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Part 1 of Certain Dark Things
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Certain Dark Things

Summary:

They sought her out for conversation sometimes, cornering her in the garden or at the park, not that they ever had much to say. Really, Harriet thought snakes were rather dull.

---------

Harriet Potter has always been odd. Between having a shadow that moves on its own and chatting with grass snakes, learning she's a witch really isn't the strangest thing to happen to the bespectacled girl with a lightning scar on her neck.

Harriet attends Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, where she makes new friends, encounters a prickly Potions Master, learns about the Boy Who Lived, and meets the enigmatic Defense Against the Dark Arts instructor, Professor Tom Slytherin.

Notes:

(See the end of the work for other works inspired by this one.)

Chapter 1: the shadow of the serpent charmer

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

1 - THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE

hell is empty and all the devils are here.

 


 

 

prologue. deathly reverence

 

The girl had barely begun to live before her life ended in a flash of green.

Caught in the space between here and there, she might have drifted until the end of time, when the world would shudder and smoke and snuff itself out with a final, seething hiss—if not for a peculiar twist of fate that brought the looming specter of Death to Godric’s Hollow on a desperate October night in 1981.

You see, Death never needed to waver far from the side of the man who called himself Lord Voldemort. For all that the Dark Lord despaired and spat upon his inevitable end, he danced willingly enough with his invisible nemesis and delighted in sending soul after soul into Death’s waiting hands. Death took what was given to him, he wouldn’t turn away those who crossed the Veil, but with every life lost and every flicker of green light, Death came to loathe the spiteful monster just a little bit more. He watched the soul break piece by piece by piece. Voldemort didn’t have sovereignty over the end; he had no right to feed Death like a corpulent cat nipping at his master’s heels.

For his lack of reverence even in the face of utter terror, Death hated the man who was born Tom Riddle all the more.

It was on the night of Samhain, when the Veil drew taut between the two worlds and the looming specter could almost step out into the realm of the living, that Death followed Voldemort to Godric’s Hollow. He took the soul of the father, watched him crumple upon the carpeted stairs as Tom stepped over the man’s limp corpse. He took the soul of the mother, heard her beg for the life of a terrified, black-haired child clinging to the rails of a crib.

He heard the mother’s soul whisper, “Spare her.”

Then Voldemort raised his wand for the third time, his silhouette a gruesome sight in the watery glow of a nightlight, the sweeping motion of his arm practiced like a reaper hewing through the stalks of a summer harvest. Green light struck the crying infant and splayed across the crook of her neck in a sizzling mimicry of lightning—only for something to go wrong, some resplendent hitch of gold ambiance that blinded even Death himself stealing through the small nursery. The wall exploded outward. Another piece of Tom Riddle went flying away from the rest of his wretched being.

Death watched Voldemort flee, the man’s pale visage shaken, his soul hemorrhaging—but ignorant Tom felt no remorse for what he had done, only a sick remnant of fear from witnessing the curse sling itself back in his direction, and so his soul found no respite as the Dark Lord fled into the night. Death didn’t follow. Instead, he remained and looked down upon the still form of the infant with red seeping from her neck, her green eyes frozen, her being tangled in the net between this realm and the next.

Shadowy fingers slipped across the child’s brow. Strange, Death mused as he plucked the girl’s soul from the Veil. He knew this soul; had come across it in another time, another place, another world, and had called it Master. The bit of Tom that had splintered from the already ravaged whole had twisted itself about the girl, strangling her soul like a determined snake, but something of the mother remained in a vein of gold suppressing the parasitic fragment.

Try as he might, Death could not steal that piece of Tom’s wretched soul. It clung with unrivaled ferocity to the girl’s in an attempt to consume and subvert it—but the innocent soul did not give in. It persisted, burnished and brilliant despite the taint trying to tear it apart.

An idea occurred to him.

He returned the soul to the girl. A shuddering breath escaped fragile lungs, and then weeping split the air, the great, gasping sobs of a wounded child shattering the solemnity of Death settling upon the broken home. The had girl lost everything in but a handful of minutes.

Death sunk into the shadows spilled about the crib’s base. Perhaps not everything.

 


 


i. the shadow of the serpent charmer

 

The Dursleys of Number Four, Privet Drive, liked to think they were as normal as normal could be.

Really, they turned normalcy into an art form; Mrs Dursley fancied herself a model housewife, Mr Dursley the consummate businessman, and their son a rosy-cheeked, boisterous lad. Petunia Dursley—tall, blond, thin and rather horsey in appearance—cleaned house, gossiped with their equally nosy neighbors, and always had supper on the table by five in the evening. Vernon Dursley was a heavyset man with a black mustache and little hair on the crown of his head. He work as a director at Grunnings, a firm that produced drills, a career so thoroughly mundane even his office was painted a boring beige. Their son, Dudley, often returned from school with a note or two of reprimand from his teachers, but they put off his antics as examples of youthful enthusiasm.

Yes, the Dursleys were perfectly bland. By all expectations, a soul would be hard-pressed to ever find a family more ordinary, more average, more dull than the Dursleys of Privet Drive.

They did, however, have a secret—a secret who lived in the cupboard under the stairs, a secret the Dursleys hated to acknowledge, a secret they denied and ridiculed and feared in equal measures.

Her name was Harriet Potter, and she was not a normal girl.

_____

 

The sudden rapping of knuckles on the cupboard door jerked Harriet out of unsound dreams. Groggy, she rose from her nest of well-worn blankets—and whacked her head on the underside of a stair riser.

Bloody hell….”

“What was that?” demanded the shrill voice on the other side of the door.

“Nothing, Aunt Petunia,” Harriet slurred in response as she fumbled in the dark, her thin fingers curling around the cool metal of her wire-framed glasses. Her dream stayed with her like a filmy shroud of mist. She tried to wipe it from her skin, but the malignant sense of oozing dread remained, and when Aunt Petunia slid back the latch on the cupboard door, Harriet remembered that something had been there in her dream, something scrabbling at the handle trying to get inside. She shivered.

The door came open, and Harriet’s eyes watered in the harsh brunt of morning sunshine. Aunt Petunia crouched at the entrance, wearing an apron already spotted with flour, glowering at the scrawny girl sitting in a dizzy heap atop her cot.

“Get up and get breakfast ready,” she snapped. “And you’d best not burn the bacon.”

“Of course, Aunt Petunia,” Harriet said, because there was nothing else really she could say. Harriet watched as her aunt sniffed and rose, turning on the heels of her white shoes before pacing back toward the kitchen. Harriet swayed for a moment and weighed the repercussions of falling back into her pillow against Aunt Petunia’s eventual wrath. The black shadows in the cupboard created by the narrowly focused sunshine curled and twisted in such a way that was not at all typical for shadows to behave. The tendrils solidified into a rather comical approximation of an arrow and jabbed toward the waiting hall.

Harriet snorted. “Yeah, alright, I’m up and going, Set.”

In her own opinion, the strangest thing about Harriet Potter had to be her shadow—or, to be more precise, the creature who lived within it. He had been there for as long as she could remember, and she knew he was a he because of the vaguely looming, masculine shape he took when he stopped hiding underfoot. One of her earliest memories was of him making shadow puppets on the ceiling of her cupboard just to make her laugh. She knew nothing about him, really, and had only ever gotten three words out of the entity in the all the years she’d been testing him: “yes,” “no,” and “Set,” which she later came to understand was his name.

Harriet was not like the Dursleys. She was thin-boned, green-eyed, and messy haired—an ugly crow chick kicked too soon from the nest, short and skinny and pale from living in the dark for the better part of ten years like Gollum in her favorite story books. Her thick glasses had been picked from a bin at a local charity shop, and her hand-me-down clothes were stained and carelessly hemmed by her Aunt within an inch of their life. Whereas the Dursleys were fleshy and loud and red in color, Harriet was dry, quiet as the wind through winter trees and just as lackluster in hue. Her mum had been Aunt Petunia’s sister, but Harriet just couldn’t imagine coming from a woman related to anything Dursley.

She also had scar upon her neck she had supposedly received in the accident that had killed her mum and dad ten years ago. A curious thing, it stretched from her right collarbone up around her throat and down part of her chest in fractal patterns, like branches of lightning spiraling through her flesh. The white color of the scarring stood out stark against even Harriet’s pale skin, and her aunt often sneered whenever she caught sight of the strange marking. She wondered if the scar reminded Aunt Petunia of her sister Lily.

Sighing, Harriet shuffled out into the hall, feeling grubby and disheveled from sleeping in the stuffy dark of the cupboard. She ran her fingers through her short hair in a vain attempt to flatten the wilder spots, but nothing Harriet ever did tamed the mop on her head. Several times she’d pleaded with her aunt to let her grow it out, but Aunt Petunia had no time from her “scruffiness,” and so every other month or so the woman took a pair of kitchen shears and hacked off Harriet’s hair until it was only vaguely longer than a boy’s. Her classmates often mocked her and called her “Hairy Harry.” Harriet hated that.

The smell of vanilla and cinnamon invaded Harriet’s nose when she walked into the kitchen and she sniffed in appreciation, glancing toward the oven to see Aunt Petunia moving a baked cake from its pan onto a cooling rack. Bowls of mixed frosting and little tacky decorations littered the counter. Harriet stifled a groan when she remembered it was Dudley’s eleventh birthday.

Should have stayed in bed.

The boy himself came barging in not a minute after Harriet finished frying up three plates of bangers and mash and more bacon than a reasonably sized pig could provide. Dudley was blond like his mother and rotund like his father—more so, in fact. He had all the presence of a garishly colored beach ball, especially in his striped t-shirt already stained with what looked like chocolate on the collar. Harriet wouldn’t have held his weight against him if Dudley hadn’t of been such a terrible little monster. He and his gang of friends loved to chase her down, and though Harriet was often quick enough to evade him, Dudley had caught and sat on her once. Harriet broke two ribs and spent two days whinging about the pain before Uncle Vernon took her to the emergency room.

Dudley toddled over to the table groaning under the weight of wrapped presents with a gleeful expression on his face. “How many are there?” he demanded of his mother, ignoring Harriet’s presence entirely as she slid plates of food onto whatever clear space she could.

“Thirty-seven, Diddykins,” Aunt Petunia crooned as she came up behind her son and smoothed his combed hair. He looked a bit like a pig in a wig to Harriet, but she wisely kept her opinion to herself.

If Aunt Petunia expected Dudley to be grateful, she had another thing coming. “I only count thirty-six,” he said, sullen color rising in his already pink cheeks. “Thirty-six. That’s two less than last year!”

Aunt Petunia went about trying to mitigate the boy’s oncoming temper tantrum and Harriet turned a deaf ear to the conversation, going back to the kitchen proper so she could pop a piece of bread into the toaster and slather on some peanut butter. She thought of her own eleventh birthday looming on the horizon, just a month away, and knew there’d be no celebration, no happy affection or hugs or warm kisses on the cheek. There’d be no presents for her, of course. There never were. The Dursleys abhorred spending any amount of money of selfish little freaks like Harriet.

She couldn’t help being a freak, if that was indeed what she was. Sometimes odd things occurred around her, odd things that infuriated her aunt and uncle and terrified the daylights out of Dudley. Harriet didn’t think it fair for them to blame her, especially since she couldn’t explain why these things happened in the first place. Sometimes objects fell off the counter, and she had a sneaking suspicion Set was to blame, though she never caught him in the act. Once, Uncle Vernon’s pant leg burst into flame when he stood over Harriet threatening to smack her upside the head for her cheek. Another time the television exploded while Harriet wasn’t even in the room, though she had been fervently hoping someone would turn the roaring volume down.

They could hardly blame her for such oddities. It wasn’t like someone could set people on fire with their mind.

Though, to be honest, Harriet rather liked the idea; she thought the Dursleys could benefit from having the seat of their pants set alight every now and then.

The phone rang and Aunt Petunia tutted about solicitors interrupting breakfast as she got up and went to answer the handheld. At the counter, Harriet polished off the last bit of her toast and looked glumly down at the crumbs on the plate. She’s go for a second piece if she didn’t think her relatives would snatch it right out of her hands for being greedy.

“Bad news, Vernon,” Aunt Petunia said as she returned, her face scrunched in a look of displeasure. “The old woman just called. She can’t take the girl; something about a broken leg.”

Harriet perked up. The “old woman” in question was Mrs Figg, an elderly widow who lived the next block over on Wisteria Walk and had a mildly obscene obsession with cats. The Dursleys left Harriet with the woman whenever they went on vacation or somewhere exciting, not that Harriet minded much. She imagined even the best places would be atrocious in the company of her relatives, and Mrs Figg was nice enough. She was odd, but Harrriet liked off things and odd people. Sometimes she gave Harriet left over cake.

As Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon argued, Dudley threw a right fit about “not wanting her to come,” his voice ringing in the confines of the house. Apparently they had an outing at the zoo planned for today. Harriet loved animals and, for a moment, the thought of going to the zoo sounded fascinating—until she saw the look in Dudley’s piggy eyes as he glared at her over Aunt Petunia’s shoulder.

No, going to the zoo would be a bloody nightmare in the making.

“I’m supposed to do the garden today,” she said aloud, raising her voice high enough to be heard above their yelling. The Dursleys stared, Uncle Vernon quickly approaching a shade near violet. “So I could, err, just do that while you’re gone?”

Her aunt and uncle exchanged pointed looks, Uncle Vernon seemingly pleased with the idea, Aunt Petunia more suspicious of Harriet’s motives. “We can lock her out in the garden,” Vernon said softly, hand on Petunia’s arm. “It’s a pleasant enough day out, plenty of water—a day of chores will do the lazy runt some good.”

Harriet almost—almost—rolled her eyes. Rolling one’s eyes was quite high on the list of things one shouldn’t do if they didn’t want to get swatted.

Aunt Petunia fretted a bit more, Dudley’s great, heaving sobs cutting off with haste when the doorbell rang and Petunia went to greet Piers Polkiss, Dudley’s best mate. Uncle Vernon quickly ushered Harriet out the back door while Aunt Petunia was distracted. The lock engaged behind Harriet with a decisive snap.

A different little girl may have been terrified of being shut out in the yard for much of the day, but Harriet was quite enthused. She sat on the porch steps with the morning sun hot on her head, listening to the voices inside dwindle, then shift out into the front. She could hear Uncle Vernon’s booming laugh, then the clap of car doors coming closed. A minute later, the engine to Uncle Vernon’s brand new company car turned over, and the wheels rumbled on the asphalt as the Dursleys drove away.

Harriet’s shoulders slumped. From the bushes came a rustle of broken twigs.

Ssspeaker.”

A voice rose from the bed of Aunt Petunia’s prized violets. Harriet hopped off the porch steps and crouched in the grass, her arms around her knees as she peeked through the bright leaves and saw a slender body slide through the mulch. “Ssspeaker,” the little grass snake said again as it raised its narrow head.

Ever since she was young, Harriet had been able to understand snakes. They sought her out for conversation and addressed her by the assumed title “Speaker.” Harriet didn’t know what a Speaker was—well, aside from the obvious. She didn’t know why she was different in that regard and simply decided it was yet another odd factoid on the ever increasing list of reasons why Harriet Potter was not normal. Next to having a sentient shadow and occasionally sparking accidental fires, Harriet considered chatting with snakes a rather tame quirk.

Hello,” Harriet said. “You have pretty scales.” She had learned early on that the smallest snakes usually weren’t overly bright and were only good for short bursts of conversation.

Thank you, Ssspeaker,” the snake replied, swaying as if mesmerized. Another snake moved in the bushes and addressed Harriet, their sibilant voices twining together as they hissed out that title again and again. Harriet wondered what it was like to be a snake. Would it be better than living here, at Privet Drive? Maybe. Maybe not. Harriet didn’t think she’d much like the taste of mice or bugs, so she had better stay a little girl.

There’s some crickets in the hedge, you know,” Harriet told the little snakes, pointing out the boxwood off by the locked garden gate. “Should be enough for both of you.”

Both little snakes thanked her before zooming away like flickers of light in the parched grass. She was feeling rather maudlin about the day, as she always did around holidays and special occasions, but Harriet decided everything really wasn’t all that bleak. In fact, she was looking forward to the start of the new school year; she’d be attending Stonewall High, a local state secondary school, and for the first time in her life wouldn’t be in class with her bullying cousin. Dudley had gotten in to Uncle Vernon’s old public school, Smeltings. Harriet wouldn’t have to see Dudley for almost ten months while he was away.

Smiling, Harriet stretched herself out on the lawn, feeling the warmth of the earth press into her back as her shadow stretched long at her side and one of the grass snakes returned, its hissing muffled by a mouthful of cricket. It wound about her ankles, and though the pressure of the thin body felt odd and ticklish, Harriet thought it comforting.

“Things are going to get better. I’m going to make friends and do my best and Dudley won’t be about to stop me!” she said to no one in particular, though Set did spool around her in a great black circle. He spiraled in feathery coils not unlike those of a giant snake. “Everything is going to be alright.”

Set pooled through the upturned blades of grass and seemed to go on forever.

 

 

Notes:

Thanks for reading Certain Dark Things! This is an eight-part retelling of the original Harry Potter series, told from varying PoVs, and eventually continues beyond the war.

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Chapter 2: under the stairs

Chapter Text

ii. under the stairs

 

Everything, Harriet understood, was not alright. Truly Harriet knew the way she lived was not proper; no other girl at her primary lived in a boot cupboard or wore hand-me-downs of such ridiculous proportions. No one else went hungry at lunch time because they didn’t have pocket change and no one else seemed baffled by simple affection like Harriet was. The only time she ever remembered being hugged was in her third year, when she told Mrs Richards the Dursleys didn’t give her dinner and wouldn’t let her have a better blanket and Dudley kept pinching her arms until they were black and blue. The Dursleys told Mrs Richards that Harriet was a horrid liar and the teacher never hugged her again.

Harriet didn’t realize she wasn’t being properly treated until she started first form. Then she learned that “nasty little burdens” aren’t actually something you should call children, let alone a blood relative, and for all their vaunted respect of normalcy, the Dursleys were perfectly abnormal in their care for poor Harriet. Still, she liked to tell herself “Everything will be alright” from time to time, liked to dream her parents would pop up out of the blue and say there had been a mistake, they’d survived the car accident that had supposedly killed them, or a long-lost relation would arrive on the doorstep of Number Four to whisk Harriet away. “Everything will be alright” she told herself, and soon Harriet hoped that wish would come true.

Her life changed on a balmy summer day midway through July. It was an innocuous day like any number before it; Aunt Petunia banged on the cupboard door, Harriet stirred herself from unpleasant dreams and set about making breakfast. She fried up the eggs and potatoes, serving the family before she took her own seat at the table and picked over a bowl of stale granola. Dudley sat across from her in his new Smeltings uniform. He looked so ridiculous, Harriet had to hide her laughter in well-timed coughs.

She didn’t find the knobbly Smeltings stick very funny, however. Why a school thought it necessary to give young boys sticks for whacking each other was beyond Harriet’s comprehension.

A clatter in the hall signaled the post’s arrival.

“Get the mail, Dudley.”

“Make her get it.”

“Go on then, girl.”

Harriet set aside her granola and rose from the table. Dudley aimed a whack toward her leg with his stick and she dodged, scrunching her nose up in derision as she passed him by. Her cousin scowled. Really, Harriet couldn’t even begin to guess what life at Privet Drive would be like without Dudley constantly hounding her. Maybe Aunt Petunia wouldn’t be so cold if Dudley wasn’t near by for her to smother with her unfettered love. Not that Harriet thought she should be smothered instead. She knew her aunt was capable of being nice if she wished to be; she simply never seemed to have the inclination.

She dragged her feet over to where the letters lay on the mat and picked them up. There were several bills, a postcard from Vernon’s sister “Aunt” Marge, who was staying on the Isle of Wight—and a letter for Harriet.

Frozen, Harriet almost dropped the thick envelope as she turned it about in her hands and reread the addressee.

 

Miss H. D. Potter

The Cupboard Under the Stairs

4 Privet Drive

Little Whinging

Surrey

 

A sound of disbelief left Harriet. There was her name, plain as you please, written in a lovely green ink on a pricey piece of parchment with a purple wax seal on the back. She examined the seal and saw some kind of crest embedded in the wax, though the details were a bit difficult to decipher. There was a large ‘H’ in the middle. Who in the world would write to her? Was this some type of new viral marketing? If so, how did they know where she slept?

“What are you doing, girl? Checking for letter bombs?” Uncle Vernon chuckled at his own joke.

“Oh, har har,” Harriet muttered. “Ripping good joke, ol’ chap.” Hesitating, she stuck the letter into the voluminous pocket of her cousin’s oversized shorts and went to take the rest of the mail in. Uncle Vernon grunted as she set the stack of post by his elbow on the table. She retreated to her chair, feeling the sharp corners of her letter poke at her thigh as she sat and finished her granola. Dudley eyed her like Harriet was an ugly bug he wanted to squish.

“Marge is ill,” Uncle Vernon said, flipping over the postcard. “Ate a funny whelk.”

“Oh, dear.”

Breakfast was finished in short order and Harriet cleared the table. She continued to touch the outside of her shorts even while she washed the dishes, leaving the occasional smudge of soap on the fabric, her head full of questions. What if it was someone who knew of Harriet? What if they were writing to tell her they wanted to take her away? She didn’t know if that was possible, but she surely wished it so.

Once the last bowl had been dried and neatly stacked on its shelf, Harriet scampered off. She didn’t want Aunt Petunia to call her back with another list of chores and she had long since learned that out of sight was out of mind when it came to her relatives. She paused in the hall by her cupboard door, listening to Dudley jabber on to his parents about wanting to go visit his mates, then slipped the envelope out of her pocket once more.

A second inspection proved to be just as mystifying as the first. Harriet ran her thumb across the wax again, frowning, then gently pried it open. From inside she pulled free two sheets of soft, yellow parchment, gleaming with the same green ink as the envelope.

 

 

HOGWARTS SCHOOL of WITCHCRAFT and WIZARDRY

 

Headmaster: Albus Dumbledore

(Order of Merlin, First Class, Grand Sorc.,
Supreme Mugwump, International Confed. of Wizards)

 

Dear Miss Potter,

We are pleased to inform you that you have been accepted at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Please find enclosed a list of all necessary books and equipment.

Term begins on 1 September. We await your owl by no later than 31 July.

Yours sincerely,

 

Minerva McGonagall

Deputy Headmistress

 

“What in the world?” Harriet murmured as her brow furrowed. She gave the second sheet a quick inspection and did, in fact, find a list of books by people she had never heard of and a motley collection of the oddest sounding things. Potions kits and cauldrons? Telescopes and scales? Was this real? Was there really a school for witchcraft? Harriet had never applied to such a place. Her aunt and uncle would have screamed themselves hoarse if she’d asked.

Harriet reached for the cupboard door. She would’ve opened her letter inside, but the cupboard lacked any kind of light and became decidedly dark once the door was slammed shut. Her fingers skirted the latch when—SMACK!

“Ouch!” Harriet cried as she jerked her hand back, no longer alone. She looked around to see that Dudley—holding his Smeltings stick—had left the kitchen and to come sneaking into the hall, no doubt looking for some retribution after his earlier nagging attempts had failed. His narrowed eyes landed on the folded parchment Harriet clutched to her chest, and before she could think of what to do, her cousin sucked in a gust of air and shouted. “Mum, Dad! She’s got a something! The freak’s got something!”

Uncle Vernon came stomping through the doorway, mustache twitching. He glared at Harriet as she hid the letter behind her back, her throat gone dry and her head fuzzy as her uncle loomed overhead and her heart kicked her ribs.

“Well?” he said with his meaty hand out held. “Give it here.”

Harriet took a step back. Dudley, having shuffled to the side to give his father room, made a grab for the letter and Harriet dodged—right into Uncle Vernon’s hands. He gripped her wrist with considerable force as he brought her arm forward. One of the pages tore when he jerked it from her grasp.

“What’s this then? Some garbage you nicked from school—?”

Uncle Vernon suddenly went very pale and still. His beady eyes flickered back and forth, back and forth, faster and faster. Harriet reached for the letter and he jerked his arm higher out of her reach. “Petunia! Petunia, get in here!”

A pause, then came the sharp clack, clack of Aunt Petunia’s heels as the door swung open to admit the horse-faced woman. “Yes, Vernon, what is it?”

He shook the rumpled parchment in his fist. Aunt Petunia didn’t even read the letter; she looked at what he was holding, at the fine paper and the wax seal hanging off the envelope’s flap, and choked. She wheeled on Harriet.

Where did you get that?!” she demanded, hissing like one of the garden snakes. “How dare you! Have you been in contact with those freaks? Have you been out sending owls where the neighbors can see you like the nasty little sneak you are?!”

“Owls?” Harriet weakly asked, feeling quite out of her depth. Aunt Petunia seemed to know a lot more about all this than poor Harriet did. It was almost as if—. “Hang on. What do you know about all this? Have you gotten one of these letters before?”

Aunt Petunia paled like Uncle Vernon. “Don’t—don’t ask questions,” she gasped. Of course, that was one of the first rules Harriet had learned at Privet Drive; don’t ask questions. Especially stupid ones.

At the moment, Harriet was not inclined to follow that particular rule. Her relatives’ reactions led her to believe they knew exactly what that letter was on about and where it had come from. Harriet thought it might have all been a big joke, but Dursleys didn’t like jokes, not unless they were told by Uncle Vernon and had vaguely racist undertones to them. The Dursleys knew.

“Do you know that lady who sent it? Or about this Hog—Hogwarts place?”

“Don’t—,” Uncle Vernon sputtered as a red flush began to overcome his pallor.

Harriet thought about all the odd things that occurred in the house, her strange shadow and the chats she had with the snakes who came searching for her at Number Four. “Am I a—a witch? Do I have ma—?”

“DON’T!” Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia thundered in unison. Both Harriet and Dudley slapped their hands over their ears, frightened by the sudden explosion of sound. “Don’t you dare say that word!”

“Is it true, then—?”

Aunt Petunia jerked the cupboard door open with such force the hinges groaned. “Get into you cupboard. No more questions—.”

“But what about—?”

No!

With his hand still on Harriet’s arm, Uncle Vernon jerked her forward and stuffed her inside the cupboard. Harriet struggled, reaching for her letter, not wanting him to take it away—.

Then the door slammed shut, and Harriet heard the latch slide home.

Chapter 3: touch of the unholy

Chapter Text

iii. touch of the unholy

 

Not terribly far from the dark cupboard beneath the stairs of Number Four, Privet Drive, lived another little girl quite like Harriet Potter. That is to say, she was a girl who the Dursleys, convinced of their own exemplary ordinariness, would not think normal in the slightest.

Elara Black couldn’t help being odd. There simply hadn’t been a chance for normality in her upbringing; living in a place like St. Giles’ Institute of Wiltshire often precluded such pleasantries. Matron Fitzgerald—hunched and scowling, limping with a cane that thumped loud on the hollow floorboards—woke the children at six o’clock, led them through their morning prayers, and set them to their lessons with one of the younger sisters. Lessons were interspersed with chores, and sometimes a light game of football in the courtyard. After vespers they sat down in the dining hall and Father Phillips led the children in saying grace.

If one was very, very lucky, they never had to see Father Phillips outside of dinner or Sunday mass. They never got called into his office.

Elara was never lucky.

Terrible things just happened to Elara and to those around her. She had a predilection for causing mayhem without meaning to, without raising a single hand or uttering a single word. The roses in the courtyard withered to blackened stubs after Elara helped Sister Abigail trim the buds, and she once wished Mandy Tibbs would fall off a ladder and she did. Kaleb Sanders got sick after pushing her down the stairs and he spent time in hospital, attached to all manner of strange tubes and a ventilator. Elara almost cried when she saw him. She knew it was somehow her fault.

She’s cursed,” the other children whispered behind their hands. “Elara’s got the devil in her. Black as her name.”

Elara didn’t think she believed in the devil, or demons, or any of that nonsense. As far as she was concerned, the “devil” existed all around them; he resided in Sister Mattie’s too-strong grip, in the side of Matron Fitzgerald’s cane, in Father Phillips sharp tongue, and maybe even in Elara, too, though whatever resentment festered in her heart had been born and bred by others, not by herself. She never meant to hurt anyone—not the garden, not the other children, not the sisters who were too loud and too fast with the backs of theirs hands. She mights be cursed, but it wasn’t her doing.

The summer heat sank into Elara’s back as she leaned against the brick wall and lifted gray eyes to the empty sky overhead. Voices echoed in the confines of the garden walls, younger children playing in the sand pit or among the overgrown weeds hemming the parched lawn. Elara sat behind the hedge, on the little strip of rough concrete separating the dirt from the property’s dividing wall, the air always smelling faintly of cigarettes from the eldest kids smoking where the sisters couldn’t see. They didn’t mind if Elara sat there; the children on the cusp of adulthood really stopped believing in curses and devils and God a long time ago, after all.

Elara was a thin girl, considerably tall for her age and “passably pretty,” as Matron Fitzgerald always said, though the Matron believed Elara had best join the convent and not fuss with finding a husband when she was older, lest her demons get the better of her. She was too pale and always outgrew her dresses too fast, much to the consternation of the sisters, and she was prone to terrible bouts of motion sickness. She kept her black hair consigned to a tight bun on the back of her head and liked to wash her hands far more than the other children her age. Elara thought herself quite plain, really. If not for the occasional accident happening in her vicinity, she fancied that no one would ever notice her at all.

Letting out a huff of air, Elara returned her attention to the book bent open on her knee. It was an old bible, battered and torn and water-damaged, resigned to a regretful fate in the bin before Elara salvaged it. She had no love for the scripture—rather the opposite, in fact. Lips pursed in concentration, she used her ink pen to gently black out certain passages and lines, creating mini stories with the words and letters that were left. If one of the sisters found this, Elara’s backside would have yet another unfortunate meeting with Matron Fitzgerald’s cane.

She pulled at her wool gloves, her hands hot and itchy, but didn’t remove the coverings. Sweat prickled on her brow and the back of her dress had a decidedly sticky feel to it. I should probably go inside, she thought, morose at the idea of having to face the others. I’d rather cook than listen to Sister Mattie snarl psalms in lessons. She could probably fly to Bath with the amount of hot air in her head.

A sudden screech jerked Elara upright. The bible snapped shut on the concrete.

An owl—an honest to goodness owl with rumpled feathers, sharp talons, and a rather cross look in his or her gold eyes—had landed on the wall above Elara’s head. Surprised, she stared at the creature and the owl stared right back. Had Elara not been used to “devilish” things happening to her, she would have been a touch nervous to have such a sharp-beaked bird inspecting her like a piece of tasty roadkill.

“Ah,” she said, reaching for the bible in case she needed to chuck something at it. “Hello, there.”

The bird clacked its beak twice, then jumped down off the wall into the narrow space allocated between the hedges and the bricks. Elara scuffed her shoes scrambling out of the way, and the owl followed her, hopping about on one leg with a displeased hoot. Confused, she realized the poor thing had an envelope tied to its upheld foot, and it insisted on her taking it off. Elara hesitated, then reached out to pull the loop of twine.

The heavy envelope fell and the owl moved away. Under the direct brunt of sunlight, the letters inked in green shone like emeralds.

 

Miss E. A. Black

Bedroom 3, St. Giles’ Institute

45 Riversrun Lane

Wilton

Wiltshire

 

A letter for me? Elara pondered as she took the envelope in hand. The thick paper reminded her of the pages in Father Phillips’ oldest bible, the one he used for special sermons during the holidays. Nobody had ever written a letter to Elara before. She had no living relations, no friends, not even any cordial acquaintances. She could count on one hand the number of times she’d ever left the orphanage since she’d been left there at almost two years old. Someone delivered me a letter by…owl? I’ve heard of carrier pigeons, but not carrier owls, for goodness’ sake.

She cracked the purple seal and proceeded to read.

 

HOGWARTS SCHOOL of WITCHCRAFT and WIZARDRY

 

Headmaster: Albus Dumbledore

(Order of Merlin, First Class, Grand Sorc.,
Supreme Mugwump, International Confed. of Wizards)

 

Dear Miss Black,

We are pleased to inform you that you have been accepted at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Please find enclosed a list of all necessary books and equipment.

Term begins on 1 September. We await your owl by no later than 31 July.

Yours sincerely,

 

Minerva McGonagall

Deputy Headmistress

 

Elara held her breath. A light breeze rippled through the hedge leaves. “It’s a test,” she managed to choke out past the lump in her throat. “They’re trying to test—.” Because how could it not be a test? The Matron and Father did so love to try the zeal of their charges, none so much as Elara and her perceived wickedness. “A fanciful child,” they called her when they were being generous, “a damned heathen” when they were not. Hogwarts? Witchcraft? A confederation of Wizards? What nonsense—?!

She went to crumple the letter in her fist, frustrated, when the owl gave another haughty hoot.

Where did the owl come from?

Frozen, she forced a breath into her lungs and blinked away the sting of tears. Elara had seen many bizarre things in her short life. She had seen books float on their own accord, flowers shrivel between her fingertips, silverware start to dance, had dreamed about a black haired man who could turn into a great, shaggy dog, and had felt the rekindling of a tiny rapid heartbeat cupped in her hands—but Elara had never seen an owl so uncanny in its intelligence, and had never seen anyone at St. Giles’ exhibit even an ounce of the creativity it would take to construct such an elaborate little game.

Where would Matron Fitzgerald even get an owl? She swallowed, turning the letter and the accompanying list over in her hands. It seemed such a fanciful thing. An ill-tempered bird comes soaring out of the sky to deliver a letter from an academy of magic to a poor orphan girl. For her entire life, the Institute and the church had all but beaten into Elara’s head the evils of witchcraft and blasphemy—but by instilling those teachings, were they not confirming their existence? Elara didn’t think much of devilry, but what if magic, real magic, existed? Did this letter mean Elara did magic? Was she really and truly cursed?

She wasn’t sure, couldn’t be sure, and the skeptic in Elara warned her against such silliness. Would it hurt to reply? she asked herself, running a finger along the signature of Minerva McGonagall. The pen had cut deeply into the paper—parchment—leaving indents.

“Miss Black!”

The voice of a sister carried through the garden from the back door, and Elara tucked the letter and envelope into her bible without hesitation. The owl continued to watch her as Elara rose to her feet and brushed dust from the backside of her skirt. Her socks and Mary Jane shoes were hopelessly dirty. Stealing herself, she looked at the owl, and said, “Just…just wait—or not. Whichever,” then hurried off after the call of her name. Her face felt hot with her own embarrassment.

Talking to birds now. Maybe I am touched in the head.

Sister Abigail waited for her, holding open the door and the screen against the casual tugging of the wind. She smiled when she saw Elara and her young face creased. “There you are, Miss Black. Father Phillips has been askin’ for you.”

Elara’s heart lurched. “Did—did he say what he wanted?”

“No, not as such.” Distracted, Sister Abigail craned her neck to peer by Elara toward the younger kids chasing each other in a game of tag. One of the girls tripped and let out a piercing cry. “Here, you go on, Miss Black, Miss Richardson needs some help over there….”

Elara continued inside on her own, clutching the tattered bible against her chest, the letter and alterations inside like brilliant hot stones she wanted to let go of and hold all the tighter at the same time. Her footsteps echoed in the narrow, crooked halls, a fan droning somewhere behind a shut door, the children either outside or cloistered in the chapel or in the musty classroom listening to Sister Mattie snarl. Elara pushed her panic away, took the trepidation she felt tapping at the inside of her ribcage and shoved it to the back of her mind until she felt reasonably calm. It didn’t stop her gloves from sticking to the palms of her hands.

Father Phillips’ door lay at the end of the long, twisting corridor. Elara stood before it, and knocked.

“Come in, please.”

The door swung in on silent hinges, her steps muffled by the thick rug residing just past the threshold. Silence typified the the priest’s office, no radio sitting on the empty bookshelves, no fire in the grate even in the dead of winter, no ticking of a clock on the paneled walls. The rest of the world seemed to get just that much farther away whenever Elara was called into his presence, as if everything beyond St. Giles’ just ceased to exist.

“There you are, Elara,” Father Phillips said with slight simper from behind his desk, the corners of his mouth pulling at the aged skin of his heavy cheeks. Bushy brows capped his eyes like the white peaks of mountains, though the man himself was a whole and hale fifty in age, his Irish brogue deep and rolling. “And how does God find you today?”

“Very well, Father Phillips.”

He gestured at the wooden chair by the covered window and Elara went without protest, her fingers cramping around the bible from their unforgiving grip. He must have sensed her anxiety despite her best efforts, because he laughed. “Oh, you needn’t be so anxious, child. I just wanted to check up on you.”

“Of course, sir.”

“How have you been feeling?”

“Very well, sir.”

His gaze trailed over her, hard and disinterested, then lingered on the bible with the slightest bit of warmth. “Have you been doing your readings outside? It’s a nice day out. Best to be thankful for the weather before the rains blow back in.”

Elara gave her head a quick nod as she stared resolutely at a certificate handing above the wood mantel. She couldn’t read it from her angle, and the frame was so thick with dust the letters would have been lost anyway. She didn’t want to look at the priest.

Father Phillips stood and came around his desk, his hands folded behind his back, his pace measured and loud in the pressing silence of the office. “Sister Mattie tells me you’ve been quiet in lessons, and you haven’t been eating all your food at supper.”

Something tightened in Elara’s chest as the priest came to stand before her. Memories weighed on the edges of her thoughts like feet stepping on the hem of a dress, jerking it back, causing her to stumble.

“Now, child, I know you’ve been through an ordeal, but it’s important to keep your strength up. Heaven knows we don’t want to be hearing more tales about any resurrected birds, aye?”

The window was covered, but Elara knew that if she were to twitch the curtains aside, she would be able to see the great old willow tree that Elara had avoided looking at ever since that day. Flickers of images returned to her: Gunther Lyle with a sparrow in his hand, the other orphans shouting, jeering, crying, a stone coming down, a tiny body broken and thrown into the leaf-strewn roots, bloody feathers sticking to Elara’s trembling fingers as she gathered the bird in her hands, feeling the warmth spill through her skin—and she suddenly watched as the dead sparrow took a breath and flew away.

The tightening sensation in Elara’s chest constricted, and she wanted to tear it free, tear through the cloth and bandages and flesh until she could put her hands on her bones and shake the feeling out. She didn’t do that, though. She just laid her bible in her lap and discreetly wrung her hands.

Father Phillips settled his own hand on the top of her head, stroking her hair. “Recovery is a hard road, but I know you have a good soul in you, Elara, and God does not abandon his faithful servants to the treachery of the Devil.”

Elara nodded once, numb. She didn’t trust herself to speak. From the corner of her eye she saw a glass begin to spin and shudder, coming ever closer to the edge of the priest’s desk, and she willed it with everything in her to stop, to stay still. Please—please, not again, I can’t go through THAT again—.

Too many hands in the dark. The sharp bite of steel in her young flesh, encircling her wrists, the cross glowing red like a shooting star, Father Phillips clutching that special bible of his while he loomed overhead, the silk of his purple stole cool against her skin as it trailed across her tear streaked cheek.

Most cunning serpent, you shall no more dare to deceive the human race. We drive you from us, we drive you from us….”

Shivering, Elara stood and banished the images and voices from her head. She hated that office more than any other place in the orphanage. “Father Phillips, I need to go get ready for my lessons later this afternoon.”

“Of course.” He straightened, stepping back, and Elara exhaled. “Make sure to study well. We’ll have tea in a few days to check up on how you’re doing. How does that sound?”

Awful. “Wonderful, sir.”

“Excellent. Off you go then.”

Elara turned on her heels and hurried from the room, trembling. The sound of glass shattering filled her ears and she broke into a run, the bulbs in the light fixtures bursting as she crossed the hall, dashing up the stairs and into another passage. Elara didn’t stop until she was safely ensconced in her bedroom and the door slammed shut behind her on its own.

That won’t go unpunished. She stripped off her gloves, then threw them at the wall in a fit of self-indulgent frustration. The room was not very large but it was modestly comfortable, the iron frame of the slim bed cleaned of rust, her sheets firmly tucked, her desk empty of everything aside from a notebook and pen she’d been using earlier that morning to write lines for Sister Mattie. Sunlight streamed through the window, and the silhouette of the wrought-iron bars laid a crooked latticework on her polished floor.

Elara sat on the edge of the mattress and covered her face with her sweaty hands. She was tired of this. She felt as though she lived her life on a tightrope strung between punishments, and no matter how skillfully she managed to cross the gap, her reward was yet another sharp reprimand, another smack with a ruler, another scathing monologue promising Elara Hell waited for her and she would burn for all eternity. She was already burning. Elara Black was eleven years old and yet she felt so, so much older. She could not go on like this.

Thwack! Thwack!

Sitting up, she glanced toward the window where the tapping sound originated. She blinked. The owl that had accosted Elara in the garden now perched on a rung of the bars, sticking its head through the barrier to rap its beak against the glass. She hurried to open it, and the owl gave a rueful hoot as it studied her.

Right. Hogwarts. Elara found the bible laying on her mussed blankets, and she whipped out the letter again, flattening it on the top of her desk.

Magic. That invisible force that welled up inside her and broke light bulbs and cups and returned smashed little birdies to life. She had been told it was evil, that she was evil, for her entire life, but this—.

You have been accepted at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

Elara traced the words with her fingers.

You have been accepted.

Hardly daring to breathe, Elara sat at her desk. She pulled her notebook closer and tore out the page of lines, crumpling them until the sentence ‘I will not blaspheme’ disappeared into the crinkled paper. Elara picked up her pen, and on the new, fresh page, she began to write: Dear Deputy Headmistress McGonagall….

Chapter 4: but blood is thicker

Chapter Text

iv. but blood is thicker

 

Harriet’s every thought, either waking or dreaming, was consumed by that letter.

Who had sent it? Were all the odd things that happened around her really magic? The Dursleys had always hated that word, maybe even more than they hated Harriet herself. They didn’t talk about magic and most certainly didn’t allow anything fantastical into the house; even Dudley was denied new fantasy computer games, much to his consternation, and Uncle Vernon had burned Harriet’s Tolkien books when Aunt Petunia discovered them hidden in the garden shed.

Had the letter met a similar fate? Harriet hoped not.

Shut in her cupboard, she whispered all her questions to Set, and he either didn’t answer because he didn’t want to, or because she couldn’t read shadows in the miserable darkness. Harriet would shut her eyes and listen to the house: the groaning pipes, Dudley playing the telly both upstairs and downstairs, Aunt Petunia nattering on the phone about Mr Lobelia’s ugly new hedges. She thought about the dreaded “m” word and her stomach fluttered when she dared to hope she wasn’t really a freak at all; rather, she was magical. A witch.

The Dursleys, for their part, refused to acknowledge that the letter had ever existed in the first place. Harriet was relegated to the cupboard full time, let out only in the morning and the evening for a spot of food and quick dash to the loo. Perhaps her punishment wouldn’t be so severe if she stopped bombarding her aunt and uncle with demands for answers every time they dared cross the hall—but she felt as if she stood upon the cusp of some great change, and hovering there without really knowing anything for certain was like hanging from a noose. The bottom of her toes could scrape the ground, but Harriet was still suffocating all the same. She needed to know there was more to life than this.

Some mornings Harriet woke and it all seemed like another product of her nightmares; a mysterious missive boasting of her acceptance into an academy of magic arrives only to be taken away minutes later. Ridiculous. I didn’t hallucinate, she told herself fiercely. She could remember the touch of purple wax giving under her fingertips, the way the green ink shone in the sunshine. She could recite many of the strange names she’d seen listed beneath their strange books, orders to get black uniforms and a pewter cauldron, the ban on first year broomsticks. Though Harriet considered herself quite imaginative, she couldn’t have imagined that.

One line caused Harriet to worry: “we await your owl by no later than 31 July.” She hadn’t a clue how one went about catching an owl to send a missive—but the rapidly approaching deadline had Harriet anxious. July thirty-first, her birthday. If she failed to send a reply by then, would this Hogwarts place revoke admission? Would they send another letter? Or would Harriet be stuck with the bloody Dursleys until she was eighteen? She was content with her prospects of going to Stonewall High right up until she discovered there could possibly be a school out there that taught magic of all things and it wanted oddball little Harriet to attend. How could she let such a thing go?

Harriet squashed her nose against the cupboard’s vent and drew in a long, muffled breath. The air whistled through her nostrils as she breathed, shaking the door, not that she cared about that. A week had passed since the letter’s delivery. Harriet had seen very little outside her cupboard since then.

Someone entered the hall—Uncle Vernon, judging by the heavy, plodding tread. The latch on the cupboard rattled as he stooped before it and Harriet leaned back, expectant, preparing for the sudden burst of light that came whenever the door opened. The hinges creaked, and Uncle Vernon—still dressed for work, though his tie had been loosened—glowered at Harriet. She frowned. Harriet had been sure it was still early in the afternoon; she lost time sitting in the cupboard for so long.

“Come eat the dinner your aunt made for you, girl.”

Harriet stepped out of the cupboard and stood. She didn’t feel very brave with her uncle looming overhead like a great, bulbous blimp of pent-up anger, but she held her ground and squared her bony shoulders. “I want my letter back.”

Uncle Vernon didn’t reply as he rounded on his heels and stormed into the kitchen. Harriet followed. A plate of cooling scraps from the roast Aunt Petunia had cooked earlier lay at the end of the counter, and the three Dursleys sat around the table picking over their dessert, ignoring her presence entirely. Harriet wanted to set in on them about the letter right away, but her stomach rumbled in protest, and so she slumped over to the spotless counter where her dinner waited and shoved forkfuls of gristle in her mouth. Chewing, she glared out the window facing the garden and studied the burnished color of the sky, the fluffy clouds scudding along the horizon behind the neighbors’ houses.

What does it even matter? They’ll never agree to let me go, came Harriet’s sullen thought, but she tamped down that pessimistic voice with a determined shake of the head. No. They have to. I can’t stay here and go to Stonewall. I just can’t.

Harriet swallowed and went to rinse her plate in the sink. With that finished, she forced herself to stand as tall as she could—which, really, wasn’t that tall at all—and turned to face her relatives.

Uncle Vernon saw her coming and stiffened. Aunt Petunia, seeing Uncle Vernon’s foul expression, craned her long neck about to level a sour grimace at Harriet. Dudley just kept eating.

“I want my letter,” she said, speaking as calmly as she could. “It’s my letter, and I think I have a right to know about magic and—.”

“The right?” Uncle Vernon thundered, jumping to his feet. Harriet took a step back before realizing it. He came nearer, throwing his napkin on the floor as he went. “You don’t have the right to anything, you utterly ungrateful freak! We take you in out of the goodness of our hearts, take the clothes off our son’s back for you, keep you fed, give you a place to sleep, and this is how you repay us?!”

Aunt Petunia swiftly ushered Dudley out of the room, though the fat boy didn’t seem inclined to go, shoving at his mother as he complained. She finally snapped the door shut in his pudgy face and locked it. Fear frazzled the edges of Harriet’s temper, and her voice grew louder in response to her uncle’s darkening face. “It’s not on, keeping this stuff from me! It’s my bloody life! It’s not fair!”

“It wasn’t fair when my stupid sister went and got herself blown up and we go landed with you!” Aunt Petunia burst out, surprising both Harriet and Uncle Vernon. Color burned in her cheeks and her eyes were half wild, glittering like coins at the bottom of a fountain, grubby and dark but catching the light when you least expect them to. “Don’t you understand anything? That’s what magic does to people! It ruins their lives!”

“B—.” Harriet sputtered. “Blown up? W-what do you mean ‘blow up’? You told me my parents died in a car crash!” Bile crawled into her throat and it was all she could do to stop herself from being sick on their shoes. “How could you lie to me about that?! They’re my parents! I’ve never even seen a picture of them!”

“I’ve heard enough of this—,” Uncle Vernon warned, but Harriet kept going.

“What in the hell is wrong with you people?!” she demanded. The windows shook in their casements and though Harriet knew shouting never got her anywhere, she couldn’t seem to calm down. She couldn’t stop. A headache pulsed behind her temples. “I’m your niece and you treat me worse than Aunt Marge treats her dogs!”

“How dare—!”

“I want my letter! It’s mine, and you have no right keeping it from me! I want to go to Hogwarts! I want to learn magic!”

A sudden pain flared through Harriet’s face and, before she knew it, she was on the floor, slumped against the kitchen cabinets with one of the knobs digging painfully in her shoulder. With a dazed blink, she looked up at Uncle Vernon—just as the man lunged, wrapping his meaty fingers around Harriet’s skinny neck to haul her upright. He squeezed until Harriet couldn’t breathe, terror ripping through her like water through a broken dam and Uncle Vernon shook his arms. Yells punctuated each shake.

You—don’t—talk—to—me—like—that!”

“Vernon—Vernon! You can’t do that!” Aunt Petunia shrieked. He dropped Harriet as swiftly as he had grabbed her, both breathing hard, Harriet swaying on her feet. With a trembling hand, she touched her throbbing lip and held bloody fingers out toward the light. The red looked ghastly on her skin. Harriet was stunned. Getting punched by Dudley or receiving a few slaps about the head for her cheek wasn’t a rare occurrence at Privet Drive—but the Dursleys had never struck her before. Not like this.

Uncle Vernon quivered with rage, and Harriet knew in that instant he wished he’d killed her, that if Aunt Petunia hadn’t of been here, he would have kept squeezing and squeezing until every last breath left Harriet’s scrawny little body. She had never been so afraid of the man before.

He grabbed her by the front of her overlarge shirt like he was afraid to touch her skin now and dragged Harriet toward the hall. “I will hear no more of this!” he roared, throwing open the door, Dudley almost falling in face first from having his ear pressed to the keyhole. A moment later and Uncle Vernon had the cupboard door open, too, the dark inside waiting as it always was to swallow Harriet whole. Her head struck one of the shelves with enough force to bruise when he threw her in. Uncle Vernon slammed the door closed again. “Get in there, and see if we let you out before Christmas!

_____

 

Harriet sobbed. She sobbed long after Uncle Vernon had stormed away, long after Dudley’s laughter had subsided, and long after the Dursleys had tromped up the stairs to their beds. Aunt Petunia hesitated once outside Harriet’s cupboard and had enough compassion in her to open the vent, but she moved on quick enough at Uncle Vernon’s insistence. Weak afternoon sunlight gave way to the gloaming hour. Harriet watched the light die through watery eyes. She had never been so miserable before in all her life.

Some time after night fell, Harriet dropped into a fitful doze, curled up tight in ball upon her cot, dreaming of green light and cold laughter and shifting shadows. She didn’t think about Hogwarts, about magic, her letter, or her parents. It hurt too much, worse than the pain in her lip or in her bruised neck or her bumped head. What else had the Dursleys lied to her about all these years?

A hard poke pulled Harriet from her lousy dreams. She lay on her cot and tried to breathe through her stuffy nose, wondering if she had imagined the feeling—until it came again. For one horrible second Harriet thought someone else was in the bloody cupboard with her, but no, she was quite alone. Set was the one trying to rouse her.

Harriet sat up—avoided bashing her skull on the riser—and stuffed her glasses onto her blotchy face. She couldn’t see very well, but she could hear, and what she heard was the distinct sound of the cupboard’s latch sliding along its groove. Harriet watched, frozen, as the door popped itself open and slowly swung aside. In the soft moonlight suffusing the hall, the shadows wheeled and pulsed until Harriet saw Set’s hand take form, beckoning her forward from the cupboard’s belly. She went.

No one was in the silent hallway. Set moved, illuminated by the light coming through the windows that flanked the front door, his black form stretching and distorting as he edged his way up the stairs. What is he on about? Harried marveled, still crouched down. A door creaked open. Set returned before she could consider following, not that Harriet was keen on following him upstairs to where her relatives slept. His shadow rippled on each step as it came down, Aunt Petunia’s handbag floating silently along with him.

“What are you…?”

Set brought the bag to Harriet, then flipped it over. Aunt Petunia’s things clattered on the floor, a tube of lipstick rolling away, loose change bouncing and spinning as Set tossed crumpled tissues and sweet wrappers aside. There, among the detritus, was Harriet’s letter. She took hold of it, gaping, and saw that someone had obviously tried to set the pages alight, but had ultimately failed. The edges were crispy and left ash on her questing fingertips.

Set broke open Aunt Petunia’s purse and extricated the folded notes, flinging them in Harriet’s face. She caught the money on instinct more than anything else and gawked, having never held more than a few quid in her hands before. Set moved again, and the front door slammed open. The evening breeze whispered through the space, cool with the first distant murmurs of autumn held in its grasp, inviting Harriet to take one breath, and then another. Her cheeks felt chilled where the tears dried themselves.

Harriet glanced at the money in one hand, at the letter in the other, and then the open door.

Set pointed toward the exit.

Her heart was beating very quickly at this point, because Harriet understood perfectly what Set meant for her to do, but she wasn’t sure she could. Harriet wasn’t even yet eleven years old, and though she despised this place, Privet Drive was the only refuge she had ever known. Bitter and hateful, but a refuge all the same. The unknown was a terrifying thing, and it waited for young Harriet now, yawning like a great maw beyond the threshold of the open door where the night lay thick like dew on the lawn. The world was very quiet then. Harriet could hear her heartbeat.

Her legs wobbled when she stood. Set twisted about her feet as Harriet walked toward the open door, her hands coming to rest on the frame, shoes scuffing the threshold though they did not cross it.

In her head, she could hear the Dursleys shouting again. “You don’t have the right to anything.”

“That’s what magic does to people!”

“Ungrateful freak.”

“It ruins their lives!

Harriet stepped forward. They won’t hold me down anymore, she told herself. Not again. I’m not afraid.

Hissing voices rose from the grass. “Misstresss,” the snakes called as she walked them by. “Misstresss.”

The yard teemed with dozens of slender, glistening bodies writhing in a chaotic mass of scales and sharp teeth and wavering tongues. As she leapt over the low garden wall, the snakes began to pour into the open door of Number Four, Privet Drive. Harriet Potter followed the pointing arm of her shadow gesturing into the night and she smiled as she walked away.

Chapter 5: bind thy hands

Chapter Text

v. bind thy hands

 

The vial shattered when it hit the floor.

Albus Dumbledore stared at it, at the jagged triangles of glass peppering his rug and the blue swirls of Pain Relief seeping into the fibers—but Severus stared instead at his hand held aloft like it was some ghastly appendage he’d never seen before.

It happened again. Fuck.

The Headmaster wore an uncharacteristically stern expression behind his silvered beard as he surveyed his Potions Master. “Are you alright, Severus?”

“Fine,” Severus replied automatically, which was true enough. The initial flare of pain had faded after his fingers spasmed and had dulled to something less incandescent than an outright inferno. Now the ache settled deeper in the muscles and bones, leaving behind nothing to indicate his hand and wrist had been in searing agony only moments before.

What the bloody hell is that?

Dumbledore flicked his wand toward the broken vial and it repaired itself, though the potion it’d contained couldn’t be salvaged. Another spell Vanished the remainder of the mess. “Are you certain, my boy?”

Severus tore his eyes away from his hand, lip curling as he addressed the Headmaster. “I assure you, I am perfectly fine. Your concern is unnecessary.”

Lips pursed, Albus settled once more in his armchair, tucking his wand away in the inner fold of his gaudy robes. His left hand came to rest on his lap while the sleeve of his right rippled, empty.

“Ah, Severus,” he sighed, a weary chuckle hidden beneath the breath. “I guess even you are entitled to a moment of clumsiness.”

The Potions Master said nothing. It wasn’t clumsiness. He didn’t admit as much to Albus, because though he may detest the simpering fool’s well-wishing and soft-hearted nagging, he was loathe to give the old man anything more to worry about. If it was anything to worry about at all. Severus sank farther into the crimson cushions of his own chair, glaring at the small fire built in the gaping hearth.

“Are you prepared for classes to commence in September?” Dumbledore asked. He reached for the bowl of tart sweets resting on a short, spindly table by his elbow and the bowl obliged him by sliding nearer.

“Nearly,” Severus said.

“And are you ready for…certain students to make their appearance?” The knowing look Dumbledore leveled over his half-moon spectacles was not appreciated and Severus told him as much, his irritation mounting as he forced his hand to lay flat on his thigh. The fingers continued to twitch. He had seen similar damage done to nerves with the Cruciatus Curse, and yet Severus knew this was not a result of that spell.

“Of course,” he sneered, eyes still on the fire. “The wretched year has come at last. We’re to be blessed with the presence of the Boy Who Lived. Tell me, where did he spend his summer studying again?”

“France, I believe, but I’m not certain. I would have to write Augusta and ask.” Dumbledore sucked on a lemon drop and, for an instant, appeared deep in thought. A somber expression arrested the usual twinkle of his eyes. “Neville is not the only child of whom I speak, though.”

Severus said nothing. In fact, he pretended he hadn’t heard.

Dumbledore persisted. “Are you excited to see Harriet again?”

He ground his teeth. Bloody meddlesome fucking fool. “Has her letter been sent?”

“Yes, it went with the rest of them, or so Minerva tells me.”

“And there hasn’t been any…issues?”

Stroking his beard, Dumbledore contemplated his reply before saying, “The charm on the paper tells Minerva that young Harriet opened and read her letter. She’s simply waiting for a reply now.”

Severus eyed the darkening sky outside the window and his hand gave a painful throb. “If Petunia doesn’t have the girl respond by the thirty-first, I’ll go visit the Muggles myself.”

Dumbledore’s beard twitched in what either could have been a smile or a frown. It was impossible to tell. Around them the silver mechanisms and multi-colored dials continued to swivel and chime, providing ambiance to the stilted conversation unraveling between the pair of wizards. “Now, Severus…you know you would attract the wrong kind of attention should you go to investigate yourself. I’m sure they’re merely waiting for the opportunity to go to Diagon and use the owl service in the alley. Young Harriet will be coming to Hogwarts; I told Petunia and her husband as such when I left Harriet in their charge.”

“You shouldn’t have left her there,” he retorted, knowing exactly type of “wrong attention” the Headmaster spoke of, not caring what that particular sadistic arsehole thought for once.

“There was no one else.”

Anyone would have been better, Headmaster.” He knew that. He knew that with every fiber of his being, no matter that Albus always said “People are capable of change.” The Headmaster could be blinded by the vaunted light gleaming off his own pretty pure morals. Severus had been born in spite, and he’d recognized its mirror in Tuney when they were just children. Petunia had loved Lily once, and so Severus could only hope to God or to Merlin or to fucking Morgana that she’d done right by her sister, but the Potions Master was a cynical man by nature. People didn’t change. The girl’s life had probably been uncomfortable in Petunia’s ugly hands.

He prayed she had something of Lily in her. He couldn’t stand suffering another seven years with a miniature James Potter.

“Anyone, my boy? So you would have taken Harriet in?”

“Don’t be ridiculous,” Severus scoffed. Snape could have barely taken care of himself let alone a child, especially a child whose mother had been so recently murdered. He didn’t like to admit how many nights he’d spent pathetically drunk in his quarters, seated with his back to the wall, because that’s where freaks sit, boy, the fire banked low and the cold seeping through his night clothes. To this day, he still thought of Lily—sans the drinking now—and of their last meeting.

She’d been holding a swaddled bundle to her chest and had asked if he’d wanted to hold her, but Severus had declined, because what in the hell did he know about holding babies? She told him she forgave him, that she understood all that Severus did for them—for Lily and her bastard of a husband and that tiny lump of a newborn she clutched so protectively, but Severus retorted, “It’s not enough. It’ll never be enough.” Lily was all that was good in the world, and sometimes Severus thought she would’ve forgiven the Dark Lord if the maniac bent his knee and bowed his head in repentance.

Smiling, Lily said there was only one thing in the world she cared about, and he would care about it too, if he meant to keep Lily in his life.

He remembered kneeling on the parlor floor, clasping Lily’s wrist, her hand on his own, James Potter’s wand hovering over them.

Will you, Severus, always do your best by her?”

I will.

“Severus?”

If the worst should come to pass, will you keep her from danger?

I will.”

“Severus, my boy, are you listening?”

The Potions Master lifted his gaze from the grate and dismissed the nagging sensation tickling the back of his mind. The remainder of the Vow seemed to echo in the air between the pops and snaps of the fire and the whir of delicate instruments. “Will you protect my daughter, the person I love most in this world, if I cannot, Severus Snape?

I will.”

He never saw her again after that day—neither her, nor Potter, nor her daughter. September would be the first time he’d seen Harriet Potter since her infancy, since he’d reluctantly stepped over her mother’s cooling corpse to approach the bloody cradle and pour Essence of Dittany over her weeping wounds. The mewling brat had been the only thing that stopped him from turning heel and chasing down his Lord that very night. He’d sat in the ruins cradling a wounded babe, sobbing his blasted eyes out, until Sirius Black—that fucking traitor—arrived on his flying motorcycle.

He and Severus probably would have cursed each other to bits if Hagrid hadn’t shown up and almost killed him by smacking Snape in the back of the head. The Potions Master woke several days later in the hospital wing, only to learn that Black had escaped, had murdered Pettigrew and a shite ton of Muggles, and that Neville bloody Longbottom was being heralded as “the Boy Who Lived” after the Dark Lord supposedly vanished into thin air right in the middle of casting the curse that would have destroyed the sniveling boy.

Lily—his Lily—her husband, and their scarred little girl had been relegated as little more than footnotes in a madman’s murderous rampage. Harriet’s survival had been attributed to a simple mistake on the Dark Lord’s part, a stroke of luck that hid her in the ruins of her home from his attentions. Severus knew better. So did Dumbledore.

He rummaged in his robes, searching for another Pain Relief, but came up empty handed. “Apologies, Headmaster,” he drawled. “I need to return to my stores to find you another analgesic potion.”

Dumbledore waved aside the subject change. “That’s not necessary, Severus. I will get one from Poppy if I need to.”

“Her stores are out of date. I haven’t yet restocked the infirmary. In fact, I should see to that now.” Severus rose, straightening the fall of his robes as he did so, refusing to meet the Headmaster’s persistent stare.

“I get the distinct impression you’re trying to avoid this conversation.”

Severus lifted a brow in mock surprise. “Who, me?” He then made good on his escaped and pretended he didn’t hear Dumbledore’s chuckling at his back.

_____

 

Severus couldn’t remember the last time he’d laughed.

It was a rather stupid thought in his opinion, though he’d been having more and more of these stupid thoughts the closer September crept and the more he remembered Lily Evans and the misspent years of his youth. He’d laughed without mirth before, to be certain, cold and snide and sarcastic, a quick burst of reviled derision passing through him like the snarl of a wounded animal. He must have been very young—that is, if he’d ever laughed at all. He couldn’t be certain.

Hearing Dumbledore’s amusement, how easily it came to the ancient wizard, rankled Severus’s already pained and agitated mood, because he stood before the sink in his quarters downing the strongest Pain Relief he had and still his hand ached, thinking about fucking Dumbledore and his bloody twinkling eyes. Sometimes Severus really hated him. The Headmaster reminded Snape of how little humanity the Potions Master still retained.

Water splashed over his hand. In the low, greenish light of the dungeons, it looked as if it belonged to a dead man. Severus snorted. The pain had been reoccurring for several years now, sometimes only as a slight ache he’d attributed to the cold, or—on rare occasions—as a sudden spear of unadulterated agony ripping through his flesh and bones. It never lasted long, yet the echo of it remained, mystifying and terrible, a fucking promise and threat Severus had never found the cause of.

He lifted his gaze to the mirror above the sink. The visage held there was just as it ever was: stark and severe, two eyes like unlit wells boring deep into the earth, black and glinting, nose sharp and cheeks gaunt, lips a displeased slash above a hard jaw. His skin was remarkably, well, unmarked considering his prior profession and the time he spent around idiot children wielding knives and bad tempers. There were, however, several scars clustered about the orbital ridge and cheekbone of his left eye, interrupting the dark hair of his brow and the fringe of black lashes. Sneering, Severus lifted his hand to gently prod at the eye.

The glass was cool beneath his fingertip.

The pain’s not from that, he told himself as he inspected the lid and blinked, looking for any abnormalities in the Charmed orb. He knew the curse that had taken his eye would eventually blind the other eye as well, but Severus also knew he’d most likely be dead by then, so he didn’t bloody care about that. Whatever malignancy persisted there wouldn’t manifest in his hand or wrist.

Frustrated, he used his wand to douse the lights and returned to the main living area. He had a great many things to see to—potions to brew for the infirmary, for his own stores, responsibilities to shirk and other professors to avoid, journals he wanted to read and correspondences in desperate need of being returned—but Severus ignored those tasks and settled in the armchair by the hearth. He glared into the depths of the twisting flames and, layer by meticulous layer, submerged his worthless thoughts and furious emotions into the hungering abyss of his Occluded mind.

Severus lifted his hand and stared at it. He stared at the way the firelight played across the sallow skin and caught upon the barely there etching left by Lily Potter’s Unbreakable Vow.

“It’s not the Vow,” he whispered, not for the first time. “That’s not…that’s not how it works.”

But what did he really know?

Sometime after dark, long after irritable Potions Masters should have retired to their beds, the pain suddenly stopped.

Chapter 6: mind of the clever

Chapter Text

vi. the mind of the clever

 

Hermione Granger was a girl who, since her earliest days, had been told she was “too” much.

Naturally Hermione knew it was possible to have too much of something, and it could be just as detrimental as having too little—but the things of which Hermione was accused of being too much of never made much sense at all to the bushy-haired, bright-eyed girl. The other children in her primary told her she was too bossy, and the teachers often grumbled that she was too clever, too well-prepared, too attentive. “Hermione, why don’t we give someone else a chance?” they’d say, and while Hermione fully believed in being fair, nobody else ever wanted to try.

Even her parents, through tight smiles and gentle touches, would say “Dear, you can be a bit too much sometimes.”

Too, too, too.

Hermione never had any patience for that silly little adverb. Why on earth would people say “be the best you can be” and then tell her that her best was “too much”?

It was an absolutely ridiculous double-standard. Hermione was clever, though, clever enough to know that sometimes it was best not to be too much, no matter how it stung her pride and wounded something deep inside her. Jean and Robert Granger were always so pleased when their daughter pretended to be intrigued by the simple revisions offered by her teachers, when all Hermione wanted was to study something more challenging, read something more engaging, and move at a pace that wasn’t so infuriatingly slow.

Sometimes, Hermione had to pretend to be an idiot and she resented the world when that happened.

So when a stern older woman dressed in a tartan suit and a pair of square spectacles arrived at the Granger household in July and told Hermione “You’re a witch,” Hermione didn’t dismiss her out of hand. She sat, and she listened.

Professor Minerva McGonagall, as the woman addressed herself, was the Deputy Headmistress and Transfiguration instructor at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, the most prestigious academy of magical learning in all of Great Britain. She explained—quite patiently—that yes, magic was real, no, she wasn’t in fact a madwoman, and yes, she’d love to preform an example for the Grangers. As they sat in the lounge, Professor McGonagall Charmed the tea to pour itself, had the Hummel figurines on the mantel break out into dance, and changed a vase into a chicken all with a flick of the thin stick she called a wand.

Hermione couldn’t believe her eyes.

The professor asked, “Miss Granger, has anything odd ever happened to you? Have you ever done something or seen something you couldn’t explain?”

Hermione wanted to say, “Of course not, everything that occurs has a perfectly rational explanation—,” but she didn’t. Instead, she sat picking at the crumpet her mother had given her and thought on the question, returning to those curious incidents in her past her logical mind had assumed explanations for. Sometimes she would reach for a second book while reading and find it in her hands when it should have been across the room. She very desperately didn’t want to get her homework wet while dashing from the car to the classroom once, and she alone out of all the students arrived dry.

“Yes,” she told Professor McGonagall, eyes darting between her parents and the witch. “A few times, ma’am.”

“Sometimes,” McGonagall explained. “Witches and wizards are born to parents who aren’t magical. It’s never been explained why exactly this happens, but magic is not always wholly understood. That is why we study it. Some devote their entire lives to the pursuit of answers and only come out with more questions—but Hogwarts is there to help anyone who has need of it.”

The professor handed Hermione a letter and she held it close, H. J. Granger gleaming in navy on the thick parchment envelope, a noble crest pressed securely into the purple wax on the back. Hermione tore open the letter. She began to read—and at the end of the list, she looked up at Professor McGonagall with something like wonder in her eyes. Magic. Real magic, and she had it.

There had to be a catch. There was always a catch to something that sounded so wondrous, and when Hermione said as much, Professor McGonagall’s expression creased as she reached into her purse to retrieve a special form.

The Muggle-born Protection Act of 1982.

“It is a law implemented by our current Minister for Magic when he came into office,” Professor McGonagall informed them, her lips thinning, her voice somber. “In essence, it is a law meant to protect magical children born to non-magical families who can often find themselves in undesirable situations. The gifts of the magical children can sometimes alarm the unprepared.” Her nostrils flared. “The Ministry finds that the MPA protects these children against violence and misunderstandings.”

The Grangers continued to ask questions and Hermione watched the little furrow between the woman’s black brows dig itself deeper and deeper. What Hermione gathered was that Professor McGonagall did not approve of the MPA, which dictated that any Muggle-born who accepted their place at Hogwarts would have to be fostered by an approved Wizarding family, and would only be allowed to visit the non-magical world for the Yule holidays, which amounted to roughly two weeks in the year. If Hermione went to Hogwarts, she would have to leave home. If she went to Hogwarts, she would only see her parents for Christmas until she reached her magical majority at seventeen.

Ten weeks. For the next five years, she would only see her parents—her family—for a grand total of seventy days.

The Grangers didn’t often feel out of their respective depths, but listening to Professor McGonagall proved more than they were capable of understanding. Jean and Robert knew their daughter was different—gifted—and that she struggled to fit in as she never struggled to do much else. She’d secured a place at a very fine public school for the upcoming year, but would she only experience more of the same? More misunderstandings? More bullying and grief?

Hermione only had to read the letter once to memorize the words, but she read it again, and again, fingers folding down the worn edges of the paper, lips pursed.

She thought about her mum and dad, about Dr. and Dr. Granger, and about the clean-cut lives they led. Being dentists was perfectly acceptable of course, yet remained…tame in the vaster vision of their youthful ambitions. Mum had wanted to be a barrister and perhaps a judge one day. Dad had wanted to go into neurosurgery and the study of the mind.

Be the best you can be.”

“Dear, you can be a bit too much sometimes.

Too, too, too.

She loved her parents dearly, just as dearly as they loved her, but their stale ambitions left Hermione discomfited.

“Professor McGonagall,” she asked as her parents looked to her and waited for what she would say. “Is there such a thing as being too much of a witch?”

The older witch blinked, lips pursed. “No, I don’t believe so, Miss Granger.”

Hermione closed her eyes. She took a breath—and chose.

 

_____

 

Two days later, she stared up at the great black gates and really, really hoped she hadn’t chosen wrong.

A hedge of yew curved along the long gravel drive and the summer air smelled of jasmine, acres and acres of land spilling in every direction without a single indication of civilization. Hermione and the professor had walked along the gravel road—which bore no trace of tire marks, no scuffs, perfect as a ribbon of stone scarring the earth—for quite some time before turning right and coming upon the gates. Beyond the gates loomed the dark stone edifice of a manor illuminated in the afternoon sun.

“The Malfoys fashion themselves to be the pinnacle of Wizarding society,” the professor said, her moue of displeasure making a return appearance. “You will be very well taken care of, Miss Granger, as I assured your parents. You will certainly learn quite a bit about what it means to be a witch in the hands of Lucius and Narcissa.”

In the interim of the two days Hermione had been given to wrap her mind around everything that had happened and to read the basic information pamphlets, she had learned exactly two things about her new foster family; they were called the Malfoys, and they had been a Wizarding family for as long as history had been recorded.

Professor McGonagall turned to face Hermione and seemed to be thinking very hard on something, her spectacles flashing in the sunlight, which made Hermione feel a bit queasy with apprehension. “If you require anything, you are free to write to me at Hogwarts. And if….” She lowered her voice and paused as if contemplating her words. “And if you feel a situation is urgent enough, I will do my utmost to deliver any messages to your family.”

Hermione’s brow rose. That was against the law—their law, the Muggle-Protection Act. It prohibited contact with the “Muggle” world outside specified windows of time to mitigate possible exposure.

“Thank you, professor.”

“Well, then.” Professor McGonagall nodded once, then returned her attention to the gates. She withdrew her wand once again and gave it a flick over herself, reverting her tartan suit into a pair of dark emerald robes, the shoulders quite stiff—not unlike the witch herself. Hermione watched with rapt attention and found herself still unable to fully accept that this all was really happening to her. She had always been a rational girl, convinced of logic and science and medicine—until magic came in and readily tipped her world onto its head.

“On we go, Miss Granger.”

Doubling her grip upon her small piece of luggage, Hermione followed Professor McGonagall as the older witch strode forward—and stepped right through the imposing gates as if they weren’t there, or simply comprised of something vaporous like smoke or mist. A ticklish sensation overcame Hermione when she did the same and she gawked.

McGonagall hid her smile. “Come along.”

The Malfoy Manor was a grand place indeed. Hermione had visited many of the historical houses in non-magical—Muggle, now—England and parts of France with her parents, and the Manor rivaled any of those sites in quality and sheer elegance. What magic was in evidence wasn’t gaudy or, well, cliche; no rabbits came popping out of hats, no man was standing by to retrieve an ever-extending line of handkerchiefs from his sleeves. White peacocks strolled through the green lawn, their cries sharp and clear, and stone snakes wound around the cornices.

Hermione wiped nervous sweat from her palms as they walked inside and kept her bushy-head raised held high.

A short creature with green eyes the size of tennis balls, dressed in a ratty pillowcase, greeted them in the foyer, bowing so low its—his?—long nose brushed the marble floor. A chandelier dripping crystals burned with a load of yellow candles overhead, the walls braced with rather terrifying rocaille and moving portraits. Pale, white-haired men and women watched from their gaudy frames.

“Dobby will be taking Miss to his Master’s family now,” the creature—Dobby—squeaked as those odd eyes landed on McGonagall. He wrung his long-fingered hands. “The Master says to thank the Professor McGonnagolly!”

Professor McGonagall took the hint and gave Dobby a prim nod. Hermione, on the other hand, was still puzzling over the word ‘Master.’ Was Dobby some kind of—servant? Her stomach lurched.

“This is where I leave you, Miss Granger. Remember, if you have need of anything, please write to me at Hogwarts,” Professor McGonagall said. She and Hermione shook hands and the latter swallowed her building nerves, telling herself there was no reason to be so nervous, she was a witch and she would learn magic and be the very best she could be at it. The front door opened again without assistance, and Professor McGonagall disappeared in the sunlight.

Dobby spoke and Hermione jumped. “This way, Miss!”

“Yes, I’m coming,” she said with a breathless nod. Hermione quickened her pace and followed the bobbing form of Dobby out of the foyer and down an adjoining hall. She continued to try to guess what he was exactly—some kind of hobgoblin? A fairy? A gnome? Something else entirely? And why did he refer to Mr Malfoy as “Master?” It seemed terribly formal to her.

They stopped before a door painted black and framed in the thinnest gilding of gold. Dobby knocked, then proceeded inside.

“The Miss Herme-ninny is here, Master!”

Hermione winced at Dobby’s horrible pronunciation of her name and stepped over the threshold. Four people sat in the well-appointed drawing room: a man with the same silvery-blond hair visible in the portraits, a woman of similar cold beauty, a boy Hermione’s age identical to the man, and a boy older than her with mousy brown hair and a tired expression. The man, with his pointed profile and silver-tooled robes sitting in the scrolled wing chair by the hearth, looked up at the intrusion and snapped the book he’d been reading closed.

“Ah, yes,” he said as he stood. “I thought I heard Minerva’s voice. Take her luggage to her room, Dobby.” His voice came out hard and sharp as a whip.

The strange creature bobbed in his bow and snatched hold of Hermione suitcase before scuttling out of the room. The door swung shut and Hermione had to lean away lest she be clipped by it.

“Miss Granger. A pleasure to meet you. I am Lucius Malfoy, this is my wife Narcissa Malfoy—.” The woman nodded her head in acknowledgment but otherwise remained seated, flipping through what looked to be a moving furniture catalog with disinterest. “My son, Draco—.” The pale haired boy sneered. A silent look from Mr Malfoy sent him strolling out of the room without a single word spoken. “And our other Muggle-born ward Jamie Ingham.” The tired boy only stared before going back to his own reading.

“Hello. How do you do?” Hermione said, feeling the horrid urge to curtsy. Ridiculous.

“Very well. Please, have a seat.”

He gestured to an empty chair with a lazy flourish; the Malfoys seemed to be quite practiced in expressing that kind of indolent, well-mannered grace, as if nothing at all mattered, their eyes remarkably distant when they looked at her. Hermione told herself she was being ridiculous again. The Malfoys had been nothing but cordial so far, and it was kind of them to open their home to her and other Muggle-borns like Jaime.

Hermione sat. The Malfoys watched her like fat, glistening spiders wondering if a fluttering moth would land in their web or not. Mr Malfoy smirked as he returned to his own chair and Hermione glanced at the cane leaning against its padded arm. The head was in the shape of a silver snake.

“You must have done exceptionally well at your at Muggle school for the Ministry to place you in our home.” The word “Muggle” came out oddly among the other posh syllables, spat with his tongue lingering on the alveolar ending. Hermione shifted under his attention.

“Yes, I—I was the best in my class. I even won a scholarship to Cheltenham.”

“And now you’ve discovered you’re a witch. How exciting.” His tone suggested it wasn’t very exciting at all. Mr Malfoy rested his pale hand atop his cane, withdrawing a wand from the top of it when the hand lifted again. He flicked the dark wand toward one of the towering bookshelves flanking the enormous hearth and several volumes jerked themselves free. “You will come to find, Miss Granger, that while the House of Malfoy may not be the oldest pure-blood family in Britain, it is surely one of the most distinguished. You are very fortunate to have been placed with us. You will receive the best money can buy while you remain here—but I must insist your studies remain exemplary. Your marks and your manners reflect directly upon my family name and I will not see it sullied.”

“Of—of course, Mr Malfoy,” Hermione stuttered, surprised at the forcefulness of his statement. She had about a million questions buzzing inside her skull—but something of this dark and ancient place, of the man before her, forbid such flippancy. If she wished ask something, she had best make sure it was a very good question. “What would happen if my marks fell?”

His lip curled. “You would be placed with another family.”

“I see.” Hermione’s eyes flickered toward Jamie and lingered on the fatigue written in his countenance. “I will do my very best, Mr Malfoy.”

The books he’d summoned came soaring toward her. Hermione caught one on instinct and the others stacked themselves on top of it until she held several tomes on her lap, feeling more assured now under the weight of so much knowledge. Some of the titles read Wizarding Traditions of the Twentieth Century, Noble Houses of the Current Era, A Beginner’s Compendium on the Magical Arts, A History of Magic, and Manners for the Modern Witch. A few didn’t sound even remotely interesting to Hermione, yet she knew she would read them anyway.

“I am lending you these volumes from the Malfoy library. I expect them to be returned in the same condition.”

“Of course,” Hermione replied. It seemed to be the only thing the Malfoy patriarch wanted to hear and Hermione would oblige him if it meant having access to such a trove of written word. She tentatively touched the binding on one text, fingertips skirting along the well-worn paper as something like electricity sparked under her skin. If they continued to be so generous with their books, Hermione didn’t much care that the Mafloys didn’t appear to be a warm family. She had her own family at home and didn’t need a second.

I’ll make my parents proud, she thought. And I’ll become the best witch there is.

Mr Malfoy inclined his blond head. His silver eyes gleamed. “Very good, Miss Granger. If you’re ready, your education on the Wizarding world begins now.”

Chapter 7: find more than treasure here

Chapter Text

vii. find more than treasure here

 

Harriet was beginning to think she might just be losing her mind. She was, after all, chasing her own shadow through downtown London.

She had followed Set to a bus station in Little Whinging, and from there she had taken a bus all the way to the city, earning many speculative glances from the driver and those passengers who climbed aboard. They looked at the scruffy girl in her over-sized clothes with her unbrushed hair covering her bruised neck and wondered where she was going and if they should perhaps call the authorities. Fortunately for Harriet she reached her stop before anyone could think to detain her.

The sun had well risen and the weather grew warm, muggy, Harriet’s mouth dry and her bladder full and her stomach empty. She trailed Set down one street and then another, moving along as fast as she dared, careful to avoid any more attention and the occasional police officer she spotted on the prowl. Harriet found herself eventually toddling down Charing Cross Road, which seemed quite the busy thoroughfare with numerous shops and venues dotted along the avenue. She collided with several pairs of legs as she chased Set.

Suddenly he veered to the left—right across the threshold of a pub Harriet hadn’t seen at first. Blinking, she swiped her sweaty fringe out of her eyes as she peered up at the swinging sign that depicted a great pot with a crack in its basin. The letters read “The Leaky Cauldron.”

“Oh, excellent,” Harriet whispered, tired from a poor night of rest and really in desperate need of the loo. She stepped inside and almost swooned at the pleasant rush of cold air coming over her before immediately darting toward a little corridor off to the side, ignoring Set and any of the inner patrons. She found the water-closet and darted through the door.

Once her business was finished and her hands washed, Harriet stepped out of the loo and spared the pub a better look over. Shadows clung about the corners and in the rickety rafters, a mixture of voices and clinking cutlery reaching her ears from the main room, where she’d glimpsed a long bar and a cluttered motley of mismatched tables. On the wall right across from the loo hung a painting of a cauldron, and as Harriet watched, ingredients hopped off shelves and poured themselves into the bubbling stew, changing the liquid in a never-ending rainbow of color.

Her jaw about hit the floor as she lifted a finger to prod the canvas. The ladle took an idle swat at her hand, not that she could feel it. “Utterly mental,” she whispered. “I’ve gone round the bend.”

It was magic—bloody magic, plain as you please, right smack in Harriet’s face, hanging in an empty hall and all she had to do was stroll in off the street to see it. Like it was nothing. Like this rather ugly painting hadn’t just rocked Harriet’s small, uncomfortable world.

It’s real, isn’t it? Really, really, real.

A sudden poke in her ribs turned Harriet’s head, and she saw Set flit against the wall behind her, rippling in the weak light thrown by the gas lamps as he pointed toward the bar.

She did as Set directed, having no reason to distrust her shadow, not after he’d taken her this far already.

Behind the counter, the wizened barman with his bushy brows and lined face chatted with a wispy, gray-haired woman dressed in purple robes and a pinstriped skirt. Most everyone in the establishment wore similar robes, some subtle, some outlandish, one man with blond hair and big, pearly teeth dressed all in gold with a group of woman hovering about his table, causing quite a fuss. Some wore clothes that looked normal under their longer robes, if a bit old-fashioned—until closer inspection revealed differences in cut and style than Harriet was used to. One woman’s blouse had blooming flowers on it that shed and regrew their peachy petals over and over again.

“Hullo there, lass. How can I help ya?”

Startled, Harriet tore her eyes away the many strange sights around her and instead looked up at the barman. “Oh, er.” Harriet had no idea what to say or why Set had led her here, besides the fact that the establishment oozed magic and mystique. “Um, could I get something to drink…?” She took the crumpled bills from her pocket and wrinkled her nose at the damp texture. Sweat. Gross.

“No Muggle money here, lass,” the barman said as he spied the notes in Harriet’s hands. Muggle? “You’ll need to go on to Gringotts first. You Muggle-born? Where’s yer guardian?”

Harriet wondered why he skipped straight to guardian rather than parent. Did she have some sort of cosmic sign over her head that said ‘orphan’? “Er—they sent me on my own.”

The barman’s brow furrowed and he seemed on the brink of saying something, perhaps something against her supposed guardians or perhaps in recrimination of Harriet herself, but he thought better of it. The gray-haired witch who’d been listening to their exchange finished her drink—some kind of juice if Harriet wasn’t mistaken, the remnants of an English breakfast on the plate before her—and stood. “I can show the girl on up to Gringotts, Tom,” she offered, giving Harriet a small smile. “My name is Mafalda Hopkirk, Miss…?”

“Harriet,” she said, pausing. “Well, Potter. Harriet Potter.”

“It’s very nice to meet you, Miss Potter. Let’s be off then, shall we?”

Harriet nodded, not knowing what else to say, though she was leery of going somewhere with a stranger. That leery feeling only grew when she followed the woman—the witch—into a grubby back alley adjoined to the rear of the pub, and Harriet almost darted back inside and away from Mafalda. She didn’t consider herself a coward, but Harriet had very little luck with adults in the past and had even less trust for strangers. The witch took out a stick from the inner folds of her long, rippling cloak and gave the bricks on the wall a good sharp tap.

A crack resounded through the air. Harriet watched, dumbfounded, as the bricks began to shift on their own accord, peeling like the skin of an orange, curling at the edges until a new pathway was plainly visible. The roof of the warehouse above the wall remained—and yet there was an alley in front of Harriet, not the rear of a warehouse; an alley full of people dressed in funny clothes carrying funny things and saying funny words.

There, a name was written on an arch: Diagon Alley.

“Come along, then, Miss Potter. I need to get to the Ministry yet this morning.”

Harriet urged her wobbly legs forward despite the sudden tingling in her limbs and hands. Mafalda tucked her stick into her cloak with a curious look in Harriet’s direction, then led the way up the street away from the grubby alley opening. Harriet, for her part, did her best not to gawk and shriek and generally make a nuisance of herself, staring at every little thing she could. There was a man selling bits of dragon liver, and that vendor there had little cooling charms you clipped to the front of your robes, guaranteed to keep you cool and fresh the rest of the day! Harriet brushed the side of a lumpy witch and her cloak left out a chorus of bird calls.

“Is this your first time to the Alley?”

Harriet started when Mafalda addressed her. The witch had already moved off several paces and Harriet blushed in her rush to catch up. Set had returned to her shadow for now, leaving Harriet to her own devices. “Er, yeah.” She scratched her head and tried to think of a plausible reason for her being there by herself. While the temptation to ask questions—or to simply beg for help—was great, Harriet knew she’d most likely end up in a police station, or right back with the Dursleys if she wasn’t careful. She refused to return there. “My folks had to work and, uh, sent me on my own.”

Malfalda’s brow furrowed. Harriet knew there must be some glaring inconsistencies in her story, so she shrugged off any of the witch’s follow up questions and hurried her on to their destination. Gringotts, the barman Tom had said. Harriet guessed it was a bank of some kind, and that she’d have to exchange her stolen pounds there for whatever money the magical people used. Hopefully she had enough to buy all the odds and ends listed on her charred letter.

“That’s Gringotts there, Miss Potter,” Malfalda said when they reached the alley’s end. A towering building of white stone sat at a fork in the path, Diagon Alley continuing to the left, a sign stating the right to be Empiric Alley. The name “Gringotts” scrolled across the bank’s stone face, a set of sweeping steps leading up into a marble antechamber. It looked like the kind of place someone would want to store their money—or spend it, whatever their preference. It also looked like the kind of place that would throw a scruffy urchin like Harriet right out on her ear.

“Ah—thanks,” Harriet said, staring up at the waiting doors and the thick columns like the arching teeth of a wolf.

“There’s access to the Ministry for Magic down Empiric Alley, if you didn’t know,” Malfalda said with a telling nod in that direction. “The Department of Welfare and Muggle-born Placement could provide…help, if one were to ask. Discreetly, of course.”

Harriet didn’t know exactly what the witch spoke of, but she was bright enough to recognize the words Ministry and Department of Welfare. No, if Harriet went toddling about a government building, she’d end up with the Dursleys again, in her cupboard, before she could blink. What if they took her letter away? What if they told her it had all been a mistake, that Harriet was just weird, that she didn’t belong anywhere at all?

“That’s okay, Ms Hopkirk. Thank you for showing me the way.”

Resigned, Malfalda nodded. “I’ll be off, then. Good day.”

“Bye.”

Harriet started up the steps and the gray-haired witch went her own way, hurrying along the right fork in the road. Many people came and went from the bank, some dressed as flashy as that smiling wizard in the pub, some more demure in shades of black and brown and gray. One wizard in a purple turban came dashing down the steps in a terrible rush, his face stricken. A man with long silvery hair and a black cane brushed by Harriet and sneered as if he’d touched something disgusting.

Well I could do with a shower.

Harriet managed to climb halfway up the steps before she caught sight of who—or what—guarded the doors and froze.

What the bloody hell is that?

“That” being a creature with very long fingers and feet, though the rest of it—him—was comparatively small. A bald pate gleamed on the top of his domed head and pointed teeth showed through his thin, parted lips, a crest of some kind positioned on the center of his black vest. A passing witch counting gold coins in the palm of her hand muttered, “Bleedin’ goblins and rubbish exchange rates—.”

Goblins? Harriet marveled, watching the creature watch the customers come and go. Goblins were real now too?

A sudden jab in the ribs brought her attention down. Seth, distorted by the angle of the steps, jabbed a finger toward the waiting doors.

“Yes, alright,” Harriet whispered, ascending the rest of the way into the foyer’s cool shadow. Harriet edged around the goblin, half expecting him to bar her entree and shoo her away, but the goblin only leered, motioning for Harriet to stop blocking the entrance with her horrid spy theatrics. She quickly apologized to the wizard she’d bumped into and rushed inside.

Two high counters dominated the inner chamber, stretching from one end to the other, behind which clustered more of the pale, long-fingered goblins dressed in black suits with gold fobs and brooches and pins. One was laying rubies the size of Harriet’s head on the side of a scale, another arguing with a well-dressed witch over a set of fine dishes, a third stacking gold bars on a hovering cart that left on its own once filled. Some humans in uniforms similar to the one the goblin outside wore marched the chamber and exchanged brief words with one another.

Harriet puffed out her cheeks, overwhelmed, then exhaled. Here goes nothing.

She approached a goblin who appeared to be both unoccupied and a teller. He made idle scribbles in the ledger before him with a feathered quill tucked into his strange hand. “E-excuse me? Err—Sir?”

The goblin continued to write until he reached a stopping point, when he lowered the quill and leaned forward to leer over the edge of the counter with an unfriendly sneer. “Name?”

“Uh,” came Harriet’s initial—and rather intelligent—response. “I mean, Harriet Potter. My name, that is. Harriet Potter,” she rambled.

He scribbled something on the ledger again and flipped a page. He sniffed. “And does Miss Potter want to make a withdrawal from her vaults today?”

“My what now?”

Harriet swallowed as the goblin leaned forward again, a decidedly displeased gleam in his beady eyes. “Do you wish to access your vaults or not?”

“I don’t have any vaults.”

“Our records show different.”

Then the goblin snapped his fingers, and Harriet jumped when the ledger he’d been writing in jerked itself about and dropped roughly two feet off the edge of the counter to come to her eye-level. Harriet gawked as letters unfurled themselves across the opened page, stark and black against the yellow sheen of bound parchment.

  1. House Potter Estate, entailed, nontransferable.

Beneficiary: Harriet Dorea Potter, 31 Oct 1981.

The letters continued in a looping script of puzzling legal nonsense and Harriet struggled to recognize even half of the jargon. A few columns of numbers and names spilled themselves over the ledger when the page flipped itself, and though Harriet still couldn’t make heads or tails of the figures, she did see that the names had “Potter” for a surname. She recognized the one listed above her own moniker, James Fleamont Potter, as her father—though she hadn’t know his middle name was Fleamont. How unfortunate.

Her dad must have been a wizard, then. Was her mum a witch? Aunt Petunia had shouted “That’s what magic does to people!” when she’d rowed with Harriet about her parents leaving her with the Dursleys. Was that how the Potters had actually died? Harriet didn’t see any bloody cars out and about on Diagon Alley. Did wizards and witches even use cars? Had magic killed her parents?

I’m going to find out, Harriet told herself as the ledger snapped shut an inch from her nose and rose into the goblin’s possession. Right after I find out about this vault business. How did he even know who I am? It’s not like Potter’s an uncommon name.

“Does Miss Potter wish to inspect her vaults?” the goblin asked again in a noticeably more tetchy tone.

Harriet fussed with the hem of her ugly secondhand shirt and nodded.

“Does Miss Potter have her key?”

“No,” Harriet replied, heart sinking. “I was never given a key.” He should know that, of course, considering she obviously didn’t know about the blasted vaults in the first place. Maybe there had been a mistake. She didn’t think the Dursleys had ever been given a key, either, since they would’ve cleared out any money her parents left Harriet—and maybe they already had. Maybe these vaults or boxes or whatever had already been sucked dry by Harriet’s relatives.

The goblin let out a put upon sigh. “You will need to give a sample of blood before a key can be reissued and then you will be escorted to your vault by a goblin associate. Is this agreeable?”

“Yes?”

In short order, one of the human employees came over and dropped a stool down on the floor with a kindly smile toward Harriet as he helped her up. Harriet burned under the curious attention of the other bank goers turning to look at the raggedy little girl, and being closer to the goblin did not make her less nervous. He leered as if he’d love to do nothing more than shove Harriet backwards off that stool, but he went on with his task. Her finger was pricked, a droplet sampled, and suddenly Harriet was being hustled off down a side corridor with a gleaming golden key pressed into her grubby palm.

A door opened onto what looked like a dusty mineshaft. The goblin assisting Harriet now—Griphook—led Harriet toward a waiting cart that sat upon a pair of thick iron rails. The rails plunged off into the dark. Griphook held the only light, a battered old lantern with a wavering flame.

Harriet gulped as she took a seat and the goblin jumped into the front. Are these vaults underground?

“Potter trust vault. Six hundred eighty-seven.”

“Six hundred eighty—?”

The remainder of Harriet’s question was cut off with a yelp when Griphook thrust the lever holding the cart in place forward and they went rocketing into motion. She clutched the cart’s metal sides with white-knuckled fists as they plummeted down one slope and then careened through another, the cold air whipping past, turning Harriet’s already frightful hair into a right mess, her small backside lifting off the padded seat when the rails abruptly swerved again. Griphook grinned nastily.

Several minutes later, the cart came to a lurching stop and Harriet—dizzy but a bit enthralled by the journey—stumbled out after Griphook. “Six hundred eighty-seven,” the goblin said, jabbing a long finger at the vault in question. Harriet had been expecting something more along the lines of a safety deposit box, not an actual, honest to goodness vault. “Six hundred eighty-eight—.” He pointed instead at the larger metal door across the way. It was partially obscured by a glittering stalagmite—or was that a stalactite? “Will be accessible at your majority.”

“Okay,” Harriet said, not knowing what one should say to a goblin. Instead, she passed the key over to him and allowed Griphook to get on with opening the vault up.

Green smoke hissed out through the crack, torches burst into life, and Harriet almost had a heart attack.

Gold.

It glimmered in every corner, climbed the walls and spilled across the polished floor—gold. She had never seen so much of it before in her life, not in books or pictures or even on the telly when the Dursleys let her watch commercials after the dishes were washed and her chores completed. The vault itself seemed to emit a brilliant yellow light from how the torches reflected on the accrued wealth, on the tidy mountains of solid gold bars, on the buckets of coins, the roped coils of white pearls and silver chains and the gilt frames with moving people on the canvases. There were trunks stacked to the ceiling and long curtains of silk fabric and stacks upon stacks of great fat books. Trembling, she bent down to pick up a coin that had fallen near the vault door.

Poor orphan Harriet, who had a pocketful of sweaty, stolen notes, who had never eaten a full meal before, who had lived under the stairs and now lived nowhere at all, burst into tears.

Griphook despaired.

Chapter 8: wand of elder

Chapter Text

viii. wand of elder

 

When the hysterical tears ran dry, Harriet wiped her eyes—and her nose—and took a breath.

She knew she wasn’t terribly clever; rather, she was intelligent but lacked that spark inherent to those of true cleverness, that intuitive sixth sense that allowed those more brilliant than her to assimilate their environment and find information with ease. Sometimes Harriet had to be told things twice, and sometimes she didn’t have to be told at all. What a life with the Dursleys had taught young Harriet was that one got by on a lack of cleverness by using cunning, and by taking stock of their situation while they could.

The goblins, she guessed from their behavior, didn’t much like witches and wizards, so she asked them questions, confident they wouldn’t send her off to that welfare office Mafalda had mentioned because they simply didn’t want to deal with the hassle. Griphook grumbled and grunted and sneered while he spoke, but a coin or two placed in his hand loosened the goblin’s tongue well enough.

He told Harriet that the gold coins were Galleons and the silver were Sickles and the bronze were Knuts. He wasn’t sure how the Potters had died but knew that James Potter, despite his vast fortune, had been an Auror—which was a bit like a Muggle policeman—so Griphook assumed he and his wife Lily must have been offed during the war. When Harriet asked about the war, he told her she’d best go to Flourish and Blotts and buy a bloody history book because he didn’t have all day to tell stories to nasty little wizarding brats.

Harriet was apparently the head of the “Noble House of Potter,” which wasn’t as great as being in a “Most Noble House” or in a “Noble and Ancient House” or even a “Noble and Most Ancient House.” When Harriet asked if there was such thing as a “Most Noble and Most Ancient House,” Griphook told her not to be ridiculous. What the designation boiled down to, she understood, was that she had a seat on the Wizengamot, which was a bit like a magic conclave that Wizarding families applied to so they could sit in on very boring political meetings about laws and whatnot and have their voices heard. It cost two hundred Galleons per annum to retain a House’s seat, and one of Harriet’s ancestors had apparently paid the fine up through the next one hundred and fourteen years.

Sounded barmy to Harriet, but there it was.

The Potters had an estate—the Stinchcombe House—which was a modest manor out in the Gloucestershire countryside. It was “entailed,” which meant the house belong to Harriet’s family and not really to Harriet herself, and she had absolutely no access to it because it was part of the fortune secured and locked away in Vault Six Hundred and Eighty-Eight. Vault Six Hundred and Eight-Seven was a trust fund set aside for the Potter heirs for their personal use, kept separate from the main estate in case something catastrophic were to happen to the family’s fortune. Griphook had a nasty grin on again when he told Harriet about all the Wizarding families who had bankrupted themselves in the past.

While goblins didn’t seem very nice at all, they did prove informative, and when plied with gold, Griphook was quick enough to mention useful things to Harriet. He pointed out a spelled trunk with an extension Charm that was most likely illegal now and would be excellent for Harriet’s use at Hogwarts. The goblin noted her keen interest in the Stinchcombe House and commented that the Leaky Cauldron could take on longterm boarders if necessary. He told her that if she wished to be smarter than the average stupid witch or wizard she needed to buy more books than were on her school list, and if she wanted anyone to take her seriously, it didn’t matter if she had a bag filled with Galleons, she needed to go to Twilfitt and Tattings and get some bloody better clothes.

So, once Harriet loaded a purse with coin and took hold of her family trunk, she finally trundled out of Gringotts into the hot afternoon sun and took a left upon the alley to venture down the Southside. She ambled along with the strange crowd, feeling loads more confident now that she had real Wizarding money and knew, without a doubt, that she was a witch, her eyes taking in all the peculiar sights with hungry attention. Newspapers at a stand outside a building called the Daily Prophet read themselves aloud to passersby. A pair of twin red-heads came out of Gambol and Japes with wide grins. Shady characters lurked near an arch proclaimed the entrance to “Knockturn Alley” and Harriet kept well away from there.

Harriet paused at the post office to send off her acceptance notice to Hogwarts, then entered Twilfitt and Tattings and was almost immediately set upon by a snooty witch who didn’t seem to believe Harriet was, in fact, a paying customer. Logically Harriet knew Griphook had been correct in his assumption that no one would take her seriously when she dressed like a beaten rag doll, but it was still annoying to be judged solely based off her appearance. The witch eventually changed her tune—after much cajoling and purse rattling—and Harriet walked out of the shop an hour later with a new wardrobe. She wore an emerald sun dress that had a neckline high enough to hide most of her scar, and a Charm in the hem meant to prevent it from tearing or becoming dirty.

Harriet had never owned anything new before, let alone something so pretty.

Magic oozed through the alley and Harriet found herself quickly becoming enamored with it. It was such a marvel; every little thing could be accomplished with a spell or a Charm or a Hex, witches and wizards whipping out sticks—or wands, as she learned they were called—to shrink their bags or levitate them, changing their cloaks from blue to green to red, popping in and out of existence with a quick turn of their heels, or jabbering on as they carried cauldrons and books and owls and moving papers. Harriet felt like she was in a dream and she never wished to wake from it.

After Twilfitt and Tattings she returned to the Northside of Diagon to find Madam Malkin’s Robes for All Occasions, where she would have to buy her uniforms for school, according to the snooty witch at Twilfitt. Harriet found the shop and poked her head inside. A small bell chimed.

“Hogwarts, dear?” asked an older witch with red cheeks and curly hair. She was much nicer than the other witch Harriet had met, and she smiled when Harriet quickly nodded, then led her farther into the shop where two other students were already being fitted for their own robes. Harriet was ushered onto a stool next to a bushy-haired girl about Harriet’s age while a pale, drawling boy on the girl’s other side continued to drone.

“—honestly, Granger, how you expect to manage at all when you can’t even recognize which of the houses is greatest—.”

The girl, Granger, flushed an irritated color and, when she spoke, did so in a rush of very precisely enunciated words. “None of the houses are greater than any of the others,” she insisted. “The book states clearly that each has it failings and its accomplishments. Slytherin is not the best, nor is Gryffindor, or Ravenclaw, or Hufflepuff.”

“Don’t let father hear you saying that. He might chuck you back to the Muggles,” the boy snorted. He seemed to realize someone else had appeared, because he looked past Granger to Harriet and said, “Well? What do you think?”

Harriet blinked as a shop assistant jerked a standard black robe over her head and started in on the magic pins. “What?”

“Which house do you think is best?” he demanded.

Harriet hadn’t the faintest clue what he was asking, so she looked to the other girl for help. “Err, I think you’re right,” she said. The boy was being rather rude, and Harriet decided it was best to give the other girl some support. What houses is he going on about? Slithered in? Huffle buff?

The boy scoffed. “You haven’t a clue what I’m talking about, do you?” When Harriet didn’t respond, he straightened himself and stared into the mirror before him with an unpleasant scowl. “Bloody Mudbloods everywhere nowadays….”

“Draco!”

“Do shut up, Granger. Try to show some dignity.”

Granger turned her shoulder to the boy—Draco—and ignored him. “I’m Hermione Granger,” she said to Harriet, sticking out her hand. “I’m a Muggle-born, too. You are going to Hogwarts, right?”

“Right,” Harriet replied as she shook Hermione’s hand, her brow furrowed. She didn’t think she was a—what did she call it? Muggle-born? Griphook had said “Muggles” were the non-magical people out in regular London, and Harriet’s dad had been a wizard, and she was fairly certain her mother had been a witch—or maybe not, considering Aunt Petunia was about as mundane as a person could be. Mundane as cheese. Maybe Harriet was Muggle-born. There was so much she didn’t know. “I’m Harriet.”

“Are you excited to go to Hogwarts?” Hermione asked, going on before Harriet could open her mouth. “I personally can’t wait. Magic is so very fascinating. You really should think about getting Hogwarts: A History before you go. It has all kinds of information about the Houses and all the classes that have been taught at the castle over the centuries and the separate modifications it’s gone through. Draco insists that Slytherin is the greatest, but I think it has more to do with your personal values and qualities. You can’t truly think to rate a House based on the virtues of ambition or loyalty or wisdom—.”

Take a breath, Granger. For Merlin’s sake.”

Unfortunately at that moment Harriet was brought down off the stool, her robes finished, and so she waved a quick goodbye to Hermione and Draco, feeling a bit irked she hadn’t been able to have a decent conversation with either. She loaded her purchases into the top drawer of her trunk, careful not to drop anything into the cavernous lower drawer, then moved on to her next stop.

Harriet purchased a pewter cauldron at Potage’s Cauldron Shop, picked up a standard potions kit at the rather smelly Apothecary, ogled the fancy flying brooms at Quality Quidditch Supplies, then stepped into Flourish and Blotts. She remembered Griphook’s advice and selected several other books aside from the ones on her school letter, including one on goblin wars, one about magical creatures, another containing a multitude of ways to curse your enemies and hex your friends, and Hogwarts: A History. In the end she was glad she had taken the trunk along, as it seemed to be Charmed almost weightless as well as big and roomy.

She was on her way back to the other end of the alley when Set jabbed her in the ribs again, this time gesturing at a brightly lit sweet shop stationed near Gringotts. Only then did Harriet realize how very hungry and thirsty she was, her head dizzy and her feet aching from walking on the hard cobblestones, so she stopped at Florean Fortescue’s Ice Cream Parlour for a blueberry and mint flavored treat, as well as a tall glass of something called “pumpkin juice.” Harriet wasn’t sure if she liked the drink, but she assumed it would grow on her.

She came at last to the shop she’d been most looking forward to: Ollivanders. It didn’t look like much on the outside. The sign proclaiming that they’d been in business since 382 BC was faded and peeling, the gold letters of the name crinkled at the edges, and the display window held only a single stick—wand—on a faded purple cushion. From all the conversations she’d overheard snippets of, Harriet knew it was the very best place in all of Britain to buy one’s magic wand—and Harriet was ecstatic to purchase her own.

She’d never been to a church before, but she rather imagined it was a lot like stepping into Ollivanders; a hush pervaded the tiny shop, a palpable sanctity that clung to the place as surely as the thick layer of dust. Long, slender boxes filled the shelves from floor to ceiling with very little room to spare. There was a counter with an ancient register sat atop it and one spindly chair with the stuffing poking out the sides of the cushioned seat. No one was in sight.

Set flickered and curled about Harriet’s feet, waiting.

“Hello?” Harriet called, setting her trunk down by the chair. “Is anyone here? I need to buy a, er, magic wand?”

“Hello,” echoed a man’s voice. Harriet let out a startled swear when the old man slipped quietly from the shadows, his wide, pale eyes watching her with all the eerie uncanniness of two uncovered moons. His gray hair was wispy and wild about his head. “Ah…Harriet Potter.”

Harriet stared as the elderly wizard came slowly forward, gradual as creeping mist, tingles prickling along her spine. “H-how do y’know my name?”

The wizard smiled. “You’ve your mother’s eyes,” he said. “And your father’s poor hair, I’m afraid. Ten and a quarter, Lily was. Willow, excellent for Charms. And James…eleven inches, Mahogany. Pliable. Perfect for Transfiguration. I remember every wand I’ve ever sold, Miss Potter, though I don’t always know where they end up.”

Harriet failed to find her voice, overwhelmed as she was by the sudden jolt to her system. Really, she liked to think she didn’t normally lack control over her emotions, but the day had been quite long. Harriet had seen many marvelous things, and she’d also learned a high volume of stressful information. She’d never seen a picture of her parents. She had no idea that she mirrored Lily’s eyes or James’ hair.

“I sold the wand that did that as well,” the wizard murmured as his fingertips grazed the side of Harriet’s neck over the thin veins of scarring that curled about her throat. Harriet jolted out of her stupor. “Thirteen and half inches, yew. A powerful combination. Very powerful indeed.” The briefest flicker of contrition passed through those pale eyes. “Perhaps, in hindsight, I should have known better. Making a wand like that. Power does so often call to the Dark—or perhaps the Dark calls to power? Who can say?”

“You—you said a wand made my scar?” Harriet asked, fidgeting with her glasses.

“Of course. Very distinct, curse scars. I am, of course, in the minority that believes He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named cursed you directly, but fools will believe what they want to believe.”

He who what—?

Harriet’s mouth was dry. Her head was spinning again. “I was told I got it in the car accident that killed my parents.”

“Car?” the wizard frowned. “For certain you received the scar when Mrs and Mr Potter died; He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named could have hardly cursed you without going through your parents first.” He seemed to realize he’d said something insensitive, because the wizard covered his mouth and urged a swaying Harriet to have a seat on the spindly chair. He rushed on before Harriet could ask questions. “Ah, well—where are my manners? I’m Garrick Ollivander, Miss Potter, and it is very nice to meet you. Now, let’s see about getting you a wand, shall we?”

Harriet let him get on with it while she tried to gather her wits. Blown up, Aunt Petunia had said. That’s what magic does to people!

The Department of Magical Law Enforcement still deposits payments out of Potter’s pension benefit. He was probably an Auror met a sticky end in the war.

He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named could have hardly cursed you without going through your parents first.

Someone…someone had killed Harriet’s family. James and Lily must have been mur—.

“Oh dear, not that one.”

Harriet looked about and had a chance to glimpse the wand that had been shoved into her hand before Ollivander jerked it away. Another replaced it, then another, and another. On and on Ollivander went to the teetering shelves only to return with more wands that he summarily rejected. Harriet tried to reclaim the joy of the moment, and yet her excitement remained tame in the light of this newest revelation. Perhaps it should’ve been obvious after all the small hints and outright claims she’d heard so far, and perhaps Harriet had ignored the hints, had buried her head in the proverbial sand to escape the terrible, terrible news. Perhaps she hadn’t wanted to know.

“Yes, this one,” Ollivander said as he returned once more, this time only holding a single battered box in his pale hands. “I have a very good feeling about this one. A very good feeling. Holly, eleven inches, nice and supple. Go on, Miss Potter. Give it a flick.”

Harriet lifted the wand—and immediately felt a ticklish kind of warmth spread beneath her skin, pushing aside the wounded feel of her saddened heart. Smiling, she did as Ollivander suggested and gave the wand a swish, gasping when a burst of silver sparks poured from the wand’s tip. Magic. Harriet had done magic, easy as you please.

“Excellent!” Ollivander cheered, clapping. “A wonderful bond, Miss Potter. Curious, though, very curious.”

“How so?” she asked as she tucked the wand back into the box and Ollivander took it toward the register. He opened his mouth to answer, then came to an abrupt halt, looking down upon short Harriet with her bruised neck and thin face and tired eyes. He turned the box, thumbs hooked along the lid’s edge, and simpered.

“Nothing at all, Miss Potter. Nothing at all. That will be seven Galleons, and…here.”

He reached below the register to a shelf that held a collection of weathered tomes coated in the same saintly dust as the rest of the shop. Ollivander withdrew one of the books and handed it to Harriet along with her wand when she extracted the seven coins from her purse.

The Rise and Fall of the Dark Arts,” she read aloud, puzzled. “What’s this for?”

“A small gift. You will find it…informative.” Ollivander smiled again, just the slightest twitch of the mouth. “I will expect great things from you. Great things indeed. Good luck, Miss Potter.”

Harriet was shooed from the shop then, her trunk laden with magical purchases trailing at her heels, a fat book under one skinny arm and a wand box in the hand of the other. Few witches or wizards wandered this far end of the alley, and Harriet wagered it was because buying a wand wasn’t an everyday occurrence for most. The sun was dipping low along the crooked roofs belonging to Diagon Alley’s many shops, and Harriet decided she had best return to the Leaky Cauldron and see about that extended boarding Griphook mentioned. Harriet wasn’t sure how she’d manage without an adult.

She made to stop and tuck her new things away—when her wand was jerked from her hand.

“Hey—!”

Harriet’s breath left her in a gasp when she saw Set—more corporeal than she had ever seen him before—crack the box between his spidery hands and retrieve her wand from the plush velvet. The stick of holly spun between fingers comprised of shadow and air as the box fell to the cobblestones, forgotten, and the wand turned in ever quickening circles.

“What are you doing?!”

The wood lightened until it was as pale as ash, the shape changing, new grooves forming where Set’s tapered fingers traced funny designs. The tip lengthened beyond the original eleven inches. Set flicked the wand into the air and, on instinct, Harriet reached out to catch it. The wand slapped into her palm as if summoned.

The warmth that answered her touch was not the same; no indeed, the tepid satisfaction became a soaring inferno, and the sadness imparted by learning her parents’ fates was incinerated beneath a wave of confidence that thrummed like a heartbeat in Harriet’s small hand. It sung. For a girl who had never owned anything of her own before that day, Harriet felt uncommonly attached to that wand now. Like it was a part of her arm and she’d sooner lose a hand than let it go.

As Set returned to her shadow, the young Potter girl marveled at how much she loved magic.

Chapter 9: where stars dwell

Chapter Text

ix. where stars dwell

 

When the final letter came, Elara was ready to go.

The benefit of practically being raised in the shadow of a pulpit was the exhausting linguistics preparation that went into teaching jaded orphans how to read and interpret the puzzling language of the bible. The inhabitants of St. Giles’ spent an abundance of time with their necks bent over stuffy passages, fighting the urge to yawn, lest they wanted to feel the back of a ruler slap their hands. Elara excelled at her coursework—if only because she loathed being struck or touched. She could recite whole pages of Matthew or Mark or the Epistles without much thought, and when she sat down to write Minerva McGonagall, she had the literary prowess necessary to ask the right questions without receiving the wrong reactions.

She thought her handwriting would have been neater had her wrists not still been aching from Father Phillips’ treatment.

Elara Black knew how to read Latin and how to sing psalms and how to forge acceptance letters to religious boarding schools on the other side of the country. She knew the right words to say and knew when to be quiet, knew when to keep her eyes down and when to bluff. She wrote questions to Professor McGonagall in the dead of night and let Matron Fitzgerald send an acceptance note to St. Katherine’s School for Girls, a note that would go absolutely nowhere at all. Elara walked a thin line between outright deception and truth, letting neither woman know all the answers to the questions they asked, never letting them know just how desperately she wanted to leave that place.

Because Elara had decided to leave. Hogwarts or no, she would not stay at St. Giles’ another day.

By stating that her guardians weren’t familiar with the area, she managed to convince Professor McGonagall to send a brief series of instructions for where to purchase school supplies and how to access the “Wizarding” world, as it was called. The instructions included many words that were outside Elara’s vocabulary—including “flooing” or “Apparating” or “Muggle”—but she understood the basic necessities.

When she asked about tuition, the tone of McGonagall’s letters became more suspicious, pondering if something had happened to the Black fortune, if Elara or her guardians were being denied access to the Gringotts vaults, and so Elara quickly demurred until the subject was changed—but the words stayed with her. Fortune. Gringotts. Vaults.

Had Elara’s parents left money for her? Perhaps McGonagall had the wrong Black. It wasn’t a terribly uncommon surname, after all.

Or so Elara thought.

She left a week from the end of July. A final letter from McGonagall included possible temporary accommodations she could find in London, and a ticket for the train to school that would depart at exactly eleven o’clock on September first from Platform Nine and Three Quarters, Kings Cross Station. Elara gathered her satchel and her fare for the non-magical train trip into the city. Sister Abigail cooed about how proud she was of Elara, Matron Fitzgerald warned her there’d best be no problems from her at St. Katherine’s, and Father Phillips pressed an iron cross on a chain into her palm, saying they would see her when the holidays came.

In a fit of vindicative pique, Elara threw the cross into the bushes once she was left at the station alone.

They would never see her again.

_____

 

The name Black, she came to know, was not as common as she theorized.

No, Black was the name of traitors, of murderers, and of madmen—and Elara was the daughter of all three.

Her revelation began at the bank Professor McGonagall mentioned in her letters, Gringotts. Elara followed the instructions on how to reach “Diagon Alley” from the “Muggle-side” of London, and though she was suitably flabbergasted by her first real experience with magic, she managed to stagger along the alley’s length until she found the goblin-ran bank. She almost collided with a bespectacled girl in rumpled clothes coming out of the foyer dragging a trunk, but once there, the goblins swiped some of Elara’s blood—and her life started to unravel at the seams.

She was not the only Black alive. In fact, not only was Elara not the last of her name, she also wasn’t in control of the family fortune the professor had told her about. That honor fell to the current head of the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black, her father Sirius Orion Black—and his proxy, Cygnus Pollux Black the Third.

Well, she thought, sitting in one of the well-appointed meeting rooms off the main Gringotts’ chamber. The celestial monikers would explain my name, at least. “Sirius,” she asked in a breathless whisper, staring at the goblin—Sledgetongue—across from her. “My father, Sirius, is alive?”

The scrawny goblin bared yellow teeth. “If you can call being incarcerated in the Wizarding prison alive.”

More letters were written. More owls sent winging off into the summer sky. Elara left to check into a quaint inn on neighboring Horizont Alley called “The Niffler’s Nest,” which she was assured often boarded Hogwarts students who lived far from London and needed to be closer to the station—though not usually quite so early in the summer. They charged a fee to Hogwarts itself, so she needn’t worry about paying for that yet. Elara perched silently on the edge of her mattress, dazed, her satchel resting on the duvet at her side. She stared at the pinstriped wallpaper and told herself again and again that it didn’t matter, that it didn’t matter if her father was alive because he was in prison, for goodness’ sake—.

Elara returned to Gringotts at precisely eleven o’clock. She expected to greet Mr Cygnus Black, her great uncle and proxy head of the family, whom the goblins had written earlier that very morning to arrange a meeting with—only for Elara to confront one of the ugliest creatures she had ever seen when she stepped into the second chamber again.

It was shorter than the goblins, hunched with gangling limbs, a bulbous nose, bloodshot eyes, and great sagging folds of flesh. If Elara were to be honest, it looked as if someone had held the scowling imp over a fire for too long and he’d started to melt like overheated wax. The creature dipped his head in the approximation of a bow after he looked Elara over from head to foot. The white hair sprouting out of his floppy ears shifted with the motion.

“The master sends his regrets for not being able to attend, but poor master is not well. Kreacher is here to take the blood-traitor’s daughter to Master Cygnus.”

Blood-traitor?

Elara wasn’t sure she wanted to go anywhere with such a cantankerous little thing, but she wasn’t given much of a choice. Kreacher, as he called himself, reached out a bony arm and took hold of Elara’s wrist. She gasped at the resulting sting, and the breath disappeared into the sudden crushing pressure that consumed her. It was like being sucked through a narrow straw at high velocity without access to air, her insides churning, heart pounding—.

As abruptly as it had begun, the pressure abated and Elara landed on her knees, retching.

Kreacher twisted his lined lips, biting back a retort, and gave his fingers a snap. The sick splattered across the floor vanished.

“The blood-traitor’s daughter will follow Kreacher.”

Elara lifted her head and saw a narrow foyer, a black door with no knob at her back, a dusty corridor before her that led to a stairwell and another shut door. Flocked wallpaper peeled from the walls in curling strips, and Kreacher’s little feet left smudged prints on the floorboards and carpet runner. Gas lamps flickered to life, putrescent yellow in color behind emerald glass globes, cobwebs thick as hair caught in the fixtures’ curlicues. Kreacher turned to glare. Elara stumbled upright, dazed, and trailed after him.

Another girl might not have followed the pale little thing deeper into the house. Another girl would have been frightened out of her wits by Kreacher, by the decor, by the sudden relocation from one place to another—but Elara had lived for several years frightened of herself, of the Matron, of the Father, and compared to the orphanage, this place wasn’t remotely scary. It certainly set her ill at ease, yet the grandeur beneath the grunge remained prevalent, and Elara was sad when she thought of what the house must have looked like in years past.

As they climbed the stairs, Elara could’ve sworn whispers bloomed at her back, yet a glance over her shoulder showed the landing as bare as it had been when she passed it by. She kept her eyes forward after that.

Kreacher knocked upon a door and opened it with a wave of his gnarled hand. He gestured Elara inside.

Breathing was the first thing she noted; heavy and wet, the pants came at a stilted intervals in the darkened room, little sunlight managing to crawl about the edges of the thick damask curtains on the windows, a fire all but dead in the filthy hearth. The man lay in his nightgown beneath several comforters and blankets with his torso propped up by fine, tasseled pillows, the silver and emerald hangings tied off to the thick posters of the bed. The room smelled of sweat and sick.

“Come closer, then, I’m not contagious.”

Embarrassed to realize she’d just been standing on the rug staring, Elara stepped nearer, her hands folded before herself.

“Kreacher,” the man called. His voice cracked at the end and devolved into a hacking cough. “More light, Kreacher. And a chair.”

The little scowling imp hadn’t followed Elara into the room, and yet a stuffed armchair appeared behind Elara—almost taking her legs out from under her—and the silver candelabrum on the nightstand burst into flames. Elara sat before she could be asked, mostly because she was beginning to feel a mite weak in the knees. Magic could be overwhelming when it happened so suddenly.

The man on the bed surprised Elara. She’d been expecting someone a great deal older, someone in their seventies or eighties—but the man looked barely fifty, aside from the wasting kiss of illness drawing his waxen skin taut and painting perspiration on his brow. In him she saw several of her own features: the black hair with the slight wave to it, the gray eyes, the sharp, symmetrical bones of his cheeks and jaw. He gave her a hard look as his thin chest continued to rise and fall. Elara noticed several letters laying on the duvet at his side, including the one sent off by the goblins.

At length, he said, “You look like him,” and fell into a coughing fit once more.

Elara wondered if there was anything she could do and voiced the concern, but he waved it off with a slight flick of the hand.

“There’s nothing to do. I’m dying. It’s as simple as that. Whatever comfort can be brought to my body does nothing to stop the inevitable.” He breathed in and out as he looked at Elara with his brow furrowed. “So you must forgive me for my lack of manners. I am Cygnus of the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black, the proxy-Head of the family. It is a…relief to meet you.”

Relief? An odd way to greet someone. Not that my entire life hasn’t become decidedly odd. “I’m…Elara. It’s very nice to meet you, Mr Black.”

He tutted. “No. That’s not how you introduce yourself to the Head of a pure-blood family. It’s ‘Elara of the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black.’” He coughed again, briefly. “Heir to the Black family. And here I didn’t think anything could surprise me at this point in time. Tell me, girl. How did you come to be here? Who has been raising you since Sirius got himself incarcerated?”

Elara bit back the urge to pounce on the first question that jumped into her head, wanting to know about Sirius, about who he was and what he’d done, and if that was why she’d been left at St. Giles’ as a child. But why the non-magical world? Why? Elara had been taught not to interrupt adults, however. “I was raised at an orphanage in Wiltshire. I…I received my Hogwarts letter, and found out I’m a witch. I left. I’m not going back.”

The lines on Cygnus’ face deepened and Elara noticed there were threads of silver in the black hair of his brows, a tinge of gray marring the first shadow of a growing beard. “Muggles?” he demanded, voice rising. “They left you with Muggles?!”

“Yes.”

He said something then beneath his breath, something about Merlin’s pants that Elara guessed might be a magical euphemism, and looked more ill than ever. “The world’s going to the dogs.” By ‘dogs,” she assumed he meant ‘Muggles.’ His tone told her as much. “The Ministry can’t even keep track of pure-blood magical children, let alone the rest of the rabble. They assured Sirius and Walburga that the premises was checked, but what can you expect from a fool like Millicent Bagnold? Of course, she barely lasted long enough to warm the seat for her successor.” He paused then to breathe—or wheeze, more like. “But you wouldn’t know anything about that, would you?”

Elara stiffened. “No, sir.”

“It’s not your fault,” he replied, voice gruffer than it had been before. “You will be taught. I have enough strength left in this body to see the state of the family better off than it was left to me. You mentioned not returning to that—to that orphanage. That’s quite out of the picture.” Cygnus stopped speaking and cleared his throat, his eyes closing for a long minute of silence interrupted only by the faint crackle in the hearth. “Where are you staying?” he finally asked.

“The Niffler’s Nest. It’s an inn in Horizont Alley that boards Hogwarts students before the term begins.”

“I know of it. You can stay there or you can reside here, if you wish. Merlin knows I could use better company than the house-elf.” He wrinkled his nose in that dignified way rich parishioners always screwed up their faces when confronted with a particularly scruffy orphan. Cygnus eyed Elara again, taking in her proper—if worn—attire, her clean shoes, her washed face and cut fingernails. “As I told you, Miss Black, I am dying and it is inevitable, but I won’t see this house crumble or fall into the hands of fools like my own children, pledging themselves to madmen or Muggles. Toujours pur, do you know what that means?”

“No. I was taught Latin, not French.”

“At least you recognize the language. It means ‘always pure.’ Remember those words. It’s the motto of this family, and while some will tout it as a slogan galvanizing hate and the agendas of lesser wizards, that is not what it is. Not originally. Toujours pur means to always be loyal to blood, to family—to magic. You are, or will be, the last free member of the House of Black, a family that has existed in Britain since before the Ministry came into being—before the Conqueror even set sail for the Isles—and it will be your responsibility to carry on our noble name.”

Elara felt wide-eyed and silly listening to her great uncle speak. Why, just that morning she dressed in her modest bedroom at St. Giles’ hearing the morning sermons echo from the adjacent church, and while she’d been exchanging letters with Professor McGonagall for a week now, it hadn’t been real until now, until she sat down at the bedside of a dying relative and he regaled her about lineages and house mottos and magic.

“Please, Mr Black,” she asked softly. “Can you…can you tell me about my parents?”

“I don’t know much,” he replied, sighing. He began to cough again and struggled to control it, one hand plastered over his mouth as his reddened eyes watered. “Th—that potion there—.”

Elara lurched to her feet and followed his pointing finger toward the dusty sideboard. There were several “potions” sitting there in a line of various crystal vials, their contents luminescent and churning at Elara’s inspection.

“Th—the pink one.”

She grabbed it and brought it back to him. Cygnus drank the infusion, sputtering, and instantly his fit subsided into a grateful gasp of air. Elara took the empty vial from his hand as he slumped against the pillows, clearly exhausted. “I don’t know much,” he repeated. “Your grandmother, my sister Walburga, was some thirteen years my senior, and so we were never really close. You can find her portrait on one of the landings, howling about blood purity like a Gryffindor who can’t string more than two words together.” He sniffed. “She married our second cousin Orion—don’t make that face at me, girl—and had two sons, Sirius being the eldest. No one’s quite sure where his brother, Regulus, got off to.”

Elara nodded along, and though she forced her face to remain composed, she still didn’t like the idea of her paternal grandparents being related, for goodness’ sake. It was technically legal, being second cousins and not first, but still.

“As far as I know, Sirius rowed with Walburga and Orion sometime during his Hogwarts years and she had him disowned, but when Regulus disappeared in 79’ and Sirius returned with the promise to marry a pure-blood heiress, Walburga had little choice but to accept him back into the family. I actually don’t know who he married, though I heard she died early on in 81’. Walburga and I were hardly speaking at the time, differences in political opinions being what they were—but I digress.”

“And what happened to Sir—my father? I know he’s…incarcerated. For how long?”

“The goblins tell you, then? Oh, he’s there for life.” Cygnus’ eyes gleamed hard like cooling quicksilver. “He killed twelve Muggles and an old school-mate of his with a Blasting Curse. The Hit Wizards found him in the ruins, laughing like a madman. Took him straight to Azkaban with the rest of the Death Eaters they rounded up that day. He besmirched the whole of our house with his idiocy, and you’ll bear the brunt of his treachery for years to come. Trust me when I say this, Miss Black; the only part of Sirius that will ever see the outside of an Azkaban cell is his rotting corpse, and even then I have my doubts.”

Elara shuddered and shut her eyes. She wished she hadn’t asked. She really wished she hadn’t.

“I think his punishment fitting,” Cygnus said as he sank farther into the pillows and his tired gaze roved from Elara to the far wall, focusing on the empty portrait frame there. “He doesn’t know about you, after all. He gets to sit in that prison every day, gets to wake up every morning on that dismal island, and gets to remember again that his only child is dead.”

Chapter 10: the boy who lived

Chapter Text

x. the boy who lived

 

Harriet spent three days reading The Rise and Fall of the Dark Arts from cover to cover and didn’t feel better when she finished it.

The Dark Arts, she learned, were a kind of particularly punishing magic that was, for the most part, used for the express purpose of evil. Spells themselves didn’t have morality—but sometimes gathering the things that went into the preparations of the spells required evil, like fresh baby hearts or the eyes of your murder victim, or they needed you to feel evil things like hatred and rage or bloodlust before they could be cast.

The book talked about a witch named Morgana who was said to have brought the Dark Arts to Britain, and who hated Merlin—who actually existed, much to Harriet’s shock. Page after page of Dark wizards and witches flipped by under Harriet’s hands: Ekrizdis, Herpo the Foul, Godelot, Gormlaith Gaunt, Ethelred the Ever-Ready, and Emeric the Evil—on and on it went. Harriet felt queasy reading about the deeds they’d committed, the books they’d written, the places they’d built. So far, all she’d seen was the wonder of magic, but she soon came to understand magic was also capable of great terror.

When events encroached on the modern era, a curl of dread settled in Harriet’s stomach. She learned of Gellert Grindelwald, who sought to dominate the Muggle world with magical might, who met his fate at the hands of a great wizard named Albus Dumbledore—and then he faded, replaced by a new section in the book attributed entirely to the “Wizarding War” and “The Dark Lord V—.

No history of the wizard’s past could be found, and not a bloody hint of his name, either. The author referred to him only as “The Dark Lord” or “V—” or “You Know Who,” which Harriet thought incredibly frustrating because no, no she did not know who. “V” rallied followers dubbed “Death Eaters” to his cause of pure-blood supremacy, wanting nothing more than the utter subjugation of the non-magical world.

He killed many people. Their names blurred together for Harriet, but she knew she’d see their children at Hogwarts, and that all this was more than some dry history in a book, or a fantastic fairytale about magic battles. This was real, and it was the world she’d been born into with so many others. Fear and uncertainty bled through the yellowing pages like wet ink.

She found her parents listed near the back. The passage read; “James and Lily Potter were both subjected to the Killing Curse by V— on the evening of October the 31st. V— ruined their residence with a Blasting Curse, overlooking the Potters’ daughter, who survived in the wreckage.”

That was it. Nothing about why they’d died, if they’d opposed “V” or if they’d been neutral or just people caught in the crossfire. The author hadn’t even included Harriet’s name, and though she really didn’t want her name written in such a horrid book, it bothered her that she was separated from her parents even in print. James and Lily Potter. The Potters’ daughter. Overlooked, it said. Wallowing, Harriet bitterly muttered that the word basically summed up the whole of her existence until now. Overlooked.

The worst part was learning “V” met his fate barely two hours later. His followers, his Death Eaters, raided a home in Dorset and killed a pure-blood witch named Alice Longbottom. The Death Eaters occupied her husband, Frank Longbottom, as “V” entered the home and aimed a Killing Curse at their son, Neville, only for the Dark Lord to vanish with an “agonized scream” before he could finish casting. No one was precisely sure what happened and the author included several interviews from various magical experts who postulated on the phenomenon, but one thing was certain; Neville Longbottom had survived the Dark Lord and was hailed “the Boy Who Lived.” He was a hero. The war ended.

Anger and resentment festered in the deepest pits of Harriet’s heart. Two hours. A decade of war, and her family was torn apart a measly two hours before it ended. Two bloody hours. If “V” had gone to the Longbottom’s first, or if he’d stopped for supper or hit buggering magical traffic—Harriet would’ve spent the last ten years with her mum and dad at home, not living in a cupboard with spiders, not toiling in the garden and hoping she’d get dinner later. She couldn’t even figure out the bastard’s name.

Harriet hated that petty emotion. It was something the Dursleys would feel; slighted by fate, entitled, fussy and argumentative, like Dudley when he counted his presents and came up short. She wasn’t the only one to lose people, not at all. Two hours, two days, two years—what did it matter? James and Lily were dead, and though Harriet was alone now, she had Hogwarts to look forward to, and perhaps friends.

At the bottom of the page, in the footer, her finger traced over the handwritten words “The best coups are silent.” In light of everything she’d learned, Harriet could make little sense of the words, so she shoved them from her mind. She snapped the book closed, took a deep breath, and moved on.

 

_____

 

On the thirty-first of July, Harriet Potter sprang out of bed more excited than she had ever been on her birthday before.

Her exploration of Diagon Alley and the adjoining lanes had taken her all over in the week Harriet had been boarding at the Leaky Cauldron. She ate ice cream at Florean’s almost every day and wandered from there, through Diagon and Horizont, along Empiric Alley and Toad Road all the way to Carkitt Market, where she liked to watch the wizards work at the Bowman E. Wright Blacksmith and listen to explosions coming from Dr Filibuster’s Fireworks. A teenage witch intern at Globus Mundi Travel Agency liked to chat with Harriet about all the magical societies scattered around the world, and the clock outside Cogg and Bell Clockmakers always chimed the hour with a series of strange, screaming bird calls. Harriet’s favorite stop, though, was The Junk Shop, where she’d poke through all manner of delightful bits and bobs, most of it broken, but some of the stuff quite interesting all the same.

Today, Harriet had a special destination in mind: the Magical Menagerie.

She had seen the owls at Eeylops and cats ran rampant throughout the whole of the Wizarding quarter, but there was only one kind of animal for Harriet and it wasn’t allowed at Hogwarts. Resigned, she promised herself she wouldn’t stop by the store until her birthday, when she’d go to fawn over the great scaly beasts none of the other witches or wizards seemed inclined pay attention to. It promised to be the best birthday ever.

No bell chimed when Harriet edged open the door to the Magical Menagerie early that afternoon; instead, she was greeted by collective squawking from an—she squinted—unkindness of black-feathered ravens. There were no shelves in the Menagerie; rather, the aisles themselves were comprised of dozens and dozens of cages stacked atop each other, the interior a constant riot of squeals and barks and cries. Several haughty owls lined the top of a rail protruding from the brick wall and they glared at Harriet as she passed them by. A small dog with a forked tail dashed around the store chased by a younger witch spouting muttered obscenities.

The snakes and other less popular pets were kept farther in the store’s depths, nearer the smudged windows that looked out over Horizont Alley and the corner of Gringotts. There weren’t many there; a few skinny garter snakes, some darkly colored adders, two sleepy cobras with glittering scales of gold, and a very ornery boomslang tearing up his bed of green leaves.

Hello,” Harriet, crouching down before the glass tanks, whispered. The snakes paused as all snakes did when they suddenly heard Harriet talking to them. “You’re all very pretty.”

The cobras preened like peacocks, if such a thing were possible. “Misstresss,” the garter snakes jabbered. The boomslang’s tongue flickered in and out at a rapid pace before it slunk beneath its torn bed and disappeared. Harriet guessed he or she wasn’t up for conversation.

A Sspeaker?

Startled, Harriet glanced at the larger tank that sat above the others, partially covered by a velvet drape and dark on the inside. Scales glittered in the sparse illumination of the sun, and she reached up to give the drape a gentle nudge or two. Two blue eyes appeared to float in the tank’s inky shadows—but, no, there was serpent hidden inside. It was mostly black, body larger than the littler snakes below with silvery scales on its belly and a crown of stubby white horns. A small gemstone that looked like a sapphire rested on the crest of its angular head.

Ssspeak,” the serpent ordered as its violet tongue flicked out of its mouth. Harriet guessed it to be five feet or so in length, thicker than her arm.

I’ve never seen a snake like you,” she blurted, almost nose to nose with the creature on the other side of the glass. Those eyes burned blue and white, fierce and unnaturally intelligent. “What are you?”

You tell me,” the serpent returned. “If you are ssso sssmart. I call mysself Liviusss.”

Harriet didn’t know snakes could have names—or that they could be so snooty. She’d asked the little grass snakes and adders who visited Number Four before, but to the last they seemed confused by the concept. Truly, most snakes Harriet encountered hadn’t been terribly bright. They chatted about crickets and mice and had little patience for any other kind of conversation.

That’s a nice name,” Harriet told the serpent. “You are very pretty.

The snake—Livius—scoffed at Harriet. Scoffed! “You sssaid that to the…othersss.” Given its tone, Livius didn’t appear to enjoy the company of his monosyllabic friends in the tanks below.

Harriet blinked. “Well, you are very pretty. You have a gem on your—err—forehead. I imagine it glitters in the sun.”

Livius lifted its head an increment higher and swayed as it continued to study Harriet. “I wouldn’t know. I wasss hatched in thiss placcce. The ssun iss beyond me.

How terrible.”

Livius swayed again, the motion hypnotic. “Yesss. Terrible…Misstresss.

“Are you talking to that snake?”

Harriet jumped and blushed when she realized how close her nose had gotten to the glass. “Um.” Turning, she found a girl about her age standing nearby, though she rose a full head taller than poor Harriet in height. She wore black wizarding robes with silver thread tooled about the wide sleeves and the high collar, a little pin with a crest attached to the lapel. The girl was much prettier than Harriet, she noted with chagrin, her black hair neatly brushed and gathered in a bun at the nape of her neck, her gray eyes able to look about without the obnoxious cover of thick glasses or a wild fringe. She had a bent notebook in her slender hands.

“Yeah,” Harriet finally admitted. The girl leaned nearer the tank to peek at the serpent inside, her lips tipping into a slight frown.

“I didn’t know witches or wizards could do that,” the girl said.

“I didn’t know either.” Harriet wondered how many others spoke to snakes. Perhaps it was one of those things in the long list of things that made Harriet odd, even among magical folk. “This one’s kind of bossy.”

“Bossy?”

“Yeah. All the snakes I’ve found in the garden before just want to chat about bugs or where the sunniest spot is to nap. Two grass snakes once argued over which rock in the flowerbed was best, so they both napped on the rocks for about an hour while I weeded to test the theory.”

The corner of the girl’s lips twitched into a lopsided smirk, which looked a bit odd on her otherwise prim face. “How strange.”

Harriet shrugged, self-conscious.

“Do you know what kind of snake it is—?”

A shadow fell across the pair, and together they glanced up into the face of an older wizard with a tremendous mustache. “A Horned Serpent,” he said as he brusquely shoved by them and went to properly cover the tank again. Livius hissed with displeasure as it disappeared from view. “An exceedingly rare and exceedingly expensive male specimen from North America. It’s also quite venomous and not for sale to children. Move along.”

The clerk chivvied them back toward the shop’s front, which was crowded with kittens and a litter of those playful fork-tailed puppies. “Well, that’s rude,” the other girl murmured, watching the wizard walk away from the corner of her eye. “Seems an odd choice to keep the creature in the shop then scare off potential customers.”

Harriet shrugged again. “I can’t buy it anyway. Hogwarts doesn’t allow snakes, and where would I keep a thing like that? With my socks?” Chuckling, she poked a finger through the bars of a box containing oddly purring puffballs puddled together. A long pink tongue slipped out to lick Harriet’s skin. “Oh, gross.”

The girl didn’t reply. Harriet glanced about and saw that she had her pale gaze fixated on something occurring out on the street. Harriet craned her neck to see over the top of a crate and through the window, but all she could really see was the backside of a plump wizard talking with the witch next to him. A number of people were clustered in the alley now, all facing something obscured from view.

“Wonder what that’s all about,” Harriet commented. The girl shook her head in silent answer, then moved toward the rail of owls Harriet had spotted at her entree. Harriet followed along, unsure of what else to do, and the girl didn’t appear to mind.

“I need an owl,” she said. Harriet decided the statement was directed at her and took the chance at conversation.

“An owl? They have a ton at Eeylops Owl Emporium. It’s on the other side of Gringotts. They’re a lot more—.” Harriet glanced at one of the glowering screech owls. “Friendly.”

“I didn’t like any of those.” The girl pursed her lips as she studied her choices. She had a calm mien, quiet and considerate, relaxed. Harriet, who didn’t know how to act in situations like this, felt antsy and wagered that the other girl probably had plenty of Wizarding friends, so it was just Harriet who was awkward and anxious like Aunt Petunia just before Dudley started in on one of his really nasty tantrums.

The door to the shop jerked open and Harriet jumped at the sudden clamor of voices. A boy slipped inside. The door was promptly closed by a wizard wearing maroon robes with fitted attire underneath, who then leaned against the door to prevent it from being opened again. Harriet—who had spent far too many years locked in the cupboard—didn’t much like being trapped in a shop, but she swallowed her protests and turned her attention back to the owls.

The girl held up her arm, bent at the elbow, and one of the largest creatures hopped down. Harriet thought it was the meanest looking one of the bunch, with furious golden eyes and a face set in a permanent scowl, but he hooted softly at the girl and gave her fingers a gentle nip. She stroked the glossy black feathers, revealing spots of brown and gray around the back of the bird’s head.

“It’d be really useful to have an owl,” Harriet babbled. She fussed with the sleeves of her new casual robes. “And he’s really big. He could probably carry mail far without getting tired. I read that Hogwarts is in Scotland, so he looks like he could make it back to London without a problem. That’s, err, if you are going to Hogwarts and do need to write letters to London….” Harriet subsided into silence.

“…I think I’ll get him,” the girl replied, voice distant as if lost in thought. She blinked then and gave Harriet a small smile. “I’m sorry for being rude. I’m Elara, and I am starting Hogwarts this year.”

Harriet grinned in return. “I’m Harriet.”

A loud gasp from the store’s manager had Harriet jumping yet again, and the owl on Elara’s arm gave his wings an indignant flap. The mustachioed wizard and the younger witch Harriet had seen chasing the dog were both standing by the blond boy who had come inside, the wizard seemingly in raptures and the witch gushing on.

“—and I wasn’t even supposed to come in today, it was supposed to be Maggie, it was—.”

“—the wife won’t even believe me when I tell her—.”

“—Morgana’s knickers, if I can’t even believe it, Belinda’s going to be over the moon. Wait until I tell Maggie—.”

“—the Boy Who Lived, in my shop!”

Oh, Harriet thought as she stared at the boy who was no older than herself. Youth still clung to the round cheeks of his face and the wide grin he plastered on didn’t quite reach his eyes, but his posture oozed easy confidence and he had a cocky set to his jaw, chin tipped up and one hand propped on his hip like he practiced the pose in the mirror.

“Can we have your autograph, Mr. Longbottom? Oh, it would just be such a treat for Belinda—.”

The boy gave a slight nod, still smiling, and said, “Of course, sir.”

That ugly seed of resentment still rattled about in Harriet’s middle as she looked at Neville Longbottom and she squashed the emotion, feeling small and ugly herself for that bitter voice in the back of her head. He took the quill and parchment proffered to him by the wizard and signed his name with a flourish.

Elara watched the scene, the frown once more set on her face. The witch and wizard continued to prattle on and on.

“We should get him some owl treats,” Harriet said, wanting to do something besides stand there like a numpty with her stomach full of spiderwebs. “And a cage. I saw some over here….”

Harriet and Elara ventured deeper into the store again and Elara lifted the owl to her shoulder so she could lower her arm. She grabbed a cage off a rack and Harriet sussed out a package of owl treats from behind a bag of lime green fish food.

“Do you reckon he’ll like these?” Harriet asked as they started toward the front of the store with the purchases in hand. Elara was rather quiet and Harriet hoped she wasn’t bugging the other girl. She tended to be a chatty when nervous. “I mean, I don’t know if they come in different flavors or anything. Mrs Figg used to babysit me, and she had all these cats and said they each liked a different kind of canned food—.”

They almost bumped into Neville Longbottom coming out of the aisle. Both girls took a step back and Harriet suppressed a grimace.

“Sorry about that,” he said with another quick grin. He looked between Elara and Harriet, then asked, “You don’t want autographs, do you?”

It was the awkward sort of question Harriet could’ve never asked with that level of aplomb, but Neville pulled it off as if he did so regularly—which he probably did, considering his level of celebrity. “Er,” Harriet said, fiddling with corner of the owl treats bag until it frazzled. Shoot. “No thanks…?”

He blinked, taken aback, like no one had ever turned down an autograph from the Boy Who Lived before. The more Harriet thought on it, the sillier the name sounded. He was the Boy Who Lived and everyone else was the People Who Died or the People Who Are Just Grateful A Murderer Isn’t Hanging About Anymore.

Neville didn’t look as surefooted as he had a few minutes ago. He acted as if Harriet had gone wildly off script and now he had to improvise.

“If you’ll excuse us,” Elara said, breaking the awkward silence. “We have somewhere to be.”

“Sure, uh—.”

Elara stepped around the boy, keeping a polite distance despite the abruptness of her exit, and Harriet scuttled after her. She was grateful for the excuse to leave Neville behind and would have thanked the other girl, had Elara seemed remotely interested in being thanked. The wizard behind the register was still exchanging excited whispers with his assistant, so Elara had to clear her throat to get his attention as she set the ungainly cage on the counter and urged the great horned owl inside of it.

Miffed, the wizard gave Elara her total, and instead of reaching for her purse, the girl asked to borrow the wizard’s quill and used it to write something down inside that notebook she’d been carrying since Harriet first saw her. Harriet watched as Elara carefully detached a slip of parchment from the binding, and the inked numbers on the slip glowed for a second before the parchment vanished, only to be replaced by a small pile of gleaming Galleons.

“Wicked!” Harriet said. “And here I’ve been lugging about all those bloody coins. It’s like checks!”

“A bit,” Elara admitted as she accepted the cage with her owl and the wizard shrunk the treats down so they could fit inside her pocket. “My guardian showed them to me.”

The wizard dressed in maroon robes opened the door and helped them through the crowd standing just outside. The throng had multiplied in the past several minutes. They called Longbottom’s name and were disappointed when two girls came out instead. Harriet wondered how Neville dealt with popularity like that. She had difficulty with simple conversation, let alone being some kind of international idol.

“It was really nice to meet you,” Harriet said to Elara once they broke out of the milling bodies and began to part ways. The other girl seemed to be headed back toward the Leaky Cauldron while Harriet wanted to return to Gringotts and see about getting one of those nifty checkbooks. Maybe she could bribe Griphook into saying ‘happy birthday.’

“You as well.” Elara turned to leave—then paused, facing Harriet once more with a determined expression. She jostled the owl about and extended a hand.

Smiling, Harriet offered her own hand and they shook. Is this what it’s like to have a friend? Harriet didn’t know, but excitement unfurled in her belly at the prospect of finding out. Elara departed then, and Harriet called after her with a happy wave.

“See you at Hogwarts!”

Chapter 11: snake thief

Chapter Text

xi. snake thief

 

All in all, the life and future of Harriet Potter looked brighter than they ever had before.

Others may have thought her birthday a miserable event. Other little girls received presents or had parties to which their friends were all invited, cards were sent by relatives who lived too far away, and they would blow out the candles atop their cake before the wax could melt. While Harriet had none of that, she did have cake flavored ice-cream at Florean Fortescue’s, chatted with a magical snake, and even met another girl who was about her age. She wasn’t smacked for burning breakfast, wasn’t given an extra long list of chores, and wasn’t shoved in a spidery cupboard under a set of stairs.

It was, in Harriet’s opinion, the best birthday ever.

She returned to her room after having a hearty dinner down in the pub—and was almost instantly assaulted by a shrieking ball of feathers. “Ouch! Alright—ouch!” Harriet snapped as she caught the owl. It beat its gray wings against her head as she tried to untangle the crinkled letter from about its leg and, when the string finally came loose, the barmy bird rocketed away with a final shriek, clipping the sill as it sailed out the open window and into the encroaching night.

“What was that for?!” Harriet demanded of the retreating owl, rubbing her cuffed ear as she scowled at the feathers scattered on the floor. Shutting the door and adjusting her glasses, Harriet examined the letter—then let out a soft sound of exclamation when she recognized the swirling green script. It was a letter from Hogwarts, not that she expected anyone else to write to her. She tore through the seal and pulled out the missive, something heavier than parchment slipping through her fingers to fall like the owl’s lost feathers on the floor.

“’Dear Miss Potter,’” she read aloud. “’Thank you for your reply. We look forward to having you join us here at Hogwarts. Enclosed is your ticket for the train that departs from Platform Nine and Three-Quarters, King’s Cross Station, at precisely eleven on September first.’ Three-quarters?” Harriet muttered under her breath, brow furrowed. What did she mean by that? “’Wishing you many happy returns on your birthday, Deputy Headmistress McGonagall.’” Harriet blinked. “Hey, she knows it’s my birthday!”

Of course, no one answered her, but Harriet was pleased nonetheless. Harriet couldn’t remember ever being wished a happy birthday sincerely. Dudley would sometimes shout “Happy birthday!” before punching her in the arm or pulling her hair, but Harriet didn’t count that. She tucked the letter back into its envelope and knelt to pick up the ticket, testing the thick edges of the cardstock as she saw for certain that she was expected to board the Hogwarts Express from Platform Nine and Three-Quarters on the first.

“Well that’s helpful.” Rolling her eyes, she tucked the ticket into the new Galleon register she’d gotten from Gringotts earlier that day, setting it aside on the wobbly table. Harriet heaved a sigh and peered out the window toward the lights of London—Muggle London, that is. She saw how the air appeared to ripple and warp with color, like sunshine on an opal, and how it seemed to redirect and turn the train tracks away from the magic alley behind the crooked pub. Everything in her view was spotty because of magic and how it came into contact with the mundane. Harriet couldn’t help but stare at those odd anomalies. She thought they were pretty.

Sss…Missstressss….”

Startled, Harriet spun in place, expecting to find someone behind her, but there was no one. The room remained empty aside from herself and her shadow, though she didn’t know if Set was still there. Movement from the hearth caught Harriet’s eye and, breath held, she watched as a familiar head poked up from the side of the armchair.

Missstresss.”

W-what are you doing here?!” Harriet sputtered as the Horned Serpent uncoiled himself and came nearer. His black scales flashed and sparkled in the gas lamps when he moved.

You are my Missstresss, little Ssspeaker.”

Yes, I bloody well heard you,” Harriet swore as the snake rose and swayed at her eye level. At least she knew why the owl had been panicking. “How did you get out of your cage?!

They cannot keep me from you.” If snakes could shrug, Harriet bet her very last quid—or, well, Knut—that the snake in front of her would have done so. “Humansss are easssily fooled.”

They’re also going to think I stole you!” Harriet threw her hands into the air, irked and more than a little unsettled. Did the store owner know the ‘highly venomous’ snake in his collection could slip his containment whenever he fancied? “We have to go back!

Livius let out a long stream of nonsensical hisses and Harriet yelped when she felt cool, dry scales flowing over her legs. She jumped, aiming to free herself, but the serpent wound his tail around her ankles and Harriet toppled onto her backside with a loud “Oof!” Her head narrowly missed the edge of the table.

We will not go back,” Livius said as he came face to face with Harriet again and his violet tongue flicked in and out. “Foolisssh Ssspeaker.”

Oh, that’s nice,” Harriet said, voice testy. She gave his coils a shove but they only tightened. “Calling me foolish when all I want to do is get to school without being bloody arrested first!

What isss arresssted?” Livius asked. Harriet paused in her mounting tirade to study the serpent. Can snakes lie? Harriet didn’t think so—at least, not before she met Livius, who was much smarter than the little mundane snakes who hung around Privet Drive. Really, it would figure even the snakes were dumb in Little Whinging.

It’s where they put you in a cage and don’t let you out,” Harriet explained. Livius hissed.

No cagesss. No cagesss for you, no cagesss for me.”

Suddenly, the sapphire on Livius’ brow sparked—and the serpent vanished. Harriet yelped and Livius gave his coils another squeeze so she could feel them still looped about her ankles and calves. He hadn’t vanished; was invisible!

The serpent returned, blinking into view without a sound, gone and then not, quick as could be. Like magic. “Bloody hell,” Harriet whispered as she raised a tentative hand and brought it out to touch his head. Livius butted his nose against her fingertips in approval. Honestly, she had no clue how to go about returning a rather large snake to the Menagerie, especially if he didn’t want to go. The mustachioed wizard at the counter hadn’t been very nice, and Harriet had no doubt she’d be blamed for the Horner Serpent’s escape if she came skipping in with him slung about her neck. Did wizards have the equivalent of a lost and found?

Something Livius had said earlier in the day stuck with Harriet; “I wouldn’t know. I was hatched in this place. The sun is beyond me.”

Sometimes, Harriet felt like she had been born in that stupid boot cupboard, hatched just like Livius and stuffed into the dark like a scaly, terrifying Thing the Dursleys didn’t understand and didn’t want ruining their furniture—but at least she knew what the sun was like, knew enough to love and miss it.

She touched his nose, then the gem atop his head, marveling at the heat of it beneath her touch. “I’m going to call you Livi,” Harriet decided with a nod. She had no clue what he ate, but she surmised Livi would make sure she knew.

His tongue flicked at faster speeds. “Do not likesss,” he hissed, displeasure plain in the harsh rasp of his tone.

Livius is too snooty.

What isss sssnooty?

You. You’re snooty.”

The serpent unwound his tail with a huff of air and slithered over to the bed, which he promptly hid beneath for a good sulking. Harriet saw Set swirl beneath her feet, amused.

Sitting on the floor with a sore backside, watching a serpent pout while her shadow laughed, Harriet decided that though she may never be normal, she was more than okay with being odd. She couldn’t wait for September to begin.

Chapter 12: not slytherin

Chapter Text

xii. not slytherin

 

King’s Cross buzzed with noise like an active beehive, people hustling in every direction, calling out to loved ones and checking watches or timetables, mothers holding the hands of fussy children while harried travelers ran by. The noise pressed upon Harriet as she stood halfway between Platform Nine and Platform Ten, glaring at a bit of wall.

There was some kind of invisible bubble surrounding the area because the Muggles going about their business avoided the space, turning their heads and bodies away without noticing—which was all well and good, as wizards were not the most subtle of people. Harriet had seen a whole gaggle of red-headed witches and wizards go by pushing trolleys loaded with magical things, and though she had wanted to ask the mother for help, Harriet had hung back, anxious and perspiring, until it was too late.

She’d observed several people slip through the bloody wall now and she guessed it was where the Platform was—but what if it was more difficult than it appeared? What if there was a password or some kind of secret phrase or look or spell? Harriet thought she might literally sink into a puddle of her own embarrassment if she cracked her head on the bricks by running full on at a wall.

Well, she thought as she gave Livi’s head a gentle rub through the fabric of her shirt. The serpent had wrapped himself about her torso, comfortable as could be, and was disinclined to leave. Harriet’s blouse was loose enough to accommodate him and he stayed invisible while in public at her request. She simply appeared a tad lumpier. I haven’t come this far to fail now. Here goes nothing.

Tightening her grip on the handle of her trunk, Harriet set a brisk pace and aimed for the wall. She came closer, ten steps away, eight, five—she shut her eyes and threw out a hand, almost certain it’d collide with bricks—but Harriet felt nothing. She just kept walking, and walking, until she did collide with something, though it was much softer than a wall.

“Watch yourself!” the wizard said in gentle reprimand as he gripped Harriet’s shoulder to steady her. Harriet blinked at him—then whipped about to face the barrier behind her. It stood brazen and solid as ever, which meant not very solid at all, apparently. I did it! There was nothing to worry about!

A scarlet steam engine puffed plumes of white as it idled on the tracks. Families crowded the platform, parents with their arms wrapped around their children, children desperately trying to escape their cooing ministrations. Owls shrieked in their cages, cats tried to evade their owners, and one boy with dreadlocks had a box with a tarantula hidden inside, and spectators gathered to stare and squeal. Not being overfond of spiders after a childhood stuck in the dark with them, Harriet gave the boy and his pet a wide berth.

Some students struggled to boost their heavy trunks that final step from the platform to the train itself, so Harriet paused to help one of those red-heads she’d seen earlier heft his luggage up onto the steps, then went off to find a seat. Harriet’s dithering in the station meant most of the compartments had already filled and many students had thrown their Hogwarts robes on over their Muggle attire. She felt a mite too shy to intrude where the older kids were already happily chatting away, so Harriet continued along the train in hopes of finding an empty compartment, or one with other first years like herself.

Luckily, she stumbled upon the person she’d been looking forward to seeing again.

“Elara!” Harriet chirped, surprising the taller girl out of her reading. She was looking over a journal, and not one very well-written if her squinting was anything to go by. Next to her on the seat rested a covered owl cage, but the compartment was otherwise empty. “Is—is that bench taken?”

“Hello, Harriet,” Elara said with half a smile. “No, it’s free. Go on.”

“Thanks.” She pulled her trunk over the threshold and let the door slide shut on its own. Elara set the journal aside to help Harriet heft her trunk into the rack overhead, not because it was heavy, but because the bloody thing was almost the same size as Harriet herself and levering it over her head could be tricky. “Thanks,” she muttered again. They settled in their seats.

The crowd began to thin on the station as students got on the train and some parents went on their way. Harriet saw that red-headed family again, or at least the mother and the daughter, the latter clinging tearfully to her mother’s skirts as she waved at her brothers. Harriet thought that was nice—well, not the crying, but that the girl would miss her siblings, that she hated to see them go. The closest Harriet had to a sibling was Dudley, and he’d sooner throw Harriet onto the tracks than wish her well.

By unlucky chance, Harriet glanced toward the far end of the platform and saw a group revolving around a trio crossing toward the train. She recognized Neville Longbottom and fought against a grimace. He followed his dad—a taller wizard with prominent ears and an argyle sweater under his maroon robes—and a blond witch who had her arm linked through Mr Longbottom’s. Harriet remembered reading that Neville’s mum had been killed, so she guessed Mr Longbottom eventually remarried.

That ugly feeling in Harriet’s middle twisted itself into painful knots as the blond witch smoothed Neville’s already tidy hair and he shooed her away, grinning. The crowd cheered when he stepped off the platform.

Harriet ground her teeth.

Elara kept reading and didn’t appear up for conversation. Where were her parents? She’d mentioned a “guardian,” Harriet recalled, at the Menagerie. Maybe her family had died in the war, too. The Wizarding world had an awful lot of orphans.

The train set on its journey, releasing a final mournful whistle that echoed into the distance as the wheels turned and the station faded. Those opalescent distortions Harriet had first noted at the Leaky Cauldron happened here, too, where the mundane and magical collided, pushing back the Muggle world to let just a thin sliver of the magical one exist, hiding the tracks and the steam engine from Muggle eyes. Staring out the window, Harriet felt like they were traveling through a great soap bubble, one that didn’t burst until they were well away from the city proper.

Harriet fiddled with her sleeves and with her glasses and with the snake napping under her clothes, then pulled out her own book from the satchel looped about her neck. She didn’t really want to read, so she just pretended to thumb through the pages of Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, pausing whenever one of the sketched images caught her attention.

London disappeared soon enough, dwindling as if it’d never been, and Harriet couldn’t seem to tear her eyes away from the shifting scenery as her heart flip-flopped in her chest. The Dursleys never took her anywhere, not even to London, so Harriet couldn’t recall a time when she’d ever been this far away from home. Of course, Harriet also didn’t have a home now. She was on her way to school, and when summer rolled about again in ten months, she would have to figure out where to go from there.

The compartment door slid open and a bushy-haired girl slipped inside. She slammed the door closed again as she ducked down on the floor, alarming Harriet and earning a raised brow from her silent companion. Harriet met the girl’s brown eyes and a jolt of recognition went through her; this was Hermione Granger, who she met briefly in Madam Malkin’s.

Hermione lifted a finger to her lips in a universal plea for silence.

A minute later, a familiar blond boy went sauntering by with two larger counterparts far too reminiscent of Dudley. Draco, as she remembered his name, glanced inside their compartment and missed Hermione sitting crouched below the window, so he simply sneered at Harriet before moving on.

“Thank goodness,” Hermione breathed, standing. She straightened the hem of her skirt and pulled on the shade’s cord, bringing it down to hide the outer corridor from view. She’d already changed into her school robes. “I’m terribly sorry for barging in like that—oh but you’re Harriet! We met at Diagon Alley!” Hermione’s relief became more genuine as she sat on the seat next to Harriet and extended her hand. “I’m Hermione Granger, if you don’t recall.”

“Hi, Hermione. It’s nice to see you.” They shook hands. Harriet was pleased to meet her again, as Hermione seemed far more enthusiastic about her presence than Elara did. “Was that your, er, brother?”

Hermione glanced at the door over her shoulder before shaking her head. “No, definitely not. I’m just being fostered by his family.”

“Doesn’t—doesn’t that make him your foster brother, then?” Harriet asked, confused. She’d known a few foster children in primary and they’d been almost as bullied as Harriet had been.

“Don’t be silly. I’m Muggle-born.” Hermione gave Harriet a funny look. “I thought you were Muggle-born too?”

Harriet didn’t know what being Muggle-born had to do with fostering, though after a month of listening to conversations in the Wizarding quarter, she knew she wasn’t Muggle-born herself, even if Lily had been a Muggle like her Aunt Petunia. “Uh,” Harriet said, trying to change the conversation. “This—this is Elara! Elara, this is Hermione.”

Thankfully, Elara lowered the journal to grant Hermione a small smile and a nod. “Nice to meet you.”

“Likewise.”

Hermione turned her gaze back to Harriet, obviously expecting an answer to her question. Harriet cursed in her head. “Well, my dad was a wizard,” she said slowly. “But I was raised with relatives who didn’t like him all that much, so I never learned a lot about him or my mum. What about you? Did…did something happen to your parents? You don’t have to talk about it if it did. I’m just being nosy.”

“No, my parents are perfectly fine.” A furrow appeared between Hermione’s brow as she bit her lower lip. “There’s a law, you see. The Muggle-born Protection Act of 1982, or the ‘MPA’. I didn’t realize there were witches or wizards who didn’t know about it.”

“What’s the law do?”

“It—well, in simple terms, it says Muggle-borns who accept a place at Hogwarts must leave the Muggle world and be fostered by a proper Wizarding family.”

Harriet blinked, then gawked when the full implication of Hermione’s words bowled her over. “D’you mean they took you away from your parents?!”

“No! No, of course not,” Hermione said with a harried huff. “I chose to leave—and I get to spend time with them over the winter holidays, so that’s…something. Really, the MPA is a good thing. It was contested when it first came out, the war having just ended, but tensions with the Muggle-world were high in the wake of You-Know-Who’s atrocities, and the Ministry decided that children who presented with magical abilities would be safer among their own—own kind, and statistically speaking there’s been a fifty-three percent reduction in Muggle-on-wizard violence since the last report in the seventies—.”

Hermione went on in this vein for a time, and though she had all kinds of information to back up the ‘efficacy’—a word Harriet knew she’d have to look up later—of the MPA law, she sounded as if she were trying to convince herself as well as Harriet. Harriet was uncertain. It seemed horrifying, being taken away from one’s parents, but what the bloody hell did she know about parents? What if there were mums and dads out there who treated their magical kids like Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon treated Harriet? Didn’t they deserve a chance to escape that?

It didn’t sit right with her. Harriet thought of her own mum and dad and longed to know what they would have said, what they were like.

Hermione and Harriet chatted together until a witch pushing a trolley of food stopped by and they bought lunch, the conversation lulling. Hermione took one look at the display of sweets and stuck up her nose, muttering about her parents being dentists, while Harriet got some of everything and Elara took two Cauldron Cakes after giving the treats a dubious stare.

Truly, Harriet was again reminded of how splendid magic was when she ripped open a Chocolate Frog package only for the frog to leap free. Elara caught the escapee with little effort, proving she wasn’t quite as distant as she appeared. They both sampled a few beans from the box of Bertie Bott’s —until they bit into something foul and promptly shoved the box aside. Harriet entertained herself with the sugary trove while Hermione unfurled a copy of the Daily Prophet and read. The occasional rustle of a turning page broke the silence.

“Hmm…they still haven’t found that rare Horned Serpent that went missing from the Magical Menagerie.”

Harriet choked on a frog’s leg and started coughing. On the other bench, Elara glanced up from the journal and gave Harriet a curious look.

“That’s, ah, interesting.” Beneath her shirt, the snake in question shifted in his sleep. “Hermione—speaking of Diagon, what were you talking about with Draco at Madam Malkin’s? If you don’t mind me asking?”

Hermione wrinkled her nose at the mention of the pale blond. “The Hogwarts Houses,” she replied, tone crisp. “Did you ever learn more about them?”

“I did! I read ‘Hogwarts: A History’ like you said—or, at least some of it.” The book contained an equal measure of fascinating information and tedious facts. Really, there was only so much Harriet wanted to know about sediment analyses or plumbing updates throughout the centuries.

A bright smile broke over Hermione’s face. “Isn’t it just so interesting? I’ve read it cover to cover twice now—but never mind that. You said you read about the Houses. Which do you think you’ll be in?”

“I’m not sure,” Harriet admitted. “The book talked a lot about being ambitious or witty or courageous or hardworking, and I don’t think I’m any of those, really.”

Hermione nodded along in thought. “Well, no one knows for certain where they’ll be until they arrive. There’s a ceremony that Sorts incoming students, but I couldn’t find any information on how the Sorting occurs exactly. I’ve been told it’s ‘meant to be a surprise.’”

Nervous, Harriet prayed there wasn’t a test waiting for her the moment she stepped foot into the school. She’d tried to read her textbooks, but the sheer flood of information Harriet had been forced to assimilate was mind-numbing. What if they asked her to do magic? Would she be able to?

“I think Ravenclaw would be excellent,” Hermione said. “Or Gryffindor. Both are my top choices—but as I was telling Draco, none of the Houses are truly superior to any other. Ravenclaws are known for being bookish, and I know I’m a bit bookish myself—.” Hermione’s cheek colored. “—so that’s where I’ll most likely end up, even though I’d love to be a Gryffindor. Being a Hufflepuff would be nice, too.” She paused. “But not Slytherin. No, not Slytherin.”

Harriet frowned as she tried to remember all that she’d read about the Houses. “What’s wrong with Slytherin?”

“Nothing,” Hermione said in a voice that meant everything. “Nothing at all. It’s a perfectly respectable House. I just…the Malfoys have all been Slytherins since they first started attending the school, and Draco will most certainly follow his family’s legacy. I don’t think I could stand having to stay in the same dormitories as him.”

“That’s a bit silly,” Elara commented. Having been quiet for most of the journey, her sudden input startled Hermione. “Allowing one person to sully an entire House for you.”

“It’s not that alone,” Hermione replied, red darkening her face again. “It’s—I don’t believe I would be a good fit for Slytherin, that’s all!”

Unimpressed, Elara replied with a simple “Hmm,” and lowered her attention to the journal again. Hermione opened her mouth to argue—when a voice echoed through the train compartments.

We will be arriving at the Hogsmeade Station within a half hour. Students are reminded to leave their pets and luggage on board, and to change into their uniforms before disembarking.”

Harriet let out a relieved breath and stood, shuffling through her satchel to find the robes she’d stashed in there. She and Elara both changed while Hermione disappeared behind the newspaper again, grumbling. Nervous excitement bubbled in Harriet’s chest once she sat and looked out the window at the darkening horizon. How many hours had passed? A half dozen, at least. Across from her, Elara finally tucked her reading away. She pulled on her sleeves until they mostly covered her hands.

The train slowed until it stopped, brakes squealing, white plumes drifting by the window, and sound in the outer corridor doubled. Harriet gave her middle a pat to make certain Livi remained in place as she rose and tucked her satchel with her trunk. Hermione lifted the window’s shade, peeking into the corridor. A group of older students with robes trimmed in blue passed, and Hermione shoved the door open. “Let’s hurry, shall we?”

Hermione obviously wished to avoid Draco, so Harriet went along with her. She glanced behind her to see Elara following with the same impassive expression she’d worn all afternoon, though she didn’t let a boisterous boy trimmed in red cut between her and Harriet when he came charging out of his own compartment. Harriet heard the whispers again, Longbottom’s name caught on every tongue, people standing on tip top and craning their necks to look about.

No one gave three random girls a second glance.

Outside, the dark closed about them, thick as lamb’s wool, and Harriet gazed at the sky bursting with stars overhead. The vastness of the revealed universe reminded Harriet how very small she was, how truly insignificant. While some despaired at being so negligible, Harriet thought it freeing. She was but one leaf on a towering tree where a thousand leaves had grown before, and no matter how alone she felt, others had been in her shoes before, staring at that sky, and someone always would be.

Hermione jostled Harriet’s arm to hurry her along.

“Firs’ years! Firs’ years! This way, Firs’ years!”

A giant of a man loomed above the milling students with a lit lantern in his massive hand. At his side stood another adult, a sour-faced, bespectacled wizard with broad shoulders and hair so light it appeared transparent. “Be swift, now. Allow the incoming first years passage—yes that means you, Mr Leovitch. Out of the way—.”

Harriet started to fidget again, patting Livi or her wand tucked into the new leather brace on her wrist. The breeze sighed through the eerie wood surrounding the station, and Harriet swore she saw the gleam of eyes watching them. The older students hurried to the platform’s end where a line of carriages drawn by skeletal horses waited.

“That all o’ you lot?” the giant boomed as he swung his lantern about and almost clipped his companion in the head. “Alright then. This way!”

They started along a steep path into the woods, stumbling in the dark on the narrow slip of gravel and stone, their tremulous voices vibrating with excitement and trepidation. At the path’s end rested the shore of a great, still lake—and on the cliff’s edge across the water waited an ancient castle comprised of Saxon turrets and Gothic spires, a sleeping dragon with stone spines sprawled upon the hill, waiting for them to come nearer. Harriet wasn’t the only one to gasp.

Hogwarts. I’m really here. It’s real.

“Only four to a boat, lest you want to capsize before you even get to the school!” the older wizard called. Harriet hadn’t noticed the small fleet of boats resting on the shore at first. Harriet clamored in after Hermione and Elara—and they were swiftly joined by Draco, who almost shoved Harriet headfirst into the lake when he jumped into the boat as well.

“Granger,” he said, snide. “Have a nice train ride with your Mudblood pals?”

Hermione glowered at the boy and didn’t answer.

The boats jerked into motion. Harriet held on with both hands and Livi tightened his coils, stirring beneath the rippling cover her robes, his voice rising in a hiss barely audible above the smooth lapping of the lake’s water against the bow.

We are almossst there?

Soon,” Harriet replied into her collar, earning a bewildered look from Elara. It always sounded like English to Harriet, but she knew from experiences with Dudley creeping up on her that her conversations with snakes came out in odd, rasping hisses.

They docked at a small harbor carved through the solid rock of the cliff’s face, where the shifting water echoed and the smell of algae thickened in their noses. The shorter wizard urged them out of the boats and up a flight of stone steps illuminated by torchlight. The stairs led their whispering group up to the hill’s crest, then across a lawn speckled in evening dew, the castle glittering overhead as it watched the first years approach.

This is home now, Harriet thought. She was caught in the wonder and mystique, gliding with the others by touch alone, unable to look away. This is going to be my home for the next seven years.

Ahead waited the great black doors leading into the castle proper. The bespectacled wizard lifted a hand and knocked.

Chapter 13: in your head

Chapter Text

xiii. in your head

 

Minerva led them inside, a tail of slack-jawed miscreants who walked before the inquisitive attention of the student body and stared at the ceiling, the candles, and the High Table with its stern array of waiting professors. They watched with their eyes wide open and unblinking.

Severus watched them too, his fingers tapping a soundless rhythm against his thigh.

He found the faces he knew first. Picking out the spawn of his associates proved a simple feat, even when Severus hadn’t seen some of their number in years. Parkinson and Goyle, Crabbe and Nott, and of course Lucius’ boy. There were others. He knew they slunk among their number even now, innocent faces and innocent soul who would be lulled by the Dark no matter how hard Severus or Albus or any of their professors tried to push them away. The latest passel of Death Eaters had arrived, but the question remained; who would they serve?

Severus lowered his gaze to the table and exhaled.

Merlin, he was tired.

Minerva set the Sorting Hat upon the stool, and it began to sing.

 

_____

 

The last of the song died away amid generous applause.

Elara wrung her hands as the stern witch in square glasses started to call out names. It was happening too quickly—far, far too quickly. Her name was high in the alphabet, it was only a matter of time—.

She had learned much about her family in the past month. Too much.

“Black, Elara!”

The call stirred whispers in the hall like small bodies thrashing in the underbrush, animal eyes gleaming through the dark.

Black?” they hissed.

I thought they were all dead.

Do you think she’s related to—?

She has to be—.”

He was the last one alive—.”

Madman’s daughter—.”

Elara forced herself to walk because she couldn’t just stand there. The stool was hard beneath her when she sat and she averted her eyes from the students, allowing McGonagall to drop the Hat over her head, plunging her into darkness.

It was only a matter of time before it was discovered, Elara thought, miserable. I wonder if they’ll kick me out before the end of the week.

I wouldn’t be so sure. We’re not accustomed to judging children by the sins of their fathers here at Hogwarts.”

The sly voice speaking in Elara’s ear spooked her, but she remained still, terrified.

You’re not mad. I’m just the Sorting Hat!

Oh, Elara thought. Oh, how stupid of me—.

You’ve a sharp mind,” the Sorting Hat said, cutting off her self-effacing comments. “But the joy of learning for learning’s sake has been stripped from you, hasn’t it? My, what wretched things some people are capable of. You haven’t the heart for Hufflepuff, too brittle now for kindness, a breath away from shattering—.”

Elara flamed at the idea of being brittle. Nearby, a goblet shattered and a professor complained. The Hat chuckled.

Yes, yes, I can see all that in your head, you know. It doesn’t sit well with you, weakness. Your pride, your desire to reclaim identity from the travesties your family has committed—oh yes. I’ll send you on to achieve your goals. Better be, SLYTHERIN!”

 

_____

 

Hermione forced her foot to stop tapping and told herself to calm down, only for her foot to disobey and start tapping again.

A dreadful habit, her mother called it. It’s very pushy, dear.

Hermione hated being called pushy.

“Granger, Hermione!”

She saw Malfoy sneer from the corner of her eye where he stood with his mountainous friends. Behind her, Harriet whispered “Good luck!” and Hermione felt lighter, fighting not to smile like a loon as she came forward to take her place. A friend. Harriet was a friend, wasn’t she? Hermione had never had one before.

The Hat came down over eyes and blacked out the world.

Hmm...” muttered a small voice. “I sense you’ll be a challenge, girl. You don’t live life in half-measures, do you? Nerve and cunning, loyalty and wit—but what shines above the rest?

A rush of thoughts went through Hermione’s head, a whirlwind of questions and ideas, things she wanted to ask the Hat and things she wanted to research later. What kind of magic could be put in a bit of cloth to make it read someone’s mind? That sounded like the rare, inexplicable things Hermione wanted to understand and master.

“I’m not just any bit of cloth,” the Hat countered. “There’s ambition in you—great, great ambition. You want to be the greatest witch of your age? Well I know just where to put you—.”

No, Hermione suddenly thought, swallowing. No, not Slytherin.

Not Slytherin? Why ever not?

Images of Draco filled her head, of Mr and Mrs Malfoy, of their scornful faces and passive aggressive moods. Mudbloods don’t go to Slytherin, Draco had said. You’d best stay with the rest of the duffers!

Then she remembered that girl, Elara, and what she said on the train. “That’s a bit silly, allowing one person to sully an entire House for you.”

She’s right, you know,” the Hat commented. “I see it all here, in your head. You want to be more than witty or brave or hardworking. Slytherin will lead you to greatness—but not if you let the actions of someone else hold you back. A boy’s words can be cruel, a man’s actions crueler, yet they only have power if you allow yourself to be swayed by it.

Hermione didn’t want to be held back, didn’t want to be swayed. No, she’d left behind too much, had sworn she’d do too much, to be hampered by the likes of Draco Malfoy. If Slytherin would help her be great and take her to the top of her ability, then Hermione wasn’t going to let him take that from her.

Better be—SLYTHERIN!”

 

_____

 

“Longbottom, Neville!”

He was used to the muttering, of course. Used to the crying and the whispering and the incessant handshaking, had kissed his fair share of babies and had signed his name so many times his signature looked like it belonged to someone twice his age. He’d gotten used to it all a long time ago. He couldn’t remember a time when that cocky grin and quick wink hadn’t been an instant reaction for him.

Sometimes Neville really hated himself.

The Boy Who Lived. Really, Neville wasn’t one to complain; he got to travel all over the world, train with some of the best wizards in their fields, meet interesting people. He didn’t know how he’d done it, but something in him had killed Voldemort, hadn’t it? He wanted to find that, make it the best it could be. The crowds could get frustrating, though. The touching, the role modeling.

Neville wondered what his life would be like if Voldemort hadn’t hunted his family down. He wondered what would have happened had both his parents died; Grandma Augusta and Great Uncle Algie could be real ball-busters, and Neville didn’t want to imagine what life would be like with them full-time.

The Hat came down on his head and he thought, Gryffindor.

The Hat said, “You’d do well in Hufflepuff. Your life is built on falsity. The House of Badgers would help you heal.

But Neville wasn’t listening. He rarely listened to anything he didn’t want to hear. Gryffindor, he thought again.

And so the Hat sighed. “Better be—GRYFFINDOR!”

The table of crimson and gold exploded.

 

_____

 

“Malfoy, Draco!”

He could barely hear his own name over the wretched sound of the Gryffindors cheering. Bloody Longbottom, Draco seethed as he marched to the dais and the waiting stool. Longbottom the Loser.

Draco knew exactly what he wanted. There had never been a question in his mind or in his heart; he would make his mother and father proud. He wouldn’t be outdone by stupid Mudbloods or blood-traitors or gits like Longbottom. He was a Malfoy! He was a Slytherin. He had always been a Slytherin.

The Hat knew it, too, because the mangy things barely brushed Draco’s hair before screaming—

“SLYTHERIN!”

 

_____

 

There weren’t many people left and Harriet swallowed her nerves, thinking of all the dreadful hypothetical things that could occur once she took her place on the stool. Had anyone ever been denied entrance? Harriet was sure if it was at all possible it would happen to her.

“Potter, Harriet!”

The Great Hall still rang with excitement over Neville Longbottom’s Sorting, so hardly anyone heard Harriet’s name being called, and fewer cared. A pale, dark-haired professor at the far end of the staff table stiffened, and the Headmaster in all his aged splendor gave an encouraging smile as Harriet slipped to the front of the scant group. Taking a deep breath, she adjusted her glasses and mounted the dais.

Professor McGonagall smiled slightly as Harriet sat—and the girl prayed to whatever deity listened to ragamuffin witchy runaways that Livi didn’t suddenly decide to come slithering out of her clothes. That would be embarrassing, and hard to explain.

The Hat almost swallowed Harriet’s head when it came down, and she held her breath.

Well, well…isn’t that curious.”

What’s curious? Harriet asked, because of all the odd things that had occurred in her life, a hat that could talk in her head wasn’t too terribly surprising.

You’re curious, Miss Potter. Everything in your head.”

I’m weird, aren’t I? she thought with a dejected sigh. I’m a fr—. No, she wouldn’t say that word, wouldn’t even think it, because the Dursleys were hundreds of miles away and Harriet would never have anything to with them again. She didn’t need them. She could survive on her own.

The Hat chuckled. “You DO sound a great deal like a Gryffindor. I wonder, though….

Gryffindor? She shifted the Hat’s brim to peek over at the House in question, at the students still clamoring to get a good look at the Boy Who Lived now trimmed in red and gold. She looked at Neville and resentment smoldered in her gut, just waiting for a fresh blast of air to leap into an inferno. The boy who got to keep his family. The boy who got fame and probably a legion of friends. Harriet doubted he had to live in a cupboard after his mum died. The bold and brave found homes in Gryffindor—but Harriet felt neither bold, nor brave. She felt petty and foolish. She wasn’t worthy of Gryffindor, not really. She wanted to prove herself better than she was, better than that sharp sting in the back of her eyes. Harriet wanted to go where she could make her parents proud of the witch she would become.

Not Gryffindor, eh? Better be—SLYTHERIN!”

Harriet rose, heart pounding, and all but yanked the Hat off of her head. She handed it to Professor McGonagall with a quiet word of thanks and rushed off the dais. She plopped onto the first seat she could find, which just so happened to be between Elara and a fifth year Slytherin who would later introduced herself as Gemma Farley. Sitting across the table, Hermione grinned at Harriet.

Elara had gone quite pale and only nodded meekly at Harriet’s greeting.

The Sorting came to an end after Weasley—who Malfoy had sneered at in the entrance hall—went to Gryffindor and Blaise Zabini came to Slytherin. Professor McGonagall rolled up her list, picked up the stool and the Hat, and proceeded out of the Great Hall. The Headmaster—Dumbledore, Harriet reminded herself, thinking back to the header on her Hogwarts letter—stood, the voluminous material of his crimson robes rippling like fire when he raised his left hand for silence. Something strange occurred to Harriet as Dumbledore smiled.

“Gemma,” she asked in a soft voice. “Does the Headmaster—is he missing an arm?”

The older girl glanced in Dumbledore’s direction but no shock showed in her expression. “Yes. Happened before I came to Hogwarts, so he’s been like that for awhile.”

The wizard’s warm voice rose above the chatter. “Excellent! It is wonderful to see you all again—or to see you for the first time.” The Headmaster winked behind his half-moon spectacles. “Welcome to Hogwarts! Before we feast, please allow me these few words….Nitwit! Oddment! Blubber! Tweak! Thank you!”

“And yes,” Gemma gamely said when Harriet’s mouth popped open. Dumbledore sat down. “He is a bit mad.”

Harriet giggled and food appeared on the table—great platters and tureens of it, acres of edibles Harriet had only ever sniffed from afar while living with the Dursleys. Her month in the Wizarding quarter, however, had taught Harriet a love for potatoes and gravy, which she ladled onto her plate with unfettered relish. Elara eyed her as Harriet started building a volcano-esque mound and substituting lava with hot, delicious gravy, then snorted.

“Harriet, you really shouldn’t play with your food,” Hermione said, her tone uncertain.

“I’m not playing with it,” Harriet assured her. “I’m going to eat it. Watch.” She did just that.

Ssss….” Dry scales rubbed against Harriet’s skin as Livi, roused by the smell of food, poked his head out through the collar of her robes and almost caused Harriet to dump pumpkin juice in Elara’s lamp. She had forgotten, of course, that the snake was invisible. “I want sssome of that, Misstresss.

Which?” she asked under her breath, covering her mouth with her napkin.

The dead thing before you. It sssmellss delicciousss.

‘The death thing’ was apparently a whole roast beef, which Harriet discreetly sliced the proper sized piece off of to secret away into her napkin, which she laid open on her lap beneath the table so Livi could eat. Normal snakes had particular dietary needs, but she’d learned from her textbooks that Horned Serpents and other magical snakes were freer in their restrictions, as long as they got the proper nutrients. Livi scarfed down his selection and Harriet disguised his pleased hissing with a cough.

She let her attention wander around the Hall, traversing the walls, the columns, up toward the ceiling enchanted to look like the sky, then down along the High Table. The professors ate their food and chatted with one another, each of them more different than the last; the giant sat at one end next to a tiny wizard who could only be as tall as Harriet’s waist, and a woman reminiscent of great glittering dragonfly rambled on to stern and oblivious Professor McGonagall. Headmaster Dumbledore said something to Professor McGonagall with a slight wave of his hand and her lips went so thin they almost disappeared. A younger man in a purple turban flinched so hard when addressed he spilled chutney into his lap.

At the other end of the table, the wizards sat without conversation, quiet and dour as they ate or picked at their plates—and they were all wizards. The man Professor McGonagall had addressed as “Otho” at the castle’s doors occupied the last seat, having slipped in through a side door with the giant earlier. His mouth moved with silent mutterings as he viciously stabbed his pork cutlet and hacked off a piece.

Next to him was a taller, gaunt wizard with pale skin and a prominent nose. Harriet was forcibly reminded of the dated scary movies Dudley would watch on the telly when Aunt Petunia wasn’t home; he seemed shaded in monochrome, with his stark skin, the curtain of black hair coming down to his shoulders, and eyes as black as the deepest, hungriest pits in the earth. Harriet knew that because she sat near enough for their gazes to briefly meet. His face hardened before he looked away.

They last professor didn’t look old enough to be a professor. He appeared barely any older than the eldest students chattering in the halls and was quite handsome, the symmetry of his features really quite striking in Harriet’s opinion—but something of the young wizard didn’t sit right with her, like a voice murmuring in her ear that she couldn’t quite understand, no matter how she tried to listen. His tidy hair gleamed in the candlelight and so did his white teeth when he smiled at the Slytherin table.

Harriet suddenly thought about sharks swimming in the darkest parts of the ocean.

“Gemma,” she asked again, the older girl glancing down. “Who are those professors sitting closest to us?”

Gemma didn’t need to check who Harriet meant. “Those would be the Slytherin professors. At the end there with the light hair, that’s Professor Selwyn. He teaches History of Magic. On his left is Professor Snape, the Potions Master, and on his left is our Head of House, Professor Slytherin.”

“Slytherin?” Harriet parroted. “Did they name the House after him?” But no, that couldn’t be right. Harriet knew that from Hogwarts: A History—and from the glare Hermione threw across the table. Gemma rolled her eyes.

“No. He’s descended from Salazar Slytherin, the House founder.”

“Oh. That’s, er, interesting.”

Dessert was served and though Harriet thought she was stuffed from dinner, she promptly ate far too much ice cream and decided that if they weren’t dismissed soon, she might just fall asleep and spend the night right there at the table. She could use a treacle tart as a pillow. Her plans came to naught when the Headmaster stood again and the platters of sweets vanished without a trace.

“Another wonderful feast! Before you’re seen off to your dormitories and comfortable beds, I must reiterate a few start-of-term policies. The Forbidden Forest on the grounds is, as its name would suggest, forbidden.” Dumbledore chuckled. “As is magic in the corridors between classes, and all joke products purchased from the fine establishments of Gambols and Japes, and Zonko’s. The first Hogsmeade trip for third years and above is scheduled to be in December, and Quidditch trials will be held next week for the respective House teams. Please contact Madam Hooch with any questions. At last, I would inform you that the third-floor corridor on the right-hand side is out of bounds and trespassing will result in a very painful death.”

Sleepy Harriet blinked. Did I just hear him right?

“Bloody hell,” someone farther down the table whispered.

Professor Slytherin continued to smile. Dumbledore seemed to look everywhere but at him.

“Now! Off to bed! Here’s to wishing us all a fun and fulfilling term. You’ve much learning ahead of you all!”

Older kids titled “Prefects” gathered the first years and the student body departed en masse, the resulting babble of noise and jostling bodies doing little to wake Harriet. She felt a hand on her elbow and looked about to see Elara guiding her from the paths of bigger students who probably didn’t even notice they were about to trod on poor short Harriet. Half the school departed in the entrance hall, climbing the sweeping marble steps to the floors above, and the other half took the stairs leading down. The group split again, and the Slytherins delved deeper and deeper, the light disappearing at their backs, torches wavering in shades of yellow and green and blue, the air crisp and heavy in their lungs.

Harriet couldn’t remember the common room. In fact, had anyone asked how she got there in the first place, she couldn’t have told them. All she recalled were floating orbs of emerald light and towering windows that looked out upon the black tide. Harriet laid down, felt blankets shift higher until they covered her and Livi, and heard the water sigh. She dreamt she was a Galleon tucked in a chest that had sunk to the very bottom of the ocean. She listened to the sea and when the hand came to scratch at the chest’s lid, demanding to be let in, she rolled over in her bed of treasure and ignored it.

Chapter 14: house of serpents

Chapter Text

xiv. house of serpents

 

Hermione woke to the sound of groggy cursing.

For the briefest of moments, she thought she was at home—home, as in not with the Malfoys but snuggly tucked into her bed in her Muggle house surrounded by her books with the smell of pancakes drifting down the hall from the kitchen. Then Hermione remembered the train ride, the lake, the Sorting and the feast. She sat up and reached out to jerk the jade hangings aside.

Dark still encumbered the first-year girls’ dormitory, though morning light filtering through the lake outside the windows illuminated the ticking clock set above the student carrells. Hermione squinted at the clock and saw that while early, it was almost time to get up. Harriet knelt on the stone floor by the bed next to Hermione’s, hissing underneath of it for some unfathomable reason.

“Harriet!” Hermione said, and the other girl jumped, banging her head on the bed’s rail.

Bloody hell—.”

“Harriet!” Hermione said again, chiding. “Really. What are you doing?”

“Oh, er, nothing.” Rubbing her head, the girl straightened the bed’s skirt until it lay flat once more. Hermione narrowed her eyes when she thought she saw the cover move, wondering if she should say anything. Was Harriet hiding something? What if it got the rest of her dorm mates in trouble? Hermione had been at Hogwarts for less than a day and she did not want to be in trouble!

Then she looked into Harriet’s smiling face and she bit her tongue, swallowing the building lecture. Right. Don’t be bossy. Don’t be too much. I’m sure it’s nothing.

“Morning, Hermione!” Harriet chirped. She still wore her clothes from the day before, robes wrinkled beyond salvaging, her thin face marked where her glasses must have pressed into the skin. Elara had deposited the exhausted girl in her bed last night, stopping only to remove her shoes and jerk the covers over Harriet. With the collar of Harriet’s shirt stretched and displaced, Hermione could plainly see the rather ghastly scar that originated from her right shoulder. Of course, Hermione didn’t mention the scar to Harriet, thinking the other wouldn’t like having the old injury pointed out in casual conversation. Hermione did wonder how she’d gotten it, though.

“Good morning. You’re up early. Are you excited for classes?”

“Yeah,” Harriet agreed with a nod. “You?”

“Definitely. Gemma said we get out timetables at breakfast, didn’t she—?”

A groan emanated from behind the curtains two beds over. “Will you two be quiet?”

That’s Daphne Greengrass, Hermione told herself, summoning in her mind the sheet of pure-blood families she’d had to study. From the Noble House of Greengrass. The eight beds were arranged in a line against one wall, the carrells on the opposing one, and Hermione had been the bed second closest to the door, with Tracey Davis first. Davis. That wasn’t one of the families Mr Malfoy had me study, but I don’t think she’s Muggle-born like me.

Harriet—from the Noble House of Potter, why does she seem so much like a Muggle-born?—had the third bed, and Elara Black the fourth. Black. Noble and Most Ancient House of Black. Mr Malfoy said it was only extant in the female line, but he also said Mrs Malfoy was the last free member of the family? Odd. Hermione would ask if Elara really was from the House of Black and not, say, a Muggle-born with a fortuitous surname, but she doubted the quiet girl would answer.

She gathered her things for the shared bath and Harriet joined her, wrangling a clean uniform out from her ancient trunk. When Hermione asked her about it, Harriet said, “It belongs to my family.” Her green eyes were bright behind her glasses. “It’s really nifty, too.”

Hermione made quick use of the showers and dressed behind the divider before returning to the dormitory. She was at the room’s threshold, mind full of her perspective classes and which text books she might need—when she almost collided with someone. Hermione started to apologize, then they knocked her folded pajamas out of her hands. Hermione ground her teeth as she met the gaze of Pansy Parkinson, of the Most Noble House of Parkinson.

“Watch where you’re going, Granger,” Pansy sneered, wrinkling her short nose. Pansy had a hard-face framed by short brown hair and pricey stud earrings pierced her ears, diamonds glittering on her lobes. Millicent Bulstrode standing behind her was a solidly built girl with dark hair and an unfriendly expression—from the Ex-House of Bulstrode, Hermione’s brain supplied without prompting. She remembered the genteel snickering of the Malfoys as they discussed the fallen fortune of the once Noble House.

“I already said sorry,” Hermione snapped, picking her things up. She’d met Pansy briefly over the summer when the other girl had come to visit Draco, and she’d sneered at Hermione then, too.

“So tell me—,” Pansy continued. “How did you make it into Slytherin? I was under the impression Mudbloods weren’t allowed in. How does one go about bribing a hat?”

Hermione straightened her spine as she met Pansy’s gaze again. She was used to bullies. There had been boys in primary who’d loved knocked her things off her desk and they once threw her bag in a pond because she was too ‘bossy.’ “Your impression is wrong. Plenty of Muggle-borns have come through Slytherin before. I didn’t have to bribe the Hat. Did you?”

Pansy went to rebuke Hermione, when somebody else coming out of the dormitory spoke. “You’re blocking the door.”

Elara was an inch or so taller than Millicent, which made her several inches taller than Hermione or Pansy and a whole head higher than Harriet, who had come up behind Hermione with her wild hair tamped down with water. Elara’s face was elegant but tired, black smudges under her colorless eyes, her temper visibly thin, and Hermione guessed she was not a morning person. Pansy gave Elara a look that clearly conveyed her displeasure but kept her mouth shut, because she couldn’t say anything rude to her. The House of Black was above the House of Parkinson—was above most everyone, really. Their pseudo-feudal system is both terribly archaic and utterly fascinating.

Pansy stepped back. Elara scoffed as she entered the bathroom, and Hermione made good on her escape.

 

_____

 

The first day of classes proved as exciting as promised.

The Slytherins spent the morning outside the castle, in one of the many greenhouses dotting the grounds, joined by the Ravenclaws and a plump, earthy witch who introduced herself as Professor Sprout. Hermione and a few Ravenclaws took feverish notes, journal popped on their arms, as they stood between muddy planters and the Head of Hufflepuff introduced to all manner of mystical flora and fungi, most of which moved or bit, could poison, stun, or kill the unwary. Most wore wary expressions when Professor Sprout asked for volunteers, so Harriet was the first to raise her hand, jumping in with both sleeves rolled up. Elara Black later managed to kill her own plant seemingly by touching it and lost Slytherin five points.

Expectations ran thick as they made their way to Charms after that, holding their wands in their hands, itching for a chance to use them. Hermione’s was yellowish in color, made from vine wood, excellent for those who sought a great purpose—according to Ollivander, at least. Pansy and Katherine Runcorn—the final first year Slytherin girl—both had elm wands and said they made for the best pure-blood wands. Draco didn’t like that and he sniffed a he informed them that hawthorn wands were obviously the greater choice.

Harriet got quite vague when Hermione asked about the pale wood of her wand. It was only later that Hermione realized she never got an answer out of her.

After Charms with Professor Flitwick—which only had theoretical studies on the first day—came lunch, then History of Magic with the Hufflepuffs, taught by Professor Otho Selwyn. Hermione knew of him, of course, because he was one of the final living members of the Noble and Ancient House of Selwyn, a family that hotly contested they’d been in Great Britain longer than the Blacks. Professor Selwyn didn’t appear to very much want to be a professor, as he spent the first half hour of class muttering about children who didn’t know anything about history or magic or the world in general. He scowled with ferocity at the Hufflepuffs—and Hermione.

Their last class of the day was Transfiguration, taught by the stern Head of Gryffindor, Professor McGonagall. Hermione had read all about Transfiguration, of course, and loved how very complex this particular branch of magic was. She had to suppress the urge to laugh when the others babbled in the corridor on the way there, excited to jump right in, when Hermione knew they wouldn’t touch anything even remotely difficult until they had practiced and studied Gamp’s Law of Elemental Transfiguration. She had dozens of questions written in a notebook already and hoped the older witch had open office hours.

Professor McGonagall passed out a match each with instructions to turn the matches into silver needles. Hermione felt quite smug indeed when she alone fully managed the feat, earning ten points for Slytherin and a warming smile from the strict professor.

Then Harriet somehow managed to turn her match into a short wooden javelin.

“Miss Potter, what are you doing over here?”

“Er….”

Many of the other Slytherins were torn between being elated about the points or glaring at Hermione. She really hoped their antagonism would pass. Logically, the antipathy pure-bloods showed toward Muggle-borns didn’t make sense. They had emotional bonds to their family heritage Hermione understood, but wasn’t magic magic? She’d read some absolute tosh about how Muggle-borns stole pure-blood magic—but Hermione had found nothing credible that said the ability of Muggle-borns or half-bloods was any less than a pure-blood’s!

But what do you know, really? A sharp, cold voice in the back of her mind demanded. It had always been there, but lately it had begun to sound more and more like Lucius Malfoy. An entire world of magic existed without you having a clue. You know so little.

Hermione wondered if she’d made a mistake in letting the Hat place her in Slytherin. She fretted over the decision. Oh, she had ambition in spades, but she wasn’t—wasn’t cunning, wasn’t sneaky or subtle or traditional. She passed the perfect needle from hand to hand and sighed. The House of Serpents was home to people like Draco Malfoy and Pansy Parkinson. Could it be home to someone like Hermione, too?

“Father says Mudbloods are always thirsty for attention,” Draco said to Goyle once Professor McGonagall moved away. “He says you have to watch how much you feed them or they’ll forget their place—ow!”

Harriet’s javelin slid off her desk and landed on Draco’s foot. Given the thunk it made, Hermione guessed it was solid wood.

“Oh, I’m so sorry, Malfoy,” Harriet said in a flat voice, twiddling with her wand. The pointy faced boy turned an unattractive red. “I’m just so clumsy.”

Then Harriet winked.

Hermione covered her mouth to hide her smile.

Chapter 15: professor tom

Chapter Text

xv. professor tom

 

Harriet was not looking forward to Defense Against the Dark Arts.

Her first day of classes had been amazing—up until Transfiguration, when Harriet had taken her wand out for the first time with the intent of using it and had transformed her match into a bloody javelin. Professor McGonagall told her to stay after class, then demanded to know which spell Harriet had been using. Harriet tried the spell again on another match at the professor’s insistence—and, in her panicked rush, managed to make an even bigger javelin that almost toppled McGonagall’s desk.

The professor gave her a very strange look as she told Harriet to practice her control.

“Control,” Hermione told Harriet later while they were sitting in the common room by one of the windows, their homework spread out on the table between them. A strange fish kept making rude faces at them through the glass. “Refers to the amount of magic you funnel into a spell and how you mitigate it.”

Harriet had no idea what that meant, but decided she’d best practice before she turned a house cat into a tiger and got one of her classmates mauled.

“Still working on that match?” Elara asked at breakfast the next day. The other girl watched Harriet drown her toast in syrup and seemed to find Harriet’s almost overt enjoyment of the food at Hogwarts amusing.

“Yeah,” Harriet glumly admitted, poking her sticky toast. “If you find a bunch of stakes in the common room’s broom closet—they’re not mine.”

Elara smiled—well, the corner of her mouth twitched. Across the table, Hermione had her nose buried in the Herbology textbook, and three seats down Pansy was waxing on and on to a bored Daphne about her new necklace and how exceedingly expensive it was. She reminded Harriet of Aunt Petunia, always chatting up the neighbors, making sure they knew just how much the Dursleys spent on their car or their house or their clothes. Harriet imagined what Pansy would say if she told her she sounded like a Muggle, then snorted.

The owl post arrived with a flurry of feathered wings, the birds slipping in through the open slots in the Great Hall’s eaves, seeming to plunge right out of the sky itself. Two owls dropped a crate of home goods in front of Malfoy and he crowed with delight. Elara’s terrifying horned owl came swooping in and scattered the smaller post deliverers, startling some of the students with his baleful glare. Unperturbed, Elara stroked his head, tied a letter to his leg, and sent the creature on his way.

“Have you managed it, then?” Harriet asked. In response, Elara retrieved her journal from her school bag and cracked it open, revealing the horrid handwriting inside—as well as a few perfect silver needles tucked safely in the binding. Harriet pouted and scratched at Livi’s belly beneath her vest. The serpent disliked remaining behind in the dorm and she hadn’t been able to convince him to stay today.

“My…Uncle Cygnus taught me a little about control,” Elara said, her tone careful, her eyes on the journal rather than Harriet. “To help mitigate…accidents. He says you can feel your magic like shouting.”

“Like shouting?

“Yes. He said it’s similar to the feeling of pulling air into your lungs, how the muscles in your chest constrict and how your vocal cords vibrate to increase pitch. He told me that, if you concentrate, you can sense your magic doing something similar just before you cast a spell.”

That sounded complicated to Harriet, but she tucked the information away, nodding her head. “Thanks, Elara.”

“You’re welcome.”

They had Herbology again after breakfast which, ironically, Harriet found quite relaxing. She hated toiling Aunt Petunia’s garden where she had to clip, trim, bind, and battle the wildness of nature into something her relatives deemed respectable, but Herbology wasn’t like that. Caring for magical plants meant learning and understanding their oddities, letting them flourish any way they wanted, not in ways deemed “proper.” Harriet earned points for Slytherin—which proved a good thing, because Elara kept losing them, muttering “it’s the roses all over again” under her breath.

The bell rang and Harriet’s dread rose. It was time for Defense.

“You needn’t be so nervous,” Hermione told her as they reentered the castle and made for one of the many staircases. Harriet had a wretched sense of direction and Hermione had mapped out three different routes to every class, so Harriet stuck to her friend’s side like a limpet. “It’s not as if you’re going to set someone on fire or something.”

Harriet quickly buried the memory of setting Uncle Vernon’s trousers alight and prayed they wouldn’t have a repeat performance today.

Voices in the corridor outside the classroom alerted them to the presence of the Gryffindors, the only House the Slytherins hadn’t had a class with yet. Harriet only counted nine students wearing gold and crimson trimmed robes, which made their year considerably smaller than Slytherin at thirteen—most of which were girls. Longbottom more than made up for their lack of bodies however, as older students crossing the hall had to stop and stare at the boy, and voices around him swelled to almost intolerable levels.

“Must be difficult, Longbottom,” Malfoy drawled, facing the Gryffindors across corridor. The door to the class was shut tight. “Trying to fit your fat head in the castle.”

Goyle and Crabbe guffawed. Longbottom didn’t react; his eyes flickered in Malfoy’s direction, then tipped away as if Draco simply wasn’t worth his time. Harriet thought living as a celebrity had probably thickened his skin—but that wasn’t the case for Ron, who flushed red from his ears to his freckled cheeks.

“Shut up, Malfoy.”

“Or what, Weasel?”

Before they could find out “what” Ron had in mind, the door popped open in wordless invitation. Hermione—ignoring the unbecoming behavior of her fellows—was the first through the entrance, and Harriet hurried in after her.

The Defense classroom had to be the largest of all the classrooms, though Harriet hadn’t been to Potions or Astronomy yet. A wide aisle split the room’s middle, the desks scattered on either side, and a small platform with a lectern dominated the front instead of a desk. The guttering torchlight cast shadows through the bones of the preserved creatures crowding the various display cabinets. Each of the soaring windows was shuttered closed.

“Take your seats.” Slytherin’s Head of House stood shy of the halo thrown by the nearest torch and his outline seemed strangely blurred against the dim backdrop—but then he stepped forward, black robes rippling, and the illusion dissipated. He had his wand in hand, texts tucked under an arm. “Quickly.”

Hermione took one of the seats in the very front. Harriet wanted to sit next to her, but she felt increasingly uneasy, so she sat behind her next to Elara and Blaise Zabini. One side of the aisle had exactly thirteen seats and the other nine; a natural division was drawn between the Gryffindors and the Slytherins, the House of Lions drifting as far from Harriet’s dorm mates as they could.

“You do not need your textbooks in my classroom,” the professor said—and Harriet saw Hermione’s hands stop before they could fully open her bag. “I have no patience for watching children read.”

A few Slytherins chortled.

The professor’s robes swept the ground as he stepped onto the platform and came to the lectern, flashes of emerald-green embroidery shifting on the hem like scales under a roiling tide. He set his books atop the lectern, then looked over the room like a king viewing his less than exemplary kingdom and Harriet still couldn’t believe someone as young as him was a teacher. “Good morning, Slytherins…and Gryffindors.” He added the latter in afterthought. “I am Professor Slytherin—yes, direct descendant of Salazar Slytherin himself, Head of his House, and your Defense Against the Dark Arts instructor.” Professor Slytherin inclined his head and stepped off the platform, slowly pacing the aisle as he continued.

“Who here can define the Dark Arts for us?”

Hermione’s hand shot up into the air.

“Name?” Professor Slytherin asked in a lazy drawl.

“Hermione Granger, sir.”

“Tell us then, Granger, how you would define the Dark Arts.”

“The Dark Arts are a magic that intends harm to those it is cast upon.”

Slytherin shrugged a shoulder. “A prosaic answer,” he replied, and Harriet saw Hermione’s back stiffen. “But one that proves you reviewed the material before coming to my class. A point to Slytherin.” He gave a languorous turn and paced the room again, wand still braced between his hands, index finger balanced on the tip. “There are seven distinct branches of magic: Transfiguration, Charms, Jinxes, Hexes, Curses, Counter-spells, and Healing-spells, each school with its own variations, disciplines, and cross-sections. The Dark Arts comprise all branches of magic, and though our vaunted Headmaster may disagree in my definition, you will cast many Dark spells in all of your classes during your years at Hogwarts.”

“Hogwarts doesn’t teach Dark magic,” one of Gryffindors argued—Seamus, Harriet thought his name might be. “Me Mam told me Professor Dumbledore banned the lot of it when he took over.”

Professor Slytherin paused, head swiveling to fix Seamus with a pointed look. The position finally brought his face directly into the light, and Harriet realized the wizard’s eyes were red, as red as Uncle Vernon’s face when Harriet had really messed up, red as the lining on the Gryffindors’ robes, red as blood

A sudden prickling stole through Harriet’s neck and she scratched at it, lowering her head when the professor’s gaze swiveled over the Slytherins, his brow furrowed.

“Your name?” he asked when he turned to the Gryffindors again.

“Seamus Finnigan.”

Sir. You will address me as ‘sir’ or ‘professor’ or ‘my Lord’ if you’re feeling particularly proper; I am, after all, Lord to the Noble and Most Ancient House of Slytherin.” He smiled and it was not a nice expression. “Tell me, Finnigan; where did your ‘mam’ receive her mastery?”

“S-sir?”

Where did your mother receive her mastery in Defense Against the Dark Arts, Finnigan?” The sentence rolled off his tongue dripping disdain and he leaned nearer the paling Gryffindor boy. Harriet shivered and Seamus looked too terrified to answer. “I will take your silence to mean ‘Oh, Professor Slytherin, my mother never achieved mastery in Defense. Please do excuse my worthless interruption about the opinions of my ignorant family members. We should obviously take your opinions and advice far more seriously.’” Slytherin straightened and his face lost its mocking smile. Seamus trembled. “Five points from Gryffindor.”

The professor returned to the head of the aisle and when he faced the class again, his expression was once more relaxed, almost approachable. Almost. “I do believe that’s enough introduction. Let’s do something practical, shall we? I will teach you the most basic of protection spells: the Shield Charm. Wands out!”

Harriet’s nerves from earlier returned as she retrieved her wand from her brace, noticing many of the others had theirs simply stuffed into robe or pants pockets. Livi hissed something but Harriet didn’t catch what he said.

“Now, the spell is simple enough. Copy my pronunciation and movements.” Professor Slytherin lifted his wand, then brought his hand down in a slow, slicing motion, saying, “Protego.

The class mimicked him.

“Again.”

They repeated this three time before the professor seemed mollified. Harriet wouldn’t say Slytherin was satisfied; no, indeed, the young wizard wore the most bored expression possible while he led the first years through their paces. Satisfaction was far from his mind. “Enough. We’ll see if you’ve managed it….ah, yes, Mr Longbottom. How about a demonstration? I’m told you’ve trained with some of the very best in the field.” The way he said “best” conveyed Slytherin’s clear dismissal of others’ prowess in his subject.

Neville simply stood, shrugging. Professor Slytherin flicked his wand at the opposing end of the aisle with a wordless spell and a red lion glowed on the floor. “Your mark, Longbottom. In case you get lost.”

Several Slytherins snickered.

Holding his wand tight, Longbottom made his way to the lion and stood on it, his face set in a determined glare as he met Professor Slytherin’s gaze. This amused the wizard. “I won’t be instructing you in dueling until next year, but it would be beneficial for us to practice proper form, yes? Bow, Longbottom.”

Both Neville and the professor dipped their heads and again several Slytherins laughed. Malfoy seemed to be enjoying himself.

“Cast the Charm.”

Neville shifted his feet into a better stance as he faced his opponent, his wand steady when he slashed it downward and stated, “Protego!

The air before him shimmered, milky as a ghost but not as opaque, rumpled at the edges like a sheet left too long in the drier.

Professor Slytherin aimed a flippant jab in Neville’s direction. “Flipendo.”

Nothing happened at first, then—BANG! Blue light flared and Harriet jumped when a girl from Gryffindor shrieked, the force of Professor Slytherin’s spell rippling through the floor when it collided with Neville’s shield. It held, if only just, Neville’s feet sliding several inches along the stone floor until he came to a stop, panting hard. The Gryffindors broke into applause.

“Quiet,” Professor Slytherin said, waving Neville back to his seat. “Decent. Though I expected better from someone meant to already know the spell. Five points to Gryffindor. Someone from Slytherin now…you. Name?”

He pointed at Malfoy’s tallest friend, the boy with big feet and bristly hair. “Greg Goyle, sir.”

“All right, Mr. Goyle. To the mark.”

The red lion dissolved into a green snake and Goyle lumbered over to it. He and Slytherin bowed to each other, displaying a touch more respect than Neville had, and the duel repeated itself. This time, however, when Professor Slytherin’s spell struck the milky distortion before Goyle, the shield gave wave with an audible sigh and the younger wizard went toppling backward. The other side of the classroom broke into smothered laughter.

“Deplorable. Return to your seat, Goyle.” Slytherin rubbed his brow as Goyle stumped over to his chair more disheveled than he’d left it. “Do not mumble when you’re casting. Enunciate. Let’s have one of our witches redeem us, shall we?”

Hermione’s hand once more bobbed in the air, but the professor ignored her, surveying the other seven Slytherin girls. Harriet shrunk herself down and stared at the top of her desk, furiously chanting ‘Not me, not me, not me’ in her head.

“You.” Professor Slytherin tapped Harriet’s desk to get her attention and she almost groaned. Shite. “Name?”

“H-Harriet Potter, professor.”

Recognition whipped through those terrifying eyes, then disappeared. “To the mark, Miss Potter.”

Harriet stood and almost tripped over her own bag in her rush, but she staggered upright to the waiting snake with her head held high. Livi tightened himself beneath her clothes and hissed, “You sssmell of fear.”

Shut up,” she responded, quietly.

“What was that, Miss Potter?”

“Nothing, sir.”

Harriet turned in place and met the watching stares of her classmates. Her face burned. I can do this, she told herself. Slytherin stood at the opposing end of the aisle, waiting, not a hair out of place. I can do this. What’s the worse that could happen? Has anyone ever blown up a professor before? Can you get kicked out for that?

She mimicked the professor’s stance and adjusted her glasses before clenching the hand holding her wand. The strip of wood hummed with excitement beneath her skin. “Protego!”

The air swirled and hardened like a thin cloud suddenly freezing in front of Harriet. She braced herself and thought she might feel what Elara had spoken of at breakfast, the sudden warm tension in her chest, the heat whispering down through her arm and out her hand—.

Flipendo.”

The blue light cracked against Harriet’s shield and, for an instant, she thought she might go flying like Goyle—until the spell suddenly slung itself back at Professor Slytherin. Harriet gaped in horror—and the wizard quickly flicked his wand to divert the returning Jinx, sending it flying over his shoulder, riffling his tidy hair. The class gasped. Slytherin grinned.

Harriet had only a moment to act—. “Protego!

Flipendo.”

The second spell came faster and didn’t rebound. Harriet’s feet slid like Neville’s had, her arm shaking.

Flipendo!

Protego!

Slytherin’s third attempt came quicker still and Harriet’s hasty shield warbled until it collapsed in on itself. Harriet landed on her backside with an “Oof!” Livi hissed in displeasure.

“Excellent, Miss Potter,” Professor Slytherin said as the members of his House clapped. The Gryffindors didn’t applaud. “Take ten points for that demonstration and return to your seat.”

She did as instructed, weak-kneed and dazed with her glasses sitting crooked on her nose. The mini-duels continued, most students sent sprawling on the ground like Goyle by their bored professor, others summoning a weak shield that nullified most of the energy in Slytherin’s spell but still tripped them up. Hermione and Draco managed to stay standing like Neville—yet no one pulled off the Charm as well as Harriet had.

“How did you do that?” Hermione asked later, miffed, as they gathered their bags and headed to lunch. Harriet didn’t know how to answer her. The move had been instinctive, easy. Despite her misgivings and the eeriness of the professor, Harriet thought she might like Defense Against the Dark Arts.

She wished her neck would stop itching, though.

Chapter 16: fire burn and cauldron bubble

Chapter Text

xvi. fire burn and cauldron bubble

 

Severus was convinced he never got around to growing up.

Not really, at any rate. He often reflected on his immaturity, his suspended evolution, when his mind wandered in the dead hours of the morning—a time of day even the ghosts found themselves drifting through with half-closed eyes and weary yawns. Severus was trapped in a limbo of maturation, not unlike those prepubescent dunderheads he taught, the tangle of a half-lived existence that seemed to have no beginning nor end; just endless, spiraling knots. It was the result of spending his life among children, of never leaving Hogwarts—except for those three horrendous years he submitted himself to the thrall of a madman.

Those three years he would spend the rest of his life atoning for.

He was both too old and too young; too old to be a child and too young to be an adult, constantly under the scrutiny of those who taught him while he attended the school, and Severus often felt as if he’d simply exchanged his class schedule for a lesson plan and continued on without a thought. Dumbledore addressed him as “my dear boy,” Minerva chided him to be “kinder, more empathetic,” and Filius still called him “Mr. Snape” on occasion, much to the wizard’s chagrin.

Memories blurred and echoed in the castle’s unchanging halls. The sensation worsened whenever he crossed paths with the relatives or children of those he went to school with. He’d chastise Jacob Rowle and suddenly remember the boy’s father, Thorfinn Rowle, crowing about joining the Dark Lord, telling young Severus he’d “better take care of his Gryffindor bullies, before someone took care of him.” He’d grade an essay for a Rosier cousin and remember completing assignments for Evan Rosier, just to be paid Knuts from the pure-blood boy’s pocket change.

He’d hear girlish laughter and think of red hair in the sunlight, bright like fresh apples.

He’d see pale eyes and think of a haughty boy now rotting in a cell. Good riddance.

The cowardly fear of what nightmares awaited him, unborn until he entered the Potions classroom for his first year Slytherin class, sickened Severus. He didn’t want to open the classroom door. Hell no. He wanted to return to his quarters and swill enough Dreamless Sleep to sleep through the next seven years.

Seven years. Merlin, Severus knew he probably wouldn’t survive that long.

The door bounced off the stone wall with a clatter when he strolled into the dungeon, startling the first years out of their tentative conversations. Their faces shone ghoulish in the candlelight reflected by the specimen jars and Severus sneered, thrusting his robes aside as he sank onto the chair behind his desk. The first name on the role call lit a fire in his gut and he regretted getting up that fucking morning.

“Elara Black.”

He wouldn’t have believed it if he hadn’t seen her with his own eyes, hadn’t heard the discreet whispers shared between the others in the staffroom. “His daughter,” they said as if afraid to use the actual name. “And Marlene’s. Poor dear.” Severus always thought Black had a thing for the werewolf—but there sat evidence to the contrary in the middle of his classroom, a mirror image to the malicious bastard who almost killed Severus in their youth. He met her eyes and heard Black’s voice, “All right there, Snivellus?”

“Present, sir.”

Of course she sat by Lily’s daughter. Of course.

He dreaded the echoes he would hear when he looked at the girl. Severus had caught a glimpse of that atrocious Potter hair at the Sorting and had looked away—had looked anywhere but at the child he’d sworn on his life to protect. What he hadn’t expected, however, was for there to be no echo; Severus glanced at Harriet Potter and realized she only vaguely resembled James or Lily, a palimpsest of two originals blurred to create something other.

She had none of Lily’s softness, none of James’ arrogance. The girl glanced about at the grim decor with the same tentative curiosity he’d seen Muggles use at crash sites, her expression openly fascinated, but her gaze dark, closed off. Even in the height of war, Lily’s eyes had sparked bright as if the witch contained an endless vault of joy in her head she could delve into whenever she wanted—and the girl’s eyes reflected none of that.

She was not James, and she was not Lily. She was a girl with hair like a Niffler, eyes like a jackal, and a tie of green and silver cinched about her throat. When the Hat had shouted Slytherin, parts of him rejoiced and parts of him despaired, because he wanted proof that even the good got sent to the snake pit sometimes, but he hadn’t wanted that for her. Nothing good could last in Slytherin’s hands.

They should check to see if Potter is still spinning in his grave, Severus thought with a snort. He returned his attention to the list before him, marginally relieved, marginally disappointed, and continued to call names.

“Ah, Neville Longbottom.” He flicked the parchment, voice thick with sarcasm. “Of course. The Boy Who Lived. It appears, class, our savior has taken leave of his busy traveling schedule to bestow us with his presence. How remarkable.”

Severus had a role to play. He knew this—and yet it came so easily, as if it wasn’t a role at all, Slytherins chortling like their fatuous fucking parents used to do whenever the Dark Lord tortured the “unworthy,” and Severus gloried in the vitriol bubbling in his veins like poison. The Boy Who Lived To Do Fuck All, his mind snarled, even as a very small voice murmured, It’s not his fault. No, no it wasn’t Longbottom’s fault the world was filled with idiots, but that didn’t make it simpler for Severus to swallow. The boy’s ignorance chaffed.

Longbottom played poster boy for the Ministry, said, “The Dark Lord’s dead,”and the public cheered, all while men like Severus and Dumbledore knew better. Oh, how they knew better. The Dark Lord was anything but dead.

“Tell me, Longbottom: what would I get if I added powdered root of asphodel to an infusion of wormwood?”

An unfair question, but a plausible one for a brat like Longbottom, inundated with tutors since he’d first worn swaddling clothes. “I don’t know, sir,” the boy said with an unaffected shrug.

“No?” Severus replied in a voice barely above a whisper. He rose from his behind his desk, walking slowly between the tables, arms crossed. A deathly hush encumbered the dungeon. “Let’s try again, shall we? Where, Mr Longbottom, would you find a bezoar?”

“I don’t know.”

From the corner of his eye, Severus saw one of the bushy-haired Slytherin girls raise her hand, the motion determined. Who was she? Not a Death Eater’s kid, and there’d been only two names on the register that he didn’t recognize. Either Davis or Granger, Lucius’ ward. Severus tipped his dark gaze in her direction and gave his head a definite jerk to the side. Paling, she dropped her arm again.

“Do you even know what a bezoar is, Longbottom?”

“No.” Longbottom gave him a peeved look and most of the Gryffindors fumed as Severus belittled their golden scion.

“What is the difference between monkshood and wolfsbane?”

The tension shifted in the boy’s round face, his mouth quirking into a grin. “Nothing. They’re both the same plant, called aconite.”

“My, my,” Severus sneered. “One in three. Please forgive if I don’t hold my breath for those odds in your marks, Longbottom.”

Malfoy laughed loudest. At her table near the front, Severus spotted the Potter girl discreetly flipping through the back of the textbook, terrified of being called on next. He ignored her and Black’s spawn sitting at her side.

He didn’t know which one the bushy-haired girl at the front table was, so he said, “Granger,” aloud, and was rewarded for the lucky guess when she lifted her gaze from her notes. “What is the result of adding powdered root of asphodel to an infusion of wormwood?”

“The Draught of Living Death, sir.”

“Where is a bezoar found?”

“In the stomach of a goat, sir.”

“What is it used for?”

“An antidote for most poisons, and several kinds of venom, including those man-made and those that occur naturally—.”

Severus cut her off. “Name one potion that uses aconite.”

Here she paused and gave his question thought, brow furrowed in concentration. “The—the Wideye Potion, sir?”

“Are you asking me, Miss Granger?”

“No, sir.”

“Then you would be correct.” He swept past the table toward his desk again. “That’ll be ten points to Slytherin…and ten points from Gryffindor.”

Minerva’s little lions gasped, outraged. Longbottom scoffed and curled his lip. “That’s hardly fair, sir.”

Severus only smiled. “Let me be the first to inform you, Longbottom; life isn’t fair.”

 

_____

 

His hand began to itch as he stood over Longbottom’s cauldron and sneered at the contents.

Severus scratched at his palm without thought as he berated the boy and his partner, Weasley, for the globular mess they’d concocted—and for nearly exploding a perfectly simple Cure for Boils by not taking the cauldron from the flames before adding the porcupine quills. He’d caught them in time, if only just, smacking the quills from Weasley’s fingers an instant before he’d dumped them into the stew.

Of course, not a moment later, acrid smoke billowed through the dungeon as a cauldron near the front of the room collapsed, and Severus almost swore aloud.

The Potter girl had quick reflexes, as she managed to shove herself and Black aside before the main deluge doused them, though part of her leg was already breaking out in furious boils. Black, wringing her hands, was apologizing profusely to Potter as Severus swept over them and Vanished the botched potion, his temper close to snapping.

“What are you idiots doing?” he hissed in an undertone. The Gryffindors were plainly enjoying their failure and Severus couldn’t have that kind of dissension in his dungeon. Gryffindors couldn’t leave his class looking pleased, for Merlin’s sake. “Did you not just hear me tell off Longbottom and Weasley for almost doing the same exact thing?!”

“We took the cauldron off the heat,” Black argued, her face red and flustered. Angry as he was, Severus did, in fact, see that the ruin of Potter’s cauldron had been lifted from flame and set upon the proper cooling rack so it wouldn’t scorch the tabletop. “I was—I was just stirring it, like the instruction said—sir.” Her tone corrected itself when she remembered to whom she spoke.

Severus glared at the mess. “You must have not paid attention to the temperature then. Idiots.” He wasn’t sure what’d gone wrong, but in a decade of teaching Potions, Severus had never seen a Cure for Boils combust when someone was “just stirring it.” They did something to it, foolish brats.

“Sir?” Potter asked, and Severus forced himself to look down—down all the way at girl he loomed above. Potter was thin; short and thin and fine-boned like a mottled fledgling, not at all like her tall, winsome mother, or James Potter, who had been athletic and statuesque—for all that he was a great ruddy fathead. “Can I go to the infirmary?”

“No,” Severus snapped. Ignoring her flabbergasted expression, he pointed his wand toward the storage cupboard and waited, hand extended, until the door banged open and jar of ointment smacked into his palm. “There’s no need to bother Madam Pomfrey with something so imbecilic.” Severus had no wish for details of this incident to find a home in the wrong ears.

He shoved the medicine at her, then glowered at Black. The contrite expression the girl wore when glancing toward Potter worried him more than any arrogance or malice he might have seen written in her face. With his luck, it would figure the bloody traitor’s heir would befriend Lily’s daughter. As if Black Senior hadn’t done enough to the Potters.

Another problem for another day.

Severus turned then and found every eye in the dungeon upon him. He bore his teeth. “Get back to work.”

The lesson ended soon afterward, potions divided into slender vials and neatly sorted into the rack waiting on his desk. Severus ordered them to clean their stations but inevitably found himself lingering after the students ran from the dungeon, using his wand to Scourgify the tables, chairs, and floor, repairing knife marks gouged into the wood, muttering darkly over the residual damage wrought by inconsiderate children wielding scalpels and fire and acidic concoctions. Lunch had started by the time he could finally leave.

Which was why Severus wasn’t prepared for the voice that came slithering out from the shadows when he opened the classroom door.

“Find any potential among the dregs, Severus?”

Tom Slytherin, he knew, was not actually a Slytherin—no more than Severus was a Prince, or their bigoted Minister a Gaunt, or the Dark Lord named Voldemort. He also knew that Slytherin was and was not Tom Riddle, not exactly, and the only person who fully understood how that phenomenon came to pass was Dumbledore himself. Severus had given up questioning the Headmaster on the matter years ago. All that mattered was that no Ministry law in existence, be it old or new, could draw a connection between the seemingly youthful wizard before him and the twisted wretch Severus had served in his youth.

All attempts to oust Slytherin from the school—both bodily and judicially—had been met with the kind of legal fluidity that came from years and years of blackmailing school governors and Ministry officials, whispering the right words into the ears of bylaw creators, watching and waiting with the kind of uncanny patience Severus had never thought possible for the Dark Lord. Albus had tried to duel him and lost his arm. Severus had tried to poison him and lost his eye.

“No,” he replied to the shorter wizard stepping into the wavering torchlight. Tom had a sense of melodrama just like the Dark Lord; he always dressed in robes tooled with his House colors, snakes on the hem and silver buttons on the waistcoat. His appearance gave him effortless charm, sharp cheekbones and symmetrical features, tidy hair and a guileless smile. Severus often pondered the number of witches—and wizards—who had been lured to their doom by that young face. “They are as insipid as ever and singularly dull. Though, Nott showed some instinct with the skill.”

Had he been speaking to the Minister, he would have put on airs about Lucius’ son or the Runcorn girl or Parkinson, but the running tally of which master the Death Eaters served was always shifting, and so he praised Nott Junior—well, as much as Severus ever praised anyone. There was a kind of sick irony in the illusions cast by these men who were and were not Voldemort; in the open, they presented themselves as pure-blood lords of particular talents, and behind closed doors they one and all claimed to be the Dark Lord and demanded submission, leaving the Death Eaters to play a game of confused musical chairs with their loyalty.

“Oh?” Slytherin said, head tipping. “A pity—though you are ruthless in your artistry, aren’t you? A few showed promise in Darks Arts.” When speaking to Severus or to that churlish bastard Selwyn he referred to the Defense class solely as “Dark Arts.” Tom’d been doing so for years, and if that wasn’t sign of ominous portents, Severus didn’t know what was. “The Potter girl, for instance.”

The sudden urge to ram Slytherin’s sodding head into the stones scoured through Severus and he would have done so, had he thought it’d do anything. He’d watched the wizard drink a glass of pumpkin juice laced with enough nightshade and aconite to take down an Erumpent without flinching. Slytherin would undoubtedly survive a good head bashing.

“Miss Potter,” he said with uncaring ice in his voice. “Is as perfectly average as the rest.”

Slytherin just smiled.

Chapter 17: what awaits the sin of greed

Chapter Text

xvii. what awaits the sin of greed

 

Before the students knew what was happening, their first week at Hogwarts had come to an end.

The walls of Number Four, Privet Drive, were once the whole of Harriet’s world; the horizon stopped where the drive met the street, the trimmed hedges were her jungle, the cupboard her prison and sanctuary, the kitchen a pseudo-minefield she navigated every single day. With the Dursleys, Harriet didn’t dream about a different life, as it was quite difficult to imagine that which you knew nothing about—but she would spend long hours trapped in the cupboard’s belly thinking about impossible things; about elves like the ones in her story books, about trees that craved conversation, about motorcycles that roared across the stars.

But, even in her most outlandish thinking, Harriet could have never created something as magical, ridiculous, and wonderful as Hogwarts. The stairs moved and the portraits snoozed, the ghosts seemed to flee Harriet’s presence, throwing themselves right through the walls whenever she entered a corridor, and the horizon stretched far, far away, far past the mountains and the lake and the forest filled with terrifying creatures of legend.

She loved her classes, some more than others. Astronomy happened on Wednesday nights, and though seeing all the constellations shine in a sky untouched by electric lights was breathtaking, there was a lot more maths involved than Harriet had been expecting. Transfiguration, too, proved difficult for her, with all its theoretical topics and abstract thinking. The Dursleys had raised Harriet with a rigid way of thinking, and while she liked to believe she’d bucked their influence, that wasn’t wholly true. Professor McGonagall would say “Imagine the beetle becoming a button,” and a hateful voice in the back of Harriet’s head would sneer “Beetles don’t become buttons.”

Harriet had far more fun in Herbology and Professor Sprout was amused by her willingness to tackle the tasks set out for the day, but her best class was—somehow—Defense Against the Dark Arts. Harriet couldn’t explain why, no matter how Hermione badgered her about it. She could only guess that, at their heart, defense spells responded to intuition, instinct—and despite the weight of the Dursleys’ grounding heel, Harriet had always been a wild thing who thrived on instinct.

It helped that whenever Professor Slytherin turned his wand on her, Harriet’s heart would lurch and she’d suddenly find her own in her hand. Sometimes she swore she spotted Set out of the corner of her eye stretching for the professor, but never quite reaching.

Professor Slytherin was scary—yet not as terrifying as the Potions Master. Professor Snape had the same look as those blokes Harriet sometimes saw heading toward Knockturn Alley; like he was capable of stealing your organs and preserving them in his jars if you weren’t paying attention. He towered over them, a black pillar of barely restrained fury, soft voice scantly audible over their bubbling potions. He mostly ignored Harriet—a relief, really—but he seemed to hate Elara and Neville Longbottom. The former he approached with subtle disdain, often snapping at her to leave Harriet’s table and sit by herself in the back so she’d stop dousing her fellows in fouled potions. To be fair, Elara did melt an awful lot of cauldrons.

Neville, on the other hand, bore the brunt of the professor’s scorn and melted almost as many cauldrons as Elara. Harriet found it hard to sympathize, especially when she’d hear Longbottom whisper how Snape was just a greasy Slytherin no one had or would ever love.

No one ever loved Harriet either, and some days she still blamed the Boy Who Lived for that.

“Harriet!”

She was jerked out of her maudlin thoughts by Hermione’s voice and the flat rock in her hand hit the water with a dissatisfying ‘plunk!’ “Err—what was that?”

“The First Principle, Harriet,” said her friend from her perch on the dry boulder at the shoreline. “What is the First Principle of Gamp’s Law?”

“Err,” Harriet said again as she nudged the stones underfoot, looking for another worth skipping. She stood ankle deep in the cool water of the lake, as did several other students dotted about the shore, all happy to have a short reprieve from classes. Had Harriet less studious friends, they might have joined her in skipping rocks instead of insisting on quizzing, but Harriet didn’t mind. She thought this must be the best way to study and was just glad Hermione wanted to be around her. Elara proved more complicated in comprehending, Harriet torn between calling her a friend or not because sometimes Elara was perfectly friendly and other days she said almost nothing to her. Harriet didn’t understand but, really, Harriet understood very little about people.

“It’s about food,” Hermione hinted, tapping the open text spread on her lap.

“Oh. Um, it says that…you can’t conjure food out of nothing, right?” Harriet pushed her glasses up her nose again and frowned. “But where does the food in the Great Hall come from then?”

“It must be transposed from the kitchens.”

“’Transposed’?”

“Swapped, basically. Transfered.”

“Wicked,” Harriet said with heart. She loved magic—though she questioned who made the food if it wasn’t magic. The professors? A sudden image of Professor Snape in Aunt Petunia’s pink apron flashed into her mind and Harriet choked.

“Are you alright?”

“I-I’m fine.”

Hermione sighed as she let her book close with a soft thump. “You could always tutor me in Defense if you don’t want to do Transfiguration.”

“I’m a wretched tutor, Hermione.”

“You’re the best in our class!”

“Yeah, but I don’t know how,” Harriet insisted as she returned to the shore. “It’s not like I have some fancy technique or something. I just…do it, y’know?”

Hermione looked more dejected than ever. “It would figure you’re a Defense prodigy.”

Harriet started to laugh.

“You are!”

She laughed harder.

After Harriet’s giggles subsided, she tugged on her socks and shoes again and they started along the path back toward the school, skirting the edge of the Forbidden Forest’s shadow. They strolled on—until Harriet paused, watching a pair of horses graze near the grassy boundary. She had seen them before, from a distance, pulling the carriages that the older students had taken from Hogsmeade’s station.

“What are you looking at?” Hermione asked.

“Those horses,” Harriet said. “They’re awful spooky, aren’t they?” With great black wings and skeletal bodies, Harriet couldn’t imagine an eerier creature—especially when she realized they weren’t grazing, but instead picking over a dead rabbit.

Hermione wore an odd expression as she studied Harriet. “What horses?”

“Those, right there.” she pointed.

“I…I don’t see any horses, Harriet.”

Was Hermione having a laugh? Harriet didn’t think so, not because Hermione had no sense of humor, but because Hermione was more inclined to laugh than to make others laugh. Why lie about this? Harriet rubbed at her eyes and hoped, not for the first time, that she wasn’t going barmy.

“Alright, you two?”

The girls turned, then lifted their eyes to the familiar face of the giant who had helped them on their boat ride to Hogwarts with Professor Selwyn. The groundskeeper, Harriet had heard one of the older Slytherin’s call him. He wore a friendly smile beneath the tangle of his black beard, a drooling boarhound standing by his knee. Harriet barely rose to his thigh in height—which was understandable, considering she was only a half a foot taller than Professor Flitwick, who was part-goblin, for goodness’ sake. Harriet hated being short.

The man peered down at her—then blinked. “Say, you wouldn’t be James and Lily’s girl, would ya?”

“Yes—?”

Harriet squeaked at his sudden movement, and then she was being smothered in a tight embrace, getting a face full of bristly beard and furry overcoat. Then she was on her feet again, staggering and more than a bit embarrassed. Had she ever been hugged before? Harriet couldn’t remember.

“Shoulda known! Of course, I took you off Professor Snape myself, right after he got you from the ruins. Didn’t mean him no harm, read the situation wrong, my mistake—.”

“P-Professor Snape?” Harriet stuttered, befuddled by this latest turn of events. What was all this about ruins and the Potions Master?

The giant stopped rambling and his cheeks reddened. “Shouldn’ta mentioned that. Sorry—but you’re Harriet! Got Lily’s eyes exactly, and James’ hair! Haven’t introduced myself though, have I? Name’s Rubeus Hagrid, and I’m the Keeper of Keys here at Hogwarts. Just callin’ me Hagrid’s fine, though, none of that ‘sir’ business.”

“It’s nice to meet you,” Harriet responded in earnest. “You knew my parents?”

“’Course I did! Great people, Lily and James. Such a terrible thing to happen to them.” Hagrid turned his glittering eyes toward Hermione and Harriet jumped to introduce her.

“This is my friend Hermione Granger.” Friend. How odd it felt to say that.

“Pleasure to meet you, Mr Hagrid.”

“Just Hagrid, that’s fine. Great to meet you.” Hagrid and Hermione shook hands, though the giant was very careful in doing so. “Would you two care for a spot a’ tea? My hut’s just there….”

He pointed out the cottage near the forest’s edge with a patch of immature pumpkin vines by the door and a smudge of smoke trickling from the crooked chimney. Harriet and Hermione agreed, if only because Harriet really wanted to hear more about her parents and Hagrid seemed a decent sort. They sat at his homemade, over-sized table, and Hagrid served them great mugs of a tasty tea and rock cakes—which, they discovered, we far more like rocks and much less like cakes.

Hermione asked what duties as a groundskeeper entailed and Hagrid chattered on about the interesting creatures he tended to in the forest and his efforts to grow giant pumpkins for the feast in October. At one point he mentioned, “Quite a shock it was, you being Sorted into Slytherin, Harriet. Probably woulda upset James, but Lily woulda been fine with it.”

“My parents wouldn’t have liked me being in Slytherin?” Harriet asked, heart sinking.

“Both of them were Gryffindors, weren’t they?” It wasn’t a question. “And James was a Chaser for the Quidditch team on top of that. Terrific flyer, your dad. Had a lot of rivals in Slytherin—jealous, the lot of them. But Lily was different, didn’t mind Slytherins after all, being friend with—.” Hagrid cleared his throat. “They’d be awful proud of you. Houses don’t matter, after all. Not really.”

“That’s right,” Hermione said, sensing Harriet’s distress. “All that matters is learning magic and doing your best, Harriet.”

“Yeah,” Harriet responded, though she wasn’t so sure. Would her mum and dad be disappointed in her? She couldn’t live by the expectations of dead people, of course, but she wanted to be the kind of witch they could’ve taken pride in, had they been there with her. Hermione’s right, she decided. Houses are just Houses. I’ll just do my best for them—and for me.

Conversation continued and Harriet wanted to ask more about James and Lily, but she was nervous the conversation would turn to why she didn’t know more about them and who she was living with—or, supposed to be living with. Harriet had learned a bit more about the MPA and Ministry laws from Hermione and knew she’d most likely be removed from the Dursleys because they were Muggles and she was a witch—but the possibility of being sent back remained, or relocated to a family like the Malfoys. Draco was a prat and Harriet didn’t want to think what his parents were like. Hermione never talked about them.

What if she got sent to a family even worse than the Dursleys?

Lost in thought, Harriet scratched the boarhound’s—introduced as Fang—head, and he drooled on her lap. There was a copy of the Prophet laid on the table, and she glanced it over. An article near the back caught her attention.

“Someone broke into Gringotts,” she mentioned. Hagrid dropped a rock cake.

“Really?” Hermione asked. “The Malfoys told me the bank was impregnable, and I couldn’t imagine them putting their gold anywhere unsafe.”

“The person didn’t steal anything, apparently,” Harriet continued, reading more of the article. “Err—the goblins said the vault was emptied earlier that day. Hey, it happened on my birthday! That’s seren—seren—?”

“Serendipitous,” Hermione supplied as she sipped her tea.

Harriet returned the paper to its proper place on the table and changed the topic—much to Hagrid’s apparent relief. Certainly Harriet wondered what was so precious someone would risk breaking into Gringotts and aggravating the goblins for it, but a bank break-in was hardly the strangest thing she’d seen in the Wizarding world. She mostly thought about her parents, and about Hagrid telling her she had Lily’s eyes and James’ hair. What else did she have?

Harriet and Hermione drank their tea, hid rock cakes in their pockets, and headed back to school after a very pleasant afternoon.

Chapter 18: gryffindor

Chapter Text

xviii. gryffindor

 

“Who, on earth, thought flying broomsticks were a good idea?”

Harriet asked herself the same thing when she saw the notice of their upcoming lessons posted on the common room board, though not with the same ire Elara injected into the words. The sentiment wasn’t one reflected in the other Slytherins; the older students regaled the first years with tales of Quidditch and their own adventures while the first years themselves boasted about their brooms left at family estates or sneaking off to fly in the summertime when their parents weren’t paying attention. Malfoy swore he almost collided with a helicopter.

“Like he even knows what a helicopter is,” Harriet muttered under breath. Hermione coughed.

Harriet, Elara, and Hermione seemed to be the only ones who had never been flying, and the others made sure they felt every bit as inferior as the pure-blood Slytherins from proper pure-blood homes deigned them to be. Pansy had taken to stating “She can’t really be a Black,” while in Elara’s hearing and Hermione snuck a copy of Quidditch Through the Age from the library when she thought Harriet wasn’t looking. Draco liked to lean over his desk in class and tell Harriet she was evidence of how far “blood-traitor” families fall.

All in all, Harriet’s second week at Hogwarts was not nearly as great as the first.

The Slytherins departed History of Magic on Thursday and, instead of enjoying a free period as they had the week prior, made their way to the main courtyard and the grassy quad beyond. Harriet, Elara, and Hermione hung behind the rest of their classmates—who all but raced forward in anticipation, the boys leading the way with the girls feigning indifference as they followed.

“I wandered through Quality Quidditch Supplies in Diagon Alley,” Harriet commented, uneasy. “And saw some pictures of people flying at Quidditch games and stuff. It looks like it could be fun.”

Hermione sniffed. Elara had been looking a bit green since lunch and only paled further once they saw the line of brooms waiting for them. “It seems an utterly illogical mode of transportation,” Hermione said. “When they have the Floo Network, and Apparition, the Knight Bus, and Portkeys available—.”

“I don’t have any idea what those are,” Harriet interrupted, bemused.

“Honestly, Harriet, how did you even get to Diagon Alley?”

“Walked.” She quickly backtracked when Hermione gave her a startled look. “Muggle bus. Took the Muggle bus.”

Elara said nothing, even when Hermione’s gaze rose to hers with an expectant brow quirked. Harriet didn’t like that her two friends—or her one friend and almost-friend—didn’t seem to like one another very much. They never argued or fought; in fact, Hermione and Elara barely ever exchanged a word. Elara was difficult to talk to, Harriet knew, and she thought this might be why Hermione—who appreciated forthrightness in all its forms—often got frustrated with her. Indeed, even now, Hermione huffed a breath and turned away when Elara didn’t answer her.

“Find yourself a broom. Stand next to it—no touching yet!” called Madam Hooch, their flying instructor. Harriet and the two with her meandered over to pick their own spots, and a minute later the Gryffindors ambled up, their approach heard long before they appeared by the raucous echo emanating from the courtyard.

“Great,” Malfoy sneered. “Longbottom and his leeches have arrived.”

Harriet and the rest of the class soon learned Madam Hooch had attended Hogwarts with Neville’s grandmother, and the other woman apparently enjoyed writing to all her old schoolmates to boast about her “talented grandson,” about how he excelled, how he’d had the very best tutors in everything—even flying. Neville chatted loudly with the instructor about being taught to fly by the Arnold Vogler of the Heidelberg Harriers and the Gryffindors were suitably impressed while the boys of Slytherin rolled their eyes. Harriet, not knowing what a Heidelberg Harrier or an Arnold Vogler was, just toyed the grass and waited for instructions.

“To your place now, Mr Longbottom, thank you. Hold your dominant arm out over your broom, and in a firm voice say, ‘up!’ Are we clear? Go ahead!”

Feeling silly, Harriet did as Madam Hooch instructed—and her rather raggedy broom leapt right off the ground and into her hand. She gave it a surprised glance, then looked about at the others, who had mixed levels of success. Malfoy and Longbottom, of course, had their brooms in hands and smug grins on their faces. Ron managed it after repeating himself. Some brooms rose about halfway off the grass before faltering, falling with dull thumps. Elara’s almost made it, and she swooped forward to snatch it before Madam Hooch could see. Hermione’s rolled on the ground as her face became increasingly red and Daphne Greengrass snickered.

Harriet scrutinized her broom. With twigs sticking out every which way, it didn’t look anything like those sleek products she’d seen in Diagon.

“Now,” Madam Hooch called once everyone had their brooms. Hermione, like several others, had finally given up and grabbed it off the ground. “Straddle your broom and take the handle in a firm grip—like so.” She displayed the proper technique for them on a broom of her own and Harriet mimicked her. It felt ridiculous to hold that position for so long while Hooch walked along the line, correcting as she went, but Harriet’s patience was rewarded when the instructor paused by Malfoy to fix his hands.

“I’ve been flying for years!” he argued.

“Well, you’ve been flying wrong for years,” she rebuffed. If the Gryffindors hadn’t laughed, Harriet was sure she would have.

At last, Madam Hooch reached the end of the arrangement and told them they could kick off. “No more than ten feet!” she ordered above the excited whispers. “Anyone who goes higher without my say so will be grounded! On my mark. One, two, three….”

She blew her whistle. Harriet pushed herself upward—and her apprehension faded to white noise in the back of her mind as the weightless sensation of flight seeped into her very bones. Her hands stopped strangling the broom’s handle and her posture loosened, relaxed, and though the urge to keep rising up and up an up roared in her ears, Harriet stopped just shy of ten feet, kicking her legs.

Elara, who had become greener and greener as the lesson progressed, only made it two feet before she pitched herself off her broom and vomited on the lawn.

“Ew!” Pansy shrieked, chorused by several of the girls in Gryffindor.

“Elara!” Harriet pointed her broom toward the ground and landed as swiftly as she could, going to the other girl’s side. Hermione and Tracey Davis did the same, along with Theodore Nott, though the others looked a bit more unsure about what they were doing. Elara retched again.

“Oh dear,” Madam Hooch said with a tired sigh, feet thumping on the dirt. “There’s always one.” She shooed Harriet back as she approached, took a firm grip on Elara’s elbow, and hefted the ill girl to her feet. “Motion sickness among the old families always seems more common than not. You there—Granger was it?”

“Yes, ma’am?” Hermione responded.

“Take Miss Black on to see Madam Pomfrey.”

Harriet wanted to protest, wanted to take her herself, but there was no reason to be fussy so long as Elara was all right in the end. She watched Hermione lead an unsteady Elara away and Harriet didn’t think she imagined the grateful look on Hermione’s face as they hurried from the quad and the collection of waiting brooms. Madam Hooch ushered Harriet farther down the line, away from the sick splattered in the grass, and she somehow managed to be slotted between Ronald Weasley and Draco Malfoy.

Great.

Malfoy didn’t hesitate to lampoon Elara. He was in rare form today, his jaw locked in that practiced grin just shy of a sneer, pale hair windblown like the fluff off a dandelion. “What kind of witch can’t fly?” he asked aloud, earning a snort from Goyle. One didn’t have to be clever to earn a laugh from Goyle or Crabbe; one simply had to look in their direction after speaking and wait. “It all comes down to blood, my father says, and her branch of the Black family has gone rotten. Did you know that, Potter? Whole lot of them went spare. Black’s father is a madman, after all.”

“Stop being a tit, Malfoy,” Harriet hissed through her teeth as she kept her eyes on Madam Hooch.

“He was a blood-traitor, too. But you would know all about that, wouldn’t you?”

No, Harriet wouldn’t. She couldn’t fathom why everything always came down to blood with Malfoy and people like him. To use Hermione’s word, it seemed quite inane. Magic was magic to Harriet. She’d rather be a Muggle-born than a plain Muggle—and if being a pure-blood meant having a bunch of blokes in her family like Draco, then maybe she was better off being just a half-blood. She’d put enough pieces together between her Aunt Petunia and Hagrid to realize her mum must have been a Muggle-born just like Hermione, and that was just fine with her.

“Weasley would know all about blood-traitors, too,” Malfoy said, speaking to the quiet red-head on Harriet’s other side. “He comes from a whole wretched brood of them.”

Ron’s ears almost disappeared against his hair as blood rushed into them.

“How do your parents manage to feed you lot, Weasel? Does your mum just sell your filthy blood in vials as fertilizer?”

“You shut up about my mum, Malfoy,” Ron spat as he trembled with rage.

“Does your family just share the one bed in that shack you call a house?”

“Stop it,” Harriet said to Draco—and suddenly Ron rounded on her.

“I don’t need your help, stupid Slytherin,” he snarled, eyes glassy, blotchy patches of purple color blooming in his scrunched face. “I know all about your family, Potter. All the Potters have been Gryffindors since anyone can remember, and your mum and dad were both Gryffindors—so what’s wrong with you? Why are you a slimy Slytherin? Bet your folks would be ashamed.”

All week Harriet had been annoyed by the Slytherins’ jeering her about flying; she was worried about Elara and mad Malfoy kept belittling Hermione, who was bloody brilliant and didn’t deserve the rubbish that came spilling out of him like his head was a bin with a crack in the bottom. Defense Against the Dark Arts made her terribly nervous, and somewhere very distant from herself she kept remembering she lacked a home, and terror seized her when Harriet imagined what would happen when Christmas came rolling in, or the summer hols. Ron’s words hit her anxieties like a stick whacking a beehive. Suddenly her arm jerked itself up, and her hand collided with Ron’s mouth.

Honestly, the punch surprised the boy more than anything, and it hurt Harriet’s hand rather than his face. Stunned, Ron took a step back, the class gasped, and Harriet had her fist still raised when Professor McGonagall shouted, “Harriet Potter!”

Harriet blinked, then stared at her own hand in baffled horror as the Transfiguration professor swept across the quad from her position near the courtyard’s entrance and towered over the scattered students. “Twenty points from Slytherin, Miss Potter! We do not strike others here at Hogwarts! You’ll have a detention—and your Head of House will be hearing about this!”

The horror thickened in her middle, folding tighter and tighter until it sat like one of those bezoars in a goat’s stomach. Detention. Barely two weeks had passed, and Harriet already had a detention! What if she got suspended? Where would she go? What would she do? Could Hogwarts write to the Dursleys? What would the Dursleys say?

Class commenced, but Harriet wasn’t allowed to fly again. Professor McGonagall dragged her to the shadow thrown by one of the school’s spires and, in a quieter tone, demanded to know what had gotten into her, why she felt the need to hit somebody else.

“It was an accident, Professor,” she said, and Harriet didn’t think that a lie. She hadn’t meant to punch Weasley, and certainly if a modicum of thought had passed through her brain, she would have restrained herself. Professor McGonagall didn’t believe her and spent the remainder of the class scolding Harriet. She felt small, wilted like one of Aunt Petunia’s violets on an extraordinarily hot summer day, and though she considered telling McGonagall one of her Gryffindors had been running his mouth—she refrained.

Harriet didn’t know why. Tattling didn’t seem like the right thing to do at the time.

High above their heads, Neville Longbottom took a spherical glass ball from his robe pocket—a Remembrall, she would later learn—and passed it back and forth between himself and his friends. They laughed and McGonagall watched, lips pursed and her eyes bright with a curious, expectant glint.

Harriet followed the flying students with her eyes as they swooped through the air, and just for a moment, she really did hate the Gryffindors.

Chapter 19: snake tongue

Chapter Text

xix. snake tongue

 

Harriet stabbed one of her eggs and yellow goo spread across her otherwise empty plate.

“You should really eat more,” Hermione chided as her friend spread the yolk about with the tines of her fork. Harriet scrunched her face and didn’t reply, intent on being glum. Every so often she would glance toward the High Table, where the professors sat enjoying their breakfasts and each other’s company. Professor Slytherin chattered quietly with Professor Selwyn, Professor Snape scowled at his porridge, and Professor McGonagall leaned closer to the Headmaster so she could mutter near his ear. Professor Dumbledore glanced toward the Slytherin table, and Harriet looked down so fast she almost planted her face in her eggs.

It was a miserable way to start a Friday.

Professor McGonagall hadn’t mentioned anything about her detention yet, but Harriet wasn’t optimistic. If she got sent to Professor Slytherin, what would he do? Was caning still a thing at Hogwarts? State Muggle schools in the UK didn’t allow that kind of treatment, but Hogwarts was an old-fashioned kind of place and Harriet plainly remembered that Smeltings had handed out those bloody sticks to their own students. She hadn’t hurt Weasley. Her punishment shouldn’t be so severe…right?

Livi moved his head where it lay upon her chest and Harriet hunched her shoulders so the shift wouldn’t be noticed by others. “There are many riversss,” he hissed. “And many bridgesss to crosss them.

Horned Serpents could occasionally say rather insightful things—though Harriet had discovered Livi was young enough yet to be confused by his own insights, and sometimes he said things that made no sense at all.

This was one of those times.

Harriet sighed and discreetly rubbed at his snout. The post arrived with its usual dusting of feathers and shrill hoots, and one owl swung away from the main group to hover before Harriet. It extended his leg for her to take the missive attached there, and she did so with trepidation.

 

Miss Potter—

I have decided to forego notifying your Head of House about your behavior during Thursday’s flying lesson. Instead, Professor Snape has volunteered to oversee your detention himself. Please report to his classroom this evening after dinner.

I do hope you will reflect upon your actions and make better choices in the future.

 

Prof. M. McGonagall.

 

“Oh, this is worse!” Harriet said aloud, garnering several curious glances.

“Who’s it from?” Hermione asked as she smeared marmalade on a piece of toast and laid it on Harriet’s plate.

“Professor McGonagall,” Harriet replied, hoping her voice held steady despite her misery. “She’s set my detention for tonight with Professor Snape.”

“So?” Malfoy snorted. Harriet hadn’t realized he’d been listening in. “What’s wrong with Professor Snape?”

“…nothing, I guess.” Harriet glanced at the wizard in question. He’d finished glaring at his porridge and now glared at Slytherin, then at Dumbledore. “He’s just….” Terrifying. Just looks like he might stuff me into a cauldron and boil me alive.

“Snape’s great. He looks out for Slytherins,” Malfoy said as he stuck his nose in the air. “Mind, I think it’s ridiculous you got detention in the first place. The Weasel deserved a good punch in the mouth for talking back to his betters.”

Harriet snorted. “I’m a ‘better’ now? Weren’t you banging on about me being a blood-traitor just like Ron?”

“It doesn’t matter; you’re still in Slytherin, and that makes you better than any of the Weasleys.”

Pansy sniffed and flipped a coiffed ringlet of hair out of her face. “A real witch would have used magic and cursed him.”

“A real witch would have been expelled,” Hermione sniped. She shoved her plate away and stood. “I’m going to the library before class.”

“Nobody cares, Granger.”

Harriet cared, so she stuffed the toast into her mouth—getting marmalade on her face—and departed from the Great Hall with her friend.

 

_____

 

With every step that drew her nearer the Potions Master’s lair, Harriet wished she had taken the detention with Professor Slytherin instead.

He’s wicked scary, too, Harriet thought as she stopped before the door to the Potions classroom and took a breath. But at least his class isn’t literally in the dungeons. I wonder if they actually held people here in the old days….

Harriet knocked and a cool voice responded. “Enter.”

She did so, pushing on the door so it inched inward on thick iron hinges. The boards of the door were battered, dented and scratched and a bit twisted from Professor Snape entering his classroom in a snit, kicking it open and letting it slam against the inner wall with its rusted rivets bolted to the stones. Pickled things floated in the jars on the walls and Harriet always stared at them whenever she had Potions, both fascinated and repulsed by the strange things the wizard had preserved in innocuous glass containers.

The professor himself sat at his desk in the permanent semi-darkness of the castle’s sub-levels with a quill in hand and a scowl on his face. His black eyes rose from the parchment before him when Harriet slipped inside. The scowl deepened. “Miss Potter.”

“H-hello, Professor Snape. I’m here for my detention.”

His eyes dropped to the parchment again in dismissal. “So you are.” His arm lifted and he pointed one pale hand toward the far wall, where a line of cauldrons waited on the counter near the stone sink and the faucet shaped like a gargoyle’s mouth. “Clean the cauldrons, Miss Potter. No magic.”

That’s it? Harriet thought as she scuttled across the room to the waiting mess. Harriet had plenty of practice in non-magical scrubbing, so this task hardly seemed a punishment at all. Well, what did you expect? she asked herself, peeved. You’re such an idiot. You didn’t actually think he was going to poison you or beat you or something, right?

Harriet didn’t answer that, not even in the privacy of her own brain. Instead, she fished out the soap and cleaning implements from the proper cabinet and turned the water on. Professor Snape gave no further instructions. He went back to work, quill scratching away at the parchments Harriet suspected were student essays, and the water gushed from the gargoyle in a frigid, gurgling stream.

She removed her hampering outer robes, folding them carefully before setting them on the nearest dry table. Livi stirred beneath her uniform and Harriet paused to make certain his outline wasn’t visible through her clothes. “Sss…cold,” the serpent complained as he placed his head in the crook of her shoulder and left it there. One of his nubby horns jabbed Harriet in the neck and she poked him over, wincing.

It’ll only get colder,” Harriet responded, her voice covered by the sound of the water. The dungeons would be frozen in the harshness of the highland winters and she didn’t look forward to that. How did the older Slytherins manage? “Will you be okay? You don’t—you don’t hibernate or something, do you?

No,” Livi said. “I am not like thossse othersss.” He referred to snakes who weren’t himself as “other,” as if they didn’t deserve to be in the same species as him. “I do not endure the ssslow ssseasson.

The slow season?

Misstresss keepsss me warm. My blood doesss not cool.”

Harriet snorted. Harriet Potter qualities: nice place for snakes to cuddle. Wonderful.

“Something amusing, Miss Potter?”

“No, Professor Snape.”

He went back to writing again and Harriet concentrated on her task, ignoring her professor and Livi’s complaining. The cauldrons proved harder to clean than expected, difficult to maneuver and coarse in texture, so the gunk and stains settled deep in the pitted metal and Harriet had to exert considerable effort to scrub the rubbish away. She didn’t like to think about what she was getting stuck under the nails of her frozen fingers. Brains? Eyes? Dung? A mix of all three?

An hour passed before Professor Snape set aside his markings and came to loom behind Harriet, inspecting the cauldrons she had already finished. “Professor McGonagall tells me you struck Weasley. Why?”

Unlike the Transfiguration professor, Snape didn’t sound accusatory; rather, he had a sharp, inquisitive air about him, reserving judgment until he better understood the situation. Harriet hesitated—but then decided Professor Snape probably didn’t care enough about stupid childish spats to get Ron in trouble. “I didn’t mean to,” she grumbled. “He said some…some stuff and—I don’t know. I got upset. I didn’t know I’d hit him until it had already happened.”

“What stuff did Weasley say, Potter?”

Harriet frowned at the brush in her hand, at the grimy bristles and raw spots on her knuckles. “He said my mum and dad would have been ashamed of me being in Slytherin because they were Gryffindors, but I don’t think that’s true.” At least I hope not.

She didn’t notice Snape stiffen. She didn’t notice the way his hand curled into a fist behind his back, or the dangerous flick of light touch his eyes, because in an instant the emotion was gone.

“You shouldn’t pay attention to the foolish prattling of Gryffindors,” he sneered. “They are arrogant and foolhardy to the last. Your year will be especially insufferable because of Longbottom; the boy king of ignorance and unquestioning virtue.”

Harriet didn’t agree with that—or, well, she didn’t think she did. A few Gryffindors were friendly enough, in that they didn’t scowl or mutter or walk away when a Slytherin passed them by, though she rarely witnessed Slytherins themselves behaving friendly in turn. Malfoy excelled at antagonizing the House of Lions, berating Neville because he was famous or Ron because he was poor or Dean because he was a Muggle-born. Pansy made fun of Lavender’s hair or Fay Dunbar’s freckled complexion.

She paused in her work to rub at her sore skin. The dynamic in Slytherin baffled Harriet; on one hand, the House was filled with people like Draco: sharp-tongued, affluent, hateful. On the other, students like herself dotted the population: indifferent, patient, empathetic. Harriet wouldn’t say she was kind, not when life with the Dursleys had honed her too much, like a knife sharpened until the metal became brittle, and her suspicions ran deep. She still didn’t feel the need to be cruel like Malfoy, though.

Then again, Harriet reminded herself. I did punch Ron in the mouth.

Snape criticized one of the cauldrons she’d already cleaned and Harriet hurried it back into the water. He retrieved his wand—black like Elara’s, the design simple, obscured by his hand—and muttered a spell that lifted the finished cauldrons from their places on the wet counter so he could march them into the storage cupboard. His voice rose from inside when he spoke again.

“That being said, you cannot go about striking cretins, no matter what nonsense comes dribbling out of their mouths. It is unbecoming, especially from a Slytherin. Our House is held to a higher standard, Miss Potter, and your behavior must conform to that standard or you will be having more detentions. Let me assure you, I have far less pleasant tasks I could assign.”

Shivering at the thought, Harriet raised her voice when she answered. “Yes, sir.” Livi poked his invisible head out of her collar and flicked a curious tongue against her earlobe. “Ew, gross.”

“What was that?” Snape returned to the doorway.

“Nothing, Professor.”

Pausing, he folded his arms against his chest, looking more sinister than ever with only his pale face visible in the gloom, his eyes narrowed. “I don’t appreciate backchat, Pot—.” Snape’s voice ended with a sudden breath when Harriet turned her head, reaching for a dirty ladle. “Miss Potter!”

Harriet jumped as he shouted and the ladle slipped through her fingers to clatter upon the stone floor. “P-Professor Snape?”

He had his wand out, pointed at her, and Harriet’s heart raced. “Miss Potter, are you aware there is a highly venomous snake tucked into your bloody shirt?!”

“Sn—?” Harriet froze, because while she of course knew Livi was there, she couldn’t fathom how Snape knew when the serpent in question was mostly out of sight and invisible to boot.

Professor Snape took a step forward, wand raised, and Harriet’s hand flew to Livi’s head. “Don’t!” she cried, unsure what the wizard’s intentions were. “H-he’s my familiar, Professor.”

His advanced stopped, as did the sharp movement of his black wand. “Familiar?”

“Yes. I know snakes weren’t on the letter about pets, but he wouldn’t hurt anyone, I swear! And I keep him out of sight—.”

“You cannot keep a large, deadly snake, Miss Potter! Remove it!”

“Well, I tried to tell him that before and he said—.”

If Harriet thought Professor Snape was pale before, she was abruptly treated to another level of sallowness when the professor sat down—hard—on the edge of the nearest table, as if his knees had given out on him. “He said?”

“Yeah,” Harriet replied as she maneuvered Livi’s head back under her collar and into perceived safety. “I mean—yes, sir.”

Snape seemed to struggle with words for a minute, mouth opening twice without sound coming out before he ground his teeth. “You can…speak with snakes, Miss Potter?”

“Yes, sir. Most of them are real nutters. Mad about bugs.” Harriet shifted under the uncomfortable scrutiny of Professor Snape’s expressionless stare. “That’s not…not normal, is it? Not even for witches?”

“No,” he responded slowly. “It is not a common trait.”

Aunt Petunia’s voice rattled in Harriet’s head like the last mint in a tin. Freak. Freak. Freak.

“Your ability is called Parseltongue, and you would be referred to as a Parselmouth, Miss Potter. Salazar Slytherin, our House Founder, was famous for having the same skill.” He heaved a weary sigh. “Who else knows?”

“No one,” Harriet said, then reconsidered. “Well, Elara I think. She saw me chatting with him at the store, but I don’t think she knows I have him here.”

Snape squeezed his eyes shut, muttered something under his breath, then snapped, “You will not tell anyone else—especially your Head of House. Do you understand?”

“Yes, sir.” Harriet didn’t really understand. She hadn’t disclosed her ability to anyone because it would mean exposing Livi and she had become rather attached to the snooty snake. She didn’t want him to be sent away. The Potions Master was quite earnest, however. “Professor Snape? Is it—is being a Par—Parselmouth? Is it bad or something?”

He didn’t answer at first. Rather, Professor Snape rose to his full height and tucked his wand back into his sleeve. “It is not bad or good, Miss Potter, it is simply a skill almost wholly unique to yourself, and one often misunderstood. Should you have brains in your head, you will realize the advantage in keeping knowledge of your true abilities close so they cannot be used against you—and yes, they would use this against you in a heartbeat.”

Harriet didn’t ask him to explain his vague usage of they. “That’s very…Slytherin, Professor.”

Snape smirked—or at least Harriet thought he did. The expression dissolved into disdain quicker than milk dispersing into tea. His eyes glinted and Harriet gulped. “Leave the rest of this and return directly to the dormitories. I had best not see you in detention again, Potter, or there will be consequences.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Go.”

She snatched up her robes and pulled her arms through the sleeves as she rushed from the dungeon. Harriet was almost back to the common room when she realized she never did find out how Snape had seen Livi in the first place.

Chapter 20: samhain

Chapter Text

xx. samhain

 

Life at Hogwarts continued on.

On the Tuesday that followed Harriet’s strange detention, she finally plucked up the courage to approach Weasley after they’d been dismissed from Defense Against the Dark Arts. He scowled when she asked him to hang back a moment and so did the other Gryffindors, but they moved along and Ron remained, knuckles white from his tight grip on his bag’s strap.

“What do you want, Potter?”

“I, err, just wanted to apologize. About Thursday. About, you know….” Harriet scratched at the back of her neck. She’d given her actions considerable thought over the weekend and didn’t like that violent impulse hidden in her heart. It reminded her too much of Uncle Vernon’s bellowing and Aunt Petunia’s quick, sharp slaps. Elara had pointed out how a childish disagreement could—as Hermione said—fulminate into a full-blown rivalry, and Harriet didn’t want enemies at school. She could swallow her pride, especially when she was in the wrong. “It wasn’t right of me. I still think what you said was foul, but that’s not an excuse for me to go hitting you. If I hit Malfoy every time he said something nasty about me or my family, I’d be in detention until seventh year. So, I’m sorry.”

Ron was stunned. He gaped, wide-eyed, until he snapped his mouth shut and flushed. “That’s fine,” he muttered. “I was…the stuff I said about your parents wasn’t on. Malfoy just….”

“Got under your skin?” Harriet supplied, and Ron nodded. “Yeah, I think he does that to everyone, even in his own House.”

“He’s a prat.” Weasley snorted as the tension in his lanky body lessened, shoulders slouching and his face returning to its normal color. “You’re alright, Potter—for a sneaky Slytherin.”

Harriet grinned.

“Oi, Ron!” came a voice from the corridor’s head. Neville Longbottom stood there with Dean Thomas and Seamus Finnigan. “Stop playing with the snakes and come on, mate!”

“I’m coming!” Ron called back. To Harriet, he added, “See you around, Potter.”

“Bye, Ron.”

Ron and Harriet didn’t become friends, but sometimes they struck up amicable conversations and he didn’t pitch a fit if they somehow wound up as partners in one of their shared classes. Harriet thought him far more pleasant than Malfoy or Crabbe or Goyle—and Neville Longbottom, who had it out for her even after Ron told him he’d forgiven her for their stupid scuffle. Resentment still curled in her chest whenever she looked at Neville, so being churlish and short with the Boy Who Lived was far too easy for Harriet.

September dribbled into October and the fantastic wilds of the rural highlands began to chill in earnest around the castle. Hermione and Elara still didn’t speak much and didn’t seem to have any friends at all aside from Harriet—not that Harriet was any better. She bickered with her dorm mates, arguing with Pansy about her hogging the counters in the washroom with her stupid make-up, or with Millicent about her cat purposefully clawing up Harriet’s bedding. Their disagreement peaked when Set threw one of Pansy’s powder poof things at Millicent’s head when the burly girl wasn’t looking, covering the dorm in white powder while Pansy shrieked and Millicent fumed.

Both girls ended up in the infirmary, Harriet with a black eye and Millicent with a split lip and neither inclined to tell displeased Madam Pomfrey what happened.

Hallowe’en, or Samhain as the pure-bloods in Slytherin called it, fell on a Thursday and their final classes for the day were canceled in favor of a holiday feast awaiting them instead of dinner. The older students waxed poetic about the marvelous treats served at past feasts and the first years were so excited to attend teaching became difficult. Luckily, Slytherin didn’t have Potions that day, but Defense Against the Dark Arts proved a trial with a prickly Professor Slytherin supervising.

Harriet was uncommonly quiet for much of the day. Around her students laughed and whispered and kicked their feet in eager anticipation, and she couldn’t help but remember that, exactly one decade ago, a madman no one would say the name of broke into her home, murdered her parents, and left Harriet for dead. Not at all a cheery thought to have, but it remained with Harriet, dampening her mood and the buzzing thrill enticing the others.

Sitting next to Harriet in History of Magic, Elara nudged her elbow and lifted a brow in silent question. Harriet just shrugged and went back to her notes, trying to concentrate on what Professor Selwyn was saying.

“—and 1689 saw the first proposal for the original International Statue for Wizarding Secrecy being signed into law by an early iteration of the I.C.W. The law would not be enforced until 1692—and would, subsequently, lead to the creation of the Ministry of Magic around the Wizengamot in 1707. As the Wizarding world shut itself off from the Muggle populace, we found it necessary to create more complicated councils and bureaus responsible for regulating magic and hiding its traces from the ignorant masses. Which of you can tell me a reason for the introduction of the ISWS?”

As usual, Hermione’s hand rose and, as usual, Professor Selwyn looked past her to the other Slytherins. Malfoy lifted his own hand and Selwyn called on him.

“Yes, Mr Malfoy?”

Malfoy thrust out his chin as he said, “Well, Professor Selwyn, Muggles started killing witches and wizards, didn’t they? Because they were jealous of our magic.” He spoke in the affirmative and slanted a scathing look in Hermione’s direction. “My father says the Muggles started burning themselves and magical kind alike, unable to tell the difference.”

“Correct,” Selwyn said, simpering. He came to stand before Hermione’s desk. “Yet another example of Muggle stupidity. The ISWS would, actually, be the basis upon which our current Minister built his campaign for the MPA. He sited the irrational behavior of Muggles and the pathetic emotional pathos of Muggle-borns as reasons they had to be protected from themselves.” The set of his face was unmistakably mocking as he watched Hermione, who had hunched down in her chair, embarrassed and trembling. A few Hufflepuffs had the same look about them.

Harriet drew air to speak and Elara nudged her again, harder, her blank gaze still pointed straight ahead. Right, Harriet told herself, slumping. Right. I’ll get detention if I backchat Professor Selwyn and Snape’ll skin me alive, probably. He was suspicious of her, especially after the “I-did-not-head-butt-Bulstrode-in-the-face” incident, which Harriet stood by, because she didn’t hit the other girl first. Besides, I would just embarrass Hermione.

Throughout the rest of the lesson, Harriet kept glancing at the back of her friend’s head, trying to think of what to say, and when the bell rang, she was no closer to knowing. She rushed out into the hall after Hermione, who dashed ahead of the others, and grabbed her arm. “Hermione—.”

“Just—just—I want to be alone, Harriet,” Hermione said in a high voice, refusing to lift her head as she kept her books close to her chest in a constricting hold. “Please.”

She jerked herself free and left Harriet standing there, hand still raised, feeling unhappy and inept. Hermione raced from the corridor and out of sight. Elara eased to Harriet’s side with silent grace and remained with her even as the others pushed around them, voices raised, excitement once again thrumming in the halls like lifeblood pumping through veins.

“The feast is soon,” Elara commented.

“What about Hermione?” Harriet replied, glum. “She’s going to miss it!”

“I’m sure she’ll show up—and if not, that’s her choice.” Elara shrugged. “It’s not as if she’ll forget.”

That didn’t sit well with Harriet, yet she saw little other recourse. She nodded her head and shoved her glassed back up her nose. “I’m going to go check the dorms anyway, then meet you in the library before dinner?”

“Yes,” Elara said. If she disagreed with Harriet’s plan, she gave no indication, as carefully blank as ever. Harriet waved goodbye and set out. She didn’t find Hermione in the empty common room or the first year dorms, much to Harriet’s disappointment, so she settled for taking Livi from his hiding place beneath her bed so she could sneak him food at the feast later on. She worried about Hermione but wanted to give her friend the privacy she wanted. It was the only thing Harriet could do.

She hated how Muggle-borns were treated, how they were ridiculed and thought of as lesser. What did it matter? Harriet had grown up with Muggles too, just like Hermione, so what did it matter that she was a half-blood? What did it matter that her mum and dad were a witch and wizard and Hermione’s folks weren’t? Hermione was a witch just like Harriet, just like stupid Pansy and stupid Millicent, who punched even harder than stupid Dudley did.

Thinking about her parents only soured Harriet’s mood further. With concerted effort, she forced a neutral expression onto her face and journeyed to the library, where she met Elara and buried her head in some half-hearted studying of seventeenth century Wizarding laws. They went to the feast an hour later.

Live bats swooped from the twilit ceiling of the Great Hall, swathes of glittering spiderwebs spun between the rafters, Hagrid’s pumpkins carved in spooky grimaces and Charmed to cackle or spit little candle flames between jagged teeth. Sweets of every possible flavor or combination burdened the tables: pies bulging with candied fruits, tarts smeared in glaze, dripping confectionery goodness, clouds of spun sugar and chocolates stuffed with a dozen different kinds of cream. Small paper ghosts flapped and moaned as they drifted between the subdued candles as the real ghosts eyed them with derision.

As usual, the resident specters drifted away as soon as they spotted Harriet. The Bloody Baron stared at her the longest before he too lost his nerve and floated to a different table.

Harriet forgot her troubles for a time, sucked into the festive spirit with the rest of the first years. Distantly she remembered past Hallowe’ens, where Dudley would sit outside her cupboard with his back to the door and gorge on sweets until he made himself sick, and Harriet would be blamed for his lack of self-control. To think that she would be in a place like this, a place thrumming with magic, serving such food, while Dudley remained miles and miles away at Smeltings probably getting whacked by other students with their Smeltings sticks made Harriet’s night.

Then the Muggle Studies professor slammed open the doors and came sprinting along the main aisle. “Troll!” he shrieked, face pale and gleaming with perspiration. “Troll! Troll in the dungeons!”

He fell in a dead faint, the sound of his body hitting the floor resounding in the silence that followed his proclamation. Then, the hall erupted.

Harriet slapped her hands over her ears in the resulting chaos, taken aback by the level noise. Students screamed, terrified, and Headmaster Dumbledore had to use his wand to bellow for silence before he could be heard. “Remain calm. Prefects, lead your Houses to your dormitories while the professors search the castle. Professor Slytherin, if you would see to your students—?”

Professor Slytherin didn’t look all that pleased at being told to babysit, but he nodded in acquiescence. Harriet wondered why Dumbledore told him to stay behind—he’s the Defense teacher!—until she remembered the Slytherin dorms were in the dungeons and quickly paled. Benches toppled when people stood in a surge of movement. Dumbledore banished the feast with a swish of his wand, and Professor Slytherin strode right down the middle of the table to reach the front of his House—not that anyone would have dared stand in the man’s way.

Looking about, Harriet realized something she should have realized right away; Hermione was not there.

Chapter 21: the harder they fall

Chapter Text

xxi. the harder they fall

 

“Hermione?” Harriet said aloud, voice going unheard in the general calamity. “Hermione! Has anyone seen Hermione?”

“Granger?” The girl next to her spoke, a third year she didn’t know the name of. Harriet bobbed her head in affirmation. “I saw her in the first floor bathroom crying earlier.”

Harriet’s heart sunk. Oh, she thought in despair. I’m a shite friend. Perfectly worthless, but she doesn’t know about the troll! What if she wanders into the dungeons before it’s caught?! I have to tell someone—.

She tried. Kicking and swearing, Harriet elbowed her way to the front of the mass and attempted to get Professor Slytherin’s attention, but his focus was on leading the Slytherins as a whole out of the Great Hall, shunting aside a line of terrified Hufflepuffs so the House of Serpents could go ahead of them. Harriet doubled-back toward the High Table and struggled through until she caught a flash of billowing black robes.

“Professor Snape—!”

It was no use. He darted out the side passage the staff used to enter the hall and the other professors were quick to follow, Dumbledore looking particularly menacing before them despite his resplendent purple robes. Harriet spotted Draco between Crabbe and Goyle and grabbed his wrist. His shriek went unremarked.

“Unhand me, Potter! How dare—?!”

“Draco! Draco, Hermione’s not here—!”

He slapped her hand and Harriet let go. “I don’t care where the Mudblood is,” he spat. “I hope she gets flattened by the troll, wretched know-it-all that she is!”

Fury exploded in Harriet’s heart like a living thing, surreal in its intensity, and she wanted nothing more than to strike Malfoy—detentions be damned. He must have seen it in her face because he backed away. “What’s wrong with you?” she snarled. “Isn’t Hermione like your foster sister? How can you be so bloody terrible?!”

Draco said nothing and swiftly disappeared into the crowd.

“Harriet—.”

Harriet whipped around to find Elara standing next to her. The taller girl proved a sturdier barrier against the shoving students at their backs, more grounded than Harriet who kept getting shoved about like a trout in a whirlpool. Elara extended her hand. “Let’s go get Hermione.”

She didn’t question it. Their hands came together in a bruising grip and Elara pulled Harriet through the frightened throng, chasing the Slytherins into the entrance hall—then slipping from the group along a side passage that would lead them to the girls’ loo on the first floor. Harriet guessed no one had seen them because there wasn’t an irate Defense professor breathing down their necks.

“Let’s hurry,” Harriet babbled, trying to sort through her panic without any luck. “We’ll get Hermione and then—what? Should we go back to the dungeons alone? There’s a bloody troll! Should we head higher, away from it?”

“We need to get back to the dorms before a head count is taken. We may be too late already.” The grimness in Elara’s voice caused Harriet’s pulse to spike higher.

“What if we went to the library? Pretended we weren’t even at the feast?”

“We were seen, Harriet. Besides, the library closed after we left it.”

“Shite,” Harriet cursed. She was unable to think of any other plans because they had come upon the loo and were barging through the door. No ready sign of Hermione presented itself—but, over the harried rhythm of their breathing, Harriet heard a despondent sniffle, and she dashed to the only locked cubicle. “Hermione! Hermione!” Harriet slapped her palm upon the shut stall door. “Hermione, we need to leave!

“I told you I wanted to be alone!” came Hermione’s tearful reply.

“Yes, but there’s a troll on the loose now and we very much need to get to the dormitories!”

A moment passed and Hermione unlocked the cubicle. In Harriet’s original rush, she hadn’t realized how terrible this loo smelled. Yes, it was a loo, but the stench burned in Harriet’s nose, in her throat, cloying as raw sewage and an unwashed body. Harriet, having been barred use of the shower by the Dursleys before, sadly had intimate knowledge of what the latter smelled like.

“A troll?” Hermione said in disbelief—then she, too, pressed a hand to her nose. “What is that smell?”

“I don’t know. I don’t know how you can stand it—.”

“That wasn’t here before—.”

A sudden lyrical chime emanated from Harriet’s shirt and they both jumped. “Misstresss!

“What in the world was that?!”

The chime came again.

“I don’t—.”

Suddenly, Elara gasped. With a hand against her own chest, Harriet turned.

The smell, she discovered, oozed from the menacing creature now shouldering its way through the open doorway. It was tall, taller than Hagrid even, its body almost too massive to fit through the entrance, but Harriet’s luck proved just as terrible as ever, because the troll—what else could it be?—managed to squeeze in. The lower portion of one leg was bigger than Harriet both in height and in width, one horny foot larger than her entire torso. Its bald head appeared comically small atop its towering, boulder-like frame, flanked in humongous ears that flapped when it faced them.

Harriet would’ve found it funny had the troll not been dragging a wooden club stained with old blood.

“Mary mother of God,” Elara whispered, trembling. Harriet whipped out her wand—and Hermione screamed.

The troll shook its head, grunting when the sound echoed. It flailed and the club came crashing into the first cubicle, collapsing them together like flimsy paper cards. Harriet, Elara, and Hermione dove toward the line of sinks and barely avoided being smashed by the falling stalls. Splinters of wood bounced of Harriet’s glasses.

Elara had her wand in hand too. “Flipendo!

A jet of blue light hit the troll in the chest—and did nothing.

“Trolls have thick hides exceptionally resistant to magic!” Hermione shrieked, the words barely intelligible in her hurry to speak. The troll must have felt something from the spell, however, because it scratched its gray chest and roared. The floor beneath the trio shook. They would never reach the door in time.

“Then what—?!”

The troll lifted its bloody club with surprising speed and brought it down towards them. Elara shouted. Harriet thrust her wand out and yelled, “Protego!

The club barreled toward their heads and bashed into Harriet’s rippling ward—rebounding with incredible force, slamming into the wall, shattering the line of mirrors as the troll stumbled. Bits of glass rained upon them and the troll kicked one of the sinks in frustration. The pipes burst and doused the trio in frigid water.

Something shifted against Harriet’s stomach, warmth slicing through the chill of the liquid, then—.

Livi!”

Six feet of enraged snake flew across the bathroom floor as Livi threw himself toward the troll’s wrinkled ankles. With a furious hiss, he sank his teeth into the creature’s thick skin and the troll roared again, louder, its agony plain. It tried to smash Livi with the club and again Harriet threw her wand arm out, but she wasn’t the only voice to shout this time.

Protego!

The club struck the shield powered by all three witches and bounced to the ceiling. It hit the stones with enough momentum to crumble them, cracks spreading through the club and the mortar both, debris raining down on their bowed heads. “Livi!” Harriet cried, arms held out, and serpent surged into her embrace, coils whipping about her sopping body. The troll tipped to one side, dazed, and all three witches ran for the lives.

Out in the corridor, they heard the rapid slap, slap, slap of approaching feet.

“Someone’s coming!” Harriet hissed, hoping she spoke in English.

“Here!”

Elara’s hand grabbed onto the back of her collar—yanking out no small amount of hair—and jerked Harriet toward a broom cupboard located just across the corridor from the loo. Hermione threw herself in and next came Harriet, squashed quickly between the two others as Elara pressed herself in and shut the rickety doors. The broom cupboard was not big enough for the three of them.

“Ouch! Hermione, you just elbowed me right in the boob—!”

“Where did that snake come from?!” Hermione demanded, not arsed about giving Harriet bruises. “You—you what?! Just walk around with that—that—!”

“He’s my familiar!”

“That’s not an excuse! You don’t see Elara with that owl of hers stuck under her blouse! That owl she hasn’t even named yet!”

“Don’t blame me for Elara’s weird owl. I think Livi’s got separation anxiety.”

“Snakes do not get separation anxiety!”

“Will you two shut up?” Elara grunted. She had her hands braced on either wall to keep herself from being forcibly ejected out of the cupboard. The troll was trying to follow them now. They could hear it, shuffling about, groaning, every footfall thumping on the floor like a boulder crashing down from a mountaintop. Harriet wriggled until she could press one eye to a crack in-between the wall and the hinges. She could barely see through the scratched, filthy lens of her glasses, but part of the corridor—and the lumbering troll—was visible.

Her leg stung something fierce but Harriet ignored it.

“There it is!” said a voice—a familiar voice.

“Is that Neville?” Hermione whispered. Elara shushed her.

It was indeed Neville; Longbottom and Weasley and Finnigan and Thomas. All four of the Gryffindor boys in their year stood in the corridor just within Harriet’s sight, staring at the troll stuck halfway in and halfway out of the bloody loo. Sick burned the back of Harriet’s throat when she realized Livi’s bite was killing the creature, because its limited faculties were shutting down, beady eyes listless and bloody, lolling tongue fat in its gaping mouth.

“What’s wrong with it?” Ron asked aloud. Hermione’s arm—had it always been wrapped around Harriet’s waist? When did it get there?—tightened.

“Dunno,” Longbottom replied, wand held at the ready, his stance firm. “I think it’s…sick. None of the trolls I’ve seen looked like this.”

“Was this all for nothing then?” Finnigan asked.

Neville shrugged. “Not totally. At least we found it, even if we didn’t need to defeat it.”

Snorting, Harriet muttered “Are they serious?” and earned another elbow to the torso.

If we could defeat it,” Dean mumbled.

The troll groaned and thumped a useless arm on the floor.

“I told you, I’ve learned to deal with them. Merlin, must have spent a whole summer in those stupid, smelly mountains—.”

“Look at it, it’s huge!” Seamus sputtered.

A new voice spoke. “Yes, fully grown mountain trolls are quite alarming in size, aren’t they?”

The three witches stuffed into the cupboard heard the familiar—dangerous—crooning of Professor Slytherin and stiffened.

If he’s here, he couldn’t have done a head count in the dorms, Harriet’s furiously working mind supplied. Really, it hasn’t been that long. He only had enough time to drop us off at the common room—we have to get back before he does, before someone realizes we’re gone!

Harriet could see that the professors had arrived, their approach covered by the Gryffindors arguing and the haggard breathing of the dying troll. Slytherin’s face was as amicable as ever; that is to say, he wore a chilling smile that could strip flesh from bone and terrify men three times his age. Snape stood partly behind him, discreetly kneading his right hand, and behind him came McGonagall. The Transfiguration professor sputtered in disbelief.

“In all my years—I’ve never—Mr Longbottom!” she thundered. Her brogue thickened. “What on earth were you thinking?!”

“We defeated the troll,” he said, throwing his shoulders back. The three shivering, dripping witches in the cupboard sucked in breaths and it was all Harriet could do to keep Hermione from bursting out of there shouting “Like hell!” The bushy-haired girl did not take kindly to others stealing credit for her work.

“Did you now?” Professor Slytherin said as he stepped around the troll to have a better look. The indolent creature grunted, flailed, and did nothing more. “Unless you’re carrying around a deadly poison, Mr Longbottom, I highly doubt that.”

Neville teetered, wand lowering, and though Harriet couldn’t see his face she could hear the uncertainty in his voice. “Poison?”

“Oh, yes. This troll’s been poisoned. The water closet’s a ruin, and yet…all four of your haven’t a spot of dirt on you, aside from the usual first year filth.”

“Really, Professor Slytherin,” McGonagall said, tone as stiff as her back. “There’s no need for that.”

Slytherin waved a hand. “It appears, Minerva, your lions are not only reckless but also liars.”

Water began to overcome the loo threshold and flood the hall, seeping nearer the trailing edge of Slytherin’s robes before he stepped aside. The water wasn’t quick enough, however, to wash away the dark splotches of blood smeared across the stones, a speckled trail that led straight to the cupboard.

Snape’s head turned as he followed the dots of red—until his gaze rose to stare at the rickety doors.

Harriet held her breath and was fairly certain the others did too.

“I think that’ll be twenty points from Gryffindor,” Professor Slytherin said. “Each.”

The four Gryffindors gawked, pale and furious, McGonagall told Slytherin he was being too harsh—and Snape just stared at the cupboard. Harriet hoped with everything in her that he would look away, that someone would call his attention or the bloody troll would take a swing at him. Anything.

“Ah, it appears you’ve found our troll.”

Dumbledore swept into view, trailed by Professors Sprout and Flitwick, who wrinkled their noses as they looked down at the half-dead mountain troll sprawled in the loo’s doorway.

“Yes,” Slytherin replied. “Your noble Gryffindors here felt they had the wherewithal to challenge a mountain troll…but it appears someone beat them to it, as it were.”

The Headmaster came nearer, water soaking the hem of his purple cloak as he bent over the troll’s small head and inspected its bulging eyes. Livi’s venom had worked quickly—and painfully. Harriet didn’t much care that the creature that had tried to turn them into jelly was dying, but she did regret the suffering it had to endure. “You’re right of course, Tom. Most peculiar. What do you make of this, Severus?”

Harriet didn’t know whose name that was, but Dumbledore stared at Snape—and Snape stared at the cupboard with a wealth of emotions passing through his eyes like trains roaring in the underground: disbelief and rage, terror and relief.

“Severus?”

“I think we should do a bed check, Headmaster,” Snape answered, voice hushed. “Just in case.”

Hermione whimpered against Harriet’s shoulder.

“An excellent idea!” Dumbledore straightened and turned his back to the cupboard, blocking Snape’s sight of it, as well as Professor Slytherin’s. “But, first, I believe our young adventurers here need to be returned to their fellows. Courage is an admirable trait, my dear boys, but it must be tempered with wisdom. Your grandmother writes to me quite often about your training abroad, Neville, and while I am most pleased to see you exercising and willing to share the knowledge you’ve acquired, you must remember that your classmates have not been exposed to the same trials and could have been severely injured. You could have all been severely injured.” His voice resonated with intensity and, for a moment, nobody spoke. “Do you understand?”

“Yes, Professor,” the four boys mumbled. Harriet felt Elara’s arms trembling from exertion. She wouldn’t be able to hold herself up much longer.

“Good! I imagine Professor Slytherin has already given a fitting punishment…?”

“Eighty points taken,” McGonagall said through clenched teeth. Harriet didn’t know who she was more upset with: her Gryffindors or the Defense teacher.

“Well, then. How about we award twenty for good use of deduction? After all, they did find the troll before us!” Dumbledore chuckled and straightened his spangled hat.

Slytherin scoffed. “Ridiculous.”

“Minerva, if you would see your charges off…?”

Professor McGonagall departed, ushering the boys before her. They hadn’t quite vanished before Harriet heard the professor’s sharp, furious brogue chastising her students further.

“Pomona, Filius, I believe you should go on and check your own students.” Sprout and Flitwick nodded and left. “Severus, Tom, I do believe we have a certain corridor that needs our attention. I will meet you there, after I secure our mountainous friend here.”

“It’s dead,” Slytherin snapped. His voice became colder, harder, in the absence of other teachers or students. Harriet wasn’t the only one to shrink herself in fear. “What’s there to secure, Dumbledore?”

“Be that as it may, if you would honor an old man’s request, Tom.” Like Slytherin, the Headmaster’s voice changed too, cool and uncompromising, a barest whisper of power threaded through his words like the silver stitching on his robes. Harriet couldn’t believe Professor Slytherin’s first name was Tom. It seemed so…so tame.

The Defense instructor seethed but did depart, swinging the hem of his robes out behind him as he stormed away. Not a second had passed after Slytherin’s footsteps vanished when Snape darted toward the cupboard and Harriet jumped, terrified, only for Dumbledore to abort the Potions Master’s movement with a steady hand and a quick word.

“Severus.”

Snape sneered and shook the Headmaster off. He gave the cupboard one final burning glance before saying, “As you wish, Albus.” He went after Slytherin, leaving Dumbledore alone with the dead troll and the steady stream of water gushing into the corridor. If only he’d leave too, Harriet desperately thought. If only this stupid night would end.

The Headmaster hummed to himself and stroked his beard, fingers pulling gently at the small tangles caught in the silver hair. The troll no longer drew breath. “Oh dear,” Professor Dumbledore said aloud as he tipped his face toward the flat ceiling. “I do believe I am about to suffer from a spontaneous episode of sudden blindness and deafness. Dear me, I do think it will only last for a minute or so, however.”

Harriet blinked. He’s not—he’s not serious, is he? He couldn’t be—!

Apparently Elara thought he was, either that or her strength had finally given out, because her arms folded and the doors burst open, spilling three sodden witches and a hissing serpent onto the stone floor. Harriet gasped as her glasses skittered away through the water—then groaned when Hermione kneed her in the kidney in her rush to get up.

“Professor,” Hermione said, breathless, seeming very near tears if the blotchy color of her face was any indication of her mood. “Professor, it’s all my fault. I wasn’t at the feast, and they were just trying to warn me—.”

Elara picked bits of porcelain out her hair and glanced at Hermione. “Honestly, he wasn’t even being subtle about ignoring us—.”

“But it’s all my fault!” she wailed.

“The troll was meant to be in the dungeons!” Elara retorted. “Not here! That’s what Professor Squirrel said!”

“Where are my glasses?” Harriet patted the flagstones but couldn’t discern much beyond the toppled forms of brooms and upturned buckets.

“But you two could have been killed—or expelled! Just because I was upset with Professor Selwyn—.”

“I don’t think this escape attempt is going well,” Dumbledore mused. He bent down to pluck Harriet’s glasses off the floor and gently dried them on his sleeve. “Here you are, Harriet.” She fumbled to take the spectacles from his hand. “And his name is Professor Quirrell, Miss Black, no matter what the older Slytherins might have told you.”

Elara flushed.

Harriet stuffed the glasses onto her face. “Err, Professor?” She smeared wet hair and bits of stone out of her face as she chanced a look toward the Headmaster. Dumbledore wore a kindly expression as he surveyed her, blue eyes bright. Livi coiled himself about her neck like a living scarf, hissing obscenities Harriet had never heard before. Trolls didn’t apparently taste very nice. “Can we have another go at that escape attempt?”

“Yes, I believe one more attempt should suffice, don’t you?”

The three Slytherin witches didn’t need to be told again; Hermione grabbed Harriet’s hand, towed her to her feet, twisted her fingers into Elara’s sleeve, and they set out at a run while their Headmaster pretended to stare at the ceiling again.

None of them heard Dumbledore’s gentle chuckling at their backs.

Chapter 22: the third floor corridor

Chapter Text

xxii. the third floor corridor

 

Severus barely noticed the roaring over the sudden agony devouring his hand.

Not now, he snarled in the confines of his own mind as his fingers curled in upon themselves, nails digging into the fleshy mound of his palm, and Severus slammed his arm against one of the slick dungeon walls to reassert a measure of control over the limb. Weeks had passed without so much as a single twinge of pain—now this.

The roaring, he realized, was not the enraged shouting in his skull. No, it echoed in the narrow passages delving beneath the school, down deep into the perilous, untraveled oubliettes and locked chambers where the manacles still hung on the walls, the stones branded with runes long since consumed by time’s avarice. The sound grew fainter, and as Severus straightened, a figure appeared in the green torchlight.

He sucked in a breath as another figure from another time overlaid itself on that youthful face, and he was torn between reaching for his wand and dropping to his knees. Welcome, Severus….

“Snape!” Slytherin snapped once his first attempts to get Severus’ attention failed. “Snape, the beast’s above us now.”

Severus straightened again, then nodded. The image in his mind faded. They whirled about and ran for the stairs, Slytherin quick to overtake him, but Severus let him go, not wanting to give the other man his back. After all, who would have the skills and wherewithal to let a bloody troll into Hogwarts if not Slytherin? Snape didn’t trust him—at all. Was this some kind of ploy? What was he up to now?

Minerva joined them in the entrance hall, appearing from the shallower dungeons where the kitchens and Hufflepuff dolts dwelt. The older witch was spry for her age and managed to keep up with Slytherin’s demanding pace, the portraits following their progress through the empty corridors. The roaring had silenced itself.

Ahead, Severus heard a familiar and totally unwelcome voice.

Is that fucking Longbottom? he asked himself—and indeed, the three professors found Longbottom and his duped fellowship standing about like thrice-Stunned garden gnomes with their wands all but stuffed up their noses, as if they knew how to do anything with them besides cast Tickling Charms or bloody Levitate. He didn’t have to look at Minerva to feel the impetus of her fear and rage.

What caught Severus’ eye was the troll itself, laying spread eagle on the floor caught halfway out the doorway to what looked like a girls’ lavatory. For one nausea-inducing minute, Severus thought Longbottom and his idiot groupies had downed the savage creature. How was that possible? He ignored Slytherin’s sniping and Minerva’s sputtering, ignored the four Gryffindors and studied the hulking mound of gray flesh, nostrils flaring against the foul odor.

Its skin lacked color naturally, but a new pallor had overtaken the thick folds of dry, mottled epidermis. Its movements were listless and automatic—twitches, really, the final impulses of a body giving way to a mind that could no longer control the heavy arms and stumpy legs.

“We defeated the troll,” Longbottom proclaimed. Arrogant little shite.

“Did you now? Unless you’re carrying around a deadly poison, Mr Longbottom, I highly doubt that.”

Severus flattered himself in thinking he knew quite a bit about poisons. It was for this knowledge he’d been originally brought to the Dark Lord’s attention, after all, and while Severus would always regret that decision, he wouldn’t regret what he learned while suffering Voldemort’s unique brand of tutelage. He’d heard it said in the Muggle world that poison was the weapon of women—but in the Wizarding world, everyone knew poison was the tool of Slytherins.

This didn’t manifest like a poison. A troll would have to ingest massive quantities of any toxic plant—and trolls were carnivorous by nature. They didn’t eat plants, and most common poisons wouldn’t present themselves in this manner. Aconite, for example, would induce sickness first, shut down the respiratory system, then attack the heart. Breathing difficulties were a common symptom among most harmful ingredients. The troll’s tongue was swollen, the inside of its disgusting mouth blackening, the eyes swelling with blood. If Severus had to guess, he wouldn’t guess poison. He’d say this was caused by—

Venom.

Blood not belonging to the troll speckled the floor. Slytherin didn’t notice it, not with his head stuffed so far up his own arse. None of the Gryffindors were hurt. They’d clearly arrived at the scene to find the troll half-dead and Longbottom decided to take credit—a reminder that had Severus grinding his teeth. The blood led away from them, across the passage to a…broom cupboard.

Venom. What kind of venom—?

A sudden recollection struck Severus dumb. “Miss Potter, are you aware there is a highly venomous snake tucked into your bloody shirt?!”

“He’s my familiar, Professor.”

His lungs burned for air but Severus couldn’t bring himself to breathe past the knot in his throat. He thought he might literally spit fire, because if he didn’t, he’d have to swallow it down and combust from the inside.

She wouldn’t. She FUCKING WOULDN’T—!

Albus was there and speaking to Severus. When the hell had the Headmaster arrived?

“Severus?”

“I think we should do a bed check, Headmaster,” he whispered, too furious to speak. “Just in case.”

He’d check Slytherin House himself. Severus didn’t give a fuck if he wasn’t Head anymore, that he hadn’t been for years. He’d check the dorms and if Potter’s spawn wasn’t there, he’d wring her bloody neck himself for risking her fucking life! He’d make death by troll seem like a fluffy alternative to his rage. How dare she!

Albus dismissed the others and, taking the sudden opportunity, Severus went for the cupboard only to have the Headmaster grab his arm. Albus squeezed with enough strength to break through the Potions Master’s seething mood. Severus remembered that he had more to do here, a role to play, especially at this critical junction, and he couldn’t lose his head.

Yet.

“As you wish, Albus.”

Severus turned his back on the Headmaster and the dead troll and the broom cupboard. He sank his worries and speculations on the matter into the frigid stillness of his Occlumency shields, allowing the cold waters to overcome him inch by inch, quenching the spark of his fury, his terror, his uncertainty. He sent it all down into the abyss so that by the time he rejoined Slytherin in the entrance hall, his face was perfectly placid and his mind empty as a Gryffindor’s skull.

“Well, this is a promising development,” Slytherin said as he fell in step with Severus and the two wizards walked to the marble staircase.

“The prospect of students being crushed by a mountain troll is promising, is it?” Severus drawled in response.

The Defense teacher’s lips curled in the mockery of a smile. “As if you’d mourn the loss of Longbottom.”

Severus said nothing. No, he wouldn’t miss Longbottom if the boy dropped dead, especially if he met a sticky end as a result of his own foolhardy stupidity, but only a sociopath like Slytherin—like Gaunt, like Voldemort, like Riddle—would see children being crushed by a troll as just another hurdle to overcome. Only a sociopath like Slytherin would let a bloody troll into a school as a distraction.

They mounted the moving steps and Severus tapped the railing with his wand, sending the stairs upward toward the third floor. “You believe he’s taken the bait then…my Lord?”

“Naturally, Severus. He wouldn’t be able to resist. After all, if anyone could understand Voldemort’s mind, it would be me.” Slytherin then shifted and removed his own wand from his sleeve. Not his wand, of course, not in truth. His fingers traced the wand’s the length and Severus heard the other wizard sigh.

He wisely chose not to comment.

The brazier kindled itself when he and Slytherin stepped from the stairs to the waiting corridor and paced to the final door. A simple lock of crude Muggle designed blocked the path and a thoughtless motion of Slytherin’s hand opened the way. They entered the third floor antechamber. The silence resounded through the empty space.

There was nothing—no one—there.

Slytherin sucked air through his teeth, displeased. “What a pity.”

Severus stood to the side as the other professor strode to the trap door situated in the room’s middle. Slytherin flicked his wand in wordless incantation and the invisible wards came into relief, gold and crimson and blue, spiraling in meticulous nets of runes and old magic even Severus hadn’t heard of before. This was Albus’ work; the wards gleamed with purity, the same fragile purity the bled from a Patronus and filled up a person’s heart with joy and relief and love.

An irked scoff left Slytherin as he stepped back from the ward, and Severus squeezed his eyes shut, holding tight to his Occlumency skills.

“No luck, then?” Dumbledore asked from the doorway. Severus spared a thought for how swiftly the Headmaster seemed to move through the school, but then again he was Headmaster, and had been working at Hogwarts for far longer than Severus or Slytherin—in any iteration of self—had been alive.

The House of Serpents alumni didn’t respond to Albus as he entered the chamber and quickly shut the door behind himself, the lock clicking home with a heavy thunk. Slytherin drifted from the trapdoor to a darker edge of the interior, the motion silent as ever, his wand still held in loose fingers. Severus watched him, and he watched the Headmaster as the elder wizard began to check his own wards.

“Ah!” Dumbledore said and Severus started. “Perhaps we had more luck than we thought.”

Slytherin slid forward without another word. Albus smiled at him—smiled at him like how he used to smile at Severus in the early days, a cruel curve of pity and reservation begging stupid sinners to repent, to recede again into the Dark or burn themselves in his light. “Though, I take it you didn’t catch that, did you, Tom? No, not when you close yourself to magic like this—the magic and the possibilities it holds.”

“Enough of your pedantic prattling, old man,” Slytherin spat. “Did someone attempt to breach the corridor or not?”

“Yes,” Dumbledore replied without missing a beat. “It wasn’t you, was it, Tom?”

Cracks began to appear in Slytherin’s calm facade, hairline thin and not always visible, but Severus was adept in studying people and he could sense the angry snap of energy surrounding the Defense professor. Albus referred to him as “Tom” constantly and consistently much to Slytherin’s consternation, widening the cracks in his persona in an attempt to pour light on the nasty little creature hiding behind that handsome face.

Then Slytherin stilled himself and smiled.

“No. As you are well-aware, Dumbledore, I have no need for the Philosopher’s Stone.”

Severus fought the urge to roll his eyes. No one needed the bloody Stone; they simply wanted it, wanted what it could offer, and Dumbledore knew Voldemort, that half-alive thing that mostly died exactly ten years ago that very evening, would want the Stone more than any other person in existence. It wasn’t as difficult to understand the Dark Lord’s mind as Slytherin supposed it to be. Truly, the desires of the power hungry were disgustingly myopic.

Who the fuck actually wants to live forever?

No, the real question was why Slytherin wanted Voldemort apprehended in the first place. Severus assumed it was because recruiting snotty little cretins to the Dark Arts became unquestionably more difficult when there was a mad Dark Wizard on the loose spreading anarchy, slaughtering Muggles and pure-bloods with little discrimination. The farther removed he was from all speculations on Voldemort, the more Slytherin legitimized himself, the more trustworthy he became. The deadliest of fruits and lies tasted the sweetest, and the very worst poisons Severus had hidden in his stores were subtle things that did the worst damage long before the toll became detectable.

“Then we will suppose his agent has come to inspect the situation, at the very least. A troll. How very imaginative.” Dumbledore stroked his beard. “Should he—or she—attempt to break my wards, they’ll be sent into a nice cozy sleep. Unbreakable, of course, unless given the proper antidote.” Here, he nodded at Severus with a look akin to pride. Severus wanted to sink into a hole and never be found.

Slytherin frowned. “He’s not stupid, Dumbledore,” he said as he gestured at the trapdoor. “Mad; yes, stupid; no. He might see through this…ruse. He might realize the Stone isn’t being kept here. You are almost too flagrant in flaunting the knowledge of its location. At the very least, he will be reticent to break wards he doesn’t understand.”

“I know. He won’t try again until he feels more confident, but confidence is the armor of the wise man and the folly of the ignorant. Voldemort will lose patience and he will try again. I know this. I know him.” Half-moon spectacles gleamed in the low light. The look their venerable Headmaster bestowed upon Professor Slytherin could have made Hit Wizards weep. “I know you, Tom.”

“And you’re just as predictable, Albus.” Slytherin started for the door and unlocked it with a twitch of his hand. “We shall see how this unfolds and how far my assistance will extend. Come, Severus, we have a House to count heads in.”

Severus—the well-heeled, if ill-mannered, dog that he was—followed him out of the chamber, though not without sharing a final glance with the Headmaster.

Watch him, said that searching look. Watch him closely.

As if there was another choice.

Chapter 23: come back for me

Chapter Text

xxiii. come back for me

 

Pure luck saved the trio of Slytherin witches from being stopped and apprehended inside their own common room.

Harriet later learned that a Dungbomb spontaneously ignited in someone’s bag and the foul smelling cloud of brown dust that burst from the satchel drew the crowded room’s attention like moths to a particularly stinky flame. Harriet, Hermione, and Elara didn’t notice the smell, not after tangling with a mountain troll, so they barely acknowledged the cloud or the shrieks or the general rabble as they passed through the entrance in the stone wall and all but dashed to their dorm room.

No one else was inside. With all the excitement of feast and troll incursion, the five other first year girls were mostly likely in the common room with everyone else, chatting and theorizing, waiting for more information. Elara was the first to sink into a boneless heap, wheezing in a way that worried Harriet, and Hermione followed suit, crumpling on her bed as she massaged a stitch in her side.

Rock dust and porcelain debris covered them from head to foot, shavings from the mirror gleaming like stars in Elara’s disheveled hair and grime patterned in nervous fingerprints across Hermione’s face. Livi slid from Harriet’s shoulders with a sullen, tired complaint. She sat on the edge of her bed and hissed in pain.

“Harriet—,” Hermione panted. “You’re—you’re bleeding!”

She was. Something in the loo had cut her calf from ankle to knee, the slice shallow but long, ruining both her sock and the hem of her uniform’s skirt. “Bloody hell,” Harriet groused as she thumbed the shredded threads. She hadn’t bought many uniforms, anticipating—hoping, hoping—she’d grow taller and have to get more before the start of next year.

“Really, Harriet!” Hermione said, her voice several octaves too high. “Your language is terrible—.” Then the bushy-haired girl dove into her trunk and threw aside sweaters and cloaks and more books than Harriet could count, emerging at last with a little zippered Muggle satchel she opened to reveal a handful of plasters, a wrinkled roll of gauze, and a tube of ointment. She disappeared into the washroom and returned with a dampened towel.

“I’m fine, really, you don’t need to—,” Harriet stuttered through chattering teeth, but Hermione wouldn’t hear of it. She made quick work of cleaning the blood and grit off the affected skin, applying plasters to keep the cut closed before they both wound the gauze around Harriet’s twig-like leg.

“You two could have been killed!” Hermione lectured under her breath. Silence had been thick in the room ever since their heavy breathing had subsided. “Such an utterly insensible thing to do!”

“I tried telling a teacher!” Harriet huffed. “But they ran off after the troll! And Slytherin wouldn’t listen!”

“And so you just gave up?!”

“Well, someone had to come get you!” Harriet’s voice rose to match Hermione’s in pitch. “I wasn’t going to let my best friend go wandering with that big buggering thing stomping about! It could have killed you!”

“You—.” Hermione was suddenly reduced to tears. Harriet felt ill, unsure of what to do when clear, glistening streaks cut through the dirt on the other girl’s cheeks. “Y-y-you came back for me.” She whirled on Elara, who flattened herself against the door again, wide-eyed and startled, like one of Mrs Figg’s cats when she’d corner it for a brushing. “And you. I never—. You—. You came for me, too! And I thought you didn’t even like me.”

Elara’s pale face turned brilliant red in color and she fidgeted with her sleeves. It was a nervous tick Harriet had noticed before; Elara tugged her cuffs down toward her hands or straightened her collar, making sure the top button remained closed, and Harriet knew she’d wear gloves if the professor would let her get away with it. “I…of course I like you. I know it doesn’t seem that way. I just—. I’m not…not good with…people.” She kept her gaze on her hands as she wrung them together. “The…the people who…the place that raised me, they didn’t—.” A shuddering sigh escaped and she squeezed her eyes shut. “Of course I like you. You and Harriet are my friends. My only friends.”

Hermione stood and hesitated for the briefest of instances before she went to Elara and gave the other girl a hug. Elara became rigid as a board, clearly unaccustomed or uncomfortable with the touch, and yet she pushed aside her own misgivings to lay a tentative hand on Hermione’s shoulder.

Harriet smiled. Her cheeks ached from the strength of it and her eyes felt wet behind her scratched glasses. She didn’t look away.

“I’m being silly,” Hermione said with a broken chuckle as she used her sleeve to wipe her face. “I didn’t mean to cry, how ridiculous—.” She hunted through her pockets for a sodden tissue when she stepped back from Elara—who visibly deflated in relief—and happened to clap eyes on Livi again. “Harriet…is that the Horned Serpent from the Magical Menagerie? The one they reported stolen?”

Elara only quirked a brow.

“I didn’t steal him,” Harriet replied, hoping the two other witches believed her. Neither appeared wholly convinced and Harriet ground her teeth. “I didn’t! I went into the shop and we had a little chat—apparently I’m a Parseltongue or, err, a Parselmouth, like Professor Snape said—and I got shooed out by the shop owner. Livi showed up in my room later and told me he didn’t want to go back and I told him he had to go back, and then he kind of pinned me down and I couldn’t think of how I’d go about getting a big snake back into the store—.”

Harriet knew she was rambling but couldn’t stop. Elara, who’d be there in the Menagerie and had heard Harriet talking, wasn’t surprised by her snake chatting ability; Hermione reacted much like Snape, her expression cycling through various degrees of disbelief and shock. “Holy cricket. You can speak to snakes?”

“Yes—? But you can’t say anything! I told Snape I wouldn’t mention it to anyone else and he—.” Might give me detention until the next century? Seems that kind of bloke.

“That’s incredibly rare,” Hermione said. “According to Hogwarts: A History, Salazar Slytherin himself was a Parselmouth—it’s the reason our House symbol is a snake! And it’s a hereditary talent, which is why Professor Slytherin is a Parselmouth too—.”

“Professor Slytherin’s a Parselmouth?”

“He would have to be. Some of the, um, books speculate on the legitimacy of his claim to the Noble and Most Ancient House of Slytherin because he simply couldn’t have been born a Slytherin, as the family went extinct in the male line centuries ago—.”

“Hermione—.”

“—and the Gaunts became the last direct family, with the Minister claiming to be the final living member of the House—.”

“Really, Hermione—.”

“—so Slytherin would have to display a magical hereditary trait such as that for his claim to be rectified by the Wizengamot, not that any of the records make note of that. Shortsighted of them, really. Harriet, you’re most likely related to him!”

Harriet wrinkled her nose. Maybe that’s why Professor Snape warned me not to say anything. Something about Professor Slytherin seemed off to Harriet, something she couldn’t name or really put a finger on, especially since he was always cordial with her, praised her Defense abilities, and was Head of Slytherin House. His presence…aggravated Set, riled her shadow when no one was looking, and Harriet didn’t like how he grimaced at the Gryffindors and ignored Hermione. She already had enough terrible relatives, thank you very much.

A sudden bang hit the door and all three witches jumped.

“Professor Slytherin’s doing a head count in the common room in five minutes! Be ready!” Prefect Farley called. Harriet, Hermione, and Elara looked at one another—then at their filthy, rumpled uniforms and dripping robes.

“Oh, no—!”

Shite!

“Oh, we’re going to be—!”

“Don’t say it—!

Expelled!

“Will you two move—!”

Trunk lids clattered against the ends of their beds as the three girls grappled for any clothes they could, Elara disappearing into the bath where she typically changed while Hermione and Harriet tore off their robes and vests to jam jumpers on over their heads. Harriet used her dirty shirt to hastily clean her face and hands, then found a pair of new socks that mostly covered the gauze on her sore leg. She shoved her shoes onto the wrong feet in her haste and almost collided with Hermione when they both bolted for the door. Elara joined them then, her hair once more collected in a bun, her appearance much fresher than Harriet’s.

The Slytherin common room was a long, sunken space built beneath the lake, windows set to look out into the black tide, the hearths gone dark and cold despite the number of people congregating on the plush couches and winged armchairs. The House of Serpents was the smallest House at Hogwarts despite the contrary size of Harriet’s own year; sixth and seventh year girls often left Hogwarts early, content to marry with their O.W.L.s alone and lead their lives, pure-bloods marrying other pure-bloods to make pure-blood mums and dads and relatives happy. Some of the older girls, like Gemma Farley, sneered when someone asked if she was going to follow the same tradition, and disparaged those “unambitious twits” who did.

That left sixty or so students to mill about the room, their anticipation politely subdued but still palpable, like static clinging to the surface of a well-kept cashmere scarf. The eldest Slytherins intimidated Harriet so she didn’t know much about them; they took the best seats by the best hearths, gleaming in the lowlight like cut gems, and those that crowded their sides reminded Harriet an awful lot of Dudley’s snotty friends—if better bred. They looked and spoke like adults, not like children, with posh “r”s and “h”s, House rings on their fingers and practiced smirks at their lips.

“This way—,” Hermione whispered once they exited the dorm corridor and came into the throng. “We’ll just stand back here—.”

Hermione quickly dragged Harriet and Elara to the farthest edge of the common room, where the light was the weakest and the temperature plummeted several degrees. Harriet’s teeth started chattering again—though whether from cold or apprehension, she didn’t know. Elara gripped her hand and Hermione gripped the other as they hunched their shoulders and waited for what would happen.

Professor Slytherin appeared less than a minute later. He strode from the dim passage that held the hidden wall entrance, silent as one of the ghosts when he walked, Professor Snape like a sure-footed cat at his side—a large, predatory and undeniably furious cat towering over Slytherin and the students. Harriet stared at the floor and gulped.

“Well, we’ve certainly had an interesting evening, haven’t we?” Slytherin said, earning several genteel snickers out of the oldest students. They looked at Slytherin with something like adoration in their eyes and it made Harriet a bit queasy for reasons she wasn’t sure of. “Yes, yes—funny, isn’t it?” Something in Slytherin’s tone shifted, indicating that no, nothing was funny about his words. “Funny to waste my time with a troll hunt through the castle. Funny to endanger the lives of Slytherins—funny to spoil a perfectly good Samhain those of you with half a brain would have used to prepare your best ingredients and rituals, or have you not be paying attention while attending this school?”

Hardly a breath could be heard. Slytherin always spoke louder than Snape did but he needn’t have bothered; he could’ve muttered and it would have resounded among the students gathered there. “Professor Snape will call names by year. If you are not prompt in answering, you will be very sorry indeed.”

Snape didn’t need a list; he said the names from memory, and with each “present, sir!” Harriet watched his thumb tap against a fingertip as the professor counted in his head. He spat “Potter” like poison and, when he glowered at her, Harriet knew they hadn’t fooled the Potions Master for an instant. The man was too clever for his own good.

“He knows,” Elara whispered to the floor, her lips barely moving as Snape finished off the role call.

“He can’t—not for sure,” Hermione responded. “There’s nothing that could prove we were there—.”

“Except her knows about Livi, and he knows Longbottom didn’t poison the bloody troll, and he knows someone was in the broom cupboard, even if he can’t prove it—.”

“Sh—!”

Slytherin dismissed the crowd. They made for the dorms, moving as swiftly as they could, but three first years didn’t have the same presence as their older counterparts, so Harriet, Elara, and Hermione were shoved to the back of the dwindling line. Snape was on them the instant Slytherin turned to the common room entrance and disappeared.

“Potter,” he said, voice low, eyes flashing as he leaned forward and the three girls froze. “Black, Granger. Don’t think for an instant I’m fooled—.”

“We weren’t there. There’s no proof—sir,” Harriet told him. The statement came out much braver than Harriet felt, which was good, because Snape only paled further in his fury.

“Oh no? No proof? Perhaps I should bring a certain reptile to the Headmaster’s attention then, hm?” Snape snarled.

Harriet blinked, because that was an empty threat and she hadn’t realized Snape gave empty threats. Dumbledore had plainly seen Livi in the corridor and hadn’t breathed a word of protest, so either the Headmaster knew about the snake already or the professor’d told him.

“If any of you do something half as brain dead ever again, I’ll personally see to it that you’ll be dissecting toads and scrubbing cauldrons for the duration of your stay at this school. I don’t need proof, Potter, and you’re a fool to suggest otherwise. Am I understood?”

Eyes on the floor, they nodded.

“Get out of my sight.”

The congestion in the corridor had cleared during Snape’s brief tirade, so the trio managed to slip by him and disappear with minimal fuss. Harriet’s chest ached like she hadn’t taken a breath in several minutes and now that she had, the air burned in her throat, in her lungs, and rendered her limbs as listless as cooked noodles. Dread and relief mixed in her head, and a single thought burst through the morass with startling clarity.

He didn’t threaten to expel us.

“You know,” Harriet murmured as they approached the door to their dormitory. Pansy’s grating voice was audible just inside. “Tonight wasn’t so bad. I’ve had worse Hallowe’ens!”

Hermione buried her face in her hands. Elara shook her head and looked toward the ceiling.

“Honestly, Harriet….”

Chapter 24: curse thy enemies

Chapter Text

xxiv. curse thy enemies

 

November landed with all the subtlety of a firecracker being lobbed into the middle of a silent church.

Those born and bred in the Wizarding world had been ticking off the weeks and days in rampant anticipation of the Quidditch season’s beginning, and they couldn’t wait for the first match between Slytherin and Gryffindor slated for later that very month. The blood fanaticism and constant sneering about Muggle-borns abated in the common rooms and classes in favor of talk about favorite teams and prospective winners. Slytherin hoped to take the Quidditch Cup for the sixth year in the row.

Of course, Harriet knew very little about Quidditch, only what she’d learned in Diagon Alley and from listening to some of the more talkative boys wax poetic about player statistics and famous maneuvers—but she found the enthusiasm infectious. Hermione thought it was silly; she told Harriet a whole list of grievances against sports in general as Harriet helped her carry books out of the library, and every time Elara so much as glimpsed a broomstick, she turned a bit green.

Nevertheless, both girls followed Harriet out into the bracing November chill as the school made their way to the Quidditch pitch.

“I just don’t see the point,” Hermione grumbled as a Gryffindor running by almost clipped her in the head with a flapping pennant. “I don’t see why people are so mad over such a silly thing.”

“Because it’s magic!” Harriet replied. “I still can’t believe you two hate brooms. They’re a lot of fun!” She thought so, at least. She’d only been on a broom twice: at the very first flying lesson and at the very last. Madam Hooch had been reticent to let her into the air at all after she punched Ron.

Speaking of whom—

Harriet caught a flash of red hair as they climbed the steps into the stands with the rest of the students and paused. “Err, we’re not on the Gryffindor side are we?” she asked as she glanced behind her at Elara and Hermione. They both shared puzzled shrugs.

“How should we know?”

“Well, I guess we’re going to find out….”

The stands, of course, didn’t have any official form of categorization, but the trio of Slytherin witches did end up seated in a mass of Gryffindors with a scattering of yellow scarf wearing Hufflepuffs and a few older Ravenclaws who didn’t look all that excited to be there. Harriet plunked herself down on a bench without care and dragged in a lungful of cold air as Hermione and Elara sat down as well.

“What are you doing here?” one of the Gryffindors in their year—Seamus—asked as he twisted in his seat to glare at them. “Why aren’t you sitting with the rest of the Slytherins!”

Besides the fact that Harriet hadn’t seen where the majority of her House had migrated, she had little interest in hanging around those of her own year. Some were all right. Theo Nott was a bit like Hermione in regards to studying and could be courteous, though he could also jump onto Draco’s Muggle-hating bandwagon quick enough when it suited him. Daphne Greengrass also adopted “pure-blood politeness,” as Harriet thought of it. They were nice enough not to make themselves look like total arses, though Malfoy never had the same compunction.

An entirely different dynamic ruled the Gryffindors. Thanks to her magical foster family, Hermione was a walking encyclopedia on Wizarding families, and so Harriet knew Seamus was a half-blood and Dean Thomas was a Muggle-born and three of the Gryffindor girls—Parvati Patil, Lavender Brown, and Fay Dunbar—were all pure-bloods of varying “purity,” while Fay’s friend Gretta Meadowes was a Muggle-born and Sophie Roper was a half-blood. Ron and Neville were both considered “blood traitors.” None of those in the House of Lions ever seemed to care about that, though.

That’s because it doesn’t matter, Harriet reminded herself as she glanced between Elara and Hermione. Elara was a pure-blood—supposedly, because all Blacks were supposedly pure-blood, though Elara fiercely ignored all questions regarding her family no matter who they came from. Harriet didn’t begrudge her that silence since she herself was just as tight-lipped about her home life. Hermione was a Muggle-born and had to be the top in their year, she was just so dead clever. It doesn’t matter.

“I’m here to watch Quidditch,” Harriet said stiffly, meeting Seamus’ glare. “There’s no assigned seating.”

Seamus opened his mouth and Ron—with clumsy red and gold stripes painted on his cheeks—elbowed him in the ribs. “Leave off, Seamus! You’re going to miss it!”

Harriet wondered what he meant by that because it wasn’t likely he’d miss an entire Quidditch match before it even began—or maybe it was, what did she know? She sat straight and stared out across the grassy expanse of the pitch. The voice of the commentator, a Gryffindor boy Harriet didn’t know, boomed from the staffing stands visible in the periphery of Harriet’s vision.

“And here comes this year’s Slytherin team: Chasers Flint, Pucey, Montague, Keeper Bletchley, Seeker Higgs, Beaters Derrick and Bole! Flint back again as captain as well, even after some blatant examples of cheating last season—.”

Jordan!” came McGonagall’s voice, distant but still sharp. The Slytherin team walked from their locker room with their brooms balanced on their shoulders, and the greener part of the stands—so that’s where the other Slytherins went—burst into applause.

“Now the Gryffindor team—! Keeper Wood, extraordinary captain there—Beaters George and Fred Weasley, couple of Bludgers themselves those two, Seeker Alicia Spinnet, Chasers Angelina Johnson, Katie Bell, and—new to the team this year—Neville Longbottom!”

Harriet froze.

The stands erupted in cheers and shouts and bouts of chanting, though it couldn’t quite drown the tremendous, echoing “boo” that roared out of the Slytherins. Ron and the other Gryffindors must’ve already known about Neville’s placement on the team because they showed no surprise, only blatant enthusiasm as they jumped to their feet whistling and yelling Neville’s name.

“But first years aren’t allowed brooms or to try out for the House teams,” Hermione said as a furrow dug its way between her brows. “That’s against the rules. It’s hardly fair.”

“Like Professor Snape said,” Harriet told her, her own enthusiasm dulled. “‘Life’s hardly fair.’”

“Lighten up, Potter.” Ron dropped onto his seat again. He was breathless from cheering, though that didn’t stop the rest of Gryffindor from continuing as the teams met Madam Hooch on the field. “We’re all a bit jealous of Neville, but that’s no reason to get yourself in a snit about it.”

Harriet bit her own tongue. Jealous of Neville? Yes, Harriet decided she was mostly likely jealous of Longbottom—though not over something as silly as Quidditch. Truth be told, she wished she’d gotten more of a chance to fly during their lessons, but she had only herself to blame for being grounded. Her jealousy toward Longbottom stemmed from the fact that, though war had touched his life just as it had touched Harriet’s, he came out of it almost wholly unscathed. Harriet longed for the family she’d lost so long ago and would never know.

“Quiet, Weasley,” Elara snapped, causing the red-head to jump.

“No one’s talking to you, Black!” Finnigan put in.

“No one’s talking to you, either, Finnigan.”

Out on the field, the two teams were mounting their brooms and rising into the air. They ascended much faster and far higher than Harriet’s year had with Madam Hooch, and Harriet shoved aside her immature distaste for Longbottom to watch. The older students handled their brooms with obvious skill, flying like they’d been born on a broomstick, steering with their knees and hips, relying very little on their hands. After all, they needed their hands free once the Quaffle and the Bludgers and the Snitch were set loose.

“That’s called Checking,” Harriet said when one of the Slytherin Chasers—Pucey—darted between Johnson and Longbottom just as they passed the Quaffle between them, snatching it from Longbottom’s fingers before darting in the other direction. “And that, well—.” Flint threw an elbow into Bell’s face. “Well that’s called Cobbing.”

“Where do you learn this, Harriet?” Hermione asked, confused.

“I have to read something while you’re in the library studying.”

“You’re supposed to be studying, too.”

“I am!” Harriet shrugged. “Just not what you thought I was.”

Hermione scoffed, scandalized, and Elara snorted into her scarf.

The game continued at high speeds. Harriet had to admit Neville seemed to have some skill at the game. He flew with aggressive confidence despite his relatively small size and fronted several Hawkshead Attacking Formations—which involved the three team Chasers coming together like an arrowhead and flying with speed to force other Chasers aside.

That said, Longbottom didn’t appear to cooperate well with Johnson and Bell. A few times they waited at his flanks, open for a pass, and Neville would just barrel forward through the Slytherin offense like no one else was even playing. The louder the crowd yelled his name, the more reckless he became. Watching him, Harriet didn’t feel quite so jealous. She’d rather be set on fire than let her head get that swollen.

Her attention wavered until Ron yelled, “There’s something wrong with Neville!” sounding terrified.

“Yeah, it’s called being a prat—.” Harriet turned her gaze from watching Flint lob the Quaffle toward a goal and found Longbottom higher in the air than he’d been before. Bell and Johnson circled below him with apparent apprehension, and when one of the Weasley Beaters tried to get closer, Longbottom rose even higher. He had both his arms wrapped tight about the broom, his hands white on the haft as it quivered and rolled.

“There’s something wrong with his broom,” Elara corrected Ron, her pale eyes following Longbottom’s twitchy ascent. The broom rolled again and jerked forward, the motion not unlike the hard flick a person might give their hand after they burn it or jam a finger, like they’re trying to throw the pain from themselves. Neville clutched to handle harder and shouted wordless alarm to the Chasers below him. The Slytherins were taking full advantage of the distraction to freely score points.

Seamus took note of this too. “Why haven’t they called the match?!” he shouted with anger. “What are they doing—?!”

A whistle blew and barely cut through the rising din of watching spectators. The broom bucked harder and rose sharply, bringing Neville a good fifty or sixty feet above the pitch. The Slytherin team were forced to the ground, none looking pleased, as Madam Hooch retrieved her wand and flicked it toward Longbottom. Nothing happened.

“Harriet—,” Hermione said in a voice loud enough to be heard by her alone. Harriet tore her eyes from Longbottom’s peril when her friend jerked on her arm, and Hermione pointed toward the higher staffing section of the stands. “I think—I think it’s Professor Snape!

Snape? The professor was difficult to pick out of a crowd; he was distinct one on one, but in a group of other professors and guests and shopkeepers from Hogsmeade all dressed in drab winter cloaks, he blended in. Harriet could only see the profile of him and he looked to be speaking very quickly, thin lips in constant motion. “What about him?”

“I think he’s….” Hermione’s voice dropped lower still and Harriet had to bend her neck so she could hear the other girl. “I think he’s cursing the broom!

“What?!” Harriet squawked.

Hermione gripped her wrist and rushed on. “He hasn’t broken eye contact once, not once, and he must have his wand out, and—.”

“I know he’s not the nicest bloke, but he wouldn’t!” Harriet glanced at Professor Snape again and he still hadn’t broken eye contact. Her stomach twisted. “I mean, he’s right out in the open there, sitting with a bunch of teachers, and if we’ve noticed him staring, I think better witches and wizard would have too, right?”

Hermione pressed her mouth into a thin line. “But—.”

The bucking broom became too much for Neville; it heaved, then threw itself forward, and the Boy Who Lived came sliding right off the end. The crowd screamed and Harriet gasped, horrified, as Longbottom plummeted toward the earth, going too fast, flipping end over end like a limp ragdoll—.

Levicorpus!

Much too close to the ground, Professor Slytherin—standing at the head of the teacher’s box, wand extended—shouted a spell that broke through the din and caught Neville by the ankle. The boy’s descent slowed all at once, as if he had a noose wrapped tight about his leg, and the bones gave with a loud crack! Harriet winced. Otherwise, Longbottom hung suspended, unharmed, a few feet above the pitch. His teammates jumped off their brooms and raced toward him. The Gryffindors in the stands did the same, and Harriet caught an elbow to the ear when she didn’t move quick enough for Finnigan.

“That was…eventful,” Harriet muttered as she rubbed her head. Hermione still had her lips pursed as she stared off toward the higher staffing seats. Snape stood as well, though he didn’t make for the field. He seemed to be thinking very hard, wand in hand, brow low.

“It was Snape,” Hermione said for Elara’s benefit. She kept herself mindful of the trailing Gryffindors around them, but no one was paying attention to the three first year witches. Elara blinked. “He was cursing Longbottom’s broom.”

“We don’t know that,” Harriet told her. The last thing Harriet wanted was for a rumor about Snape trying to off Neville to get out and trace its way back to them. Snape might really try to kill a student then. “He’s a teacher, Hermione! You love teachers!”

Hermione flushed. “I know! But what else could he have been doing? I’ve studied curses, Harriet, and you have to maintain eye contact, and Snape—.”

“It could have been a counter-curse,” Elara said, cutting Hermione off. The bushy-haired witch jerked as if shocked. “Both need constant eye contact. But I wouldn’t put it past Snape. He can be quite foul.”

He could. The acerbic attitude of the Potions Master rarely extended toward the Slytherins, and yet they still felt the backlash of it, and Elara’s explosive ineptitude at the subject earned her just as many biting comments as any Gryffindor. Harriet he mostly ignored and Hermione sometimes even won points for her perfect brews.

“He wouldn’t,” Harriet said again, though her heart wasn’t in the statement. “It’s…not very Slytherin—and Professor Slytherin himself saved Neville!”

“He has that nasty grin of his on though,” Elara muttered. “Maybe he and Snape are playing a game of terrify the Gryffindor?”

They couldn’t be certain. As Oliver Wood began shouting about sabotage and the Slytherin Quidditch players denied all allegations of foul play, Harriet, Hermione, and Elara remained sitting on the cold benches and wondered who had tried to kill the Boy Who Lived.

Chapter 25: eye of newt

Chapter Text

xxv. eye of newt

 

Sooner than anyone expected, the holidays arrived at Hogwarts.

Severus both loved and loathed the Yule time; the miscreants returned home to their doting families, leaving the castle blissfully silent, but he rarely had the opportunity to enjoy that silence between resupplying Pomfrey’s infirmary and dealing with the Headmaster’s well-meaning—and unwanted—Christmas cheer. Severus would languish in the lab, frozen through by the highland winter, and his hand would inevitably ache to the point of distraction. Dumbledore would ask “How are you, my dear boy?” and Snape would snarl, bitch, and most likely drink too much at the yearly feast just to sleep through the night.

He didn’t expect this year to be different—not until Prefect Farley flounced into his office the afternoon before the train was set to head to London and handed him the list of students staying behind.

Slytherins rarely lingered for the break. The occasional N.E.W.T student would remain, intent on escaping irascible relatives and utilizing the school’s quiet to study, and both Slytherin and Snape would have difficulty prying them away from their books long enough to stuff food into their mouths. One name was hastily jotted on the list this year, as if the writer had done so unwillingly, looking over their shoulder to see if the other students were watching. Severus recognized Harriet Potter’s untidy scrawl.

The parchment bent and twisted under his fingertips. He pushed the roiling mass of dread into the back of his mind and refused to acknowledge it.

Severus saw her the next day. He stood by a drooping Sinistra in the entrance hall as the little monsters flocked through the castle’s doors dressed in Muggle-garb and dragging their luggage. The sun managed to break free of the winter clouds and spilled upon the stone floor, glittering in the bits of snow drifting on the morning breeze, the smell of fresh rain and pine disgustingly refreshing. The brightness burned Severus’ eyes and he rubbed at them, aggravated.

Potter was one of the only students wearing school attire. She came out of the dungeon corridor with Granger and Black, the latter pair dragging their trunks, the Granger chit talking much too fast if the speed of her moving mouth was anything to go by. It was the only time of year Muggle-borns could return to the Muggle world thanks to that ridiculous law passed by Gaunt, so Severus knew where Granger was headed, but he didn’t know where Black was going, why she was opting to leave her supposed friend alone for the holidays.

Why the hell is the girl not going back to Petunia for the break? He’d asked himself the same question in his office. It kept bobbing up in his head like flotsam after a storm, the “why” like the incessant dripping of a leaking faucet over a sink that wouldn’t drain. Why, why, why—drip, drip, drip. Severus had an answer—one of many, he told himself, one of many—and it threatened to come into focus at every turn, but he ignored it, buried himself in his own Occlusion, because the general consensus among the staff was students who remained during the holidays weren’t typically happy at home. Severus didn’t want to think about why Potter might not be happy at her own.

You’re a freak, Lily! A freak!

“Long night, Severus?” Albus asked as he came to stand by the Potions Master. The light blue of his robes reflected the soft color of the sky visible through the shredded clouds and snowflakes made of threads coalesced along the wide sleeves, dripping and dissipating only to repeat the action again and again.

“Your robes are ridiculous,” Severus grumbled in lieu of answering. By the doors, Granger jerked Potter into an strangling embrace and Black followed suit before they made for the exit with the rest of the departing mass. Potter waved goodbye, glum. Severus’ gaze drifted through the hall and came to rest on another remnant who would be plaguing the corridors this holiday.

Tell me Longbottom isn’t staying,” he said, glaring at the idiot boy as if his stare alone could burn through him. Longbottom stood with his Weasley cohort at the bottom of the marble staircase, leaning on the newel post, and neither were dressed to leave. When Dumbledore didn’t reply, Severus had to bite back a groan. “For Salazar’s sake—.”

“Molly and Arthur Weasley are out of country visiting Charlie and so their other boys are remaining with us for the holidays. Neville expressed worry to Frank over his friend and asked to stay behind,” the Headmaster explained with an idle shrug that only further pissed Severus off. “It’s a noble sentiment, Severus.”

Snape didn’t unleash the verbal tide of swear words churning in his gut, but it was a near thing. “He’s a wretched, arrogant brat, Albus. He has a team of Aurors watching his home and enough wards to satisfy Gringotts; why remain, especially after that debacle on the Quidditch pitch? For Weasley? It’s not as if he’s in danger.”

“It can be difficult to leave behind those we care about. Impossible in moments of crisis, and sometimes wholly irrational, but who are we argue against the sentiment? All we can do is watch over them and ensure their safety.”

Severus’ attention flickered back to the girl. She still stood watching the backs of her friends dwindle into the distance and he felt a fresh stab of anger toward Black, because if Neville fuckwit Longbottom could stay behind for bloody Weasley, why couldn’t Black remain for the girl? She was alone in the dungeons and if Voldemort had an agent in the school, someone intent on the Stone, someone intent on Longbottom, was it possible some fragment of the Dark Lord’s twisted mind would recognize her? Realize the truth—?

Slytherin came sauntering out of the underground passage and Severus sneered, ducking his head so his hair swung forward and obscured the direction of his sight. The Defense professor paused by the Potter girl and Snape felt more than saw Albus stiffen, a sudden rigidity falling over the older wizard when Slytherin scrutinized the short, strange girl with her wild hair and haunted eyes, and brought his fingers together in thought. He said something to her, something lost in the distance and din of running feet, and the girl stirred, blinking as she looked up at her Head of House. Slytherin spoke again and Potter made her excuses, dashing off into the dungeons once more.

It was difficult to tell from the angle, but Severus thought Slytherin looked…curious.

“Forgive me if my worry doesn’t extend to Longbottom at the moment,” he drawled, leaving his place by the wall. Albus said nothing.

 

_____

 

Ten students in total had been left in their charge during the Yule holiday. It was a simple task to count them during lunch, scattered at their respective tables as they were, the House of Lions making up half that number. Three Weasleys sat clumped with the Longbottom boy and made a disproportionate amount of noise, earning several pointed looks from Minerva and one scolding rebuff from the remaining Weasley, Percy.

At the Hufflepuff table, first year Susan Bones sat affably chatting with third year Randy Twilfitt. Severus guessed Bones’ aunt was too busy with the Ministry and Twilfitt’s father was probably inundated by end of the year orders. The friendliness exhibited by the Hufflepuffs didn’t extend to the neighboring table; the two seventh year Ravenclaws, Wendell Henge and Felipe Sanders, sat at opposing ends of the hall and shot one another bitter, harried looks, both slumped over open texts, hands grubby with dust and ink. The pair exhibited the stereotypical competitiveness that plagued Filius’ house and Severus imagined they’d come to blows like a pair of tired Muggle thugs before long.

Finally, there was Potter, of course, sitting on her own and picking at her sandwich, gazing morosely at the delicate decorations that had sprung up in the castle only that morning. Pitiful sight that she was, Potter attracted the notice of other professors aside from Severus. Pomona leaned nearer Minerva and he heard her mutter. “Poor dear. Black and the Granger girl didn’t stay? Why didn’t her family have her come home?”

Minerva pressed her lips into a firm line and she surveyed Harriet—who not so subtly dropped part of her sandwich into her lap for that invisible snake of hers to eat. “They must have been busy.”

The Herbology professor hummed around a bite of potatoes. “I still remember her parents well. Tragic thing, what happened. Who did their girl get left with after 81’?”

“Relatives of hers.”

Pomona frowned, the look unnatural on her well-mannered face. “I didn’t know James had folk about still.”

Then Minerva quickly tucked into her soup and changed the conversation. Pomona would know any relatives of Lily’s to be Muggles and that was not something Dumbledore or those who had even the slightest inkling of what really happened that Hallowe’en so long ago wanted others privy to. The girl had been left with Petunia—with Muggles—despite the law prohibiting such arrangements for her own protection. The Dark Lord’s influence ran deep in the very bones of Wizarding society; Lily’s daughter wouldn’t have lived through infancy had she remained in the magical world.

Slytherin watched the girl, too. Selwyn nattered on in his ear about some petty grievance and Slytherin didn’t even bother to nod; he ran the tip of his thumb against the tips of his fingers over and over again, then touched one of the ubiquitous books he seemed to always carry, the formation of dastardly thoughts churning like thunderheads amassing on a horizon, threatening an oncoming storm. Severus had watched one too many Slytherin students succumb to the man who wore the name of their House like a smiling mask; he wasn’t about to watch Potter run headlong into the hurricane.

He shoved away his cold plate and stood.

“Finished, Severus?” Minerva asked, eying the wasted food.

“Yes.” Severus paused “Potter has a detention to serve.”

“A detention?!”

Severus didn’t give an explanation. He gathered himself and strode from the dais, walking into the midst of the Great Hall instead of leaving through the side chamber. Potter didn’t notice him until he snapped her name and the snake darted for cover under her robes once more. He felt stupid for not noticing the creature sooner; it looped itself about her shoulder and gave the scrawny girl an odd, moving hunch.

“P-Professor?”

“Come with me, Potter.”

She did as told, scrambling up from the empty table, leaving behind a plate of food just as full as Severus’ had been. She trailed after the Potions Master as he strode out of the hall and made for the dungeon corridor, his left eyes aching in the sudden—and severe—shift in temperature. He rubbed at the scars, irritated, and tried to think of what to do with the brat now. Minerva would verbally flay him later. His immediate plan had been to remove Potter from Slytherin’s sight; like the symbol of his Noble House, the man had an indolent disposition, a propensity for snatching things dangled in front of his nose before hunting for bigger, juicier prey. Slytherin wouldn’t put the effort into searching for Potter if she wasn’t in his immediate vicinity.

Severus wondered if Albus would protest him giving the girl detention for the rest of break.

“Professor Snape? Am I…in trouble?” she asked, the words coming out small and nervous, like Severus might turn around and start screaming. He rolled his eyes—and immediately regretted the motion when his left began to throb again.

“No,” he retorted as they entered the Potions classroom. He pointed at one of the tables near his desk, told the girl “Sit,” and she did so. “The infirmary requires new potions to be brewed and I would rather not waste my time with menial prep work. Since you have nothing better to do….”

Defiance sparked in her, a brief flicker of irritation behind tired eyes, and Severus waited for her to take exception to his tone— but then Potter looked down and nodded without protest. Odd.

Severus flicked his wand toward the storage cupboard and waited for the needed ingredients to come zooming out, settling a cutting board, a knife, and a sizable clutch of different roots on the table before her. “These must be cut to specification. Watch carefully.” He diced one daisy root and one stick of yew, then sliced a Gurdyroot, showing the girl how each needed to be prepared. “Do you think you can manage that, Miss Potter?”

“Yeah—yes, Professor.”

“Good.”

Severus retreated to his desk and retrieved the proper cauldrons needed to brew Pomfrey’s potions. Silence descended over the dungeon, broken only by the small noises arising from their separate motions: the quiet scuff of Severus’ shoes on the floor, the screech of metal cauldron legs sliding on wood, the slow but steady thud of the knife cutting through plant matter. Potter concentrated on her task, nose wrinkled against the smell of split Gurdyroot. Her potion making abilities weren’t as clear as her Muggle-born friend’s, but she had a spot of talent in handling ingredients and properly measuring materials—not like Black. Every cauldron Black touched seemed to collapse in on itself.

They worked without exchanging words for an hour—well, Severus worked without exchanging words while the girl hissed from the corner of her mouth and made a mockery of subtlety. He could hear the serpent whisper in return as they carried on a conversation. Every sibilant word hit his ear like a sledgehammer, images of the Dark Lord flashing through his recollection, memories of deadly vipers spilling through the man’s white, white hands and stirring around their ankles, Death Eaters trembling in fear as pythons thicker round than grown wizards slithered through the room.

Severus sat down with a heavy sigh and rubbed at his sore eye as his iron cauldron continued to simmer. Why can’t anything ever be simple?

“Professor Snape? Is your eye okay?”

He froze, then jerked his hand away from his face. Shit. “It’s fine,” he snapped, leveling a fierce glower in the nosy chit’s direction, daring her to question it again. Not many students knew about his eye, not anymore. Those who’d been in school when the incident occurred had graduated, leaving their younger siblings and friends with nothing more than rumors and speculations—rumors and speculations that proved to Severus the uncreative idiocy of his students over and over again.

“Sorry, sir.” She didn’t sound sorry. She sounded irked, and Severus guessed he deserved that for dragging her to the bloody frozen dungeons and telling her to chop roots. What other excuse could he give? Stay away from your Defense professor, he’s an ill-defined, maliciously clever, nefarious duplicate of the same Dark Lord who killed your parents? He regularly bends the minds of children to accept his potentially deadly ideology? Slytherin would read that in Potter’s head like he was perusing the Daily Prophet and Severus would probably be dead in a week.

“Potter….” Severus paused, then stood to inspect his cauldron again. “Why did you choose to stay for the holidays?”

The knife’s steady thud stuttered. “Err—what?”

“Are you deaf, girl?”

“No, it’s just—why do you want to know? Sir?”

Severus quirked a brow as he stirred, counting the ladle’s revolutions through the thick concoction. No, Potter had no subtlety whatsoever, but for a moment, he saw a glint of Slytherin evasiveness in the girl. Being eleven, it was unrefined, the childish misdirection of a girl used to lying to idiot Muggles, not practiced deceivers like Severus—but is was there, and likely part of the reason she ended up in the House of Serpents. “That doesn’t answer my question.”

“I’m not deaf.” She poked at the daisy roots, shredding the messy ends, staining her fingertips green. “My, err, relatives work.”

“Yes, everyone works, Potter. Does that work actually interfere with you returning to your home?”

She thought about it. Severus saw her trying to come up with some answer beyond ‘my aunt’s a bitch,’ like little cogs clicking behind the face of a clock. “Yes.”

“In what way?”

“I dunno. Just does.” Potter furiously chopped at the roots again and created a mess of useless pulp. “I ruined these, I think. Sorry, professor.”

Severus scoffed at her purposeful destruction, but allowed the subject to drop for now. “Never mind. Move on to the yew.” She did so, and he removed the ladle from his cauldron, careful to not unduly disturb the base mixture. “And what of Black? Surely her caregivers could spare her for the holidays. Why did she not stay?”

The stiffness leached from the girl’s shoulders and she stopped massacring the roots. “Oh, um—.” Severus winced when she brought the knife too close to her face, using the hand to adjust her glasses. “Elara’s uncle’s been sick and she’s a bit worried about him, so she decided it’d be best to go home.”

Uncle? Severus took a moment to pore through his knowledge of Black’s family lineage; her wretch of a father only had one brother, Regulus, and he’d been presumed dead since before Potter or Elara Black’s birth. Marlene McKinnon had no brothers and only one older sister who died with the rest of the McKinnons in the fire. Black had no uncle—unless she meant great uncle. Severus knew through Narcissa’s scathing comments that Cygnus was still alive and still not speaking to the Malfoy family after they quarreled years ago. Perhaps he was the one who took Black in.

Potter kept talking. “She’s also hoping to find out more about her parents, since her uncle didn’t really know them, I guess. He doesn’t even know her mum’s name and it’s been hard getting information while at Hogwarts.”

Severus stilled. “…does Black know who her father is?”

“Yeah—I mean, yes. But she doesn’t really like to talk about him.”

Ah, he thought. So she does know about him. The students are quick enough to call her the ‘Madman’s Daughter,’ so I shouldn’t be surprised. “Her mother was Marlene McKinnon.”

The sound of the knife hitting the cutting board came to a stop yet again and Severus lifted his gaze from the cauldron. Potter stared at him in astonishment. He scowled.

“You will keep the source of that information to yourself, Potter!”

“Y-yes, sir!”

Severus glared and the girl returned to her task. She prodded a Gurdyroot with the tip of the knife and lunged forward to grab it before the spherical root could roll off the table. Potter’s friendship with the Black heir still grated on Severus, so he found himself speaking before he could think better of it. “It doesn’t surprise me Black dislikes speaking of her father. He was an abominable human being and a very dangerous wizard. Most Blacks are.”

Potter glanced up and caught his eye. She’d heard the implicit hint in his tone. They stared at one another as Potter passed the Gurdyroot between her small hands and her thoughts churned inside her head. Severus wasn’t fool enough to think she’d toss Black’s friendship aside on his accusations, but he hoped the sentiment sank in somewhere in thick skull. Even he hadn’t suspected Sirius Black of being a traitor; he wouldn’t see Potter’s spawn fall into the same trap.

“It doesn’t really matter though, does it, sir?” she said slowly. “I mean, whoever her dad is or was, it doesn’t matter. Most kids don’t grow up to be like their parents. Not really, anyway.”

Severus looked at Potter for several seconds, expression inscrutable, then spoke. “No,” he said. The cauldron hissed and bubbled, and the flame cast an eerie light through the cold room. “They don’t.”

Chapter 26: reflections of desire

Chapter Text

xxvi. reflections of desire

 

Harriet peeked into the deserted corridor, let the tapestry fall behind her, and released a relieved breath.

Professor Snape hated her. It was the only reason she could imagine responsible for his sudden, burning need to give Harriet detention every time they crossed paths; four days had passed since the rest of the student body went home and already Harriet had been given four detentions. One she spent chopping more potion ingredients, one cleaning cauldrons, one polishing trophies with Filch, and one lingering in the Transfiguration classroom. Professor McGonagall didn’t seem all that pleased with Professor Snape and probably would have let Harriet go had Harriet not been convinced she’d only get another detention for leaving detention early.

He punished her for the stupidest things—for having messy hair or for dropping a book or for sneezing too loud. When Harriet protested, Snape gave her yet another detention, all while wearing a smug expression that dared Harriet to argue further so he could extend what rubbish penance he’d already assigned. Naturally, she wouldn’t accuse a git like Snape of ever liking anyone, but Harriet’d thought he didn’t hate her as much as he seemed to hate the Gryffindors—or Elara, who melted all his cauldrons and once caught her table on fire. She’d obviously been mistaken.

The corridor was Snape-free—or it looked Snape-free, at least. Harriet felt cautiously optimistic. She walked carefully as she headed for the library, which she hoped was close enough to Professor McGonagall’s office to stave off anymore run-ins with the Potions Master. She tried coaxing Set into being her lookout, but her shadow remained obstinate and quiet, much to Harriet’s frustration. She would’ve kicked him had she known where his shins were and if it wouldn’t have bruised her toes on the stone floor.

One stairwell separated Harriet from her destination. She wanted to run, if only to get there quicker and find a quiet table out of sight where she could think about reading the books Hermione always pestered her about and probably settle on something more recreational. Harriet wished one of her friends could’ve stayed, but she understood better than most the importance of a loving family, and she wouldn’t begrudge Elara or Hermione for wanting to go home and see theirs.

Maybe she could reach the Owlery. Elara had left her bird behind so Harriet could write if she wanted. Harriet would’ve used a school owl, but Elara said a school owl probably couldn’t reach her because of the old enchantments covering her house. The owl still didn’t have a name and Harriet kept trying to give him one whenever he stopped by in the morning for part of Elara’s breakfast, yet the owl disliked every choice she gave him, leaving Harriet with nothing but nipped fingers for her efforts.

Raised voices in the stairwell reached Harriet’s ears and she froze.

“—don’t know how you’re managing it, but I’ll go straight to Flitwick, I swear—,” one Ravenclaw snarled at another, his bespectacled face mottled with flushed red color.

“I’m not cheating, you’re just a bloody moron.” The taller Ravenclaw shoved the boy in glasses and took a step back. “You’ve never been top of the class so I don’t get what your problem is—.”

“I was top of the year last term—!”

“Yeah, that was sixth year,” the Ravenclaw sneered. “No one cares about sixth year, dunce.” He turned and climbed the steps toward Harriet, slamming his feet down as he went. The sound of his stride echoed in the enclosed space. “Get out of the way, Slytherin.”

Harriet shuffled to the side, though the larger Ravenclaw still knocked his arm against hers. On the landing below, the bespectacled boy glowered at the taller student, his eyes hard—until suddenly he had his wand clenched in his fist and his voice rang in the stairwell when he shouted, “Slugulus Eructo!

Really, Harriet had no desire to be in the middle of whatever issues the two older students were arguing about. She much rather be in the library, reading a nice story book, or in the Owlery sending a letter, or outside in the snow building snowmen and generally avoiding any of the school’s professors, especially Snape. However, long hours in the Defense classroom or studying practical lessons with Hermione had drilled habit into Harriet’s head; when the curse came flying toward the other Ravenclaw, Harriet had her wand in hand, incanting, “Protego!”

The spell struck her transparent shield and ricocheted into the wall, where it left a long smear of a green, slimy substance. It looked like bogeys to Harriet’s eyes. “Oh, ew, gross—!”

The taller Ravenclaw whipped around on his heels and jabbed his own wand toward his fellow. “Calvario!

Red light smacked the bespectacled boy in the face—and suddenly the brown curls atop his head fell from his scalp like dead leaves off a tree. His eyebrows did the same. The taller student barked with laughter, and the furious boy below took the chance to yell, “Locomotor Mortis!

The second boy’s legs snapped together and Harriet yelped when he toppled into her, almost sending them both down the steps. She grabbed the Ravenclaw by the arm in an attempt to keep him upright, but he was a great deal larger and heavier than Harriet, his weight dragging her down with him as he fell and smacked his face on the top step. The bespectacled—and bald, very bald—Ravenclaw started to climb, his wand raised, and because Harriet had crumpled atop the other boy, she knew any spell sent his way would hit her instead, so she grappled to right her grip on her own wand, eyes wide, mouth dry—.

“Enough!”

The sudden voice froze the three students in place and dread spilled along Harriet’s spine like ice water. Professor Slytherin appeared at the bottom of the stairs, books tucked under an arm, his red eyes roving from the pile of hair strewn on the stones to the Ravenclaws and finally to Harriet herself, who shrank under his scrutiny and adjusted her glasses. “Are you injured, Miss Potter?”

“N-no, Professor Slytherin.”

“Good.” He flicked his wand and the mess on the floor burst into flames, the hair incinerating itself to nothing in a matter of seconds as Slytherin strode up the steps. “Forty points from Ravenclaw,” he snarled. “Get up, Henge.”

The boy on the floor—Henge—tried, but his legs were immobile from the waist down still so he could only manage an ungainly push-up. A small pool of blood had formed where he’d smashed his nose.

“Pathetic, the pair of you. Finite Incantatem.” The cursed ended and Henge righted himself, wincing at the bruise forming on his face. He fired a furious look in the other boy’s direction, then wilted when he caught Professor Slytherin’s eye. “Henge, Sanders—you will both go to the Hospital Wing and wait there for the Headmaster and your Head of House. If I catch wind of even so much as a whisper of more fighting….” Slytherin allowed his hissed threat to trail off into nothing and the two boys ran for it, their quarrel forgotten in lieu of escaping Slytherin’s wrath. Harriet tried to sidestep by him and make her own escape. His hand came down on her shoulder and squeezed.

“A moment of your time, Miss Potter,” he said with a smile—one of those smiles that wasn’t a smile at all, simply a tight curl of his lips like a snake preparing to open its jaws and devour a cricket whole. “I’m sure the Headmaster will appreciate an unbiased report of this embarrassing behavior.”

He then proceeded to march her straight back the way she’d come, up to the top floor of the high tower, where Harriet had hid herself early in the day to escape Snape-the-dungeon-dweller. Slytherin brought them to a halt before a winged gargoyle crouching low with bared teeth, and the man said the words, “Pumpkin Pasty.”

Harriet glanced at him, wondering if the wizard had gone mad, and the gargoyle shifted aside, revealing a set of spiral steps that began to revolve upward the moment Slytherin pushed them past the entrance. At the top of the stairs waited a door carved with intricate designs bearing an aged patina, though Harriet didn’t have time to appreciate the picture because Slytherin shoved the door open without knocking. He ushered Harriet into the space beyond.

Harriet hadn’t been called into the Headmaster’s office before; she liked to believe she was rather well-behaved, punching-Ron-in-the-mouth incidents aside. The Headmistress in primary had punished her on occasion, so Harriet expected Dumbledore’s office to be something like hers; wood finishes, a large desk, lots and lots of little folders for organizing. She did see a large desk ahead of her—but everything else in Professor Dumbledore’s office was nothing like Harriet would have guessed. Shelves lining the lower walls were crowded with all manner of texts and above waited line after line of gilded portraits, most of the residents fast asleep, or at least pretending to sleep. Low tables held collections of odd, whirring instruments cast in silver, emitting thin puffs of steam or chiming with gentle song. By the desk stood a golden perch, and on the perch rested the most regal bird Harriet had ever seen.

She glanced about but found no sign of Professor Dumbledore.

Professor Slytherin sighed, rolling his eyes at the crimson bird as it warbled a bright melody that eased the tension in Harriet’s shoulders and warmed her heart. “It appears we will have to wait for Dumbledore’s return,” he said as he settled in one of the armchairs facing the desk. “Wonderful.”

He gestured toward the accompanying chair and Harriet eased into it, nibbling on her lower lip, watching the man from the corner of her eye. The bird chose that moment to hop off its perch and come rest upon Harriet’s knees, leveling her a searching look as it cocked its head to the side and clacked its beak. Nervous, Harriet lifted a hand to stroke the bird’s striking plumage and it allowed her to do so, crooning once, twice, and then taking flight again, alighting through an open window into the gentle flutter of snow beyond. Harriet watched it leave and, for some reason, felt incorrigibly sad.

Whispering jerked her head around just as Professor Slytherin tucked one of his books into the front of his robes. Harriet caught only a glimpse of it; bound in black leather with brass tabs on the corners, it appeared to be a journal, and the second it slipped out of sight, the whispering stopped. Professor Slytherin met Harriet’s inquisitive gaze and smiled. Again, the expression showed nothing but sharp teeth and something distinctly vicious that made Harriet swallow and look away.

“Something the matter, Miss Potter?”

“N-no, professor.”

“Hmm.”

The wizard studied Harriet, his thoughts unknowable, his index finger tapping his lower lip until Slytherin put aside his woolgathering and summoned a book off one of Dumbledore’s shelves with a wandless wave of his hand. The cabinet door sprung open and the book made an audible slap of sound when it landed in Slytherin’s upheld palm. Stare still lingering on Harriet, he popped the book open, then began to read.

If Harriet thought conversations with the Defense professor were nerve-racking, his silence was even more so. She kept shooting furtive looks toward his chest without meaning to, thinking about that journal with its weird whispering and the strange, gelatinous feeling of dread she’d gotten from just seeing it. Like tar, the feeling stuck with her despite the book’s absence and left behind a smudged residue, something tacky beneath her fingers that Harriet couldn’t help but poke and prod and scratch at.

She stood and meandered toward the Headmaster’s tables of silver instruments, putting much needed space between her and Slytherin while also sating her curiosity. Harriet didn’t know anything of what those contraptions did and could only guess and wonder to their function. She bit back the urge to touch things, a voice suspiciously like Aunt Petunia’s snapping at her to keep her grubby hands to herself, though Harriet still craned her neck, twisting this way and that, to get a better look. She swore she heard one of the portraits snort, but they all resumed their naps when she glanced up in suspicion.

The was a room adjoined to the main office. Of course, there were several other rooms and a set of stairs Harriet suspected led to Professor Dumbledore’s private quarters, but the door to this room stood partly open—or partly closed, the chamber beyond roughly the size of a large cupboard or a small study, illuminated by a single golden candle. Harriet poked her head inside for a look and saw nothing but a couple of closed trunks, a few shelves holding some broken oddments—and a mirror.

The door’s hinges creaked as Harriet stepped inside. She stared at the gilded mirror that reached from floor to ceiling, spots of wear speckled on the silver glass, words carefully chiseled into the thick gold frame arching over the mirror’s top: Erised stra ehru oyt ube cafru oyt on wohsi. Harriet wrinkled her nose and decided if that wasn’t a bunch of gibberish, she didn’t know what was.

Maybe it’s some kind of spell, she thought as she edged nearer and peeked at her reflection. Maybe something to activate it—.

There were people standing right behind her.

Frick—!” Harriet jumped and wheeled about, heart pounding. No one was there.

She glanced at the mirror and found that the image hadn’t changed.

Is this room haunted or something? Does Dumbledore have a closet full of ruddy ghosts? Or is this some kind of joke mirror—?

A woman stood closest to her, and she passed her fingers through mirror-Harriet’s hair, through real-Harriet couldn’t feel it. She looked into the woman’s eyes—and they were familiar, so familiar, and the man at her side grinned from ear to ear, black hair untidy, glasses sliding down his skinny nose, and behind them lingered more faces, all of them so achingly memorable—.

Harriet blinked. A hollow ringing built in her ears and beneath her feet Set curled, shadows clinging to her heels, slowing her laborious trudge toward the mirror as Harriet lifted a hand and felt the cold glass beneath her fingertips. “…Mum?”

The woman nodded.

As if she’d taken a punch to the gut, the air whooshed from Harriet’s lungs and she gaped, wordless, hands trembling. The image blurred and shifted, the crowd in the background dissolving so two additional figures could appear with Harriet and her parents. A younger girl with hazel eyes gripped the wizard’s hand and the witch had a third girl, a toddler with dark red hair, balanced on her hip. Siblings, Harriet’s beleaguered brain supplied, and the thought plinked through her like a breeze in wind chimes, hollow bones resounding with a soundless, vibrating need she had never encountered before.

Harriet didn’t know what her parents looked like. Here and there she’d heard a comment about her hair being like James’ or her eyes like Lily’s, but Harriet had never seen this for herself and now she could. She wanted desperately to know the name of her siblings, to know if they liked Harriet, if they spent time together as a family, if her mum baked cookies and how warm her dad’s hugs were. What was growing up in a wizarding household like? She pressed her hand flat to the glass in effort to slip through it and join those on the other side.

“Ah, the Mirror of Erised. What a droll trinket.”

Harriet jerked back. Professor Slytherin sauntered through the open door with his arms crossed and he smirked at her, and the mirror. Not wanting him to see her family, Harriet stepped to the side, out of frame, and her parents vanished.

“Figured out how it works then, Potter?”

She hadn’t, no. Why did the mirror show her family? Her mum and dad had been real enough—but those two girls hadn’t ever existed. Did it show some type of alternate future? A world that would never be? Harriet’s heart ached in her chest and she laid a hand against it, fingers brushing the edge of her lopsided tie as she recalled the sudden burst of emotion that had erupted there, the sheer need—.

“It—it shows you what you want,” she stuttered. “Whatever you want, even if it’s not possible.”

“Partially. Five points to Slytherin.” The professor shrugged as he leaned his weight against one of the shelves. The shelf didn’t appear very sturdy, and yet it didn’t wobble in the slightest. “The Mirror of Erised is enchanted to show your most ardent desire, not the petty wants of everyday life. Many a wizard and witch have been fool enough to let the images depicted therein drive them to madness.”

“So it’s not real,” she whispered, more to herself than to Slytherin, her eye still drawn to the mirror despite the absence of her family. She wanted to see them, just once more, just long enough to commit the image to memory, just so she could have the picture of them in her head—.

Harriet hated the mirror when she realized Slytherin was right, that someone could go quite mad wanting to look at that lying hunk of antique junk, even if just for a few seconds more. Her weight leaned precariously forward and Harriet had to smother the voice in the back of her head telling her to take that step, to bring herself into the mirror’s line of sight, to look one more time. It’s not true. It’s pretend, like dreams in my head projected onto the surface. It’s not real.

“What do you see, Miss Potter?” Slytherin asked. Her breaths still came in shallow increments when she turned to him, then lowered her chin, not wanting to meet his terrifying eyes.

“Err—I’m with my relatives. It’s Christmas time,” she lied, deciding it best to splice in a measure of truth.

Slytherin tipped his head and a curl of brown hair fell across his brow. “Yule,” the wizard corrected her in a sharp voice. “Christmas is a Muggle holiday. Yule is celebrated by magical kind. Why, Miss Potter, it sounds as if you were raised by Muggles.”

Then he grinned and Harriet wanted to sink through the floor and disappear. Her neck itched something fierce.

Movement at the door caught her attention. Dumbledore stood there in crimson robes striped with thin lines of gold, his sleeves lined with fur that looked particularly warm. “Hello, Harriet,” he greeted with a gentle smile—then his blue eyes cut to Professor Slytherin and the soft creases on his brow became hard and deep. “Is there a reason you’ve brought Miss Potter here, Tom?”

Slytherin sucked air through his teeth and Harriet thought of how Uncle Vernon would’ve cuffed him in the back of the head for showing that kind of disrespect. “Miss Potter witnessed a fight between Henge and Sanders. I thought it best she give her account of the story, lest you question my bias.”

“Oh, I’d never doubt your professionalism, Tom. Simply your methods.” Something cold slithered in Dumbledore’s normally jovial voice and Harriet shifted. The Headmaster extend his arm out toward her. “Come along, Harriet. It’s best to leave the mirror alone and not dwell upon what is seen within. Dreams, while lovely, should not be pursued at the expense of living.”

She placed her hand in the Headmaster’s and, when his warm fingers closed over hers, a feeling of safety enfolded Harriet like a new cloak. That prickly misery that had reared its ugly head after encountering the cursed mirror deflated, and though Harriet could see Slytherin sneer in disapproval, Harriet smiled at Professor Dumbledore and followed after him.

Chapter 27: the house of black

Chapter Text

xxvii. the house of black

 

Elara yanked on her trunk to get it over the crack in the sidewalk and scowled.

It was a long walk to Grimmauld Place from King’s Cross, made all the more difficult by the thin layer of half-frozen snow that stuck to Elara’s shoes and the trunk’s wheels. She could have gotten a taxi, of course, but Elara hadn’t thought of that before and didn’t have any Muggle money on her person. Besides, she wanted to avoid the Muggle world, just in case the orphanage had reported her as a missing person.

Father Phillips would probably tell the cops I’m an escaped nutter.

Elara crossed the quiet square with the looming faces of townhouses watching her progress. Number Twelve Grimmauld Place appeared right between Number Eleven and Number Thirteen, rather woebegone and weathered compared to its neighbors, the whispered, tinny sound of a television fluttering out someone’s cracked window. The neighbors flitted by their windows, ignorant to Elara’s presence, and the many shuttered eyes of Number Twelve remained dark, haunting. She mounted the steps, huffing all the way, and ignored the serpent-shaped knob in favor of rapping on the door itself.

“Kreacher,” she said aloud with a glance up and down the street, seeing no one. “Kreacher, open the door. Please.” When nothing happened, Elara smacked the door with more strength. “Kreacher.”

The knob creaked, twisted, and the door popped open an inch or so, allowing a sudden gasp of moldy air to escape, like breaching the vault of a forgotten tomb. Elara wrinkled her nose and quickly stepped inside. The house-elf’s milky eyes gleamed in the low, sputtering light of the gas lamps once the door came closed again.

“The blood-traitor’s daughter is back.”

“Yes,” she said, sighing. Kreacher had warmed to her—somewhat—over the summer hols, but it seemed he was back to referring to her as the blood-traitor’s brat. “It’s nice to see you too, Kreacher.”

The elf grumbled and sneered but otherwise refrained from making a comment. “Master Cygnus is not well.”

The handle of Elara’s trunk slipped from her sweaty hand and thumped on the dusty carpet. A knot had begun to twist itself into her middle not long after leaving Grimmauld for Hogwarts and it doubled itself now, tightening until Elara felt like she might be ill. “Can I—can I see him?”

“Kreacher will ask.”

“Thank you.”

He frowned and turned away, his pale body hunched and off-kilter as he tottered down the hall and up the stairs. Elara picked up her luggage again and went to find her room. She ignored the glassy-eyed stare of dead house-elves on the wall, a spider hanging from one’s bulbous nose. Elara would have to do something about those heads, something that wouldn’t set Kreacher off into a full-blown fit and yet still removed them from her sight.

The room Elara had inhabited since that summer was, ironically, bedecked in faded banners of crimson and gold, a Gryffindor lion embossed on the wall—right between a few posters with scantily dressed models that pouted when Elara pinned sheets of parchment over them. She would tear them down if they hadn’t been stuck to the wallpaper with a spell.

It was in this room that she had found the journal, the one she took to reading between assignments at school or on the long train ride into the city. The writer had been particularly fond of code names and she had no idea who used to inhabit the space she now utilized. Cygnus himself had only come to live at Grimmauld some years after Walburga’s passing, when his illness had worsened beyond its initial stages, and thus didn’t know much of the house’s more detailed information. Kreacher could tell her, were he not the most intractable of people Elara had ever had the misfortune of meeting.

She settled down and took out the journal in question, a tattered thing with a magical shop’s logo branded into the inside cover along with a series of nonsensical doodles. It was not a diary—not the sort Elara had ever seen—but rather a book of thoughts, funny anecdotes, ideas, and bits of copied lectures. What she found particularly compelling were the parts detailing Animagi and their transformations. Whoever had owned the journal had a penchant for rude humor and was an absolutely brilliant wizard.

Elara thumbed the weathered pages, considering the scribbled handwriting and the careless blotches of ink. She’d considered the possibility of the book belonging to her father—he’d lived in this house too, as far as she knew—but Elara couldn’t reconcile the image in her head, and dozens of Black sons had lived in the house over the years. “Padfoot” wrote with vivacity, wrote about pranks and a boy he fancied named “Mooney” and how much he loved Quidditch; Sirius Black was a madman who killed thirteen people with one curse and supposedly laughed. The journal couldn’t belong to him.

Feeling sick at heart, Elara set the journal aside and exhaled. She rubbed at her wrists and wished the cold didn’t make them ache so.

Kreacher arrived with a sudden pop! and she jumped, startled, giving the house-elf a reproving look as he grinned nastily. “Master Cygnus is awake.”

“Thank you, Kreacher.”

The elf disappeared as Elara stood, straightened her clothes, and headed up to the proper bedroom. She knocked on the door and the occupant called out entry, voice as weak as a summer breeze, and Elara eased into the room. The dark remained omniscient with shadows as thick as shrouds, the smell of sick and ash heavy as a morning fog. Elara strode forward without waiting for invitation and brushed her fingers against the base of the candlestick sitting on the nightstand. A grunt rose from the bed when the candle came to life.

“Brat,” Cygnus rasped as he turned his head on the pillow and his black hair clung in limp coils to his pale skin. Elara pulled the shade low around the candle to dilute the light and her great uncle sighed in response. “Thank you.”

“How are you, Uncle?”

Cygnus didn’t respond. His eyes gleamed in the flickering light, two bright spots in and otherwise blurred countenance. Elara felt the sudden urge to tear away the shade and cast the light fully upon him, just so she could see him, so she could see how much worse he must have gotten in her absence, but she’d been raised with better respect, even if she resented that place with every bone in her body. Cygnus wouldn’t tell her and it was better if she didn’t ask. “How was your trip?”

“Fine. Uneventful.”

He harrumphed. “How is Slytherin House treating you?”

“Fine.” Elara fidgeted, bringing her fingers together, studying her nails. “I have some friends and my studies have been going well.”

“Ah, yes. The Potter girl and the Mud—Muggle-born.” He narrowed his eyes. “I do hope you haven’t alienated the students from the old families?”

“No, but they are a bit….” Elara trailed off and Cygnus chuckled. The sound was heavy, wet, and painful.

“They will grow out of their idiocy with age,” he said. “They confuse bigotry with House pride and forget a man’s fortunes can dwindle in a single afternoon.” Cygnus coughed and turned from Elara, facing the dark. “The blue potion, if you’d be so kind….”

Elara jumped up to retrieve the asked for mixture, then returned to her seat. At Cygnus’ prompting, she continued to share stories of her time attending Hogwarts and he coached her to speak up or to speak more, because telling a good tale was part of knowing how present oneself. He scoffed over recollections of Draco’s behavior and stated that “Allowing Narcissa to marry Lucius Malfoy” had been one of his stupider decisions in life. “He may be pure of blood, but he and his father Abraxas are the greatest of cross-eyed dolts.”

She pressed her lips into a firm line to swallow her laugh and if Cygnus noticed, he chose not to comment.

“To that end, I actually have a gift for you….” Elara’s great uncle shifted and she heard the fine scratch of paper moving on paper before he found the missive he wanted and extended it to her, bringing his trembling hand into the light. Elara stared at the pale, wasted thing and felt something twist in her middle again. His skin was paler than the parchment and just as thin and dry. “The letter, brat.”

“My apologies.” Elara took it from him. She opened the page and held it closer to the single candle, squinting against the dark to decipher the words scrawled there in a very official manner. It was some kind of legal document and the jargon therein confused Elara, since her vocabulary leaned more toward the romantic, poetic styling of religious dogma. “This says I’ve been—.”

“Emancipated,” Cygnus said with a sigh, as if he’d grown tired of watching Elara try to read. “It took a great deal of gold and persuasion to manage it for a girl your age. What it means is that upon my death you will become the proxy-Head of our family, and you will not be forced into some lesser household—or, Merlin forbid, taken in by one of my daughters. You will be recognized as an adult in the eyes of magical law.”

Elara stared at the paper in her grip until her eyes blurred. “I don’t have to go back to the orphanage.” She had no plans of ever returning there, but it had always been a possibility, a threat looming in the back of her mind like the ominous rattle of handcuffs and the slow intonation of priestly chanting. She didn’t have to fear ending up somewhere just as despicable in the Wizarding world.

“No, you don’t.”

Careful, as if handling a priceless heirloom, Elara folded the letter and held it to her chest, repressing the prickling sensation in her eyes that threatened tears. Cygnus wouldn’t appreciate that. “Thank you.”

He didn’t smile, but he did watch Elara, his gaze glassy with pain and his sunken skin wet with fresh perspiration. “You will do the House of Black proud,” he said. His words rang with certainty, the kind of certainty only men like her great uncle—men who’d walked in the upper echelon of society and had sampled the fruits of indulgence—could achieve. “The least I could do was assure you were not taken away from it.”

 

_____

 

Cygnus Black died three days after Elara arrived at Grimmauld Place.

She woke early in the morning to the sound of house-elf sobs echoing in the narrow corridors and entered her great uncle’s bedroom to find that he had, presumably, expired in his sleep sometime the night prior. At a loss, she sank into the armchair by the bedside and stared as Kreacher howled and Elara patted the elf’s heaving shoulders. Cygnus’ death was sudden, though not unexpected. Had he not introduced himself to her by stating his condition was fatal? Elara knew that, had seen how shaky his handwriting had grown, how tired he sounded, and yet she’d hoped for more time. Just a little more time.

Having been a man of thought and foresight in life, Elara’s great uncle had made arrangements for his inevitable end and had left detailed instructions for Elara—or Kreacher, had she not been home when he passed on. Elara liked to think herself passably clever and well-read, but she was still only eleven, and she had never dealt with a death in the family before. She appreciated the tidy, bulleted instruction scrolls as she’d appreciated everything given and taught to her by Cygnus in the short time of their acquaintance.

Letters were written and sent out to Cygnus’ specifications, Elara managing to coax her great uncle’s ancient owl—Percival—out into the frigid weather. St. Mungo’s was contacted, a death certificate issued, and the mortuary received a new occupant. Elara spent much of that first afternoon sitting small and uncertain in the overlarge leather chair of Cygnus’ solicitor, Mr Piers, who became Elara’s solicitor and managed the arrangements and the obituary for the Daily Prophet. Elara returned to Grimmauld Place and spent time in the library, trying to muddle through the legal diction with a dictionary. She wished Hermione was there to help. She wished Harriet was there to make her laugh.

Two days later, Elara found herself walking up a flight of iced steps as the air escaped her lungs in puffs of white and she struggled to hold onto both her umbrella and the handrail. Around her rose the dark, snow covered tombs and markers belonging to wizards and witches long dead, the sky cloudy but bright with the sun hidden in the silver whorls, the silence broken only by Elara’s slow tread.

The cemetery in the borough of Hertsmere had belonged to the magical folk of Britain for generations, before Merlin was born or Hogwarts was built, before Hadrian’s Wall rose—before the Romans even thought about crossing the water. Most of the old Wizarding families aside from the Lestranges had mausoleums or plots there, and the Blacks were no exception. Cygnus had chosen one of the spots that lay in the shadow of the Black tomb itself, by his wife Druella and his brother Alphard, and the gravedigger had already prepared the site by removing the ice and spelling a barrier over the plot that stop more snow from falling. Elara paused when she came in view of her destination.

A priest stood at the head of the waiting grave, a bible in his hands, his pointed hat stuck to his stooped head with a spell. The church and magical kind had a long and often vicious history together. The Catholic miracle workers had more often than not been wizards who—in ages past—would use their abilities to heal the sick or inspire the wayward, and the clergy had been known to harbor witches attempting to escape persecution. Elara knew Hogwarts had a small chapel not far from the dungeons, a place where the Fat Friar lingered—not that she’d ever been there.

Elara swallowed and kept walking.

Aside from the priest and the gravedigger, four other people stood on the patch of grass cleared of snow, waiting for the service to commence. A blond wizard bent to mutter into the ear of his wife, both dressed in black robes tooled in silver, the latter wearing a gilded cameo at her throat that bore the Black crest. The two witches who stood on the opposing side of the grave were less polished than the first pair, the older witch obviously a Black, with her patrician beauty and practiced posture, her hair lighter than Elara’s and her expression soft. A witch several years older than Elara waited with the woman, streaks of vermilion coloring her brown hair.

Closing her umbrella, Elara stepped past the ward and found several pairs of eyes swiveling in her direction.

“Ah, Miss Black,” the priest said with a kindly smile, though Elara couldn’t quite meet his gaze. “Are we ready to begin, then?”

“Yes, sorry,” she replied. She would have told them it was a long walk from the road and even longer walk from the train station but refrained, a lump growing in her throat.

A magical funeral service proved similar to its mundane counterpart. Elara had never attended a funeral before, of course, but she’d seen them happening in the cemetery that adjoined the church’s lot next to the orphanage and had listened to the voices on the wind, ashes to ashes, tearful widows, people shaking their heads and whispering “such a shame.” Cygnus’ funeral was quieter than that, no one aside from the priest speaking, the snow still falling silent below the mausoleum’s eaves, the gravedigger smoking at a respectful distance, waiting.

Elara wrung her hands until creases appeared in her leather gloves.

The priest stopped speaking and drew his wand. He enacted several spells without uttering a word, a soft yellow light phasing over the coffin before the gravedigger left his post and lowered Cygnus into the earth. The waiting witches and wizard conjured flowers to toss down, which Elara couldn’t do, being underaged and scarcely trained, so the young witch with red in her hair passed a carnation to her with a smile. Elara flushed before adding her flower to the others. Magic returned the dirt to its proper place, resowed the sod, and Transfigured a blank sheet of marble into a stately headstone embossed with the family’s motif and Cygnus’ name. The ward fell with a soft pop! of displaced air. Snow speckled the grass.

It was over. Cygnus was gone.

“Miss Black.”

The blond wizard spoke as he and his wife turned from the fresh grave without a glance in its direction. Looking at him, with his haughty sneer and cold eyes, Elara was struck with a sudden rush of déjà vu, though she couldn’t quite place where she’d seen the man before.

“My name is Lucius, of the Most Noble House of Malfoy, and this is my wife, Narcissa, Cygnus’ youngest daughter.”

Elara’s eye twitched at the excessively formal greeting—though she realized where she’d seen him now; Draco was a foul little carbon copy of the wizard before her. Hermione never said a word against the Malfoys, but life in St. Giles had drilled the importance of subtext into Elara’s head; Hermione said nothing against the Malfoys and nothing for them, her eyes always blank whenever Draco opened his trap to wax poetic about his vaunted father. Cygnus claimed the Malfoys were weak-willed, wealthy and impeccably bred but unable to do anything more than ride the coattails of others. Really, Elara hadn’t met anyone who had something nice to say about the couple now looking down their noses at her.

“Hello,” she responded, fidgeting with her sleeves. When Elara declined to say more, Lucius cleared his throat. She doubted they knew her name.

“Yes, well. I have been led to believe you resided with Cygnus at—.” He hesitated, like he had the name on the tip of his tongue and couldn’t quite spit it out. “At—?”

“Grimmauld Place,” the wife—Narcissa—put in. “Aunt Walburga’s, Lucius. Uncle Orion cursed the place so thoroughly the name escapes those who aren’t current residents or Blacks.”

“Of course,” he drawled. “How remiss of me. Nevertheless, with Cygnus passed and your father’s continued incarceration, we will be able to make arrangements and take you into our home—.”

“She doesn’t have to go with you.” The witch with brown hair and kind eyes wasn’t looking particularly kind as she left the grave’s side; her stare hardened as she studied Lucius and found him wanting. She addressed Elara next. “Hello. I’m Andromeda Tonks, Cygnus’ daughter, and this is my daughter, Nymphadora—.”

The younger witch flinched and the red in her hair suddenly turned a poisonous green. Elara blinked, shocked and more than a bit alarmed.

“She’s a Metamorphmagus,” Andromeda said by way of apology. “Dora, you know better than to—.”

“Well, don’t call me Nymphadora in front of people—.”

Lucius released a low, genteel scoff and raised his chin as Narcissa looked anywhere but directly at her sister. “You clearly have your hands full, Andromeda. It would be best if we—.”

“I’m not leaving Grimmauld,” Elara said, freezing the others in place. Malfoy’s brow furrowed.

“You don’t expect your new guardian to move in, do you?”

“I don’t require a guardian.”

“Don’t be ridiculous.”

“I have no intention of being ridiculous, Mr Malfoy. I don’t need a guardian because I’ve been eman—.” Elara had to form her tongue around the unfamiliar word and felt heat rise in her cheeks, feeling young and naive and about two centimeters tall in Mr Malfoy’s eyes. “Emancipated.”

“The Ministry does not emancipate eleven year old pure-blood girls!”

Elara already had a hand in her robes, retrieving the folded copies of the legal notice Cygnus had left for her. She all but threw the first at Lucius and, for good measure, handed another to Andromeda, who accepted the note with something like sadness in her careworn expression. Lucius, meanwhile, was looking more and more thunderous with every line he read. Finally he snatched the letter from his own face and shoved it toward Narcissa’s.

“This is the kind of unbecoming behavior we’ve come to expect from Cygnus. He was old and half mad with fever toward the end—.”

“I think I would know better, Mr Malfoy, seeing as I was there,” Elara replied. Her voice reflected more bravery than she actually felt, considering Lucius Malfoy had been—was—a Death Eater, and Cygnus had no reservations about telling her those who pledged themselves to any wizard in such a manner were unpredictable and most certainly dangerous. She knew her great uncle had been more than a bit racist, but Cygnus had recognized his own failings and had made an effort to teach Elara what it meant to be a pure-blood without falling victim to one’s own pride like the Malfoys.

Her gaze flicked toward the silent grave and a fresh stab of misery jolted her heart, Elara’s eyes dampening of their own accord. She spent ten years in the orphanage and these people never spared a thought for her, having thought she was dead from infancy—and now they cared. Now they wanted a say in where she lived and whom got control over her life, but Elara wasn’t having any of it.

“If you don’t mind,” she said, breath hitching. “I’m going to go home now.”

“Listen here, girl, we don’t accept this kind of insolence—.”

“Narcissa, tell your wretched husband to let the poor girl be—.”

New waves of civilized and grossly well-mannered invectives came hissing from Lucius’ mouth while Elara took the opportunity to turn and walk away. She could feel the gaze of the witch who didn’t like to be called Nymphadora lingering on her back.

The snow crunched under Elara’s boots. The priest and the gravedigger had Disapparated the moment they sensed a family feud on the rise. Elara had left Grimmauld the Muggle way that morning after discovering Kreacher still weepy and inconsolable, balling into a pair of trousers for some inexplicable reason, but when Lucius snapped “Get back here! You haven’t been dismissed!”, Elara shouted “Kreacher!” and the house-elf appeared. She stuck out her hand and, without another word, the glowering imp took hold of her and Apparated them home.

 

_____

 

It was much later, after night had fallen and silence had settled good and thick about Grimmauld Place, that Elara cried.

She sat at the table in the kitchen, folded as small as she could be in one of the stiff chairs with her arms wrapped about her legs and her nose buried in the crook of her knees. Tears painted damp patches on the hem of her skirt and Elara sniffled. Elara hadn’t known Cygnus very long, and yet he’d shown her great patience, had given her all the tools she needed to succeed, and Elara appreciated that more than any pity she’d ever gotten, any half glances from the nicer sisters who said “Poor dear” and tried to ply her with extra desserts while never doing anything. After all, they knew what would happen, had agreed with Father Phillips, had turned a blind eye when they dragged her from her bed in the dead of night and—.

A part of Elara wanted to yell, throw a tantrum or be overtly hysterical like Kreacher had been that morning. The sisters had taught her tears were a sign of weakness, and weakness was a sin—much like everything else, if she were being honest. So Elara sucked in a ragged breath and let out a sharp, short scream, just because she could. The sound echoed and one of the portraits out in the hall squawked. The tension in her chest ebbed, and Elara laughed, tired and lonely and yet inordinately pleased with herself for shattering the silence, if only for a second.

Somewhere farther in the house a clatter came and Elara paused, listening, hearing the approaching mutter and thump of familiar feet. The kitchen door swung open seemingly of its own accord—then Kreacher came into view, foul tempered as ever, carrying her owl in his arms. The owl, for his part, looked most displeased with this arrangement and shot filthy, accusing glares in the elf’s direction.

“The Mistress has mail.”

“Thank you, Kreacher,” Elara returned. The elf sniffed and let the owl go. The bird landed on the table with a screech, beating his wings, and Elara reached out to soothe his rumpled feathers. Harriet’s voice played in the back of her mind, the bespectacled girl trying to give the scowling avian a name—monikers like ‘Zeus’ and ‘Bacon’ and ‘Berk’ after he smacked Harriet in the face—because “All familiars need names, Elara!

Bits of broken snowflakes melted until Elara’s fingertips as she stroked his feathers and the owl stuck out his leg. Attached to it with a clumsy bit of twine was a letter from the aforementioned girl and Elara smiled when she took the letter in hand. She remembered to write.

The owl fluffed his plumage. Elara studied him and, unbidden, a name fell from her lips. “Cygnus.”

He nipped her cool fingers in approval.

Chapter 28: bequeathed

Chapter Text

xxviii. bequeathed

 

Harriet Potter woke to a strange and puzzling sight.

She sat up from her mangled sheets bleary-eyed and mussy-headed—Livi complaining at the sudden draft created by the shifting covers—and stared at the odd blurs cluttering the foot of her bed. Harriet didn’t remember dropping anything on the bed before going to bed, so someone must have put it there after she went to sleep.

“Wazzit?”

Several moments and mumbled curses left the sleepy girl before she could find her glasses and stir the lanterns into something brighter than a dim blush. Crowded on top of her trunk and the end of her bed were several boxes wrapped in silver and green paper. One had a bow.

Bloody hell, she had Christmas presents!

Harriet had gotten gifts before from the Dursleys—if you could call them that. Sometimes she got old socks or secondhand clothes from the charity shop, and one year she got the wrapping paper that came off of Dudley’s gifts, which she actually tacked up in the cupboard to make it pretty until Aunt Petunia snapped at her to take it down. The year she got absolutely nothing was the year the oven somehow turned itself up to “broil” and reduced Petunia’s Christmas roast to cinders.

Harriet picked up the first present and recognized Elara’s stilted handwriting on the tag. Inside the wrapping she found an old book that was considerably heavier than she expected, the cover most likely made of something more substantial than cardboard. Harriet couldn’t see a title on the dusty binding, only some kind of crest with a tiny skull, three birds, and what looked like a blurb of French, though she wasn’t certain. On the first page scrolled the words “A Compendivm of Defense Against Magic Moste Dark: First Edition.” Below that Elara had written, “For Harriet — to learn something that might surprise even Prof. Slytherin himself. Sincerely, Elara.

Harriet snorted.

There was another book in the next package from Hermione, this one brand new and glossy, the pages crisp and smelling of new ink: 101 Legendary Artefacts of the Wizarding World. A cursory flip through the contents revealed a wealth of bright, moving pictures and the letter from Hermione was considerably longer and more verbose than Elara’s had been. Harriet huffed with amusement when she thought of how her best friends seemed determined to make her just as brainy as they were, though Harriet knew she’d never have Hermione’s knack for Charms or Elara’s precision in Transfiguration. At least she didn’t kill everything in Herbology.

The next package contained blank stationary that, to Harriet’s surprise and unease, had the Potter family crest stamped across the top in green ink. This, too, came from Elara—but the letter was different, written in the smooth script of a Dicta-Quill rather than personal handwriting, signed with “From the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black.” A note stuck to the bottom told Harriet that it was, according to Elara’s uncle, a pure-blood tradition for Wizarding families to pass on gifts for the Yule to invite good fortune in the new year.

Indeed, the remainder of the gifts were from the families of her housemates—Malfoy and Greengrass, Nott and Runcorn, Goyle and Crabbe. Nothing extravagant was inside the Transfigured boxes, just simple things like new quills or Chocolate Frogs or fresh parchment, but Harriet thought it was an oddly generous tradition for the pure-bloods. Then again, wizards and witches were some of the most superstitious people she’d ever met and not all of the pure-bloods were snobs; some of the upper year Slytherins were quite nice, as were a few pure-blood kids in the other Houses Harriet shared classes with.

A final gift lingered, half caught in the crevice between the mattress and the footboard, soft and squishy as if whatever inside were made of cloth. Set hovered around the package more than he had the others and Harriet thought he might be excited, if spooky shadow dwellers with a penchant for throwing things could be excited. She shoved the rest of a Chocolate Frog in her mouth, then tore away the paper.

Cool, light fabric spilled from the open wrappings into Harriet’s hands and she marveled at the feel of it, like water through her fingers—yet so alive, sparking with the sharp, crisp prickle of active magic. For half a second Harriet wondered if the cloth was cursed, then decided it didn’t matter now since she’d already grabbed hold of it, and who would want to curse an eleven year-old?

She very pointedly ignored the memory of Neville Longbottom falling from his broom in November.

Further investigation proved the cloth to be a cloak of some time, adult in proportions with a deep hood and a slightly crooked hem, as if whoever had cut the fabric before stitching it had done so with something rough and uneven. Harriet nudged Livi’s tail off of her lap and hopped to her feet, letting the cloak pool about her like a ridiculous cape. She found it rather old fashioned, the pattern on it distorted and difficult to decipher, the threads glinting like silver in the green glow of the lanterns.

Then Harriet folded the cloak around herself and disappeared.

“Bloody hell!” Harriet swore, tripping on the hem she couldn’t see, catching herself on the bedpost with a hand that was there but wholly invisible to her eyes.

Misstresss?” Livi hissed from the tangled nest of sheets when Harriet rushed by to the full-length mirror hanging between the empty carrells. Her head appeared in the speckled glass—and that was it.

I’m invisible!” Harriet yelled at the snake as she threw the hood over her head so it vanished as well. Once fully immersed in the cloak she could see herself again under the cloth, Set pooling in a narrow puddle at her feet, lapping the cloak’s hem, the lantern light strangely ethereal where it managed to peek through the cloak’s impermeable weave.

Livi lifted his head from the blankets and lazily turned in Harriet’s direction—only to pause. His tongue flickered in question. “…Misstresss?”

I’m here!” she told him, not quite able to hold back the laugh burbling in her chest. “This cloak is amazing!

Livi didn’t seem to agree if his annoyed hissing was anything to go by. The Horned Serpent levered himself off the bed, silver belly touching the floor with an audible thump of dry scales upon stones, and made his way nearer Harriet, following the quick darting of his violet tongue. Once he found Harriet, he slithered under the cloak’s rumpled edge and wound about her legs, using the witch’s offered arm as a way to lever himself higher. “Sss…thisss is ssstrange magic,” the snake said.

It’s not cursed, is it?” Harriet asked, suddenly apprehensive.

I do not know. It sssmellss like you.”

Well that’s helpful,” Harriet grumbled as she pulled off the cloak and carefully refolded it. She returned to the wrapping and poked about, looking for a card, and the search took several minutes before she managed to find it stuck in the crevice between the mattress and the bedrail. Huffing, Harriet pulled it out and read what was written there.

 

Your father left this cloak in my possession before he died. It is time I returned it to its proper owner. Use it well.

 

There was no name listed. Harriet traced the looping cursive letters and marveled at the cloak now settled on her lap. It belonged to my dad? She had an entire vault in Gringotts of things that had belonged to her parents, and yet Harriet felt oddly attached to this strange bit of fabric. “Use it well,” the note said. How did one go about being invisible well? To Harriet’s knowledge, people typically wanted to be invisible to do nefarious things, like steal or sneak about. Harriet didn’t want to steal anything and didn’t much fancy sneaking about. What should I use it for?

Harriet tucked her new possessions away and nicked another Chocolate Frog from her stash of candy before heading out to the common room with Hermione’s gift. Once in the hallway, however, she heard hushed, raspy whispering and—terrified of running into Snape again—Harriet tiptoed to the corridor’s end and carefully peeked into the room proper.

“—Vaisssey hass promissse,” said the portrait of a snake that hung above the empty hearth.

Does he?” replied Professor Slytherin, one elbow propped on the mantel, hand carelessly running through his hair. “He’s never shown much initiative in class.”

He readsss booksss on the magic forbidden by the old man by the fire late in the eveningsss.”

Hmm,” Slytherin responded. “He shows interest, then.”

Yesss….” The snake bobbed in affirmation, its painted coils writhing beneath the roots of a great rowan tree.

And the first years?” the professor inquired. “What have you noted of them?”

Harriet held herself very still as she listened to the wizard speak in Parseltongue to the inanimate serpent. He has the snake spy on us! She quickly tried to think of any snake she’d ever see in the castle portraits, then had to relent, because it wasn’t like Professor Slytherin could only speak to snakes. He could talk to painted people just fine as well.

The blond hatchling ssspeakss often of his sssire.”

That would be Malfoy’s get,” Slytherin scoffed. “Lucius acknowledges Gaunt’s authority over my own. A fool, but a fool who has always sought influence over true power. He will most likely be a loss. Pity. Tell me of Nott.”

He ssstudiess his booksss with great fervor.”

Excellent.” Professor Slytherin paused then, one long finger tapping his bottom lip. “And what of Potter?

Harriet pressed herself into the wall with all her strength and thought it a marvel she didn’t just sink into it.

I do not know thisss name.”

Black hair. Bespectacled. The smallest of the first years—the runt of the litter, if you will.”

Harriet bristled.

The snake lisped in irritation. “Ssshe is a ssstrange hatchling.”

How so?”

Alwaysss…whissspering….

Odd.”

At this point Harriet thought it prudent to retreat before she could be discovered and quickly eased back to her dorm. She could’ve kicked herself for being so careless; sometimes she spoke to Set when she passed through the common room on her own. Being Muggle-raised, Harriet often forgot the bloody portraits not only moved but also saw and heard and spoke—and apparently Professor Slytherin used them to spy on his students, finding out if they had promise or not.

Promise for what was the real question, and Harriet wasn’t sure she wanted to know the answer.

She went back to her dorm, locking the door for good measure.

 

_____

 

Harriet didn’t leave the dungeons until supper time, when she scuttled out through the empty common room and all but ran to the lighter, warmer parts of the castle. She could hear voices coming from the Great Hall, mostly adult, but with a few younger laughs interspersed between the deeper droning, and the smell of cooked meat, potatoes, and baked bread had drool pooling in Harriet’s mouth. She sighed with relief—until she looked into the hall and found only one table waiting for her. Comfy purple armchairs surrounded it, with one seat open by Professor Selwyn, and another by bloody Longbottom.

Scrunching her nose, Harriet took the place by Longbottom and the Weasleys. “Happy Christmas—err, Yule!”

The Gryffindors blinked in surprise at her presence.

“Oi,” Neville muttered as he glowered, his voice low enough to escape the ears of the arrayed professors. “Why don’t you go sit with the other slimy Slytherins?”

As one, the Gryffindors and Harriet glanced toward the opposing end of the table where Professor Slytherin sat with Snape and Selwyn on either side of him, their faces all set in a unique kind of grimace achieved by the truly cantankerous during times of excessive joy. In fact, it appeared they’d largely Vanished any of the decorations that had dared spilled in their direction, though none of the other professors had the same problem.

“Is that—is that a serious question?” Harriet asked as she piled potatoes onto her plate. “Because I could give you about half a dozen reason why I’d rather drink Bubotuber pus.” Harriet would bet a sack full of Galleons she’d get half a dozen detentions from Snape for breathing the same air as him.

The Weasley twins snorted into their pumpkin juice. Neville might have protested, but Ron nudged him in the ribs and said, “Leave off, Nev, the food’s gonna get cold!” so Longbottom harrumphed, sticking a bite of chicken into his mouth. Harriet looked over the Gryffindors and noted that Ron and his brothers—including Percy, who sat by the Arithmancy teacher chatting with fervor—all had on thick, woolly sweaters. Given how frigid the dungeons were, Harriet gazed rather wistfully at their attire.

“I like your sweater,” she told Ron, who flushed. “Was it a gift for Ch—Yule?”

“Yeah,” Fred—his sweater had a large ‘F’ stitched into the threads, so Harriet guessed he was Fred—said as he chewed. She knew the twins by the rather terrible reputation they had in Slytherin. “Mum sends one every year.”

“We’ll have to tell her an itty-bitty snakey admired her handiwork,” George put in. “What’s your name, anyway?”

“Harriet Potter.”

“Potter, Potter…say, aren’t you the girl who punched Ickle Ronnikins?”

Harriet blushed and mumbled into her food. “I said I was sorry.”

Fred and George burst into laughter, earning several curious glances from the professors. “Brilliant, that,” George said with a wide grin. “Poor Ronni gettin’ nipped by baby Slytherins.”

Harriet huffed and cast a sympathetic look in Ron’s direction, who continued to stuff his face and ignored his brothers’ pestering, asking Neville to pass the butter dish. The meal progressed easily enough, the bubbly professor on Harriet’s other side striking up a lively conversation about her subject—Ghoul Studies, of all things, which she taught part-time to the sixth and seventh years who wished to take the class. Crackers made an appearance and Harriet pulled one with a reluctant Longbottom, getting showered in red confetti, tiny lion figurines that moved about on their own, and a small green snake—which Harriet quickly secreted into a robe pocket, lest it terrify the Gryffindors.

“Say,” she asked once dessert was well underway and a few professors had departed. Selwyn made a quick escape, but Snape lingered and had his head tilted toward Dumbledore’s ear, speaking in a low whisper that had the Headmaster nodding his head every so often. Slytherin surveyed the table, lost in thought. “If you were invisible, what would you do?”

“Is this one of those morality tests?” George asked, licking a bit of icing from his thumb. “Like if you have two kids on either side of a Nundu who do you save?”

“The answer’s always the handsomest twin,” Fred stage whispered.

“Wh—no,” Harriet said. What in the world is a Nundu? “No, I mean like if you could go about Hogwarts invisible, what would you do?”

They considered that for a time, bouncing ideas off each other, which included and were not limited to sneaking into the Slytherin common room, Snape’s store room, and the girl’s locker room—the latter earning a harsh look from Harriet and placating hand waves from the redheaded twins. Ron perked up and, after swallowing, said, “I know! The Restricted Section! We could find out more about N—.”

Neville kicked Ron under the table hard enough to jostle the flatware and Ron choked on his treacle tart.

Harriet frowned at their not so subtle behavior but otherwise pushed it aside, thinking about the suggestion. She was rather curious about the Restricted Section, about what kind of books and magic were considered too dangerous for casual viewing—and she wondered what Neville Longbottom could possibly want or need from the Restricted Section of all places. The boy loved to boast about all the tutors and fantastic places he’d been to over the years, and all Harriet could think about was how she’d been stuffed in a cupboard or scrubbing toilets while Longbottom had been scaling mountaintops or saving a village or something equally exciting and distinctly un-Dursley.

She sighed and popped a spoon of blueberry ice cream into her mouth.

Slytherin rose from his seat, dismissing his napkin with a negligible wave of his hand, the volume of conversation dipping around him as he strolled out of the Great Hall without a backward glance. Harriet shivered. He gives me the creeps. Was that how other Houses saw Slytherins? Ill at the thought, she set down her spoon and considered the Gryffindors she sat with. They chatted as they ate, the twins still bent on figuring out the very best mischief one could get into while invisible, Ron rolling his eyes while Neville ate his pudding. No, they didn’t see her as they did her Head of House. Whatever Professor Slytherin was, Harriet wasn’t anything like him.

She was glad for that.

 

_____

 

Harriet was having second thoughts.

Originally, the idea of venturing through Hogwarts’ corridors in the dead of night had been exciting, tinged with a bit of forbidden thrill and open curiosity. Now Harriet was faced with the very real prospect of venturing through the frigid, echoing dark of a castle literally haunted by ghosts and patrolling professors like Snape and Slytherin.

Hogwarts became sinister at night once the students were tucked into bed and the torches doused. Harriet shivered beneath the cloak as she inched out of the common room and found herself in a hall too black to see anything at all. She fumbled for the cloak’s edge until she could poke out a single hand and press it against the stone wall as a guide. The cold burned against Harriet’s skin and she hissed in a breath, bundling her fingers in her sleeve before touching the stones again. She hurried forward.

I’m glad I don’t have Prefect duty; this place is too spooky, the young Slytherin thought as her soft footsteps echoed in the entrance hall, moonlight splayed on the floor, wavering through the thundering clouds. She could barely tell where she was in the dark.

Harriet had almost reached the floor where the library could be found when she heard sobbing. Muffled sniffling drifted from the open door of an empty classroom, and when Harriet inched nearer to see who it was, she saw a professor standing hunched in-between the sparse whorls of moonlight coming through the frosted windows. He wore a purple turban, a dark olive cloak—and sobbed into his cupped hands.

“I’m trying, Master—. I can’t—. I can’t—.”

He sobbed again, harder, then abruptly stopped, sucking in a breath and no small amount of snot. He whipped around and Harriet scuttled backward as if she were visible, which she was wasn’t, of course. Seeing him clearer, Harriet realized the wizard was the Muggle Studies professor. Terrence Higgs pointed him out when she asked about the subject at lunch one time—pointed him out with the kind of sneering snark most Slytherin reserved for anything even remotely Muggle in distinction. She couldn’t remember the wizard’s name.

He passed her by and heat struck Harriet’s neck like a thousand stinging needles abruptly diving into the flesh of her shoulder and throat. A gasp left Harriet but the wizard kept sniffling as he shuffled off, covering the sound. The pain lasted only a moment, then vanished as it’d never been; Harriet, however, kept her hand clasped her neck as if to ward off a second bout. She watched the teacher until he wandered out of sight.

Slytherin’s not the only one who gives me the creeps.

Harriet waited several minutes and took several steadying breaths before she turned—and saw Professor Snape standing at the corridor’s end.

Standing there, staring at Harriet.

But that’s impossible, she told herself as she stood perfectly still. Snape did the same. He couldn’t possibly—.

Snape took three furious steps forward and lunged before Harriet could do more than jump, the Potions Master snatching the cloak right off her head. “Potter!

“How do you do that?!” Harriet blurted out before she could think better of it. “Can you see through all invisible stuff or—?”

Professor Snape loomed overhead and Harriet’s blathering dwindled. The girl gulped.

“Thirty points from Slytherin!” he snarled. “What kind of absolute idiocy would lead you to believe wandering the school in the middle of the night was permissible? I had hoped you were beyond such puerile arrogance. What do you have to say for yourself, hmm?”

“Err—.” Harriet blinked at the man as he continued to silently fume. “What’s—what’s puerile, sir?”

“Childish, Miss Potter! Childish!” Snape hissed. “Return to your dorm! Immediately!”

“But what about—?” She reached for the cloak still hanging from his pale fist and Snape pulled it out of reach, the hem fluttering against Harriet’s fingertips.

“Oh no,” he said, voice returning to the cold, soft intonation she was used to. Harriet thought of it as like getting jabbed by a metal knife instead of being bludgeoned with a club. “I believe I’ll be confiscating this.”

Harriet opened her mouth to argue and Snape gave her a glare so ferocious she thought she might just be immolated on the spot if she so much as breathed funny. “Go, Miss Potter. Or do we need to wake Professor Slytherin and have this discussion with your Head of House?”

Harriet went. Snape followed her all the way down to the dungeons again, though not into the common room itself. He stood beyond the open passage door with her cloak stuffed into a robe pocket, and as the stones grated against stone, preparing to close, the professor said, “One last thing, Potter.”

“…yes, sir?”

Snape grinned and it was not a nice look at all. “That’ll be another week of detentions.”

The passage closed, leaving nothing but a blank stretch of wall behind.

“Well, shit.”

Chapter 29: pure-blood

Chapter Text

xxix. pure-blood

 

The scarlet steam engine idled by the platform and perfumed the air with the heavy smell of carbon and ash. Hermione, bundled in her coat and scarf, paused just beyond the empty barrier onto the station and sighed, puffs of white still slipping through the loose weave of her emerald scarf.

Hermione Granger loved her parents. Truly. Her childhood had been filled with love and trips to educational locales and warm Sunday afternoons spent in the den reading together or watching telly. She would read the paper over her father’s shoulder. She would play checkers with her mum, knees tucked under the coffee table, a furrow of thought digging between her mum’s brows as she considered the board. Dr and Dr Granger were genuine and affectionate parents.

However, Hermione knew they weren’t very understanding.

The Grangers never much enjoyed Hermione’s insatiable quest for knowledge. To be certain, having a bright child was a joy, but when curiosity turned into near-obsession, a need to question everything right down into the atoms of its creation, that brightness becomes a curse. Her parents would feed Hermione’s inquisitive nature to a point, then say “Enough, Hermione,” with exasperated sighs and brow rubbing.

They had no comprehension of magic. To them, magic was the trade of backroom peddlers and shabbily dressed charlatans on stage; it was all theatrical, pulling rabbits from hats and yanking loads of handkerchiefs from one’s sleeve—smoke, mirrors, and a bit of glamour. The Grangers let their daughter go with Minerva McGonagall in hopes of Hermione learning better control over herself and her rabid curiosity, and after a few months missing her presence, they’d come to fully understand they’d sent their only child into a realm beyond their own. There’d be no Oxford for Hermione, no future as a lawyer or a doctor or a dentist like her parents. By sending her into the world of magic, they’d effectively cut off feasibility of her ever functioning in their own.

The Granger spent much of their two weeks together attempting to convince her staying home and not returning would be best. Hermione knew that wasn’t an option—not that she wished to leave Hogwarts behind anyway. From the moment Hermione stepped foot across her threshold and took Professor McGonagall’s hand, her parents ceded all guardianship rights over to the hands of the Ministry, and in the eyes of judicial circumstance, she was Hermione Malfoy, ward of the Most Noble House of Malfoy and subsequently held to a contract that wouldn’t be completed until September nineteenth, 1996. To the Ministry, Hermione Granger no longer existed.

She loved her parents. She’d greatly looked forward to spending the holiday with them, and yet the more the Grangers persisted in disparaging magic, the more Hermione felt as if they were again telling her she was too much, that magic was just one element too much in their otherwise practical daughter they wished she could be rid of. Hermione could no more quit being magical than a cat could quit being feline. She spent the final days of break in her room, longing for Hogwarts, for Harriet and Elara and a comfortable four poster beneath a murky lake.

Hermione’s stomach flipped with guilt when she glanced one last time at the barrier before walking away.

The majority of students returned home for the Christmas—Yule—holidays and yet few filled the compartments, most lingering still on the platform, procrastinating to the very last minute to wring out the last drop of vacation they could. Hermione boarded the train and thought of finding an empty compartment—until she saw a familiar face and burst into a wide grin.

“Elara!” she said as she eased the door open and dragged her trunk behind her. “Can I sit here?”

The pure-blood girl lifted her eyes from the book in her hands and smiled in turn, a hesitant look Hermione might have taken offense at before she came to learn more about the youngest Black daughter. “Of course,” she said. Hermione jerked her trunk over the threshold and let the door clatter shut. Using her wand, she cast a quick Wingardium Leviosa, and the trunk settled neatly on the rack. Hermione sighed when she sat because using magic again after abstaining for two weeks was a joy.

And to think I haven’t even been a witch for a full year. She paused. Well, technically, I’ve always been a witch, haven’t I?

“Did you have a pleasant holiday?” Hermione asked. Elara closed her book on her hand, using a thumb to hold her place, and gave Hermione her attention.

“Not…entirely. My uncle passed on.”

“Oh, I’m so sorry. You mentioned he was ill, but I didn’t know….” Of course she hadn’t known. Elara was particularly quiet and answered most personal questions with blank stares or utter passivity.

“I had hoped for more time. I was quite busy with the arrangements afterward.”

What does she mean by that? Why would she be busy with such things when she’s only eleven?

“How was your vacation, Hermione?”

She pushed such thoughts away and smiled. “It was—nice.” Hermione left out the strange anxiety that had prevailed in her warm but nonetheless mundane home. “Mum and dad wanted to get out of country for a bit, but opted to stay home in the end.”

“Read anything interesting?”

Now that was a question Hermione could answer at length, and she did so with pleasure, rambling off about the very book Elara had sent her for Christmas from the House of Black library, an tome about old and more dubious Charms. Hermione knew if a prig like Draco or, God forbid, Mr or Mrs Malfoy knew Elara was distributing books out of the family library to a Mudblood like her, they’d go ballistic. She expressed interest in seeing the Black library in its entirety, then winced at how heavy-handed she sounded. Elara simply smiled again.

“I would invite you and Harriet over during the summer, but the house is…not in the best repair.”

“Oh, that’s okay, I didn’t mean to invite myself over.” Hermione nibbled on her lower lip and wondered why she suddenly felt so anxious. Then, she realized this was the first time she’d been alone with Elara and her presence was…singular. Normally Harriet would be there, ignorant to any awkward tension—well, not ignorant so much as uncaring. The bespectacled girl could be quite persistent and read Elara’s silences and minute shifts in expression better than Hermione did. “I hope Harriet had fun staying at Hogwarts.”

Elara grimaced. “She sent Cygnus home with a letter. Apparently Snape’s been giving her detention.”

“No! Why would he do that?”

“Because he’s a miserable bat.” Elara scowled at the air before her. Professor Snape always snarled over Elara’s terribly botched Potions, so Hermione assumed the dislike was mutual. “He’s the sort. After all, aren’t you of the opinion he cursed Longbottom in November?”

She had been, but a trip to the library after the match had proved Elara correct in her guess that Professor Snape could have just as easily been reciting the counter-curse. “I’m not sure.” It wasn’t very Slytherin to curse people out in the open; oh, they’d do it in a dark alley without witnesses, but in the middle of a stadium? No, that showed no finesse, no skill. Sloppy.

“He acts oddly around her,” Elara said, her eyes hard.

“How so?”

“He…hesitates.”

Hermione didn’t understand what she meant by that and, frustrated, went to ask the other girl to clarify—when the door clattered open again.

“Granger,” drawled Draco Malfoy in a chilling, if childish, mimicry of Mr Malfoy. “Back from the Muggles, are you?”

“Hello, Draco, pleasant holiday?” Hermione asked through her teeth, wanting more than anything to set the pointy little toady on fire. She checked that urge, however, before her wishes became reality.

Draco sniffed and lifted his sharp nose into the air as Goyle and Crabbe stood silent and bored behind him, blocking part of the corridor. The train had set out some minutes ago, though parts of outer London still flashed by the windows. “You didn’t come to our Yule ball.”

Hermione’s mind flashed back to the gilded invitation she’d received via owl post, the one she’d thrown into the fire after penning a succinct reply. “I was with my parents,” she said by way of explanation. Really, she thought it should be obvious.

Malfoy sneered. “You’re a witch, Granger, and it’s tradition! You don’t celebrate Christmas anymore.”

“There’s a difference between being proud of heritage and being a bigot, Malfoy,” Elara interrupted. She opened her book again and prepared herself to settle in with such carefree indifference, Hermione was beginning to believe the pure-bloods might really have that cold, haughty look encoded in their DNA. “Learn it.”

“Watch your mouth, Black,” Malfoy spat. “Or people will start thinking you’re a Mudblood loving fool, too.”

“I have no love for Muggles,” Elara responded with a shrug, causing Hermione to flinch with surprise and considerable hurt. “Nor whatever diatribe you mean to spew.”

“Father’s quite upset with you, you know. He’s been to the Ministry and they’re going to overturn the emancipation. You should watch yourself, blood-traitor.”

“The list of things I don’t care about is quite long; even so, the concerns of Lucius Malfoy and his feeble-mouthed son might just top it.”

Hermione thought it unfair that, even when flushing with rage, Malfoy was still pretty in that prim, affluent mien of his. She had always been an ugly crier. Goyle and Crabbe shuffled in the background and looked eager to be off, seeing as they didn’t have the skills to counter Elara’s savage repertoire.

“Good day, cousin,” the pure-blood girl said with finality, disappearing behind her book. Malfoy stood and gawked for a moment longer, then allowed himself to be encouraged into the corridor and out of sight by his bored friends. Once the door rolled shut, Elara lowered the book again, looking cross, and yanked the shades down on the windows.

“What’s this about an emancipation?” Hermione asked for lack of knowing what else to say. Oh, she had plenty she wanted to say, but the words vied for dominance and created a traffic jam in her head.

“My uncle,” Elara began as she closed the book again and, with a sigh, dropped it on the seat at her side. “He assured my emancipation before he passed on so I—and, by extension, the House of Black—wouldn’t be slipped into Malfoy’s pocket. Malfoy’s been to the Ministry to throw a tantrum, of course, but there’s nothing he can do about it.”

“Do you really not like Muggles?” Hermione asked, unable to keep the hurt out of her voice. Yes, she was a witch—but Hermione had been raised a Muggle, was a Muggle-born, and to hear that someone she considered one of her best friends might hold that heritage against her was almost more than Hermione could take.

Elara must have seen the pain in Hermione’s eyes because her irritated expression eased to something softer. “I think it’s more appropriate to say I don’t like people in general,” she replied with a crooked smile. Pausing, she then began to unbutton her cuffs, rolling them back to reveal pale, skinny wrists. Given that Hermione had never seen the other girl dressed less than perfectly and completely covered, even when she woke up late and surly in the mornings, she couldn’t help but glance at the skin bared to the afternoon sunlight.

Scars marred Elara’s arms, puckered and pink, not quite new but definitely not old either. Horrified, Hermione initially thought they were evidence of Elara hurting herself. The thought turned Hermione’s stomach with worry, until she noted how thick the scars were, the flesh torn rather than sliced, amassed mostly about the mound of her palms and the lower portions of her thumb joints. If she had to be objective, Hermione would say it looked as if…as if her wrists had been bound by something restrictive, unyielding, something like handcuffs, and she’d tried very hard to rip them off.

“The place I lived before, the people there, were much like the Malfoys. The kind of people who justify what the Dark Lord did, just as the Dark Lord justifies what they do. They prescribed to a particular dogma and felt themselves justified in harming those who were different from themselves.”

“That is foul,” Hermione said, shaken, staring. “Foul. Why haven’t you gone to Madam Pomfrey? Or Dumbledore? Or—or—!” She didn’t want to say Professor Slytherin. Their Head of House was terrifying.

“Because it’s done. I’m not going back there. I don’t want to talk about it.”

“But—.”

No, Hermione.” With that, Elara quickly pushed her sleeves back into place and redid the buttons. She kept her eyes averted.

Hermione didn’t know what to say. Elara had only spoke of her prior home once or twice and had referred to it as ‘that place’ or ‘those people.’ Still, Hermione couldn’t have guessed this kind of trauma lay beneath Elara’s steely exterior, her inflexible need to remain unnoticed and in control of herself. The part of Hermione that was ‘too much’ wanted to urge the other girl to tell someone who could do something, someone who could fix that horrendous scarring or take away the flinty, hateful gleam in Elara’s pale eyes. Someone had to be able to help.

Hermione closed her mouth. She stood from her seat, then sat next to Elara. The other girl stiffened, but as the minutes passed and the train continued to rattle around them, laughter echoing in the corridor, she finally relaxed. “Don’t tell Harriet,” Elara whispered.

“Why ever not?”

“She has her own problems to deal with.”

That brought an end to the conversation. The two witches sat in silence as the world continued to change beyond the gentle rocking of the train’s carriage. Hermione watched the countryside and considered just how little she truly knew about her best friends’ lives.

Chapter 30: a breath before the storm

Chapter Text

xxx. a breath before the storm

 

On the evening students were set to return to Hogwarts, Harriet came barreling out of the dungeons and collided with something solid.

“For Merlin’s sake, Potter,” Professor Slytherin grunted, one hand pressed to the place on his chest Harriet had smacked with her head. “Do watch where you’re going!”

Harriet backpedaled and would have tumbled down the steps behind her had Slytherin not grabbed hold of her arm. His grip chafed and Harriet winced, then gave a swift apology before hurrying on. Slytherin hissed “Rude child,” behind her. Harriet almost froze, shocked by his open usage of Parseltongue, but she wasn’t meant to understand that, so Harriet kept running. Odd, she mused. I thought I’d imagined it, but his accent really is different from mine, even in a snake language.

Scratching her neck, Harriet entered the entrance hall and dodged around the few older students who’d already arrived, sliding on the ice that encased the outer steps, though she kept her balance and hopped into the snow. Others weren’t as lucky; they laid scattered and rumpled, complaining as McGonagall used her wand to warm the stones and scolded those who swore within her hearing. Harriet shivered in the wind and gave a thought for her cloak down in the dormitories.

“Harriet!”

Coming up the path from the line of creepy horse-pulled carriages strode Hermione and Elara, both panting heavily as they trekked through the sludge. A wide grin spread across Harriet’s face as she set off again, weaving through the crowd, her feet small and light enough to skate over the snow where others sunk deep. She felt like one of the elves from the Tolkien books Aunt Petunia had burned. Hermione let out a small shriek when Harriet threw her arms around her and they toppled into a drift, Elara evading a similar fate by jumping aside.

“Miss Potter—!” McGonagall admonished, only for her attention to be diverted by a sixth year Ravenclaw toppling into a third year.

Giggling, Harriet rolled onto her back and sunk into the snow while Elara pulled Hermione to her feet.

“Harriet, you’re going to freeze to death, you’re not even wearing your cloak!”

“Don’t care,” she said with a sigh as the air escaped her in a white plume. “I haven’t been outside in days thanks to Professor bloody Snape.”

“Did he really give you all those detentions?”

Yes! He even gave me two in one day. For lookin’ at him funny.”

Hermione managed to pry her out of the ice. “You aren’t serious. You can’t be, that’d be monstrous.”

“I think his exact words were ‘If you can sit there glaring at me, Miss Potter, you can spend an hour in the dungeons glaring at the wall’.”

Snorting, Elara wrapped an arm about the shorter girl’s shoulders to bring her into the shelter of her own cloak. Hermione started plucking dead leaves out of the unholy tangle of her hair. “That does sound like Snape, Hermione.”

The older Slytherin huffed with disapproval.

“I’ve missed you two lots,” Harriet said. “Hogwarts isn’t the same without you.”

“We missed you too, Harriet.”

 

_____

 

The oddest thing about classes resuming was Snape’s sudden switch in attitude.

He went right back to ignoring Harriet, like a cobweb too far up on the ceiling to be bothered with, or an ugly painting you pass by without giving it any real thought. Her detentions came to an abrupt halt the afternoon the rest of the student body arrived, and so baffling was the change, Harriet knocked a beaker off her desk on purpose in Potions to see what he’d do. Snape just sneered and continued pacing the class.

He’s a confusing bloke.

“I bet he was trying to keep you out of trouble,” Hermione said one afternoon as they ascended from the dungeons and headed toward the Great Hall for lunch. “Being the only Slytherin here over break. Honestly, Professor Snape seems to take over most of the Head duties. Professor Slytherin just—.” Hermione waved a hand in a vague gesture.

“Slithers about?” Harriet put in.

“Creeps?” Elara muttered, earning a titter from the bespectacled girl.

“Stalks?”

Will you two be quiet before someone hears you?” Hermione hissed as they came into the Great Hall proper. They edged nearer the Slytherin table, pausing only to let a group of sneering fourth year Gryffindor boys pass before reaching their seats.

“I don’t get into trouble,” Harriet insisted as platters and full cups of pumpkin juice appeared before them.

“You did drop a beaker on Professor Snape’s foot,” Hermione told her.

Elara spooned green beans onto her plate. “And then headbutted him in the thigh when you bent down to retrieve it.”

“It’s his own bloody fault for standing so close,” Harriet grumbled, cheeks red. “Don’t take his side; he stole my new cloak! Says I won’t get it back until I ‘learn some responsibility.’ What does that even mean? How does one learn responsibility? I’m plenty responsible!”

“Well, what did you expect to happen when you went out after curfew with it?”

“I expected to be invisible, that what.” Harriet popped a biscuit into her mouth and chewed. She thought there might be something funny about Snape’s eye; during the detentions he’d assigned later in the evenings, she’d seen how he’d always rub at his scarred left eye after brewing something particularly smelly or reading a clutch of essays. How else could he see through the cloak? How else could he see Livi? The ruddy snake could cross the dorm and steal all the food in the bowl laid out for Bulstrode’s cat without anyone any the wiser but Snape always stared whenever Livi poked his snout outside her collar.

Harriet stuck another biscuit into her mouth and Parkinson, seated across the table, grimaced. “You eat like an animal, Potter,” she complained. “Were you raised in a barn?”

“Close ‘nough,” Harriet replied, memories of the cupboard and sitting alone in the dark, listening to the Dursleys eat, flashing through her mind. She smacked her lips just to irritate Pansy. Parkinson voiced her revulsion and turned away.

Hermione and Elara took it upon themselves to slip servings of foods healthier than sugary biscuits onto Harriet’s plate as conversation turned away from their prickly Potions professor. “I must have read a dozen theory books on the Shield Charm during the holiday and still can’t cast it as well as you can, Harriet. I just don’t understand. Of course, I’m doing better than most in our class, but the practical spells just aren’t as fluid as yours, no matter how often I practice.”

Shrugging, Harriet pointed out that she still managed to turn her matches into javelins half of the time in Transfiguration. Recently they’d moved on to changing plants into various inanimate things and Harriet’s almost always turned out over-sized or oddly disproportionate, though she was getting better.

“I was actually reading the book you got me for Christm—Yule, Elara, and it talked all about Shield Charms.”

“Really?” Hermione asked, interest piqued. “I’ve read about Protego Duo and Protego Totalum, though the latter is considered far beyond our current ability.”

Harriet gave her head a quick, sharp nod. “There’s loads more—all of them made to counter specific elements or objects, making them stronger or weaker than plain Shield Charms, depending on when you use them. There’s Protego Impervius, against water based spells, and Protego Flammae against fire—and harder stuff like Protego Mente Malitiae, which is supposed to ward away spells of ‘ill intent,’ and Protego Visus, which I gather is a bit like a Notice-Me-Not? I didn’t really understand that part. It’s supposed to make you harder to concentrate on and takes a barmy amount of wand-work if the diagrams were anything to go by.”

“Can I borrow this book?”

“‘Course,” Harriet said. “Look, I’ve been practicing the one that conjures water shields—.” Making sure no one else was paying attention, she drew her wand from its brace on her wrist and held it under the table, out of view. Like a typical Protego, the charm required a sharp downward slash, but before that she needed to perform a gesture similar to the alchemical symbol for ‘water,’ an inverted triangle created with three rapid, tight twitches with the wand made from the wrist rather than her fingers. Harriet performed the proper motions, then whispered “Protego Flammae.”

Properly done, the spell was meant to conjure water in a wispy shield reminiscent of the thin, milky sheen of a plain Protego, but Harriet must have done something wrong, because the moment the words crossed her lips, every goblet in the Great Hall burst, sending their contents flying ten feet into the air before raining back down. Students shrieked as they were doused in pumpkin juice and tea. Most of the professors managed to throw Impervius Charms over themselves, though Selwyn bellowed when he caught a face full of hot cider on its way up, and Dumbledore actually laughed at the madness unfolding before him. Snape and Slytherin looked murderous.

Harriet just gawked in horror.

She didn’t resist when Elara cinched an arm about her own and all but yanked her from the bench. Others had jumped to their feet as well, and it looked like a full food fight had broken out at the Gryffindor table much to McGonagall’s despair. Elara swiftly led Harriet right out of the Great Hall’s doors with Hermione scrambling after them, pale and speckled with juice.

“And here I thought you were saying you don’t get into trouble,” Elara said once they’d made it into the entrance hall with a few miffed Ravenclaws clutching damp books to their chests. “That certainly looked like trouble.”

“I don’t know what happened,” Harriet complained. “I did it all right in the dorm over break. Here lemme—.” She whipped out her wand, fully intending to try the Charm once more—when Hermione lunged for her arm, pushing it down. “What are you—?”

“Hey, Potter!”

Two of the Ravenclaws had stowed away their texts in their school bags and approached. Harriet recognized them as Terry Boot and Anthony Goldstein, the former lanky and brown-haired, the latter boasting a shock of blond locks atop his head. “W-what?”

“You were the one who cast that spell, right?”

Harriet sputtered. “Wh—? No, of course not. Why would I do something like that?”

Terry’s eyes dropped to her wand with a bemused expression and Harriet quickly stuffed it into her sleeve, her cheeks bright pink.

“Can you teach us how to do it?” he asked, genuine curiosity in his bright eyes. “I haven’t seen anything like it. It would have amazing uses.”

“Er—,” Harriet hedged, fiddling with the edge of her sleeve, her face still warm. “That, uh, wasn’t really what it was meant to do—not that I’m admitting it was me who cast it.”

Terry grinned. “Do you think you could show us how it went wrong?”

“It only works with liquid that is already present,” Hermione interrupted. “The original is meant to coalesce it from the air, like an Aguamenti Charm. What practical use would you have for a spell that throws all open liquids within a hundred yards into the air?”

“Well, it could be really useful, couldn’t it?” Anthony replied, earnest. “Like you said, water conjuring Charms can only make use of what is already there, typically what is atmospheric and gaseous. What if your spell could be used to move an underground spring closer to the surface? Imagine the impact that could have on Herbologists and Wizarding farmers!”

Hermione’s mouth popped open and she got that glassy-eyed look Harriet recognized as one of her overly thoughtful expressions. “But that’s brilliant. I thought you wanted the spell for a prank or something ridiculous like that….”

Harriet didn’t think that. Ravenclaws, from what she’d seen, found witty jokes like riddles far funnier than anything physical like a food fight. She followed along with the conversation, though she thought it a bit too dry and theoretical for her tastes when Hermione, Terry, and Anthony devolved into a conversation about magical agriculture and the limitations of duplicating matter for consumption.

“Honestly,” Harriet grumbled to Elara. “They’re eleven. Where do they find time to think about all this stuff?”

Elara shrugged.

In the end, the Ravenclaws convinced Harriet to teach them the Protego Flammae Charm, and after dinner they all gathered in an empty classroom on the first floor and tried to recreate the spell. They didn’t manage to explode any more goblets, but before Filch came to chase them back to their dormitories at curfew, all five of first years could create a passable water shield. They returned to their beds sopping wet and tired, but also rather pleased with their progress.

Overall, Harriet was glad everything was back to normal at Hogwarts.

Chapter 31: like an untimely frost

Chapter Text

xxxi. like an untimely frost

 

Yawning, Harriet leaned an elbow on the planter’s edge and watched the Plufferupherius sob.

“I really don’t know what happened,” Elara said as she wrung her gloved hands and the plant’s weeping increased. Professor Sprout gave her a stern look worthy of Professor McGonagall and Elara winced. “Really, Professor, I don’t understand why this always happens. I’m not doing it on purpose, and I—.”

The Plufferupherius’ yellow petals drooped as it wailed and leaned away from Elara. Professor Sprout rolled her eyes and used a pair of pruners to nip off the blackened stem Elara had inadvertently touched while they’d been collecting the orange pollen. Their station was covered in the stuff now, their gloves stained from trying to sweep it up when the plant wheezed and threw a tantrum. Needless to say, Professor Sprout was less than impressed, which meant Harriet and Elara had to stay behind the rest of the class and try to explain themselves.

“I’ve never met a jinx quite so cursed as you, lass,” Sprout said as she set the dead branch on the counter and stroked one calloused finger down the Plufferupherius’ prickly stem. The strange plant shivered and fell quiet, swaying slightly under her practiced ministrations. “We may need to ‘ave a word with your Head of H—.” She stopped, an odd expression crossing her face. “With Professor Dumbledore about that. Going forward next year we’re going to be handling more of my rarer specimens and I can’t ‘ave you killing them.” Sprout tutted, lost in thought. “Finish up your cleaning, then hurry to dinner, girls.”

She shuffled off to check a few of her other plants in the greenhouse as Harriet and Elara hurried to brush the rest of the pollen into the folded parchment they’d been using to funnel the sticky granules into their vial. The Plufferupherius ignored Harriet but kept its eyes—well, the twiggy part Harriet thought it must see with—suspiciously trained on the Elara the whole time. Elara frowned at the dowdy little shrub and it sniffled, shedding more pollen. Harriet grimaced.

“I’m sorry for keeping you,” Elara said. “You should probably partner with someone else in this class.”

Harriet waved a hand. “I don’t mind. Gardening’s not all that bad; I used to do all the yard work for my aunt, you know.” She managed to sweep up the last of the dust with the parchment’s edge. “This stuff reminds me of the pollen that comes off lilies—meaning it gets bloody everywhere.” The Plufferupherius gave her a scandalized look and sobbed. “Oh, budge up, you cry baby.”

Glancing toward Elara, Harriet saw that the other girl had plucked the dead branch from the counter’s edge. She held it between thumb and forefinger, twirling it slightly, the branch black and shriveled to half its typical size as if every drop of moisture had been sucked out of it. As Harriet watched, the branched changed. Veins of green returned between the bark’s cracked husk, like blood seeping beneath new skin, and tender little vines sprouted from the end. A white flower blossomed.

“Wh—how’d you do that?” Harriet asked, gob-smacked. Elara jumped as if she’d forgotten Harriet was there and chucked the branch into the rubbish bin.

“It’s nothing,” she said, stripping off her gloves.

“It didn’t look like nothing. It looked like—.”

Don’t.”

Harriet had never heard Elara speak like that before; sharp, but quiet, like the sudden jab of a spear aimed toward a shark circling her sinking boat. Aunt Petunia used that voice when Harriet dared mention the dreaded ‘m’ word. Harriet was dreadfully curious; she knew what she’d seen and wouldn’t be convinced otherwise, but she shrugged and went about tidying up. Elara shot her a gratified look.

She brought that branch back to life, Harriet thought. But she didn’t want me to know that. Why not say anything? Is it a Slytherin thing? Like Professor Snape telling me to keep my Parseltongue to myself?

The two girls delivered the last of the pollen to Professor Sprout, who then shooed them out of the greenhouse and off toward the castle. They hurried along, the evening air brisk where the breeze chased itself up from the forest and through the open courtyard, though the sun hadn’t quite yet receded fully. Dinner would be commencing by now, and Harriet longed for something hearty to eat, something that would tie her over through the evening. They had Astronomy that night as they did every Friday and Wednesday night, and reading through constellation charts was excruciating on an empty stomach.

There you two are!” Hermione said once Harriet and Elara slid into their places on the bench at Slytherin table. The merry raucous of dishes being shifted and laughter rising—especially from the Gryffindors—made it difficult to be heard in the Great Hall, but Hermione managed. “I was beginning to think you’d gone off to the dorms without dinner, and you know we have Astronomy tonight.”

“Elara would’ve been fine,” Harriet put in as she nudged a tureen of gravy closer. “She’s better at it than both us.” She was, too; Astronomy and Transfiguration proved to be Elara’s best subjects, better than Hermione even, if only slightly. Being an absolute wreck and Potions and Herbology balanced her out. “Besides, we saw you getting along quite well with Mr Boot, didn’t we, Elara?”

Elara smirked.

Hermione gave Harriet a look that said in no uncertain terms she did not care for what the bespectacled girl was insinuating. “Terry and I were discussing our last Charms class.”

“Really? How…charming.”

Hermione whacked her arm with the back of a serving spoon.

“Ow.”

“He was telling me about how their Head of House, Professor Flitwick, tutors the Ravenclaws on the weekends in their common room.” She poured herself a glass of chilled milk and let out a huffy sigh. “It’s unfair, don’t you think? Our Head of House hardly seems to realize he is a Head of House and I doubt he’d ever lower himself to tutoring first years on the weekend—let alone a Muggle-born.” She scoffed and took a sip of her milk. “He’s far more concerned with the upper years. I’ve only seen him in the common room twice if I remember correctly.”

Harriet had a sudden recollection of tiptoeing from the dorm, disturbed by sibilant hisses rising in the otherwise empty common room. “I’ve seen him there,” she told them in her gravest tone. Hermione’s brow rose and Harriet glanced about at the other students. She would tell her friends more later, but too many ears were present to do so now. “But that portrait above the hearth? You probably shouldn’t go telling it all your secrets, if you catch my meaning.”

Both Elara and Hermione were clever—cleverer than Harriet, she thought—so they took her meaning immediately. There were several hearths in the Slytherin common room, and yet only one had a picture hung above its mantel, and that picture held only one occupant—an occupant of the serpentine variation.

Elara did as Harriet had and checked around them for eavesdroppers. Across the table, Malfoy was busy puffing out his chest and drawling to Parkinson, who reveled in his attention while Crabbe and Goyle ate their dinners and grunted about a Quidditch game posted in the Prophet. No one ever took much note of three random Slytherin girls. “When did this occur?”

“Yule holiday,” Harriet replied. She reached for the carafe of pumpkin juice—and a cup of steaming tea appeared just under her hand. Harriet didn’t much fancy herself a tea drinker, having only ever got the cold, bitter slop in the bottom of the pot at the Dursleys, but a cuppa before heading off to the library for homework sounded lovely.

“And he was just—just in the common room? While you were alone?”

“Well, I was in the dorm at first. He didn’t actually see me.” She blew on the tea and took a sip. It still burned on the way down. “I’m not mad enough to go out there with him mucking about.”

“It’s still very strange.”

“We’ve spoken before on Professor Slytherin’s oddity, Hermione. He—.” Elara stopped and frowned. “Harriet, are you all right?”

Harriet’s first reaction was to say “Fine,” but she couldn’t force the word past her lips. The burning she’d mistook as heat from the tea didn’t abate and, instead, continued from her mouth into her throat and stomach, then her lungs. She choked as the burn intensified, then sputtered, coughing, a burst of red exploding out her mouth. Some splattered on Parkinson and she recoiled, glancing down at the sudden damp spots on her arm.

“Merlin, Potter, you’re disgust—.” Her voice cut off as her eyes widened. Pansy shrieked.

Harriet’s fingers scrabbled at her throat in a bid to remove the obstruction. Nothing was there.

Harriet!

On instinct, she went to rise and only managed to throw herself backward, not registering the hard thwap of her skull smacking the floor in her desperation to breathe. Black spots bubbled to life. I can’t breathe! I can’t—! Someone had hold of her arm. Hermione screamed, “Professor Dumbledore!” and Harriet’s vision tunneled until everything seemed to simply drift away.

Then, she knew no more.

Chapter 32: hand to the heart

Chapter Text

xxxii. hand to the heart

 

Severus was having a wretched evening.

The day itself had been wretched from the outset, the first class a double period with the first year Slytherin and Gryffindor sods, two full hours spent attempting to squeeze information into their vacuous little skulls while he toadied to Death Eater brats and sneered at Minerva’s charges. Longbottom spent much of the lecture silently scoffing at everything Severus said before he and Finnigan proceeded with their abysmal work in the practical. Malfoy’s sprog almost laughed himself sick when the Boy Who Lived melted yet another bloody cauldron.

Potter and her cohorts required little attention; indeed, the three girls sat clumped in the back and only Granger dared ask questions during the lecture. As long as he allowed Black to partner with the other two, her catastrophes were limited. They formed a veritable paragon of social awkwardness and floated about the edges of Slytherin House, escaping pure-blood posturing and dissenting politics with an ease only children were capable of. It kept interested eyes away from Potter, kept her safe. Being able to somewhat ignore the girl as a result proved relieving for Severus.

He picked at his cold dinner, ignoring Minerva’s little irritated sniffs of disapproval. Gryffindor lost a grand total of forty-five points in Longbottom’s class alone and he knew the miffed Scotswoman would be banging on his office door later that evening, demanding an explanation. Slytherin would probably come slinking by for the show, foul creep. He felt the impending headache already lurching in his skull like a dark and foreboding promise.

Severus reached for his goblet—and swallowed a scream when agony tore through his hand.

Lucky for him, no one noticed; at that moment, a shriek filled the hall and several bodies at the Slytherin table leapt to their feet. As pain savaged Severus’ arm, Harriet Potter toppled from her seat between Granger and Black, spewing blood.

Severus couldn’t breathe. It’s the Vow, he realized. In that instance of time, seemingly suspended for an eternity, the world moved in slow, languorous increments around him as he cradled his burning wrist. It’s the FUCKING VOW!

“Professor Dumbledore!” Granger cried. The Headmaster was already descending the dais with Minerva in tow, students scattering before them like sparrows watching a cat approach. Minerva may coddle her Gryffindors, but not even the Potions Master could construe that fondness as neglect for any child of the other houses.

“Severus! Quickly!”

Albus’ voice shattered time’s suspension and Severus moved with ungainly speed, throwing himself over the table and down the dais steps with little more than a lunge. His vision wavered. With every passing second, the agony spread like a curse, pulsing with his heartbeat past his elbow, his shoulder, reaching for his chest and the vulnerable muscle racing inside its cage of bones. It almost appeared as if the shadows themselves rose from the floor to thrust the puling onlookers aside as Severus slid to his knees at the girl’s side, but he couldn’t be certain; his left eye strained and the right could see little more than blurs.

The Vow, the Vow, the Vow—.

He had a bezoar in his breast pocket, a habit he had picked up years ago in the wake of Slytherin’s nasty little curse as he didn’t trust the wretch or bloody Selwyn not to poison him for amusement. Severus wrenched the lumpy little stone out and had to almost break the girl’s jaw in his effort to pry it open. She convulsed even as he shoved the bezoar down her throat, her teeth cutting his fingers, not that he could feel the biting beyond the Vow’s unmitigated fury.

If she dies, I’ll die as well. A hysterical part of his beleaguered mind put in, What an embarrassing way to pop off, keeling over at the side of a student like a geriatric having a heart attack.

Granger, kneeling next to the girl, held Potter’s arm down and sobbed. Black stood behind her, fists clenched tight and her face pale as a unicorn’s hide. The tightness in Severus’ chest began to subside as the girl’s convulsions eased, though her breathing remained thin and several blood vessels in her eyes had burst. The Potions Master drew his fingers from her mouth and hissed at the sting. “She must be taken to the infirmary.”

Pomfrey shoved her way through the gawking brats and conjured a stretched, which Severus and Minerva helped load the girl onto. “I will go with her,” McGonagall said as Albus ordered the Head Boy and Girl to help the prefects disperse the crowd back to their dormitories. Naturally, Granger and Black resisted Farley’s efforts to escort them away and remained behind. The other professors trailed their charges.

I’m her Head of House,” Slytherin sneered. “You needn’t bother, Minerva.”

Minerva narrowed her eyes but didn’t argue. She also followed Pomfrey and Slytherin out of the Hall as the former levitated the stretcher and the latter curled his lip. Severus didn’t know why Slytherin bothered; the wizard professed no interest in his students beyond those malleable to the Dark Arts and had no patience for sick children. What is his game now?

His hand and wrist continued to throb as if both had suffered a sudden collision with something hard and unyielding. Severus sat back on his haunches and stared at his bitten fingers, blood oozing from the torn incisions, the flesh marbled with ripening bruises. Below that, he could barely see the pearlescent scarring of the old Vow.

I knew the truth all along, didn’t I, Lily? I knew it was the Vow but didn’t want to admit what it would mean.

He thought of all the times his hand had ached and pained him, of the weeks it would echo with distant prickling, of the nights he would wake in a cold sweat, searching for the blade piercing his skin only to find none. The pain had abated upon the girl’s admittance in Hogwarts; the worst incidents had been in the Headmaster’s office over the summer, and when the troll went on its rampage. The letter, he realized. We were discussing Potter’s reply to the letter when I was in the office. What happened to her then?

Despite its rather transparent name, the “Unbreakable Vow” was a gray and vacuous area of magic; those who studied it often died, infringing upon invisible terms and stray addenda, taken by a deadly curse masquerading as a promise because one cannot qualify what an oath means from one person to the next. Those dunderheads who had any real understanding of the Vow would never undertake it, and in the extreme hypothetical that they did, they knew only to agree to three stringent promises, three concise goals ingrained with expirations or loopholes that allowed for their survival. One did not promise something as wretchedly vague as “protecting” someone else.

Will you protect my daughter, the person I love most in this world, if I cannot, Severus Snape?

The Vow surged with agony, with warning, whenever he came close to failing her, like a tightrope frazzling under his feet. Swearing to protect a girl marked by the bloody Dark Lord may’ve been a stupid choice, and it may’ve been cruel of Lily to ask it of him—but Severus would’ve rather, quite literally, died than be shut out of his best friend’s life for a second time. Against the cold reality of lost absolution, pledging himself to the girl that had become Lily’s whole world was a little thing.

Movement jerked Severus’ attention to the handkerchief Dumbledore proffered, the older wizard’s eyes trained on his. Severus took the cloth and wrapped it around his injured digits.

I’m going to fucking kill Petunia.

“Miss Granger,” the Headmaster said in a soft voice to the girl still kneeling on the floor by the blood-splotched stones. He offered his hand and, once she took it, he helped Granger take a seat on the crooked bench behind her. The girl’s face was mottled and her hair a mess of frazzled curls. “Can you tell us what happened?”

“I—I don’t know, sir,” she replied, stealing a fortifying breath to still her tears. “We were talking about—.” Her eyes flicked toward the open doors, then away. “About things, and Elara noticed Harriet’s face had gone a bit funny. She started coughing, and there—there was blood, and she knocked over—.” Granger stopped and her eyes opened wide. The girl whipped herself around and stared at the blood splattered table littered with dinner’s remnants. “The tea!”

“Tea, Miss Granger?”

She pointed out the offending cup, tipped over in its saucer, most of the brown liquid splashed onto the floor or Potter’s abandoned plate. “The cup there! It wasn’t here when we sat down. I’m sure of it! Harriet drank from it and right after—!”

“Thank you, my dear….”

Severus swiped the cup from the table and gave the rim a delicate sniff. He heard Albus gently encouraging the two first years to return to their dorm, though Severus himself paid them little mind. He inspected the liquid, then dipped his little finger into the dregs and tapped the tip against his tongue. The burning, acrid taste confirmed his suspicions.

Soon only Dumbledore and Severus remained in the Great Hall, the solitude punctuated by the heavy thud of the hall doors coming closed. “Our poisoner has a sense of irony,” he spat, taking up a stray water goblet to clean his mouth. “They used an extract of Salazar’s Tongue.” A plant found common enough in the Forbidden Forest, though the average student wouldn’t know how to take the snake-like petals and brew them properly for a working poison.

“Hmm. It wouldn’t be my first choice for a poison.” The Headmaster stroked his beard in thought, then said, “Loppy.”

A loud crack heralded the arrival of a miserable, floppy-eared house-elf wringing the edge of his tea towel. “The Headmaster Dumblydore is needing Loppy?”

“Yes, thank you, Loppy. Could you bring us the elf responsible for supplying this cup of tea?” Dumbledore pointed out the cup in question and the elf’s blue eyes followed.

“Yes, Headmaster, sir. Right away!”

The house-elf disappeared. Severus sneered at the spot where it had stood, more out of frustration for himself than anything else. Poison. She was poisoned no more than a few meters away from you. Albus sat on the edge of the Ravenclaw table’s bench and held his single hand in a fist, the knuckles white. He was angry, Severus knew, but also worried; the skin about his eyes tightened, his white brow low and furrowed as the Headmaster’s brilliant mind set to work.

“You know,” the Potions Master said into the quiet, his voice cold. “I find your concern for Potter…surprising.”

“Why is that, Severus?”

“Because of her House.” Pacing the aisle between tables, Severus hid his trembling hand in the folds of his robes and rounded on Dumbledore. “I assumed you would be disappointed in her—suspicious, even. You’ve shown your precious Gryffindors considerable favoritism in the past, Headmaster. I am simply curious as to why you haven’t written Potter off as a lost cause.”

“Ah, my boy.” Albus heaved a weary sigh and his beard twitched in what could have been an indulgent smile. “You of all people know I’ve made many mistakes, especially in regards to your own person while you attended this very school. I allowed a schoolboy rivalry to progress into hostility on both sides.”

Severus looked away. “This is not about me.”

“No, of course not, my apologies. I simply mean to tell you that even men of my age are capable of changing and learning from their missteps. I have learned to not allow Tom Riddle’s corruption of Slytherin color my perception of its children; I have, after all, been shown that some of the purest hearts come from the House of Serpents.”

The Headmaster’s knowing gaze caused Severus to scoff. Pure-hearted indeed.

“There is good in Slytherin still. I will not give up on it. Harriet is kind—withdrawn yes, but kind and well-meaning, as are her friends Miss Granger and Miss Black. Miss Granger’s time with the Malfoys seems to have tempered her resolve and ambition, while Miss Black appears determined not to repeat her father’s mistakes,” Albus continued. “Aside from that, I find a poisoning always warrants the Headmaster’s concern. Don’t you, Severus?”

The Potions Master said nothing.

Loppy reappeared a moment later with a second house-elf in tow. The latter creature swayed where it stood, eyes hooded as if dazed, and when Loppy let go of its arm, the elf fell to the floor.

Severus shared a look with the Headmaster. It’s been Imperiused. Not well, either. The caster had left the spell to recede on its own without contingency, rendering the elf more of an insentient fool than usual as its personal will fought the expiring will of its attacker.

“This is Rikkety, Headmaster, sir,” Loppy said, dragging the other elf back to its feet.

“Thank you, Loppy, that will be all.”

The elf vanished again with a final worried glance about the Hall, and Dumbledore reached out to hold Rikkety steady as the cursed elf teetered. “Severus, if you would—?”

Nodding, he retrieved his wand and flicked it between the creature’s dazed eyes. “Finite Incantatem.”

The elf stumbled as the Imperious broke. A quiver ran through its spindly limb—then it burst into tears.

Wonderful, Severus griped as the green-skinned creature wailed. Dumbledore gave it several reassuring pats to the head and back before it calmed, snot dripping from its skinny nose, its tea towel wet with miserable tears.

“Oh, Headmaster Dumblydore, sir,” it said in a high-pitched voice. Female, then. “Rikkety is being a bad elf, sir!”’

“Can you tell us what happened, Rikkety?”

The elf nodded, head bouncing as she sniffled and fresh tears threatened. “Rikkety was told to serve the bad tea to Harriet Potter, sir. Rikkety didn’t want to, Headmaster Dumblydore, but Rikkety couldn’t stop herself!”

Albus conjured a handkerchief. He handed it to the elf, and she used to blow her nose. Tears peppered the ground underneath her.

“All is well, Rikkety. You were placed under a particularly powerful curse. Did you see who cast it upon you?”

As Severus expected, the elf shook her head. “No, Headmaster Dumblydore. Rikkety was cleaning up after Peevesy in the sixth floor corridor when someone came up the stairs and told Rikkety to go to the kitchens and make the bad tea.”

Severus and Albus shared another look. The Imperius Curse necessitated a certain level of power and knowledge to perform with any proficiency, but any student sixth year and above had knowledge of the spell as per the curriculum, and a particularly studious fifth or fourth year could figure it out. Their suspect had thinned, but not by much.

Albus sighed. “Thank you, Rikkety. I would ask you to warn the elves to be cautious over the coming weeks and to alert me if they witness anything suspicious.”

“Yes, sir, Headmaster Dumblydore,” the elf said. She paused and wrung the damp cloth tea towel between her knobbly hands. “Is—is Miss Harriet Potter going to be all right? Oh, Rikkety is a bad elf, very bad….”

“She will be fine with a bit of rest, never you worry. Off you go now.”

Rikkety sniffled again before disappearing. Severus stared at the far wall and fought his revulsion, his frustration. “Why,” he said to Dumbledore. “Would the agent go after Potter and not Longbottom? The stupid boy ate and drank plenty tonight, to no ill-effect. Why not curse the elf to taint both of their beverages? We would have only had time to save one.” And I would have gone for the girl, if only to save my own hide.

“The limits of the curse, I suppose,” the Headmaster replied, voice weary. He lifted his wand and banished the evening meal’s remnants.

“That still begs the question of why Potter and not the Boy Who Lived.”

Albus said nothing. They both knew the answer already.

“The agent is closer to the Dark Lord than we suspected,” Severus said, dread pulsing in his chest like a living thing, coupling with the fading agony in his arm. “If they know Potter is not all she seems—if he remembers something about that night—. Using Longbottom as a red herring will be pointless.”

“Not pointless, Severus. Tom does not know the truth. I am assured of this.”

How?” the Potions Master snarled. “How can you be so sure of this when the girl almost choked to death on her own blood not ten meters from us?!”

The Headmaster raised his hand and Severus calmed himself, forcing one breath, and then another, into his chest. “I believe Voldemort—.” Snape flinched. “—ordered his agent to test the waters, as it were. Had he known who Harriet is, he wouldn’t have bothered with Neville.”

“Unless attacking Longbottom was a rouse.”

“I don’t believe he has the patience for that, not in his current situation. Had he knowledge of Harriet and not just suspicions, or an old grudge, he would have gone for her directly.”

“You underestimate him.”

“No.” Albus shook his head. “I know what Voldemort is capable of—what he, Slytherin, and Gaunt are capable of. In any iteration, Tom is not a man to suffer fools lightly, but what is left of his true self will be desperate, Severus. We must be cautious.”

The Potions Master stared at the Dumbledore’s empty sleeve and the dread in his heart refused to abate, curling and snapping, tearing at his flesh until he felt he might bleed inwardly. Cautious. Severus no longer knew how to live any other way. “As you say, Headmaster.”

“Excellent. You should go to the infirmary and check if Poppy needs anything. I will check the third floor corridor.”

They departed, and as Severus walked the empty corridors, night clinging to the stone casements, his cloak trailing on the floor like a personal shadow nipping at his heels, he prayed the Headmaster was right.

Chapter 33: dark lord's mistake

Chapter Text

xxxiii. dark lord’s mistake

 

Harriet didn’t wake all at once. Rather, she became aware of an annoying ache in her back, and even as she tried to ignore it, the ache grew and grew until it persisted from the bottom of her ankles to the top of her head. Groggy and uncooperative, Harriet pushed the feeling aside and attempted to let sleep take her again, but the longer she lay in the half-doze between dreams and reality, the more Harriet began to realize something was not quite right.

She was used to things being “not quite right”; the whole of her existence up until she stepped onto the Hogwarts Express could be considered just that—and yet this was a kind of not quite right Harriet hadn’t experienced before, or at least not for a while. The only time she could recall something similar happening was when she woke in her cupboard, Set prodding her in the side, a large bump on her head after Uncle Vernon threw her inside.

What…what happened? What am I doing?

Harriet opened her eyes and expected to see the top of her dormitory ceiling, fingers of moonlight rippling through the lake’s clear waters—but that was not what she saw.

Where am I?!

She sat up and the white sheet pulled up to her chin fell into her lap, pain throbbing anew in her back and about her stomach. Harriet plucked at the front of the unfamiliar nightdress, then pushed a hand against her middle. The pressure increased the ache and she groaned.

“Good evening, Harriet.”

Harriet almost toppled right out of the narrow little bed she inhabited when a voice spoke at her side. She peered through the fuzzy darkness, trying to make sense of the misshapen blobs, and started again when someone slid her glasses into her hands. Muttering her thanks, she put them on and blinked.

The room she lay in was very large—a ward Hermione would call it—with more than a dozen empty beds lined up along both walls, the sconces all doused for the evening, rendering thick shadows where the moonlight couldn’t touch. Harriet’s bed sat near the far wall inlaid with diamond-paned windows, a screen blocking off much of her view of the ward, and perched in a chintz armchair at her side was Headmaster Dumbledore. He smiled at her.

She blinked again. “Er—?” Harriet blurted, nose scrunched in confusion. “Wh—? Where—?”

“Eloquent, Potter.”

The bespectacled girl was in for another shock when what she’d assumed to be a shadow by the windows bloody moved, and the starlight glowed on Professor Snape’s pale face when he turned in her direction.

Harriet stared at the gaunt wizard as she swayed ever so slightly, still mussy with sleep and cranky from pain. He stared in return. “I don’t know what happened,” she said. “But you can’t give me detention for it.”

His answering smirk said, I can try.

“I think we can do without any detentions tonight,” the Headmaster said, raising his brow for Snape’s benefit. The Potions Master huffed and crossed his arms, moving his attention to the view outside once more, which meant he missed the sudden humor in Dumbledore’s bright eyes. “Can you remember anything that happened, my dear?”

Harriet mulled over her jumbled thoughts and flashes returned to her, voices and screams, hot pain in her mouth and throat, Hermione’s clammy hand on her arm. “I…I drank something. Some tea I think, sir. It hurt.”

Dumbledore nodded, his expression once more grave as he ran his thumb along his knuckles in what Harriet thought might be an anxious gesture. “Yes. You were poisoned, Harriet.”

Poisoned?”

She remembered blood on Parkinson, red drops peppering her own hands and her plate, the strange burning not abating even as liquid poured out of her mouth.

“Is—did anyone else get poisoned?” She had sat between Elara and Hermione like she always did in the Great Hall; were they hurt too?!

“Everyone else is fine, my girl—as are you, thanks to Professor Snape’s swift actions and Madam Pomfrey’s care.”

Like a punctured balloon, Harriet deflated with relief, a heavy sigh leaving her as she slumped. Snape saved me? “But how did it get into my tea, sir?” Harriet asked. She looked into Dumbledore’s patient, knowing face, and when the silence stretched between them, she got her answer. “Someone put it in there? Someone meant to—?”

Someone meant to kill me.

Harriet couldn’t fathom why anyone would want to kill her; not even Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia could muster the kind of hate necessary for murdering their niece, though her uncle came close the last time she saw him. Harriet was a nobody; an eleven-year-old orphan, an average student, and a girl who mostly minded her own business. “Why? I haven’t done anything!”

Dumbledore considered her for a long moment. Snape, still at the window, said nothing and didn’t appear to even breathe, holding himself like a gargoyle looking out over the battlements. Harriet could see his arms folded behind his back and his clenched fists were plain against the black fabric of his robes.

“Tell me, Harriet; what do you know of Lord Voldemort?”

“That’s You-Know-Who, right?” It had taken months for Harriet to discover his stupid name. The Wizarding world refused to say it and Slytherins gasped when she asked. Even Hermione hadn’t known; it was only through Elara, who read the name written in a journal, that they discovered the truth. “Why won’t anyone say his name?”

“He put a Taboo upon it during the war. That is a kind of curse placed upon words—very old and very powerful magic, my dear. Voldemort felt it increased his mystique when others feared uttering his very name, but I feel fear of a name is a very silly notion. By naming a thing, we take away its anonymity and dispel the fear of uncertainty.”

Don’t tell her that.”

Snape whipped around, his face livid. “With all due respect, Headmaster, the girl is a Slytherin. You, in contrast, are eminently powerful—and independent—wizard who doesn’t have to worry about others taking offense to what he says. She cannot go about naming the bloody Dark Lord. Discretion is a virtue of the highest importance in our House.”

“Perhaps you are right, Severus. However, it is up to Harriet to make that decision for herself.”

Given the look Snape leveled in her direction, Harriet was fairly certain she’d land herself about a dozen detentions if she said “Voldemort” anywhere in his hearing.

“Nevertheless, his name and its usage are not what I wished to discuss; Harriet, what do you know of your history with Voldemort?”

History? “He killed my mum and dad, right?” Harriet lowered her eyes, and instead of looking toward the Headmaster, she stared at the hem of Snape’s black cloak. It trembled ever so slightly. “Before he tried to kill Neville Longbottom.”

“Yes. He killed many, many people, your mother Lily being the last.”

The same anger Harriet had experienced in Diagon Alley when reading The Rise and Fall of the Dark Arts came upon her again, and it curled in her belly like a living thing, wanting to lash out at someone, anyone, as she hated Longbottom for surviving, her own parents for dying, and Voldemort for being a monster. It wasn’t fair—but Harriet couldn’t change any of it. She forced the feeling away and shut her eyes.

“Voldemort is many things, Harriet; powerful, dangerous—and also cowardly, petty. He is a wizard who has committed as many mistakes as he has misdeeds, though he refers to the latter as his successes and would never acknowledge the former. If given the chance, he tries to rectify those mistakes—erase them, I should say, so they cannot remind him of his failures.”

Harriet listened to the Headmaster and flinched each time he referred to the Dark Lord in the present tense. You-Know-Who was gone. He died at the Longbottoms’…hadn’t he?

“Sir,” she said, speaking softly, hesitating before meeting his eyes. “Sir, is—he’s dead, right? You-Know-Who died that night. Neville defeated him.”

Snape scoffed. Dumbledore’s gaze flicked in his direction, a warning in his slanted brow, and the Headmaster shook his head. “No, I’m afraid not, my dear.”

The blood roared in Harriet’s ears as she gaped without a word at the Headmaster’s statement, so simply given, his face open and calm even as Harriet’s heart bludgeoned itself against her ribs. I’m afraid not, my dear. How could he not be dead? How could—? He killed so many, ruined so many families and reduced whole Muggle villages to ashes, had murdered her mum and dad and—. How could Dumbledore say he wasn’t dead?

Harriet trembled. The Headmaster took her hand in his, squeezing, and only then did she realize how very clammy it’d become.

“You are one of his mistakes, Harriet,” the elderly wizard said. “Greater than you know.”

“Why? Because he missed me in the house that night?!” Her voice went high and tremulous. “He’s going to try to kill me?”

“Headmaster…” Snape cautioned.

Dumbledore ignored him and answered her. “Yes.”

Harriet felt very much like she might lean over the bed’s edge and vomit on the wizard’s shoes. Sweat peppered her brow and her mouth dried, her tongue heavy and awkward behind her teeth, Harriet’s fingers buzzing with numbness and fatigue. Someone had tried to poison her. Someone had tried to kill her for the Dark Lord.

“He’s not…he’s not here, is he?” Harriet asked, though surely that couldn’t be right. Someone would have recognized one of the most dangerous wizards in history trotting about the corridors, wouldn’t they?

“We believe he’s had an agent infiltrate the school—either willingly or unwillingly, as there are curses that exist to bend a person’s will against their own. You see, Harriet, Voldemort is not alive in the sense that you think he is; he’s a shadow of his former self, unable to live but unable to die, and he will use any means he can to return himself to our plane and wreak havoc again on society.”

Dumbledore,” the Potions Master snapped, stepping forward. “I really must protest—.”

“Harriet has a right to know,” the Headmaster responded with a shrug, his eyeglasses flashing in the moonlight. “Voldemort ensured her involvement when he ordered an attempt against her life.”

“But why send someone to Hogwarts?” Harriet asked, gulping. “Surely not because of me. Is it because Longbottom’s here?”

“No. He’s searching for something, something he knows was moved from Gringotts and placed here within my safekeeping. I do flatter myself in thinking I’m rather clever sometimes, and this artifact—.”

Headmaster!

Before Snape could be reprimanded for interrupting again, the sound of the infirmary door popping open and muffled voices moving closer silenced the Headmaster and the dour Potions Master. They both turned their alert gazes toward the screen blocking view of the ward—and Harriet froze in her bed, jerking her hand from Professor Dumbledore’s so she could twist it into the sheets. What if it was the poisoner coming to try again? Surely she’d be fine with two professors sitting right there—but what if she wasn’t?

Harriet almost wept with relief when Hermione and Elara stepped by the screen and both yelped when they caught sight of Snape swooping over them.

“Thirty points from Slytherin,” he said without preamble. “Out after curfew, the nerve—.”

“Sir, we were coming back from Astronomy and wanted to see if Harriet was well!” Hermione quipped before realizing to whom she spoke, slapping a hand over her mouth in afterthought. Elara just eased herself from foot to foot, looking queasy, if determined.

“I think, Severus,” the Headmaster said as he rose from his armchair. It vanished with a quick flick of his hand. “We shouldn’t fault Miss Granger and Miss Black for getting lost after their lesson. The castle can be a confusing place after nightfall, can’t it?”

Both Slytherins nodded.

“Let’s see…I believe thirty-five points should go to Slytherin for checking on the welfare of a classmate,” Dumbledore pronounced, smiling, though Snape curled a lip and his hands clenched the footboard on Harriet’s bed. Hermione beamed and Elara’s cheeks flushed. “Though Professor Snape is correct, and it is quite late. If you’ll excuse me, I have much to see to before I can seek my own bed. I will have to write to your relatives, Harriet, about this—.”

What?! “No!” Harriet shouted, shocking those gathered around her, the Headmaster’s brow rising and Hermione choking like she’d just cursed at the Queen of England. “I mean—you don’t have to, I—err—I’ll write to the Dursleys, I mean my aunt. I want to write to my aunt and uncle and tell them myself. Sir.”

For one long, dreadful moment, Dumbledore seemed on the verge of denying Harriet’s wish, then reconsidered, tugging at the end of his beard as he hummed. “Well, I’m sure it will comfort them to hear from you personally. I’ll ask Madam Pomfrey to give you what you need for a letter in the morning.”

“Thank you, Professor Dumbledore.”

The Headmaster nodded, then left the ward. Harriet thought—hoped—Snape might go as well, but the thoroughly irritable wizard lingered at her bedside, plucking a vial from the nightstand and all but shoving it into her face. “Take this.”

“What is it?”

Snape didn’t say anything at first, but when it became clear Harriet wasn’t about to take anything someone just handed her at random, he rolled his eyes and pinched the bridge of his considerable nose. “Incomprehensible little twit. Take it. The poison used, Salazar’s Tongue, Lingua Salazarius, has lasting effects the Amino Accelerator counteracts by rebuilding liquefied tissue.”

Harriet sighed. He could rattle off a line of absolute nonsense and I’d have no clue what any of it meant or if it was true. She took the potion and drank, wincing at the coarse, slimy texture. Snape snatched the empty vial back.

“It was laced with an analgesic melatonin infusion. You two—.” He glared at Hermione and Elara. “—have five minutes before she’s asleep. If you are not out in the corridor, where I will be waiting to escort you back to the Slytherin common room, after those five minutes, I will begin handing out detentions. Don’t try my patience.”

With that said, Snape followed Dumbledore’s path out of the infirmary, his cloak flaring like a particularly ominous thundercloud in his passage. He disappeared—and both of Harriet’s worried friends threw themselves at her bed, wrapping their arms tight around the scrawny bespectacled girl.

“You’re crushing me, really—.”

“Don’t you ever do that again!” Hermione whispered in a furious undertone. She and Elara released Harriet, the latter coming around the other side of the bed to avoid Hermione’s agitated hair flipping. “You could have died! Haven’t you been told not to accept food or drinks if you don’t know where they come from?!”

“To be honest, Hermione, I don’t know where any of the food or drink on the House tables comes from.”

“You know what I mean!” She sniffled and wiped at her misty eyes. Harriet stared, dumbfounded and not quite sure how to react; no one had ever been so worried over her wellbeing before. Had she walked out into the kitchen of Number Four one morning missing a limb, the Dursleys would have snapped at her to make certain she hadn’t left any blood or bits of flesh on their clean floors. No one had ever cared about Harriet Potter.

Elara reminded Harriet of Snape when she looked to the other girl for help; the moonlight falling through the window blazed across her pale complexion, dark tendrils escaping the bun at the nape of her neck, gloves covering her anxious hands. She remained quiet as Hermione regained composure, then finally spoke. “…You’re not going to write to your relatives, are you?”

Stricken, Harriet looked down at the blanket covering her knees. She shook her head.

The silence continued for much of their alloted five minutes, which surprised Harriet because she thought Elara would disapprove, or Hermione would argue. Instead, they stood quietly at her sides and each took one of Harriet’s hands in their own. Harriet held onto them even after Snape’s potion kicked in and she fell into her pillow once more, lost to her muddled dreams.

She was in the Great Hall, alone, seated at her familiar spot at the Slytherin table with nothing but a cup of tea before her. The cup of tea said, “Drink me, Harriet,” and when Harriet refused, the cup repeated, “Drink me, drink me, let me in!” Harriet ignored the tea and stared instead at the ceiling above, watching the night sky bleed starlight until, one by one, the torches went out, and she drifted away.

 

Chapter 34: clever witches

Chapter Text

xxxiv. clever witches

 

Harriet grimaced when she heard the familiar patter of Madam Pomfrey’s approaching footsteps.

“Miss Potter,” the mediwitch snapped when she stepped out of her office and found the girl attempting to escape the wing, one hand still on the knob, moments away from slipping through the opening. “I told you—.”

“But I’m perfectly well now!” Harriet argued, and the witch scowled, flicking her wand so the infirmary doors slipped right out of Harriet’s hands and closed. “C’mon, Madam Pomfrey—!”

“As I said, Miss Potter, you may return to class tomorrow, but for the weekend you are to remain here.” She pointed one imperious finger back into the ward’s depths. “Bed.”

Harriet returned the way she’d come, Madam Pomfrey quick on her heels, tucking Harriet in until the bespectacled girl felt all but strangled by the tight sheets. “Now rest. The more you rest, the quicker you can leave.”

Harriet scrunched her nose at the witch’s back when Madam Pomfrey finally returned to her office and quickly disentangled herself from the sheets, though Harriet did remain put. She was mostly sure the threats about Sticking Charms weren’t real—but only mostly, and Harriet didn’t much fancy being stuck anywhere while some nutter agent of the Dark Lord ran about the school wanting her dead.

An hour passed before Hermione and Elara arrived, both slinking by the ajar office door so Madam Pomfrey wouldn’t shoo them away before they had a chance to visit. Harriet perked up at their entrance and grinned as her friends hurried over and slid the screen into place behind them, blocking view of the ward once more.

“Did you bring it?” Harriet asked, positively bouncing with eagerness as Hermione adjusted the satchel slung across her shoulder and searched the interior.

“Yes, of course I brought it, though I don’t see why you want it so much….”

The bushy-haired girl unearthed Harriet’s copy of 101 Legendary Artefacts of the Wizarding World.

Excellent!” Harriet crowed before checking the volume of her voice, glancing toward the screen. “Really, thank you, Hermione.”

“It’s fine,” Hermione said, though a pleased blushed spread across her cheeks. “Oh! And Elara brought—.”

The taller girl stuck a hand into the pocket of her robes and withdrew a coiled bit of green.

“Kevin!” Harriet said as Elara deposited the little snake into her waiting hands. Kevin was the Christmas cracker snake she’d stuffed into her pocket at the feast and had promptly forgotten, until she returned to the dorms and heard Livi hiss about an intruder. “Thanks, but why’d you bring him?”

“Livi’s been going a bit…a bit mental,” Hermione confessed, eying the snake with a healthy dose of caution. “We can’t see him, of course, but he did tear Parkinson’s bed to shreds and broke a mirror. I tried telling him you were fine—but, well, I don’t speak snake, do I?”

“No,” Harriet affirmed. “Though Livi understands some English when he feels like it.”

“Elara came up with the idea of bringing you Kevin—such a ridiculous name, Harriet, really—so you could tell him what happened, and he could tell Livi.”

Harriet lifted Kevin to her face. “I dunno if that’ll work,” she said, dubious. “Kevin’s a bit of an idiot.”

The snake blinked one eye, then the other, as his black tongue flickered.

“Really?” Hermione asked as she sank into the visitor’s chair. Elara elected to perch on the end of the bed, and Harriet folded her legs to give her room. “That’s fascinating. You know he’s not a real snake; he’s a low-level Transfiguration golem created by the magic in the cracker you pulled. He’s like the insects and animals we work with in Professor McGonagall’s class.”

Harriet blinked. “So—wait? Those animals aren’t real?”

“They’re real in the sense that they have flesh and synapses and comprehend basic stimuli. According to Professor McGonagall, however, they lack a certain indefinable spark of life. Did you know that’s where the stories of Frankenstein came from? He was a wizard who attempted to bring a human golem to life. The creation of human golems is Dark magic, of course, though they are permitted in the training of Healers and mediwizards—and, anyway, Frankenstein thought to use dead bodies as his base because he felt it was the closest he could get to true living flesh, and that broaches into Necromancy, which is a forbidden branch of Transfiguration—.”

Harriet and Elara nodded their heads at proper intervals while Hermione rattled off more magical history, until she paused for breath and realized she’d been rambling at some length. “Oh, I’m sorry, the thought got away from me. Anyway, Kevin’s a golem. It’s quite interesting that he’s able to understand and perform commands.”

“Yeah,” Harriet replied. “I wonder if that’s why Livi hates him, though. I had to ask him nicely not to eat Kevin and now Livi treats him like his own personal slave.”

“Oh, Harriet, that’s awful.”

“Well, what would you have me do?” the bespectacled girl huffed. “Livius is almost as heavy as I am and I don’t much fancy getting into an argument with a miffed Horned Serpent.”

Hermione subsided with a cross expression and Elara smirked, turning before the older Slytherin could see. Harriet stroked a finger against Kevin’s skull to get his attention.

Misstresss,” the little snake hissed, wriggling in her palm, looping skinny coils about her wrist.

Hullo, Kevin,” Harriet said. “Can you bring a message to Livi?

The snake swayed.

Tell Livi I am okay. Can you do that?

The swaying paused, then Kevin responded, “Kevin will.”

Harriet gave the snake a minute to process the information before testing him. “Kevin will what?

Kevin’s beady little eyes widened as he stared at Harriet and whipped his forked tongue out. “Kevin will…?” His coils tightened, voice puzzled. “Kevin will…Kevin will bitesss.

Satisfied with his decision, he reared back and bit the finger that’d been stroking his head—the finger that was bigger around than the whole of the little snake’s body.

Harriet pinched the bridge of her nose and sighed.

It took several more rounds of repetition and finger chomping before Harriet felt they had a semi-decent chance of Kevin relaying a proper message to Livi, and she handed the snake back to Elara, who slipped him into a pocket without so much as a flinch. They chatted quietly for a few minutes about the rumors swirling through the school and the general unease in Slytherin House after one of their own was poisoned. Harriet propped open 101 Legendary Artefacts in her lap and began flipping through pages.

“So why did you want the book?” Hermione asked as Harriet frowned at the picture of a green suit of armor. “I know you must be bored up here, but you were rather…insistent, and specific.”

Harriet stopped her perusal and considered her two friends, Hermione and Elara considering her in return. Should she tell them what the Headmaster had said? What would they do? Harriet didn’t want them to worry—or, worse, decide being around Harriet was too hazardous for their own health, which might very well be true if Harriet’s would-be murderer felt less stingy with his poisons. She fiddled with the corner of a page.

“Professor Dumbledore…when he came Friday night, he told me that I was poisoned by an agent of the Dark Lord.”

What?!” Hermione gasped, clapping a hand over her mouth when the exclamation echoed. Both she and Elara paled considerably, torn between outright horror and incredulity. Harriet rushed to explain.

“I know, I know, I didn’t really believe him at first, either. Professor Dumbledore said I was a mistake to—to him. That he meant to kill me when I was a baby with my parents, and that he’s not really dead like we think he is.” Harriet picked at the book until the page’s corner and she pressed her thumb against it, flustered. She didn’t meet their eyes. “They don’t know who the agent is, ‘course, and I’m not the reason they’re here. According to the Headmaster, the Dark Lord wants something that Dumbledore has—an artifact, he said, that was in Gringotts before and then came here.” And I want to bloody well know what it is if I’m going to be murdered over it.

“And did—did Professor Dumbledore say what this artifact was?”

“No. I think he was going to, but Snape looked like his head might explode if the Headmaster did.” Harriet patted the book. “So I thought I might find something in here.”

“But, Harriet, it could be anything.”

“I know, but if it’s something important enough that the bloody Dark Lord wants it so much, and it had to be moved from Gringotts of all places, then maybe it’s in here.”

Elara lifted and folded one leg at the knee so she could sit more on the bed and crane her neck to look at the book. Harriet was relieved neither she nor Hermione had gotten to their feet and ran from the room. “Rule out anything overly large,” Elara muttered, pointing out a picture of Hebo’s dragon-drawn chariot. “Anything ancient with old magic in it can’t be shrunk, and usually can’t be levitated. The goblins have week-long waiting periods to get over-sized objects in and out of Gringotts because of the mine shafts; it would not have been removed as quietly as it has been.”

Harriet flipped ahead, nodding. “How ‘bout any of these?” she asked as she pointed out a fancy array of different swords. “Excalibur. Galatine. Cla—cla—? The Clam Sola.”

Hermione bounced out of her chair and came to Harriet’s side. “Claiomh Solais, Harriet. Not Clam.”

“Well, however it’s pronounced—what do you think? This says it glowed with the light of the sun and could cut enemies in half. Oh, bloody hell.”

Hermione gave her swearing a half-hearted reprimand as she nibbled at her lower lip, deep in thought. “That…that wouldn’t make sense. Oh, none of it makes sense at all! You-Know-Who is supposed to be dead! How could Headmaster Dumbledore—?” Hermione took a shuddering breath as she saw Elara’s stern expression and Harriet’s nervous flinching. “I’m sorry. No, not a sword. Most listed here are accounted for and are simply legendary for their ownership. Not very useful.”

The next few pages held three items collectively entitled the Deathly Hallows. “I’d want these if I was a murderous Dark Lord,” Harriet said as she stared at an illustration of a black rock, wand, and cape. “Listen to this; ‘it is said that he who brings Death’s three Hallows together shall be his master, and confront that which terrifies mortal man.’”

Hermione shook her head. “No. The Deathly Hallows are purely a legend. Witches and wizards have claimed to own the Elder Wand or the Cloak of Invisibility dozens of times over the centuries and are always proved wrong. Whatever You-Know-Who is after has to be real, because the Headmaster says it was in Gringotts before.” Suddenly, she blinked, her mouth popping open in silent shock. “The third-floor corridor on the right-hand side!”

Harriet knew about the corridor, of course; Professor Dumbledore had told them all at the start of school to avoid the place unless they wanted to die. It wasn’t the kind of thing one forgets in a hurry. The Slytherins, being Slytherins, avoided the place and generally only spoke about the corridor in theory if they spoke of it at all—while the Gryffindors gamely admitted they’d tried the door at least once, just wanting a peek, but couldn’t get past the lock.

“That must be where he’s put it,” Hermione said, grinning from ear to ear. “Why else keep something potentially dangerous in a school?”

Elara, reading an line about Goswhit, Arthur’s helmet, frowned and said, “He was overtly theatrical about that, don’t you think?”

“What do you mean?”

“His speech regarding the corridor was blatant, given before the whole school. He didn’t need to say anything, did he? He could’ve just kept the door locked and anyone who came across it would’ve been quietly turned away, as we’ve seen. Instead, he told everyone about it. I would presume he also told this agent.”

Hermione’s eyes widened. “You don’t think it’s in there.”

“If the Headmaster was a Slytherin, I would guarantee it wasn’t.”

They continued to theorize on the Headmaster’s motivations while Harriet flipped further ahead in the book, moving past the Shield of El Cid, the Brisingamen, the Gem of Kukulkan, and settling on the image of a black cauldron oozing veins of green. “’Pair Dadeni: Cauldron of Rebirth,’” she read aloud, interrupting Hermione. “’Those who possess the Cauldron are said to be able to pour life into the dead and revive them from their eternal rest’.” Harriet glanced up. “Professor Dumbledore said he’d use any mean he could to ‘return to our plane.’ D’you think this is it?”

They debated the idea, then Hermione shook her head, decisive, hair bristling about her frustrated face. “No. The Pair Dadeni is real, unlike the Hallows, but it’s been lost. See, right here it says; ‘The last owner Cadfan Blevins reported the Pair Dadeni missing from his Vaults in 1982.’”

Elara scoffed. “Reported missing, Hermione. The Blevins are a dodgy Welsh pure-blood family on the verge of selling their House rights. Cadfan was trying to pull what the Muggles call an insurance scam. Doesn’t work well against the goblins, I’d gather.”

“Why haven’t I heard about the Blevins family?”

“Because the Malfoys are narrow-minded. I doubt they want to teach you much about pure-bloods outside England or Scotland.”

Harriet kept reading, pressing a knuckle between her teeth and biting down as she concentrated. No, she thought. Not the Cauldron. Looking at the pictures, it’s much too big and probably weighs five or six stones. Professor Dumbledore said Voldemort is unable to live and unable to die; I don’t think the Cauldron would help him.

A flash of red on a new page caught Harriet’s eye and she paused. “’The Philosopher’s Stone—.’” She had barely begun to read before Hermione snatched the book from her hands. “Steady on!”

Hermione’s brown eyes flicked back and forth at dizzying speeds. “This!” she cried, Harriet and Elara hurrying to shush her. She continued at the same volume. “It has to be this. It fits!”

“Shh! Lower your voice!”

Hermione scoffed. “If she hasn’t come to shoo us off by now, she’s not going to. You do know she has wards around the beds, right?”

Harriet opened her mouth to say that, no, she hadn’t known that, when Elara asked, “What is the Philosopher’s Stone?” and tried to read the book’s print upside down. Hermione flipped the text around.

“’The Philosopher’s Stone exists as the pinnacle achievement in the field of alchemy, with only alchemist Nicholas Flamel noted as a successful creator of the legendary substance. The Stone can transform any metal into gold and is capable of creating the Elixir of Life, which grants its drinker health, immortality, and preserves them from infirmity.’

The three girls shared a look over the book’s colorful pages. “But why does it have to be this?” Harriet asked. “Why are you so certain?” Sure, the immorality and wealth seemed perfect, but Harriet thought the Cauldron would fit the needs of a man not wholly alive too if he really wanted it—or maybe one of those fancy swords that could cut enemies in half just by nicking them. Ick.

“Because,” Hermione replied, smug as could be, a smile curling her lips. “The Ministry offers public records of Hogwarts’ merits and standards, which includes the qualifications and references of the school’s professors. I reviewed them over the summer because I wanted to know why Hogwarts was considered one of the best schools in the world. Did you know Professor Snape became Europe’s youngest Potions Master and got references from both Ebus Pippet and the Libatius Borage? And Professor Flitwick used to be an international dueling champion—? But, anyway, I looked up the professors’ qualifications, and then the Headmaster’s.”

“And?”

And Professor Dumbledore is eminently qualified for his positions as Headmaster and Supreme Mugwump of the ICW. He’s widely recognized as an authority and genius in his fields of mastery, Transfiguration and alchemy—the latter of which he apprenticed for under—.”

“Nicholas Flamel,” Elara said as she caught the train of Hermione’s thought. “He received his mastery from Nicholas Flamel, so it would be safe to assume they remained friends.”

“And who would you ask to guard your precious and valuable stone if not your good friend and master sorcerer, Albus Dumbledore?”

Suddenly, from behind the screen came the sound of slow, methodical clapping.

“Well, well,” said a familiar voice, and Harriet’s heart almost escaped her chest when Professor Slytherin stepped into view, sliding out from behind the screen with effortless grace and a haughty smirk in place. “Aren’t you a trio of clever, clever witches.”

Both Elara and Hermione stood, only to sit once more when getting off the bed only brought them closer to the Defense professor. Slytherin’s unnerving red eyes flicked between them, contemplating, until he settled on Harriet. “Dumbledore is a meddler,” he said at length, flicking imaginary lint from his robe sleeve. “He is a meddler of the highest order, a wizard of passable talent who uses the skills of others to elevate his status and quite enjoys having Slytherins clean up the mess. I couldn’t begin to fathom his reasons for wanting you to know of the Philosopher’s Stone, but I will give you three some sound advice; clever little first years who stick their noses into the business of Dark Lords don’t become clever little second years.”

Harriet swallowed. She didn’t know if he was threatening them with expulsion or—or something worse.

“Leave it be. Don’t ask questions.”

Hermione and Elara nodded, mumbling “Yes, Professor,” but Harriet—perhaps emboldened by boredom or her very recent escape from death, briefly met the wizard’s gaze. Prickling alighted from her shoulder and trailed across her collarbone, scraping at her chest and her throat. “We’re Slytherins, sir,” she said, swallowing again. “Not mad.”

He seemed to find that funny because he laughed—and the sound hit Harriet like a bucket of ice water. I’ve heard that laugh before. High, cold, and utterly humorless, Professor Slytherin’s cackling caused all three witches to shiver with unknowable dread.

“Quite right, Miss Potter. Thirty points to Slytherin.”

Chapter 35: cross my heart

Chapter Text

xxxv. cross my heart

 

Elara Black knew more about helplessness than most twelve-year-old girls.

She’d spent the majority of her life helpless, entrusted into the hands of men and women who followed their dogma with fanatical, closed-minded fervor and practiced their absolutions on the children they tended. She knew what it meant to be pinned, held down, by words and by steel, belittled by scripture and drunken slurring and childish fear. She could remember the smell of burning flesh in her nose when Father Phillips pressed the glowing brand into her chest yelling “By Christ be purged!”—and still, Elara had never felt quite so helpless as she did when watching her best friend choke to death.

The feeling remained with her days after Madam Pomfrey discharged Harriet from the infirmary and they went about their classes, the short Slytherin more subdued than usual. From everything Elara had seen, Harriet wasn’t a boisterous girl; she came across as rather brash sometimes, but Elara felt her attitude came from a lack of self-awareness rather than malice or rudeness. She’d seen similar behavior in the younger orphans at St. Giles’ who used to live with neglectful families, families who left them on their own for long stretches of time. They jumped at raised voices and generally avoided eye contact, just like Harriet. Sometimes they had imaginary friends.

Elara wondered if that was why Harriet often whispered to herself. She was, without a doubt, an odd girl—but also one of the loveliest people Elara had ever met, and the idea that an agent of the half-dead Dark Lord—the Dark Lord her father supposedly served—had tried to kill Harriet sat heavy upon Elara’s heart.

Harriet was quieter than usual, tired after her stint in the hospital wing. Elara had learned from Hermione that the poison used, Salazar’s Tongue, melted the imbiber’s insides, not quite like an acid would but with comparable results, and Harriet would need time to regain strength in her repaired muscles, bones, and organs. Her already sketchy control suffered, and Harriet managed to turn her mouse into a baby elephant during Transfiguration, breaking the desk and earning a flabbergasted tongue lashing from Professor McGonagall. Normally she took everything in stride and brushed off Parkinson’s teasing, the sneering Slytherin always mocking Harriet’s hair or her scar or her glasses, but for the last few days Harriet had only slumped beneath the relentless mocking. Parkinson kept pantomiming choking in the Great Hall and Harriet refused to touch any of the drinks.

So if Elara paid an upper year Slytherin to Charm Parkinson’s pumpkin juice to shoot straight up her nose, she felt justified in that bit of petty bullying. Parkinson vomited all over a screaming Malfoy and although the sight almost made Elara sick herself, Hermione and Harriet—and most of Slytherin House—laughed so hard they nearly wet themselves.

Snape proved particularly unforgiving on Friday during double Potions. He skulked the dungeon’s length, a terrifying specter right out of Father Phillip’s biblical stories about pale, furious ghosts and devils, his footsteps silent but no less haunting in their intensity. “Black,” he snapped as soon as they filed into the classroom. “Back row.”

Elara sighed and moved her cauldron from Harriet and Hermione’s table to the single one in the back. She fought the urge to mutter darkly under her breath, guessing it was going to be one of those days, the ones in which Snape didn’t allow Elara to skate by on Hermione and Harriet’s efforts and instead made an absolute hash of things on her own. She let the legs of her cauldron touch down with a loud bang and the Potions Master shot a glare in her direction before beginning the lecture.

She brooded through much of the lesson, ignoring Slytherins and the Gryffindors who still seemed to find it awfully amusing that a member of the House of Serpents got themselves poisoned and almost died. Elara had heard Longbottom mutter that Harriet “got what she deserved” on more than one occasion, though the sentiment lacked heat, laced with the same tepid energy the orphans used after witnessing one of the sisters’ punishments, simply relieved it hadn’t been them under the switch.

The first portion of class ended without event and they began their practicals. Snape prowled about, swooping over the Gryffindor side of the room to chastise Weasley on some contrived grievance. Malfoy took the opportunity to lean back in his seat and, within Harriet’s hearing, said, “Oh, I do hope my dinner doesn’t end up poisoned. Just imagine; I actually have parents who’d mourn me.”

Harriet shot Malfoy a two-fingered salute and Hermione smacked her arm down before Snape whipped around and paced back in their direction.

To Elara’s surprise, she almost managed to finish her potion before the situation went pear-shaped. Her concentration wavered during the final maturation as she looked about the class and watched Snape’s back when he passed Harriet’s table and, for the briefest of moments, hesitated. What if it was Snape? an insidious voice in Elara’s head whispered. Hermione still suspects he might have cursed Longbottom in November. What if all of this is a twisted scheme between him and Slytherin meant to endear or test our loyalties? What better way to divert attention than to place himself in situations where he appears the hero or savior?

Her control slipped, and some organic ingredient within the brew began to decay or blossom, spoiling the whole potion. The liquid curdled and began to swiftly rise like dough, cresting the cauldron’s top before Elara felt a sudden shove of magic hit her in the chest, throwing her into the counter at her back as the frothing meniscus collapsed and a wave of foul goo sloshed over the table and floor.

“How shocking,” the Potions Master drawled from across the aisle, wand extended. He had been the one to push Elara back. For once Snape sounded bored and impatient rather than gleefully mocking. Apparently, there was more on his mind than lambasting Elara’s substandard brewing skills. “Clean your mess, Black. No magic.”

The ‘mess,’ as he’d stated, had begun to cool and congeal on the table and stones underfoot, sticking the abandoned stool fast to the floor. Elara retrieved the cleaning supplies typically reserved for detentions from the cupboard by the stone sink and dragged her feet back to her seat. He could clean it up in an instant if he wanted. Git.

Class came to an end soon enough and the other students hurried to tidy their stations and tuck away their kits. Longbottom escaped a similar meltdown by a slim margin and scampered with Weasley and Finnigan quick on his heels, the trio shedding Billywig wings and nettles in their wake that had Snape cursing softly. Harriet and Hermione lingered, but Elara shook her head, hands covered in inert green goo, so the pair hefted their bags onto their shoulders and departed.

Snape’s eyes followed Harriet from the dungeon. Even after she’d passed through the door, the man’s gaze bore into the weathered wood as if trying to see through it, not yet ready for the girl to pass beyond his sight.

Elara didn’t like the way Snape looked at Harriet. It wasn’t predatory; Elara would’ve gone straight to Dumbledore if she’d thought so, consequences be damned. Rather, it was the way a person might look at a teacup sitting too close to the edge of the coffee table—or at a priceless Faberge egg in the hands of a drunk. Raw panic glinted behind Snape’s black irises and it made Elara nervous, nervous because she hadn’t a single idea why the wizard looked at her best friend like that. What was there to be nervous about? What did he know that Elara didn’t?

The last student left, the door swinging shut, and Elara dropped the dirty rag onto the table with a thwap. Snape glanced toward her—and found the girl regarding him with a narrow-eyed stared.

“Why do you look at her like that?” she asked, her tone questioning rather than impertinent. Elara hardly cared if she offended Snape of all people—the great bat—but she did want an answer.

“Excuse me?” he replied in a voice that conveyed an easy, chilling distaste.

“Why do you look at Harriet like that?” Elara repeated. Snape’s eyes widened as if he hadn’t actually expected her to say the words again. “I don’t like it.”

The Potions Master blinked, then gathered himself like a growing storm, anger blotching his pale face, hate glittering in his eyes like the hard shell backs of dead beetles. Time in the orphanage made Elara sensitive to an adult’s shifting moods, and just as she knew Harriet made Snape nervous, Elara knew her presence sparked fury in the wizard. “I’d be very careful about what you’re insinuating, Black,” Snape said in that soft, whispering voice of his. “Very, very careful.”

“I’m not insinuating anything,” Elara replied. She refused to match his whispering and spoke clearly, loudly. “I’m asking a question I hope to have answered. Sir.”

Snape stepped away from his desk and, when he approached, Elara tried very hard not to shudder. The man loomed like a silent, seething terror, and with his black robes relieved only by the slightest touch of white at the collar and his cuffs, the wizard looked close enough to a priest for her heart to race with panic.

Elara swallowed as the Potions Master stared her down.

“You’re awfully bold, aren’t you, Black? Perhaps you would have done better in Gryffindor…like your good-for-nothing father.”

She flinched, face burning. So that’s it, Elara realized. He knew Sirius. Or, at least he knows of him. I wonder…. “I’m not my father.”

“For your sake, you’d better hope not.”

Snape went to leave, dismissing her, and Elara spoke before she could stop herself. “If you hurt her, I’ll see you sorry for it.”

He froze. Elara fancied she could hear her heartbeat echoing against the dungeon’s cold, grimy walls as the wizard slowly, slowly turned to face her. “Are you hoping to be expelled, Black? I can accommodate that wish, but do make sure you’re very certain you want to be on the train back to London after supper before threatening me.”

“It’s not a threat,” she said, feeling more than a touch queasy. “Only Gryffindors make threats, sir; Slytherins make promises.”

“A promise, girl?” Snape took another step forward and Elara couldn’t help herself; she retreated and her back met the edge of the counter behind her. The professor sneered. “Pathetic. I don’t know what game you’re playing, child, but—.”

“I’m not strong,” she blurted out. Elara didn’t know why she kept talking despite every manner she’d had drilled into her head screaming at her to be quiet. In her mind’s eye, Harriet lay prone on the Great Hall’s floor, suffocating, poisoned by an innocuous cup of evening tea, and who best to poison a girl than a wizard who worked with poisons every day? Elara never wanted to be helpless again. “I’m only twelve and I don’t know much magic—but I do know the name of Black has clout, and I would use whatever clout I could against anyone who hurt Harriet or Hermione.”

Snape leaned forward and Elara reciprocated by leaning back. She wrung her hands together and wondered what it’d be like to be back at Grimmauld Place full-time, if she’d be able to teach herself magic after being expelled, if that was allowed, or if they snapped your wand and—.

Only Miss Potter and Miss Granger, Black? Am I free to poison whoever else I wish outside your purview?”

The question threw Elara, who’d been preparing for another verbal onslaught maligning her character. “Ah,” she said, biting her tongue. She remembered then something that Matron Fitzgerald once told her when Elara asked why she was being punished after Wendy Pamilo, a daughter from one of the church parishioners, broke the fence in Elara’s sight. “We take care of our own,” Elara repeated in monotone. “And God manages all the rest.”

The Potions Master scoffed, but he did lean away once more and Elara breathed easier. “Insufferable fool,” he sneered. His glare softened, or so Elara imagined. The low, murky light of the dungeons made such things difficult to decipher. “Make no mistake, Black, you are remarkably like your father; arrogant and presumptuous. He too made hollow promises to protect his friends, promises that meant nothing to him or to them in the end. Save your sanctimonious posturing for someone who actually means Potter harm.”

Quick as a whip, he drew his wand and Elara flinched—only for him to brandish it at the mess on the table, vanishing the mucky cauldron and spilled glop with a single gesture. Snape smirked as he tucked his wand away again. “Get out of my sight.”

Elara was all too pleased to oblige the man; she snatched hold of her bag and bolted from the classroom, earning a sharp rebuke for running and slamming the door. Even so, Snape didn’t give her a detention, didn’t take points, and though Elara wound up sick from nerves in the first-floor loo, she counted her confrontation as a win.

She wouldn’t allow anyone to hurt her friends.

Chapter 36: silvered want

Chapter Text

xxxvi. silvered want

 

If there was one thing Harriet couldn’t stand, it was all the staring.

She didn’t know how Longbottom could tolerate it, how he didn’t start yelling at people to look the other bloody way when he walked down corridors, because Harriet felt sick to her stomach with the strange level of infamy she seemed to be experiencing. The whole of the school or at least the vast majority of it had been present for her poisoning, and they wanted to know why one small, twitchy little first year Slytherin kid almost kicked the bucket in the Great Hall. Hence the staring.

As May moved on, some of the staring tapered off, but Harriet still heard the whispering and it made her increasingly uncomfortable, so much so that she accidentally magicked one of the tapestries to tear itself off the wall and chase a particularly loud sixth year Hufflepuff through most of the school. Nobody could prove she’d done it, of course, but Harriet took that as a sign to keep to herself for a while.

The afternoon was warm—one of the warmest they’d had in quite some time, and Harriet couldn’t bear the idea of grinding her nose in revisions for another minute, even if Hermione and Elara seemed perfectly content with studying until their eyeballs fell out. Harriet wasn’t having it.

So, after promising she wouldn’t wander off alone, Livi fast asleep and coiled about her torso, Harriet headed outside where other students congregated in the sunshine and borrowed one of the training brooms from Madam Hooch. The brooms didn’t go very fast and only rose three feet off the grass, but Harriet enjoyed the weightless sensation, the pull of wind through her hair, and the quietness found while toddling about the grounds on a broom that could be outstripped by passing butterflies.

Harriet caught sight of a familiar form heading toward the Forest’s edge and zoomed nearer.

“Hagrid!” she called out, hopping off the broom at the half-giant’s side, setting off a small cloud of dust and dirt from the path.

“Hullo, Harriet!” he boomed, grinning, reaching out with his free hand to pat her shoulder—almost driving Harriet into the ground. In his other hand he held a suspiciously stained sack, and upon seeing where Harriet’s attention had wandered, he shrugged. “Goin’ to feed the Thestrals. Got a new foal who needs lots o’ protein.”

“Can I come?”

“’Course,” Hagrid responded—then paused. “Err, well if you don’t mind a bit o’ blood, I should say. Thestrals love raw meat—can’t get enough of the stuff. They’re scavengers by nature and harmless.”

“I don’t mind.”

Harriet followed Hagrid on her broom since his stride was exponentially longer than her own. Thin saplings surrounded the path, and though they’d entered the treeline, Hagrid mentioned they wouldn’t be going into the forest proper.

“Nothing would hurt you in there, though, not with me around,” Hagrid boasted, swelling with pride. “Lots o’ misunderstood creatures, you see, but they demand respect and space, which is what I keep havin’ to tell those Weasley twins—but those two never listen, and I have to keep chasin’ them off for their own good….”

Hagrid went on at some length about Ron’s rascally brothers, though he sounded fond rather than scornful, and soon they came upon a partial paddock in a clearing where Hagrid set the sack down.

“You like flyin’?” Hagrid asked as Harriet hopped off her broom again and found a seat on the rickety paddock fence. An older student might’ve landed flat on their face, but Harriet was light enough for the barrier to hold. Livi hissed in his sleep and tightened fractionally, causing Harriet to wiggle to loosen his hold around her middle.

“Yes!” she replied with a wide grin. “I wanna try out for the team next year, if my marks are good enough.”

“Marks?”

“Yeah. Professor Snape said you have to have all E’s to play on the House team!”

Hagrid gave her a funny look and mumbled something into his beard that sounded like “sneaky sod,” then picked up the sack and entered the paddock. “Your dad used to play Quidditch back in his day.”

“You mentioned that when we first met.”

“Did I? Guess I’m fergettin’ things in my old age.” Hagrid chuckled. “Damn fine Chaser he was. James flew like he’d been born on a broomstick. I think he won every game he played for Gryffindor. Gave me a shock seein’ you flying about. You look just like James at a distance.”

Hagrid opened the sack and drew out the bloodied haunch of what looked like a deer, or maybe a small cow. He strode a few paces from Harriet toward the trees, twigs and fallen branches snapping under his great boots, and seemed content to wait for whatever it was he was feeding to come to him.

Harriet tried—and failed—to picture her own father on a broom, playing Quidditch, wearing gold and red instead of silver and green. She wished she could’ve seen it for herself. Would James have taught her how to fly? Would he have gotten her a broom when she was little? Or would her mum have protested? What was Lily like? Did she play Quidditch too? Or did she watch Harriet’s dad and cheer for him?

A sound shuffling nearer the clearing drew Harriet’s attention to the paddock again. She blinked as she saw a black, skeletal horse coming over to the half-giant, fluttering its leathery wings and kicking its hooves in anticipation.

“Hey,” Harriet said. “It’s those spooky horses!”

Hagrid stumbled as if she’d assaulted him and the bloody leg in his large hand hit the dirt. The horse squawked in indignation but lowered its head to eat all the same, stripping bits of meat from the whole with its tapered beak.

“You c—? You can see ‘em?” Hagrid choked as the face behind the beard paled drastically. Another horse came to investigate the commotion, seeming to slip right out of the sparse shadows accrued about the base of the wispier trees.

“Of course I can,” Harriet said—then she recalled the time she’d tried to point them out to Hermione, and the other girl had given her a puzzled look, saying there was nothing there. “Is that, err, odd?”

Hagrid fumbled with the sack and drew out another leg—chicken, maybe—and proffered it to the new horse, who trotted over and happily accepted the food. “No, it’s just—. They’re terribly misunderstood creatures, Thestrals. People get scared of ‘em, because you can—. Blimey, Harry. I’m probably not the best—. Well, you can only see ‘em if you’ve…if you’ve seen someone pass on.”

Harriet winced at the nickname before the meaning of Hagrid’s words sank in. If you’ve seen someone pass on. “Oh,” she replied, swallowing. She only knew two people who’d died, and while she knew she’d been in the house that night, she hadn’t realized she’d been close enough to actually see what’d happened. Merlin, Harriet thought, morose. No wonder I’m so weird.

“Would’cha like to feed ‘em?”

He extended one of the plucked drumsticks to Harriet and, nodding slightly, she clamored off the fence and came nearer. The horses—Thestrals—watched her with curious attention, cocking their heads like birds, turning ever so slightly to keep her in sight. Harriet wrinkled her nose at the feel of lukewarm meat in her hand and Hagrid grinned, though his watery sniffle ruined the effect.

“Go on. Mind your fingers—they’re harmless as lambs but can get a bit too excited. And remember to wash your hands real good after we’re done….”

Two more Thestrals wandered out of the forest, plus the foal Hagrid had mentioned; long-limbed and clumsy, it would’ve knocked Harriet over in its rush if Hagrid hadn’t caught her by the scruff of her neck. They were undoubtedly strange creatures, imposing and cool to the touch, and Harriet could see how carnivorous horses only visible to those who’d seen death might be scary to others—but the Thestrals proved as friendly as Hagrid said, and running her hands over their bony snouts reminded Harriet of petting Livi or other snakes.

As the Thestrals crowded around her and nosed her hair and licked her fingers clean, Harriet thought about her mum and dad and wondered, grimly, which of them she saw die as a toddler. How had she survived? Headmaster Dumbledore said she was a mistake, that Voldemort—the Dark Lord—had meant to kill her as well, but how did she live while James and Lily died? They’d been a full-grown wizard and witch, and Harriet had just been a little baby. She didn’t understand.

Harriet watched the scrawny foal lean against its mother as the mare pestered Hagrid for more scraps and she wished, more than anything, that she knew what having a family was like. All she had for comparison were the Dursleys, and they were no more her family than some rocks or the Thestrals themselves. She remembered Aunt Petunia would coo over Dudley and fix his hair and sometimes Harriet would do the same to herself, pretending she had a mum who cared about her scruffy haircut and ugly clothes, though the imitation never lived up to the real thing.

“Hagrid?” she asked, brushing one of the Thestral’s scraggly manes. “If you could have anything at all, what would it be?”

“Eh?”

“What do you want more than anything else?”

“Hmm,” he pondered, scratching at his wiry beard as he did so, leaving behind bloody scraps. Harriet would’ve pointed that out had the tallest Thestral not wandered over and plucked the pieces out himself. “Watch it there, silly beast. What was the question? What would I want more than anythin’? Not quite sure, really. Always wanted me a dragon, though.” His tone turned wistful as he gathered the empty sack in one hand. “Fascinating creatures, dragons, but they don’t live wild no more. They get into too many scrapes with the Muggles and the Ministry can’t keep up.”

Harriet’s mouth quirked as Hagrid gushed about his favorite scaled creatures, and in the back of her mind a familiar sly, cold voice spoke.

The Mirror of Erised is enchanted to show your most ardent desire, not the petty wants of everyday life. Many a wizard and witch have been fool enough to let the images depicted therein drive them to madness.

He will use any means he can to return himself to our plane.”

She gathered the broom and Hagrid led the way back to his hut, where he let Harriet wash her hands and served a spot of afternoon tea before they found places on the porch to sit and enjoy the spring weather. The May sun felt like heaven upon Harriet’s upturned face, but a growing unease suffused her when she thought about that mirror in the Headmaster’s office, and no matter how warm the weather grew, Harriet felt cold.

 

Chapter 37: look and see

Chapter Text

xxxvii. look and see

 

Harriet stared at the gargoyle, and the gargoyle stared at Harriet.

She didn’t know how long she’d been standing there, nor was she precisely sure of her reason for coming. To speak with the Headmaster, maybe? Whatever her motives, a sudden hankering for Muggle candy had Harriet drooling and so she told the gargoyle, “Fizzing Whizbees.”

“No, no,” said the gargoyle, its stone lips cracking and crumbling as it sneered. “No Fizzing Whizbees here. Only lemon sherbets!”

The gargoyle opened a taloned hand and, there, on its rigid palm, balanced a pile of sour yellow candies.

Harriet frowned. “But I don’t want lemon sherbets.”

The bright candies fell to the floor and disappeared in sooty puffs. “Then go through that door there.”

Harriet whirled about, and behind her found the mentioned door, one she’d never seen before and knew couldn’t possibly be across the corridor from the gargoyle. Still, she reached for the knob and stepped through.

A cool breeze whistled in the unyielding dark and Harriet’s feet tamped down damp leaves, the Forbidden Forest stretching tall and foreboding all around her. She couldn’t recall how she’d gotten here—hadn’t she been in the castle speaking to the Headmaster’s gargoyle a moment before? The night wood laid dark and unwelcoming in all directions, large shadows crawling in the bracken, sharp-toothed faces carved into the trees. Mirrors crowded the forest, mirrors of every shape and size, gilded or cracked, taller than houses, framed in the words ‘Nie mte l’. A single light flickered in the distance.

Harriet ran. The roots rose from the earth and coiled around her legs, but Harriet pushed through, kicking and writhing, until she reached a small cabin no bigger than a boot cupboard at the foot of a great oak. She threw open the door and slammed it shut behind herself. A torch lay on its side, flickering, batteries on the verge of going out.

Something heavy collided with the door at Harriet’s back. She pressed against it, quivering, as fists pummeled the flimsy wood—then they stopped.

Harrrriet,” rasped a voice on the other side. “Let me in, little Harriet. Just for a minute, let me in.

The torch flickered again, stronger than before, and Harriet silently begged for it not to go out. Nails scoured the door.

Let me IN!

The torch died and Harriet lunged for it. “Please, please, please—,” she chanted as she beat the plastic tube against her hand and the batteries rattled. Finally, the light came on—and Harriet looked up into a pair of watching red eyes.

“—Harriet!”

She woke with a gasp, almost colliding with Hermione in her rush to sit up. The dream crowded her thoughts, then like a sugar cube in a cup of tea, broke apart and dissolved until only the taste remained—sour and acrid with bile and fear. The sensation of pins and needles crawled through her shoulder and neck. Swallowing, Harriet breathed hard and adjusted her glasses as she blinked and met Hermione’s quizzical look.

“Are you okay?” the bushy-haired girl asked. “You napped right through lunch and I know you wanted a bit of a lie in, but I didn’t want you to sleep through dinner as well.”

Harriet yawned wide enough to crack her jaw and nodded, wiping gunk from her eyes. “I’m okay. Just had a bad dream.” Which wasn’t a rare occurrence, really. She studied the empty dormitory, brow furrowed, until she found Elara leaning against one of the carrells, a half-written letter abandoned on the desk alongside her quill. “Thanks for waking me.”

Humming, Hermione sat on the edge of her own bed and fiddled with the curtains.

Ssss.

Livi shifted in the rumpled sheets, a somnolent hiss rising from the vicinity of Harriet’s feet as she lifted the counterpane and peered at the snoozing serpent. An indolent blue eye opened and gleamed before Livi settled again. Harriet set about unraveling his coils and the snake dragged himself farther into the bed’s covers. She was thankful she’d left Kevin in his makeshift terrarium in her trunk’s nifty extension, since he had the unfortunate habit of sticking his snout in her nose while she slept.

“I’ll never get used to that,” Hermione said.

“Used to what?”

“Finding you in bed with a snake twice your size.”

“He’s not twice my size!” Harriet protested as she stroked a hand along Livi’s back. “Livi’s only—well, maybe a foot or so longer than I am tall.”

“Isn’t he going to keep growing?”

Harriet shrugged. “I read some of those books you showed me in the library and Magizoologists don’t know much about Horned Serpents, really. They live for a long time apparently, and can take years to shed their skin, depending on ‘magical maturation.’”

“Hmm.”

Just then the door banged open and Pansy strode in, gifting all three of them with her haughty, scrunch-nosed sneer as she paused beyond the threshold and Harriet scrambled to make sure Livi was covered. The other witch didn’t notice. “What are you three nerds doing in here?”

“We sleep in here, Parkinson,” Elara drawled before Hermione could say anything. Pansy glanced at Elara and, meeting the taller witch’s glare, decided to move on without comment, though she did scoff as she strutted over to the washroom.

“Reapplying her makeup. Again,” Harriet muttered. Hermione disguised her laugh as a slight cough, which didn’t do much to hide the sound. Apparently Pansy heard because she came back into the dorm and scowled.

“Don’t you have something to study for, Granger?” One eye had a glob of mascara smudged in the corner and it stuck her lashes together in messy clumps.

“No? We just finished the last of our exams yesterday, if you can’t recall.”

“As if you’d let that stop you.” Pansy stomped into the bathroom again.

Hermione glowered at the open doorway for a good minute before looking away, her cheeks stained a delicate shade of pink. “I don’t know how she manages to make being studious and smart sound like an insult.”

“Better yet,” Elara said. “I don’t know why she thinks that’s an insult.”

Hermione didn’t bother to cover her laugh this time, though if Pansy heard she chose to stay in the washroom. Harriet grinned—then pain lanced through her shoulder and neck, catching her unawares, and Harriet gasped, slapping a hand over the offending spot.

“Are you all right?”

“…Yeah.” Harriet rubbed the shirt covering the old wound and popped open a button, pulling the collar down to inspect the irritation, though she couldn’t quite manage. “My neck—my scar—hurts.”

“Your scar?”

“Mhm. I always guessed the cut hurt the muscles or the nerves or something, since sometimes it acts up. It’s been a bit worse lately, though.”

Hermione stood. She reached for Harriet’s collar and, after pausing to receive permission, plucked the fabric aside. “It looks—well, it looks bad,” she decided, lips pressed into a worried line. “The skin’s gone puffy and inflamed. Have you been scratching at it?”

“No. Nothing more than usual.”

“I don’t like the look of it.” Hermione’s frown intensified and Elara drifted over to inspect the scar as well, going so far as to run her fingertip over the thickest vein of gnarled tissue. Her hands were cold. “You should go to Madam Pomfrey. Or even Professor Dumbledore, since it’s an old injury.”

“What does that have to do with it?”

“It’s part of the school’s public information, the same place I learned of the professors’ qualifications.” Noticing Harriet and Elara’s blank expressions, Hermione rolled her eyes. “Honestly. ‘Hogwarts’ attending healer cannot affect maladies, deformities, or injuries accrued outside of term without giving knowledge to and acquiring consent from the patient’s parent or guardian.’ There is a bylaw, though, that allows the Headmaster or the student’s Head of House to grant permission in special cases or emergencies, in loco parentis.”

Harriet blinked. “It terrifies me that you have all that memorized.”

Pansy came strutting out of the washroom and went to her trunk. “Dumbledore’s not here,” she commented in passing, digging through her possessions until she found the blue top she sought. “Saw him leave like ten minutes ago.”

Pain prickled in Harriet’s neck and straightened her back. “What do you mean he’s not here?”

“Do you need to clean out your ears, Potter? I’m not going to repeat myself.”

“Where has he gone?”

Pansy propped her hands on her hips and scoffed. “How in the world would I know? Or even care? I only know this because Daphne and Millicent and Tracey and me were sitting out by the lake with Draco and Greg and Vince—.” Pansy giggled and Elara grimaced, though Pansy didn’t see. “And we—well, anyway, we saw the old man leave through the front gates in a hurry and Disapparate.”

Harriet didn’t know what Disapparate meant and didn’t let that distract her. As far as she knew, the Headmaster never left the school while in classes were in session. Why leave now? Why had he been called away so suddenly? She hopped upright and, disregarding the robes thrown across the foot of her bed, snatched her wand from the nightstand and stashed it into the brace on her forearm. “I need to go talk to—someone.”

Confused, Hermione asked, “Who?” even as Harriet hurriedly stuffed her feet into her shoes.

“I don’t know,” she confessed. “I just—I have a really bad feeling about you know what.” She let her eyes drift toward the small shelf above her bed, where A Compendivm of Defense Against Magic Moste Dark and 101 Legendary Artefacts of the Wizarding World sat.

Hermione’s eyes widened with comprehension and Elara crossed her arms, the tension in the room increasing as Pansy looked between them. “What are you talking about?”

“I think I’m going to go see Snape,” Harriet said—even if the idea sounded barmy even in her own mind. She couldn’t decide if Snape hated her or not, given he either seemed intent on burdening her with as many detentions as possible or completely ignoring Harriet. Sometimes, though, in the quiet of the dungeons when he set her to task and sat behind his desk doing his markings or checking his inventories, she could ask him a question and the professor would answer, sometimes with his familiar sarcastic snark and sometimes with resigned weariness. He’d probably tell Harriet she was an idiot, but she would feel better for hearing it from someone who knew what he was talking about.

“Snape?” Elara echoed. “I’d be worried he’d poison me again if I were you.”

Pansy gave her a scandalized look and almost dropped the blouse in her hands. “Like Professor Snape would bother poisoning a weird half-blood nerd like her. She probably faked the whole thing.”

“Funny, Parkinson. You sounded convinced when you screamed bloody murder in the Great Hall.”

Elara and Pansy’s bickering gave Harriet the opening she needed to escape the dorm, and she flashed a grateful—if strained—smile in the older girl’s direction before hurrying into the corridor. Slytherins milled about the common room, basking in the freedom provided post-examinations, and they gave the bespectacled witch scurrying for the exit little thought. Harriet wished she’d taken Livi with her, but she wouldn’t have had the chance to pull him from the covers with Pansy there, and really, Snape should still be in his classroom, only a short jaunt down the hall, either proctoring a test or finishing one up.

Harriet was almost there, too, when she collided with a body around a blind corner where the dungeon corridors bisected one another. She caught herself against the stone wall and winced at the renewed pain in her neck, blinking through tears as she looked at the figure shadowed by doused torchlight.

“…Professor Quirrell?”

He said nothing, standing stiffly, crookedly, as if lame in one leg or in pain, until he whispered. “…yes, why not?”

Before he could say more or Harriet could react, the wizard moved and magic winnowed through the enclosed space. A sudden burst of red light was the last thing Harriet saw before the world went dark.

_____

 

“…can’t do it, Master. I can see it, can see myself giving it to you, but oh where is it? I don’t understand—.”

Quiet, you fool.”

Groggy, Harriet became aware again in tenuous increments; her senses reignited one by one, hearing the high, cold voice and the downtrodden muttering, pain in her oddly bent leg and numb hands, candlelight fluttering against her eyelids. She sucked in a breath and blinked until she could make sense of the scene before her.

She was in the Headmaster’s office—or, rather, she leaned against one of the battered trunks in the spare room off the Headmaster’s office, and in front of her a hunched Professor Quirrell whimpered as he looked in the gilded Mirror of Erised.

He hadn’t seen her yet, or at least Harriet thought he hadn’t. She doubted anyone else was about, given her hands were bound behind her back and the wizard in his purple turban was wholly absorbed with the mirror, but there were people in the office; painted people, dozens of them. If she could get the attention of the portraits….

No sooner had Harriet sucked in a breath to scream then Quirrell spun on his heels, wand raised, and snapped, “Colloportus!”

The door slammed shut with a tremendous bang. Quirrell turned his wand on Harriet and she choked, terrified, an eerie, not entirely lucid grin splitting the wizard’s wan face. The single candle that gave light to the room had gone out when the door slammed, and now the only illumination came through the boarded up window, sharp bars of late day sunlight slicing across Quirrell’s front and the Mirror behind him.

“Good afternoon, Miss Potter. If you scream, I will kill you.”

Harriet tried to gather her scrambled wits, terror drying her mouth and throat until she could hardly swallow. “Wh—wh—?”

Quirrell sniffed, annoyed, and turned to the Mirror again. He touched the glass with his left hand and let his fingers play over the frame’s intricate design as he mumbled and hummed. “Where is it? How did the old fool manage…?”

Oh, Harriet knew what the wizard wanted; since that sunny afternoon with Hagrid a month ago, she’d been harboring a heavy suspicion about the looking glass sequestered away in the Headmaster’s discreet keeping. As Elara’d noted, Professor Dumbledore’s blatant mention of the third-floor corridor at the Welcoming Feast had surely drawn attention and suspicion to the place, including the attention and suspicion of anyone looking for the Philosopher’s Stone, but the Mirror—in contrast—was safely tucked away. Harriet only knew of it by chance.

If Quirrell was after the Stone, that would make him—.

Harriet’s heart started to beat very fast indeed as she struggled against the bonds on her wrists. Set pooled beneath her and she felt the featherlight touch of shadows creeping across her skin, plucking at the ropes.

“Master, I do not know what to do!”

Quirrell sudden cry jerked Harriet’s attention back to the wizard.

Use the girl….”

The chilling voice spoke from thin air and Quirrell spun about, Harriet scuffing her shoes as she tried to scramble away from his reaching hand, but Quirrell managed to haul her upright. Having sat on her left leg too long, it gave beneath the sudden weight and Harriet slumped to her knees before the Mirror, dangling from Quirrell’s grasp.

“Tell me what you see, girl.”

Harriet didn’t see anything. The images within the Mirror flickered and morphed as different scenes battled for dominance. Her deepest desire changed every second or so as Harriet vacillated between fear and anger, horror and disbelief, stubbornness and desperation.

“I—I don’t know.”

The angle was awkward, but Quirrell managed to strike her across the face with his wand hand. Harriet tasted iron as her teeth cut her lower lip—and she remembered being struck by Uncle Vernon in a similar manner all those months ago and crying in the cupboard afterward, alone. Always alone.

In the Mirror, Lily Potter knelt to embrace the image of her daughter. Tears spilled from Harriet’s eyes.

“You’re not worth the time I wasted brewing that poison,” Quirrell said before tossing her aside. Harriet landed on her back, wincing as her arms twinged, but Set returned to fraying the bonds once out of the wizard’s sight.

Let me speak with her….”

Quirrell paused, head tilting as if listening to something Harriet couldn’t hear. “Are you certain, M-master?”

Do not question me, Quirrell….”

Without further prompting, the wizard tucked his wand into his belt and began to unwrap his turban. Withered garlic cloves fell from the loosening cloth with distinct plops, and the smell of rot mixing with the sulfurous garlic odor overwhelmed Harriet as bile burned in her throat. She retched.

The last of the turban fell like the cloves and Quirrell turned his back. Harriet wished he hadn’t.

She had no words for the abomination before her; it defied description, and the longer she looked, the more terrified Harriet became. A second face protruded from Quirrel’s skull, two slits approximating nostrils, a slash where the lipless mouth opened and sharp teeth shone, red eyes peering right at her. The skin was peeling in great chunks and bruises mottled Quirrell’s cranium like mold on cheese.

Harriet felt faint.

“Not a pretty sssight, is it, Miss Potter?” the second face mocked, the voice frigid and raspy, sibilating from the malformed jaw. “See what I have been reduccced to? Possessing snakes and lesser wizards, skulking in the dark, playing Dumbledore’s ridiculous gamesss. See what I, the greatessst wizard who ever lived, have become?”

Oh, no. She realized Quirrell wasn’t just an agent for the Dark Lord; he bloody was the Dark Lord, or least a carrier for the Dark wizard’s twisted remnant.

If she didn’t do something, she knew she wasn’t going to leave that room alive.

“He thought to trap me, Dumbledore, that wretched old fool. Sought to trick me, thought to outsssmart me, but I am far too clever for such pitiful attempts. You’re clever too, aren’t you, Harriet?” the voice crooned. “A Ssslytherin, like me. You know what I am after. Look into the Mirror. Give me what I want. You and your friendsss are smart, aren’t you, Harriet? You will be given everything if you assissst Lord Voldemort….”

“No!” Harriet yelled, trembling. “I would never help you! You killed my parents!”

Voldemort hissed his displeasure. “I can give them back to you, silly girl. What Voldemort takes away, he can return….”

For the briefest of moments, hope blossomed in Harriet’s heart—and once it decayed, Harriet hated the wizard more than she ever had before, because she knew he lied and she hated that, even for an instant, she’d considered betraying her parents, her friends, the whole of the Wizarding world, for a selfish dream that could never be.

“I will let you share in that eternal life, Harriet…. You and your family could live forever….”

Mustering strength, Harriet spat, “No one lives forever,” and Set tore the ropes free. Harriet did the only thing she could think to do, and lunged at Quirrell.

The wizard stumbled and Voldemort yelled, wordless and furious, Harriet’s sore hands fumbling to grasp Quirrell’s wand, pulling—.

An elbow collided with her collarbone. Fresh pain lit through her scar, blazing incandescent, and Harriet’s vision blurred before she fell, and the wand slipped through her fingertips. It bounced once, then rolled below a cabinet, out of sight.

He doesn’t have a wand now! I can do it! I can escape—!

Quirrell reached into his sleeve and Harriet stopped breathing when he retrieved her own wand. Of course. She’d forgotten in her terror, but Quirrell must have disarmed her after hexing her in the corridor, and now he towered over Harriet with her pale wand clasped in his hand, a wicked grin playing across his cruel features.

Kill her!” Voldemort shrieked.

Harriet drew in a breath to scream.

Quirrell raised the wand and, still smiling, said, “Avada Kedavra!

Chapter 38: shattered

Chapter Text

xxxviii. shattered

 

The agony struck before Severus could call an end to his sixth year N.E.W.T class.

The students were intent over their cauldrons, Volubilis Potions bubbling away, careful measurements of hellebore syrup being diluted and stirred while the withered faces of chopped up mandrakes dissolved in the brews. Between one step and the next, Severus gasped and stumbled as he brought his arm to his chest and very nearly knocked Lauri Lyons’ cauldron to the floor. The freckled witch gawked at him and Severus sneered through the lank curtain of his hair.

“You have five minutes,” he announced to the room at large, a slight roughness in his quiet baritone the only indication of the pain wracking his right hand. “By now you should be decanting your potion, and if you have not provided me with your sample at the end of those five minutes, you will fail.”

Severus returned to his desk and dropped into his chair. In his lap, he attempted to unfurl his clenched fingers and failed as the muscles seized. What the fuck has she done now? he thought, loosening his wand from its brace so he could slip the stick into his left hand. Casting with a non-dominant hand could prove disastrous—and no matter how many contrary little dunderheads squawked “But I’m ambidextrous,” magic did not flow in symmetry through the body—though Albus proved proficient enough. Albus Dumbledore wasn’t a good marker for what the average wizard could achieve.

Concentrating, Severus whispered, “Fretum,” and cool, green mist spooled around his wrist and forearm. By no means powerful, the numbing Charm blunted the pain enough for Severus to clench his wand in his proper hand and suck air through his crooked teeth. Shit.

He retained the proper, passive facade until the very last student—twitchy Lauri Lyons—all but dropped her vial on the desk’s top. The bottle hadn’t settled before Severus Vanished the lot to the storage cupboard and got to his feet. “Class dismissed.”

The sixth years clamored to collect their possessions and didn’t notice Severus dart out the door, his footsteps quiet but urgent, the numbness fading with every fiery pulse caused by the Vow. His heart thumped against his sternum like a small, shriveled hummingbird trying to escape. Damn it, wretched girl, where is she?

Severus rounded the corner and the common room’s entrance came into sight—as did Elara Black and Hermione Granger, the pair deep in heated conversation, their expressions as taut as the body language suggested they were.

“Black, Granger—.”

Before he could demand the girl’s whereabouts, Black lifted her chin and demanded, “Where’s Harriet?”

What?

Granger pursed her lips and huffed. “What she means, sir, is that Harriet left the common room about twenty minutes ago and she—. Well, she said she had a bad feeling about you know what.”

“About—?”

“About the Philosopher’s Stone,” Black clarified, obviously in no mood for prevaricating. Severus’ eyes widened. Hell. How do they know about the Stone?! “Parkinson came into the dorm and said the Headmaster has left the castle and Harriet popped up and said she needed to go talk to you.”

Severus’ mind worked quickly as the pain tightened in his wrist again, echoes of agony spiraling through his elbow and to the tips of his fingers. Potter never arrived at his classroom, which meant she had lied to her friends, or—.

Or she was taken.

He flicked his wand and the silver doe warbled into relief, almost transparent from lack of concentration. “Recall the Headmaster!” Severus ordered the Patronus, and it bounded through the solid stone wall, the two witches gawking at the spell as the silver light faded from their faces.

“Return to the common room.”

“But—.”

Now!” Severus thundered. His voice echoed in the dungeons’ narrow confines, and both Granger and Black grudgingly retreated. The entrance closed behind them and Severus rapped his wand against the wall’s stone to activate the castle’s wards. Technically, the power should be beyond him as a simple teacher, but Severus had been given the ability when he’d been Head of Slytherin House as Albus now turned a convenient blind eye to the forgotten permissions. It made things easier, what with Slytherin himself being utterly unaccountable half the time.

He flicked his wand again and an even weaker Patronus emerged, but it would suit his purposes. “Minerva,” he said. “Lockdown the castle.”

As the doe disappeared, Severus set off at speed, robes flaring, wand clenched in a white-knuckled fist as he ran up the steps two at a time. His arm quivered.

I’ve waited too long. Five minutes was too long. Let them blow up the ruddy classroom for all I care, I waited too long now, and she’s—.

“Severus,” Slytherin acknowledged as he came swanning out of the Great Hall, prowling for what drama and mischief he could capitalize on. He spotted the Potions Master and stilled, registering the other wizard’s urgency, the rigidity of Severus’ expression and the speed of his gait. The mocking smirk dissipated into blank awareness, not unlike a snake coiling in upon itself, waiting for the opportune moment to strike.

“He’s called our bluff and taken a student,” Severus said without slowing. Slytherin swore and fell into step with him.

The staircases moved to ease their passage, and a moment later Minerva’s voice echoed through the halls and boomed across the grounds. “Students are to return to their dormitories immediately.

Time slogged on. His footsteps echoed, his breath grown ragged as he all but ran the bloody length of the castle, though he couldn’t hear Slytherin at all. Agony surged through his skin, but Severus embraced the sensation and willed it to continue, because so long as he remained in pain, the girl lived, and that certainty was worth the torment.

Dumbledore’s plan had been bound to fail from the beginning, Severus told himself. It was too complicated—and, in the same breath, too simple, and he should have known failure was imminent when Slytherin agreed with the idea. Naturally, he agreed; it fed his sense of the theatrical, and the rouse may have deterred him for a time, but the Dark Lord—in any iteration—was wily, capable, and only became more cunning as time progressed.

They were never going to win.

A small, self-defeating voice whispered, The greatest mercy you’ll receive is ceasing to exist when the girl does. Perhaps, even in this, Lily was looking out for you.

Severus shook his head, furious with himself, as they came onto the seventh-floor corridor. The gargoyle leapt aside without prompting and he almost fell when he hit the spiral stairs at full pace. He thought Slytherin said something along the lines of “Where the hell is Dumbledore—?” but the blood rushing in his ears made it difficult to hear anything aside from his screaming pulse, his wand wavering, blood in his mouth, teeth buried in his tongue to abate the swelling fire gorging on his bones.

Then, the pain stopped.

The storage room’s door was locked, as expected. Muffled sobbing broke the otherwise stilted, worried whispering of the portraits, who could hear the sound but had no vantage into the room itself. Severus tried the handle, then took a step back, bringing his wand down in a practiced slash. “Aperianuam!”

The magical seal on the door gave as it flung itself open, revealing the darkened room beyond. Potter sat on the bare floor, sobbing, blood on her lip, and before the shattered remnants of the Mirror of Erised lay the crumpled body of Quirinus Quirrell.

Minus the back of his head, of course.

Slytherin took in the scene with the dispassionate air of a casual observer, equally as irked by Potter’s tears as he was bemused by Quirrell’s shattered visage. Frayed ropes lay by Quirrell’s leg, and in his hand he clutched a wand—Potter’s wand, Severus recognized. “My, my,” Slytherin said. “It seems the Muggle Studies professor was our little agent all along. I wouldn’t have thought the stuttering fool capable of it.”

Potter sucked in a shuddering gasp and looked at her Head of House, then turned to Severus. Her green eyes were raw with tears.

“Miss Potter, are you all right?” Severus asked. Of course she’s not all right, you twit. A part of him wanted to scream at the girl out of sheer bloody relief. What happened?

The girl sniffled and wiped snot on her sleeve. Disgusted, Severus conjured a handkerchief and handed it to her, and Potter blew her nose like a trumpet before she answered. “’M okay, professor.”

A sudden blast of hot wind and searing light brought Severus and Slytherin around, their wands raised, and the Headmaster appeared from nothing with his phoenix perched on his shoulder and steel in his blue eyes. Severus lowered his wand in an instant, though Slytherin’s lingered, his lips pulled back in a displeased curl.

Dumbledore cast one cold look in the Defense professor’s direction before disregarding the man entirely and going to Potter’s side. “Harriet,” he said, extending his hand for her to take. “Harriet, my girl, can you stand?”

She tried to, and Severus intervened before the chit could yank the elderly wizard right off his feet. He took firm hold of her skinny arm and the girl leaned into his grip, content to hang limp and shiver.

“He—he—,” the girl choked between heaving breaths. “He cursed m-me, in the dungeons. W-with something red.”

Stunner, Severus’ mind supplied.

“A-and I woke up here. He wanted the Ph-Philosopher’s Stone, wanted me to get it f-for him, but I didn’t know how.” Potter swallowed and shook so hard Severus could feel it in his own bones. “He—it was Vol—the Dark Lord,” she whispered. “He had the Dark Lord with him, inside of h-him, on the back of his head—.”

Dumbledore’s brow furrowed and dread sung in Severus’ veins. The Dark Lord. He had always thought Quirrell to be an odd character and his sabbatical on the continent had only exacerbated his eccentricities, but the Potions Master hadn’t suspected this. He hadn’t suspected poor fumbling, feeble-mouthed, Muggle-loving Quirrell of anything at all.

“H-he used a spell when I—when I tried to grab his wand.” She pointed toward a cabinet, beneath which peeked the edge of a dropped wand. “He had mine and he said something, s-something I don’t know—.” The girl swallowed. “A spell. There was a green light, and then—.”

The three men in the room froze. The portraits in the office continued to squabble among themselves and Potter’s breathing remained ragged, but Severus, Slytherin, and Dumbledore said nothing at all. Slytherin traced the large cracks splintering what fragments remained in the Mirror’s frame. “Well,” he whispered. “Isn’t that interesting.”

Albus picked up the wand from Quirrell’s limp, dead hand, and stared at it. “It is indeed…Tom.”

Chapter 39: never prosper

Chapter Text

xxxix. never prosper

 

“Drink.”

Harriet looked at the vial tucked into her pale, trembling hand and did not drink. She stared at the opaque blue liquid and remembered, oddly enough, the sound of the Mirror of Erised breaking. It should have been on the low-end of memorable events this afternoon, and yet Harriet couldn’t forget the crash and the subsequent pinging of jagged glass bouncing on the stones as Quirrell slumped to his knees and fell forward.

Then the wraith had burst from his skull and screamed, “This isn’t over, Potter!” while the glass continued to rain.

Harriet jumped when Snape snatched the vial from her and uncorked it with one practiced hand, holding the rim to her mouth. “Drink it.”

“Severus, a modicum of care at this moment would go a long way—.”

Harriet didn’t hear the rest of Dumbledore’s statement because she swallowed the silty blue potion and everything ceased to matter. Harriet stopped thinking about the glass, about Quirrell’s dead eyes, Voldemort’s screams, or the vibrant green flash that poured from her own wand and flung itself back at the wizard who cast it. She barely noticed when the Heads of Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, and Hufflepuff came streaming into the office and all began to talk at some volume. Harriet just sat in the wing chair by the fire with Snape watching her until the mediwitch came, at which point Madam Pomfrey began bickering with Dumbledore as she healed Harriet’s busted lip and smeared a nice, cool cream on her aching shoulder, neck, and chest.

A white sheet covered a Conjured cot, Quirrell’s body stretched out beneath it. Muggles did that too, Harriet knew from catching snippets of Dudley’s programs. They covered their dead in clean white sheets. The strange, unexpected commonality almost had her breaking out in a hysterical, giggling fit.

By the time the world came back into focus, Harriet felt much calmer and the body had gone, as had everyone but for Professor Dumbledore. The Headmaster sat in another wing chair across from her, his profile highlighted by the flickering fire in the hearth, the windows grown heavy and drab with sunset. He noticed Harriet’s rapid blinking as she straightened and sucked in a breath.

“I believe Professor Snape was a bit heavy-handed with the Calming Draught,” he said with a small smile. “He means well, of course. Lemon sherbet, Harriet?”

The end table balancing the colorful candy dish scuttled closer on spindly, delicate legs and leaned to offer up a sweet. Harriet stared at the candy dish for a moment before taking one.

“I had a bad dream with lemon sherbets in it,” she said, not quite sure why she was mentioning the weird nightmare. It seemed surreal after having watched a man with a ghost in his head accidentally kill himself.

“Oh?”

“Mhm. I wanted something sweet and the gargoyle told me all he had were lemon sherbets. He sent me out to the Forbidden Forest where there were lots of mirrors and a cupboard that I hid in to escape.”

“To escape what?”

“I’m not sure, sir.” Harriet popped the little yellow candy into her mouth and the sour taste helped further clear her mind. “I have that dream a lot, though.”

The Headmaster studied her over the top of his half-moon spectacles. “Curious,” he decided, taking one of the candies himself. “I’m sure Professor Trelawney would have much to say about your dreams. She’s the Divinations teacher, you see.” Professor Dumbledore said this with a wry note to his voice that puzzled Harriet, but the elderly wizard simply shook his head. “Never mind, my dear. You’ve been through a great deal and I’ve no doubt that listening to an old man’s prattling isn’t high on your priorities. I did want to ask you about…this.”

He held up Harriet’s wand, which she’d quite forgotten about in all the commotion. “That’s mine, sir.”

“Yes. Tell me, Harriet, where did you receive this wand?”

“From Ollivanders, Professor.”

The Headmaster lifted one brow in disapproval. “Now, I think we both know that’s not true, my girl.”

Not precisely, no, but the truth was infinitely odder than the lie, and though Harriet had come to learn many fantastical things in the magical world, she knew some things were still labeled as ‘weird,’ and possibly possessed shadows fit neatly into that category. “I’m not sure,” she said instead. “I know it’s not the same as it was, but I don’t actually know what happened to it. It is the wand I got at Ollivanders, Professor, I promise. It’s just—different now.”

Professor Dumbledore made a thoughtful sound as his fingertips moved over the surface of the wand and he relinquished it to Harriet. “It’s made of elder wood, I believe. A very rare kind of instrument indeed; according to Garrick Ollivander, it takes a rather special and talented kind of wizard—or witch—to master a wand of elder.”

Harriet blushed.

“I could guess at the core, but I believe such projections would be best left to others, because I couldn’t say for certain. It is a very loyal wand, one of a pair.”

“A pair?” Harriet asked. “Who owns the other one?”

The Headmaster shrugged, then extracted his own wand from a fold in his navy blue robes. “Me.”

It certainly looked like Harriet’s wand, the same pale wood and of similar length, but the professor’s had more design to it, a band with funny markings about the part where his knuckles rested and several pitted protuberances, kinda like the knobbly tops of bones Harriet had seen pictures of in her old Muggle texts. Her own was like a very thin, tightly wound tree branch with funny markings on it from Set’s fingers.

“As I said, they’re very loyal wands, Harriet. They can prove quite difficult, impossible in most cases, to turn against their chosen master, and if someone were to attempt casting a deadly curse against the will of the wand—well, I would think that someone might find themselves the recipient of their own misdeed.”

Harriet’s eye wandered over where the Conjured cot had stood and she gripped her wand tight. Dumbledore watched her, and for a moment looked nothing like the spry, gentle Headmaster she’d come to expect, but rather an aging wizard with a great weight upon his shoulders.

“I’m sorry, Headmaster,” she mumbled. “I shouldn’t have left the dorm on my own.”

Dumbledore let out a short breath of disbelief and smiled. “Oh, my girl, it’s not your fault.”

“No,” Harriet agreed, staring at her scraped knees. Madam Pomfrey must have missed those. “But I knew I should be careful. Hermione and Elara always tell me that. And I—I meant to take Livi—.” She cast a furtive glance in the Headmaster’s direction. “But I had to leave him behind. I should’ve known better.” In afterthought, she added, “He’s gonna come after me again, isn’t he, sir? Voldemort is?”

He didn’t respond immediately; instead, Professor Dumbledore returned his wand to his pocket and eyed the window, night coming to sit prim upon the sill, the final whisper of sunlight still caught in the dust that lingered there, speckled spots of brilliance on an otherwise dim surface. She felt anything but calm, and yet Harriet relaxed despite herself, holding onto her wand as if she’d never let it go and wishing she could thank Set for setting her free earlier. She would’ve died without him.

“Harriet, I once told you that you were what Voldemort considered a mistake, but not for the reasons that you believe, or even for the reasons he believes. Sometimes…sometimes it is not the blow that kills us, but the wound.”

“The wound, Professor?”

“Yes. You see, when he attacked your family that Hallowe’en, Voldemort very much intended to kill you, Harriet. He did not overlook you; much like Quirrell, he attempted to curse you—and failed.”

Harriet’s hand crept upward until it cupped the sore side of her neck, the cream Madam Pomfrey had spread still tacky beneath her rumpled shirt. “Why…why did he fail?”

“I believe it was because of your mother. I believe Voldemort meant to spare her, but Lily refused to step aside, and her sacrifice—her love—invoked an old and very powerful kind of magic that we may never really understand, a kind of inscrutable, uncontrollable, wonderful magic Voldemort fears above all else. It’s the same kind of magic you feel in your heart when you look at your friends or think of your parents, dear girl.”

Her eyes stung and Harriet stared again at her knees.

“He wounded himself when he attacked you. He broke himself truly, though he didn’t shatter. He fled your home, mortally wounded—though, in his arrogance, I doubt he saw it as such—and attempted to rejoin his followers in Dorset, where they had been sent on their own mission to raid another wizarding home.”

Slowly, Harriet lifted her head and found the Headmaster watching her closely as he continued speaking.

“I do not know how he managed to leave your home at all that night. Something of his being persisted, a thread of himself keeping the whole together, fraying from the moment he spoke the curse meant to end your life, and when he attempted the same spell again, before he could even manage to summon the words, Voldemort soul gave out, and he became what he is today—a wraith who cannot live, and who cannot die. And it is all because of you and your mother, Harriet.”

The bespectacled girl had to swallow twice before she could speak, and even then her voice escaped in a thin, terrified whisper. “But…but Neville, he’s the Boy Who—.”

Professor Dumbledore shook his head and dread tightened in Harriet’s middle.

“Neville is a brave boy who lost his mother and nearly his own life that night, but he is no more the cause of Voldemort’s downfall than myself or this candy dish.”

“But—but, bloody hell, Professor, he’s famous!” Harriet winced at her own cursing, but the Headmaster only shrugged.

“He attracts a great deal of attention, yes. A rather large detachment of Aurors from the Department of Magical Law Enforcement is tasked with his safety, and both his father, Frank Longbottom, and his stepmother, Catherine Blishen, are aware of what truly transpired that night. Frank, and his late wife Alice, were quite devoted to seeing Voldemort defeated.”

Harriet felt nauseous as she struggled to keep her head from spinning out of control. She’d wondered on many occasions how it was possible for her to survive that night and had dozens of her own speculations on the dilemma. Those speculations, though, had turned themselves on their heads when she went with Hagrid to feed the Thestrals and realized she must have witnessed the death of one of her parents. How did I survive? Apparently, madmen will overlook you if they’ve already killed you. It made an awful, terrible kind of sense. “Neville’s like the third-floor corridor.”

“In a manner of speaking, yes. A clever way to put it.”

“And I’m…I’m the Mirror of Erised.”

Again, Dumbledore nodded and Harriet turned her face to the fire. “That’s rather Slytherin thinking, isn’t it, Headmaster?”

“To quote Professor Snape; ‘if one wants anything at all to be done, then they’d best find a Slytherin with an ounce of sense in his head, because that’s an ounce more than anyone else has.’”

Harriet snorted, covering her mouth, and Professor Dumbledore chuckled. She laughed more fully at the sound and a measure of tension left her upset, nervous stomach, allowing Harriet to feel more herself than she had since stepping foot into that office. “Sir, why couldn’t Vol—Voldemort get the Stone out of the Mirror? I think that’s why he brought me along, in the end. He couldn’t figure out how to get it and thought I might be able to.”

“Ah, it’s one of my cleverer ideas, if I do say so myself. Anyone who wished to possess the Stone to use it could not possess it, but a person simply wishing to keep the Stone from harm could be given it quite easily. If I may ask; what did you see when you looked into the Mirror?”

“I didn’t see any of that, sir. I just…I just saw my mum.”

Dumbledore nodded as if he’d expected nothing else. “Yes, that’s evidence of your Slytherin character— no, my dear girl, I don’t mean that as an insult. Quite the opposite, in fact. You see, Slytherin House has a poor reputation, and even I myself have been swayed by that prejudice in the past—but over the years I have come to learn that those who find themselves Sorted into Slytherin are often of a singular character, possessors of quick-wit, ambition, and their own kind of bravery. Hufflepuffs are kind even when it’s difficult to be so, Gryffindors brave in the presence of fear, Ravenclaws inquisitive even when challenged, and Slytherins are unbelievably loyal to those who’ve earned their trust, even in the face of great temptation.”

“I…I don’t know if I’m any of those things, Professor.”

“But you are, Harriet. I’m certain he tried to tempt you; far better witches and wizards than you and I have fallen prey to Voldemort’s false promises, and many more will, before the end. However, you didn’t give in. You resisted.”

“I almost didn’t,” Harriet confessed, horrified at the quiet words coming out of her mouth. “For a second, I…he promised….”

When it became clear Harriet couldn’t continue, Dumbledore asked with plain curiosity, “So why did you deny him?”

“Because he’s a liar!” she snapped, tears stinging her eyes again. “Because he’s the one who took them from me. I just…I just wanted my family back.”

The Headmaster leaned forward to grasp Harriet’s hand in his own. “And therein lies your greatest strength and your greatest weakness, my dear; loyalty. An old proverb in our Wizarding community says ‘a Slytherin who cheats at cards and steals your wife says nothing when you take his gold and give him strife, but threaten his family and you’ll meet his knife.’ A bit melodramatic, but it makes a poignant point. You saw your mother, Harriet, because you didn’t care about Voldemort or the Philosopher’s Stone; you cared about her.”

Harriet gave the Headmaster’s hand a squeeze before letting go and mulling over his words. It was selfish of her, she decided, not caring about the Stone or Voldemort or any of that. She never felt like much of a Slytherin, having grown up downtrodden and decidedly Muggle, concepts of normality drummed into her head like a stick beating a snare drum—freak, freak, freak. Hermione was clever and quick-witted, Elara was cunning and proud, and Harriet—.

Well, Harriet didn’t know what she was.

“The Philosopher’s Stone is gone, isn’t it, sir?” she asked. “Because the Mirror’s broken?”

Dumbledore sighed and adjusted his spectacles. “Yes, unfortunately.”

“What’s going to happen to Nicholas Flamel? He’ll die without the Stone, won’t he?”

“Oh, you know about Nicholas, do you?” He smiled when Harriet nodded. “Nicholas knew there would be risks in lending me his stone—the worst of which was possibly having it stolen by Voldemort. He has enough Elixir for himself and Perenelle to set their affairs in order, and I imagine that, at the end of the day, they were prepared for this eventuality. To live forever is a great burden, Harriet. A quiet death can just as often be a gift as it can seem a curse.”

“I’m sorry.”

“It wasn’t your fault, dear girl.”

“I still think it should be said, Professor. He’s your friend.”

The Headmaster met her gaze and Harriet saw the briefest flash of profound sadness in the wizard’s blue eyes before he stood from his comfortable chair. “Come along now. I’ve kept you far too long and Madam Pomfrey will have my beard if you don’t get the rest you deserve.”

He walked her toward the waiting door, past the storage room where she saw Quirrell kill himself, Dumbledore’s hand coming to rest on her shoulder so Harriet wouldn’t stop and stare. “He’s…Voldemort’s going to return, isn’t he, Professor?”

“Not today, Harriet.”

“And when he does, sir?”

He considered her, then opened the door with a wave of his hand. “Then we’ll be prepared. But, as I said, that day is not today.”

Harriet left the office. She wiped her face when the cooler air on the stairs chilled the smudged tears on her cheeks, and she found none other than Professor Snape waiting in the hall outside the gargoyle. Clearly in a dark mood, he pointed in the direction that would lead them to the common room and they set out without a word, the Potions Master leaving once Harriet stumbled through Slytherin’s secret entrance.

She didn’t start crying until she entered the dark dormitory and changed into her nightgown. Harriet lay in bed and tried to smother her stupid sniffles, and suddenly Hermione and Elara were there, embracing her tight with whispered worry until Harriet buried her face in someone’s shoulder and quietly sobbed herself to sleep.

She didn’t dream.

Chapter 40: on your way to greatness

Chapter Text

xl. on your way to greatness

 

Harriet felt as if she’d only just arrived at Hogwarts when summer descended upon them and it was time to depart.

Items were gathered and trunks were packed, final minute squabbles had, books Summoned through the air by forgetful students as familiars crawled about underfoot. Marks were distributed and no one was at all surprised to learn Hermione was top of their year overall. Elara had scored marginally better on their final Transfiguration exam, much to Hermione’s frustration, and Neville Longbottom had earned top marks in Herbology.

To Harriet’s absolute shock, she took first in Defense with what Hermione considered a wide margin between her and Longbottom in second. All subjects cumulated, Harriet ranked eleventh in her year, and she had never felt as proud of herself as she did when blinking dumbfounded at the listings posted in the common room. Attending primary with Dudley had meant having her homework stolen or handed in late, and as such Harriet had never taken much interest in learning—but here, at Hogwarts, with a world of magic at her fingertips, Harriet found she enjoyed studying, enjoyed classes and picking up new spells, listening to Hermione squeeze all sorts of information into her skull while Elara did her best to tutor her in Transfiguration.

She was grateful her friends were such bloody geniuses and hoped some of their intelligence rubbed off on her.

Professor Snape called Harriet into his office on the last day of term. She expected a detention or another punishment. Was summer detention a thing? Harriet had had enough of that at the Dursleys’, thank you very much. She slunk into the cramped space wearing a pinched expression. Snape saw it immediately and scoffed.

“Don’t look at me like that, Potter. Sit.”

She tried to control her face as she sat and ended up looking mildly ill.

Unamused, Snape strode behind his desk and unlocked one of the drawers with a tap of his wand, extracting a familiar bundle of silvery fabric. Harriet forgot her frustration and instead gaped. The professor held the cloak out and, when Harriet reached for it, he jerked his hand back, ensuring he had her attention.

“You will use it only in emergencies, girl,” he said, pronouncing every word like a pebble being pinged off Harriet’s forehead. “It is not a bloody toy. You will not abuse the privilege. You will not use it to gallivant about the school after hours or cause mischief with your cohorts. If I find that you have, I will take it back—and don’t think that I can’t or won’t.”

Despite the snarl in his voice, Harriet was as pleased as Punch. She’d been convinced Snape would never return the cloak, that he’d forgotten about it entirely or had simply thrown it out in a fit of pique or carelessness. He poured the cold cloth into Harriet’s open hands and when she grinned, he blinked as if startled, looking at Harriet as if he’d never really seen her before. She doubted Snape ever had students smile at him, and though Harriet thought the wizard spent far too much time being a miserable git, he had been the first one through the door after what happened in the Headmaster’s office. Harriet wouldn’t forget that.

“Thank you, Professor Snape!”

He grunted and returned to his chair behind the desk, straightening the cuffs of his sleeves and staring resolutely at the far wall. “Remember what I said. Get out, Potter.”

Harriet did as told, though she also hung back just long enough to yell “Have a good hols, Professor Snape!” as the door swung shut and she ran before he could change his mind about that detention.

At the Leaving Feast, Slytherin colors decked the Great Hall and Professor Dumbledore stood up, waiting for silence to fall across the chattering students so he could be heard. “Ah, another year gone! And I hope it has been an excellent year for all of you, and I hope you will indulge an old wizard’s need to maunder before we tuck into our excellent meal. We’ve a House Cup to award it seems. In fourth place, we have Gryffindor with three hundred and twelve points; in third, our friends in Hufflepuff, with three hundred and fifty-two points; Ravenclaw is in second with four hundred and twenty-six points, and Slytherin stands at first with four hundred and seventy-two points.”

The Slytherin table applauded themselves and a few of the other Houses gave perfunctory claps.

“Yes, well done again, Slytherin House. It would, however, be remiss of me not to take recent events into account.”

The applause faded and many of the Slytherins were looking at the Headmaster with wariness, Professor Slytherin’s red eyes narrowed at the older man, Snape’s hand wrapped tight about his goblet’s stem.

“No matter that you are in first already, I find it important to acknowledge every students’ trials and successes so they can be recognized for their cunning, their brilliance, bravery, and humility in the face of difficult challenges and harrowing danger. To Misters Neville Longbottom and Ronald Weasley, I would like to award ten points each for their efforts in researching and warning the school of a danger that had gone unknown to the professors. Thank you, gentleman.”

Gryffindor House cheered and Longbottom beamed, Ron shrugging off his brothers’ well-meaning hair ruffling. Now that Dumbledore mentioned it, Harriet recalled Longbottom and Weasley wanting to go into the Restricted Section during the Yule hols to research something that began with “N,” something Harriet suspected might be “Nicholas Flamel.”

“To Misses Hermione Granger and Elara Black, I award ten points each for their care and consideration in regards to a classmate’s protection and safety.”

Harriet grinned at her best friends as their House clapped and whistled, even Malfoy and Parkinson begrudgingly bringing their hands together a few times. Hermione let out an embarrassed squeak, burying her head in her arms, and though Elara bore the attention with better poise, her cheeks did turn a flustered pink color.

“To our Head Girl, Miss Amanda Robinson, and our Head Boy, Ryan Uzkosk, for keeping calm, protecting and gathering younger students during a declared emergency, I award ten points each and wish them the absolute best in their adventures beyond our hallowed halls. Remember, Hogwarts is always here to help those who ask for it.”

The Head Girl and Boy, a Hufflepuff and a Ravenclaw respectively, were applauded by their Houses and Harriet clapped too, because she could imagine how scary it must’ve been for other first years like herself, not knowing what was happening, why the school had been in lockdown, and she doubted they made things easy for Robinson and Uzkosk.

“And, finally, to Miss Harriet Potter, for remaining true to her friends, her family, her House, and herself in defiance of great evil and imminent threat, I award fifty points.”

Harriet blushed from her head down to her toes when her House cheered, acting less dignified than a bunch of stiff pure-bloods usually did, though not as riotous as the Gryffindors would’ve been in a reversed situation. At the High Table, Harriet thought she saw Snape pinch the bridge of his nose in exasperation. Professor Slytherin clapped like his students and looked…curious, just as he had every time he saw Harriet in recent days. She couldn’t decide if that was a good thing or not.

“Yes, congratulations again, Slytherin House. I wish all of us a lovely summer and hope you’ll arrive in September ready to learn again; maybe we’ll get to see the Great Hall in different colors next year, hmm?”

The Feast commenced, and the Headmaster’s words stuck with Harriet throughout the meal, a grin at her lips that’d been more reticent of late. For remaining true to her friends, her family, her House, and herself. The older Slytherins smiled and shook Harriet’s hand, looking appreciative in a way her relatives never had, and Harriet herself felt proud—proud she’d done well in her classes, proud she’d made such wonderful friends, and proud that, in a moment of panic, she hadn’t betrayed who she was. She hoped her mum and dad would be proud, too.

The Sorting Hat chose right, she told herself as she lifted her chin and looked at the enchanted ceiling. I will do well in Slytherin.

_____

 

The train rattled on the rails as it chugged ever southward toward the distant horizon.

“I still don’t understand what Professor Dumbledore’s thinking,” Hermione said, fidgeting with her forest green robes, causing the bench to squeak. “It doesn’t make sense.”

“It makes a perfect kind of sense, if that kind of sense is Dumbledore’s,” Elara countered as she lifted her nose from her journal. She, too, wore robes; a dark gray pair with sage lining and a high collar. Harriet, in contrast, dressed like a Muggle—though not her cousins’ cast-offs, since those had met an unfortunate fate in the grate last summer. “He’s privy to something we’re not.”

“Exactly,” Hermione replied. “Why else would he keep this a secret? And for so long.”

“Longbottom could use a bit of a head shrinkage,” Harriet grumbled, giving her feet a moody kick. Livi grew restless inside her thin jumper and popped his head out the bottom, tongue flickering, lounging across Harriet’s lap. She rubbed his snout with little thought.

“To keep Harriet safe.” Elara crossed one leg over the other and leaned back. “The Boy Who Lived attracts a certain amount of enmity and we can assume the Girl Who Lived would be no different.”

Harriet shuddered. “Ugh.”

She’d told them all about Professor Quirrell, the Mirror of Erised, Quirrell’s unsavory passenger, and what the Headmaster had told her afterward, despite the niggling fear that Elara and Hermione might decide friendship with her was too complicated or dangerous. Both had taken the news in stride, much to Harriet’s relief, and they tried to puzzle out Dumbledore’s decisions and actions when privacy allowed.

“But that’s my point exactly, don’t you see? Longbottom is guarded. He is, arguably, more protected than Harriet, who’s anonymity and safety depends upon a serendipitous rouse, and what’s the point of that?”

“What do you mean?”

Why would Harriet need anonymity? Why was she denied the fame and attention given to Neville?”

Harriet huffed and unwrapped a Pumpkin Pasty. “Please. I’d rather eat my wand then put up with all that stupidity.” She shoved half of the Pasty into her mouth and presented the other to Livi, crumpling the wrapper to stow it in her pocket. “After talking with Professor Dumbledore, I think…well, I know he believes the Dark Lord’s going to return.”

“But what is the point of keeping you safe—? Oh, I didn’t mean it like that, honestly, Harriet. I mean theoretically. Neville is, for all intents and purposes, the Boy Who Lived. He has been brought up and touted as such for years; should he die, it would have the same impact upon the community as it would if Harriet died had she been rightfully identified. There must be a reason that, in a worse-case scenario, it is plausible for Neville to die, but not for Harriet.”

They sat in silence for a time, lost to their respective thoughts, and though it may have been macabre to consider the worth of a classmate’s life against her own, Harriet was terribly glad Hermione and Elara were pragmatic enough to not make such projections personal.

Elara ran her fingers over the bent, worn edges of her journal’s pages and said, “We’re missing too many pieces of this puzzle, Hermione.”

The bushy-haired girl exhaled and admitted defeat. “Yes, yes. You’re right….”

All too soon, they slipped through London’s peripheries and barreled on, the train rolling to a halt at Platform Nine and Three-Quarters where hundreds of parents stood about waiting for their children to disembark. Harriet pulled down her Charmed trunk, hoisted Livi higher, and followed her friends into the students streaming toward the doors. Her heart felt heavier with every step.

“I have to go,” Hermione murmured once they stepped outside. Already she’d caught sight of Mr. and Mrs. Malfoy standing to the side like a pair of perfectly matched salt pillars, Malfoy Senior leaning on a black cane while he surveyed the moving crowd with impassive eyes. Hermione hugged Harriet, then Elara. “I’ll write—if I can. I’m not sure—oh, I’ll miss you both terribly.”

“We’ll see you in September.”

Hermione smiled, and off she went to greet her foster guardians. Elara and Harriet parted ways at the busy Floo, though not before the former embraced the bespectacled witch tight and warned, “I will be writing. And I expect you to send a letter back with Cygnus.”

“‘Course.”

Elara held her skinny hand. “Tell me if you need anything while living with the Muggles.”

Harriet didn’t quite meet her eyes. “I will.”

Then, Elara Black disappeared, just like Hermione had, and Harriet walked through the barrier into King’s Cross Station alone aside from her serpentine companions and mischievous shadow. She strolled until she came to the avenue, where she tipped back her head and let the hot London sun warm her face, listening to the bustle of Muggle society around her, the honking horns, rolling tires, the screeching brakes of a lorry.

She took a breath, then let it out. She had nowhere to go and yet Harriet wasn’t afraid, because Harriet Potter was a witch. She could talk to snakes, cast spells, and just days ago survived a confrontation with one of the Darkest wizards to ever live. Harriet Potter was a proud Slytherin, best friends with Hermione Granger and Elara Black, and was going to learn all the magic she could so, one day, she’d become great—because Harriet Potter was not afraid.

Not anymore.

“All right then. First stop on our way to greatness is….” Harriet stared at the pavement and, after swirling lazily about her feet, Set extended an arm and pointed along the avenue. “That way, I guess. Lovely. I think greatness needs a compass.”

 

- e n d   y e a r   o n e -

 

A/N: That’s the end of year one! *confetti*

Thank you to all my reviewers and commenters! I love to read your thoughts on the story!

On a different note, I know my Dumbledore might be a bit OoC. I try to write him as I would expect a man supposedly as wise as Dumbledore, living in this altered world, would—and should—behave. I still expect he’ll have spots of Gryffindor bias (like allowing Neville onto the Quidditch team), but he’s going to be more straight-forward than canon Dumbledore, a bit more cunning, and more compassionate. This world has enough bloody Dark Lords, thank you very much.

Chapter 41: bruises on the soul

Chapter Text

2. THE CHAMBER OF SECRETS

but be the serpent under’t - w. shakespeare

 


 

  xli. bruises on the soul

 

The broom scraped along the floor and the sound echoed in Grimmauld Place’s oppressive silence.

In Elara’s limited memory, the house had never been as quiet and doom-laden as it was now; when Cygnus had been in residence, a breath of life wheedled through the place, and no matter how thin and sickly it’d been, Elara recalled a comforting weight to the occasional wet coughs or the raspy mutterings he shared with the portraits of his forefathers. Now, there was nothing. Aside from Kreacher, Elara Black was alone.

The bristles scratched the wood and she sighed as she lifted the dust pail and dumped its contents in the rubbish bin. The bin coughed, sputtering out half the dirt and earned a tight-lipped glare from Elara. A month had passed since her arrival at the London townhouse and most of her efforts had gone into fixing the damage accrued during her extended absence at Hogwarts. Kreacher, still moping over Cygnus’ death, was of no help at all, and Elara didn’t have the patience or the wherewithal to chastise him for it.

Giving up for the moment, Elara leaned the broom against the peeling wallpaper and dropped onto the divan below an open window. Outside, a transparent veil of magic created generations before Elara’s own birth hung between the house and the sidewalk, blocking the Muggles’ view of the property, glittering slightly in the afternoon sunshine. A paltry breeze crossed the sill and stirred the mottled curtains, and though she wished for it to stay, the breeze retreated and the air stilled again. Elara resigned herself to melting in the muggy heat.

Sprawled on the divan, she stared at the ceiling and its weathered paint, then raised one hand before her face. Elara peeled off the sweaty glove, then, with deliberate attention plucked at the buttons on her sleeve until she could yank it down to her elbow. The light played over her pale skin and the scars that started about halfway up her forearm gradually thickened to their worst around her wrists, looking like ugly, scarlet bangles embedded in the flesh.

Elara poked the scar sitting over the tendon that ran into her thumb and the digit trembled.

She sighed louder and dropped the arm onto her middle, then went about shedding her remaining glove and rolling back that sleeve as well. Unsightly as the scars were, the weather was inexcusably hot and she was alone. Matron Fitzgerald would’ve called it an “Indian Summer,” but Elara was fairly certain that was the incorrect term, which didn’t surprise her in the slightest. Bigoted and cruel, Matron Fitzgerald had also been a bit of an idiot.

A Doxy made a conspicuous show of tip-toeing back into the draperies Elara had de-infested the day before. She glowered at the tricky devil and, not for the first time, wished she knew and could perform the proper cleaning spells. Doing everything the Muggle way had quickly lost its charm.

Muffled flapping brought Elara’s head up and she watched her owl Cygnus come winging through the open window, making a brief circuit around the dilapidated office before landing on the divan’s arm. He pecked at her groomed head affectionately and Elara sent her fingers questing over his dark wing, feeling the sun’s heat still trapped in the feathers.

“Thank you,” she said once Cygnus proffered his leg for her to take the attached letter and package. He hooted, apparently finding her response acceptable, and took off through the open door to find his water dish. Elara pried the red seal open on the letter and proceeded to read. It was from Hermione.

 

Dear Elara,

I hope your holidays are going well. I know only a month has passed, but it seems inexorably longer, doesn’t it? I miss you and Harriet and Hogwarts terribly.

I’m sorry if I’ve been remiss in sending a letter earlier. Mr. Malfoy keeps us to a very strict studying schedule and I have not had the opportunity to use the owlery much.

 

Elara snorted. Between the lines, she read, “Lucius Malfoy is a prig and he’s not allowing me to use the owls.” Hate was not a feeling she often relished, but Elara thought she might hate Lucius a little more each time she received another notice of investigation involving her emancipation from the Ministry. He could do nothing, and yet he persisted because he had the money, the time, and the desire to simply pester Elara constantly.

 

Have you had the chance to review Prof. McGonagall’s summer assignment? It deals with the principles of Gamp’s Laws in the Vera Verto spell, and though I’ve looked up the spell and its usage on aves, rodents, et al., I question the efficacy of the third string in the Conjuration wheel, wherein the inverted symbol for truth seems out of place—.

 

Grinning, Elara quickly skimmed through what amassed to several rambling paragraphs concerning Vera Verto, a spell they’d be learning next year, and its applications. It seemed Hermione was determined to place better than Elara in the upcoming year, and Elara looked forward to a bit of friendly competition.

Farther down the parchment, Hermione changed topics.

 

I’ve attached Harriet’s birthday gift and would really appreciate it if you’d send it on for me. I’m—here a word had been delicately scratched out—concerned about her. I know we haven’t much discussed our home lives, but I also know you understand a bit more of her situation than I do, and I’ve come to think possibly her—again, another word was blackened by ink—situation might well be a product of that unfortunate Hallowe’en.

 

Elara hummed low, finger tapping the parchment. Harriet never spoke of her relatives, but she had the distinct misfortune of being friends with a pure-blood and a pure-blood’s overly curious ward. The Noble House of Potter was notorious for producing single sons for generations; James to Fleamont to Charlus—though Elara hadn’t traced the House farther than that, as the Blacks had married into the Potters at that point, which coincidently made Elara and Harriet third cousins.

Regardless of their relation, Harriet’s father was known to have married “outside” the other families, which basically meant he’d married a Muggle-born. Harriet had mentioned her “aunt and uncle,” and from then on Elara realized the bespectacled witch lived with Muggles on her mother’s side, and she hadn’t seemed particularly pleased when summer rolled about. None of them had.

Elara contemplated the little package in which Harriet’s present was contained and pursed her lips. She’d written to Harriet twice earlier in the month and both times Cygnus had returned rumpled and irritable, unable to deliver her messages, and if Elara hadn’t known better, she would’ve said Cygnus hadn’t been able to find Harriet because she was moving.

 

Whether or not that’s true, I still hope she’s well. Mr. Malfoy made a comment in passing about her the other day—Elara’s eyes narrowed—and I confess that I don’t actually know where he might have heard about Harriet, unless Draco mentioned her. That seems unlikely, as he’s far more prone to badmouthing you and me than Harriet.

 

Scoffing, Elara read Hermione’s salutation and folded the letter again. She tucked Harriet’s present into her skirt’s pocket and took her time getting up, content to remain languid and close to the window’s relief for a minute longer before returning to the main house’s sticky heat. When she rose, Elara abandoned the office as a bad job for today and returned instead to her own bedroom across the hall.

The scantily clad swimsuit models scowled over the top of the parchment sheets covering their permanently stuck posters with, though she ignored them and went to the desk, sitting on the crooked stool. Balled up parchment and bits of old quills lay on the surface between heavy, dry tomes concerning Ministry and Goblin laws that Elara found incredibly dry but endeavored to slog through nonetheless. She had a solicitor, Mr. Piers, but her late great-uncle had said it was stupid to place all of one’s faith concerning financial matters in another’s hands, and Elara agreed.

Even so, Elara was still twelve and had to look up every third word or so written in the legal texts, making her studies very slow going.

Shuffling through the desk’s top drawer, she retrieved a fresh sheet of parchment, then uncapped the inkwell and picked up a quill. The edge proved worn down and bent at the tip, but when she looked about for her Charmed trimming knife, she came up empty.

“Kreacher?” Elara called, waiting. When no response came, she huffed and tried again. “Kreacher!”

The old house-elf appeared with a crack of noise and a glower. “The blood-traitor’s daughter is calling Kreacher?”

Elara pinched the bridge of her nose and squeezed her eyes shut for a moment. “Yes. Do you know where my trimming knife is, by chance?”

The elf snapped his knobby fingers and the little blade appeared in his hand.

“Oh. Thank you.”

She reached for it—and suddenly remembered her arms were bare, and Kreacher’s bloodshot eyes froze on the ugly blemishes before moving to her face. Elara felt as if he could see more than just the tarnishing marks on her flesh; Kreacher looked at her like he could see the very bruises on her soul and didn’t like what he saw.

Elara snatched the knife from him and quickly turned away, shoving her sleeves back into their proper place. “That’s all, Kreacher. Thank you.”

She heard the house-elf’s shuffling, uneven gait as he left the room, mumbling all the way to the hall and the stairs beyond. Elara gripped her wrist and shut her eyes, willing the creeping shame from her thoughts as the fixtures on the wall rattled and dust shook from the ceiling. She took one breath, then another, then opened her eyes and finished buttoning her cuffs.

Silly of me, she told herself. Kreacher was bound to see them eventually, and he already thinks I’m about as useful as pond scum. It’s not as if his opinion can get any lower.

Elara returned to her seat and trimmed the quill, tidying the desk before she wrote out another brief letter to Harriet and tucked it into an envelope. She had her own gift meant for Harriet’s birthday, of course, and she found it before putting the velvet pouch into her pocket with Hermione’s, then rather than setting out for the kitchen where Cygnus would be resting, she made for the stairs to go to the library on the second floor.

The Black library was no misnomer; dubious Charms expanded the space far beyond what the walls should have constrained, making it a maze of dark shelves towering in the dimly lit space, crowded with more books than one could ever possibly read in their lifetime, or so it felt like to Elara. Hermione would’ve squealed with delight upon seeing a room like it. Elara, though she liked books and reading, found it was a bit too…eerie.

She turned the lever for the gas lamps and waited for the wan light to brighten, sniffling on the untold decades worth of dust and dirt as the shelves came into view. There were no windows, as the sunlight could damage most of the older volumes, and several of the upper rows Cygnus had told Elara specifically not to touch. The books whispered to one another, exchanging secrets, quieting only when Elara walked down their rows.

Squinting at the bindings, she wished she could use her wand and took a volume off the shelf to hold it closer to the light.

“What are you doing, girl?”

Elara flinched and almost dropped the book. Above the empty hearth, the portrait of a clever wizard with thin brows and a pointed beard watched as she clutched one hand to her chest and tried to slow her racing heart.

“I’d appreciate it if you didn’t purposefully startle me.”

The portrait scoffed. “Perhaps you should pay better attention to your surroundings.”

Ignoring him, she popped open the book to a random page and squinted.

“Interested in animal husbandry, are you?”

Elara’s gaze jerked itself back to the portrait. “What?”

The wizard smirked. “Well, considering you’re perusing an eighteenth-century collection on Charms concerning the best ways to breed livestock, I thought you might have a passing interest in the subject.”

Elara turned a page and, upon seeing a rather detailed sketch, realized she did indeed have a book on animal husbandry in her hands and snapped it shut with an embarrassed grunt.

“Now, because I so dearly love listening to my own voice, I’ll ask again; what are you looking for, girl? I’ve had precious little to do in here but look at the bindings since my great-grandson thought to move me from the bedroom. I know where everything is.”

Elara desperately wanted to snap that hanging in a bedroom shouldn’t prove more exciting than hanging in a library but shut her mouth and swallowed the words. “I’m looking for a locater Charm, of sorts, for a letter. Something either I could cast or could ask to be cast at the postal office in Diagon Alley.”

“Why?”

“To locate someone, of course.”

The portrait gifted her an unamused look before jerking his chin in the direction of the southern wall. “Look there. Between the curio cabinet and the shelf bearing the Black crest. The collection of communication magic and indexes should still be there.”

“Thank you.”

Elara went to the bookcase in question and began scanning the heavy tomes. She had to pull most off the shelf and check one by one as few actually had titles printed on the binding, and most proved to be outdated editions on owl care. She did learn a great deal about how magical owls first came to be bred and used—apparently, the early wizards thought to breed eagles, and that ended with a few too many missing fingers—but Elara pushed on and searched more.

After dragging a particularly fat volume down, another, smaller book stuffed between its pages slipped out and hit the dusty floor. Elara frowned at it and picked the book up after setting the other one down, running her fingers over the leather cover stained a deep emerald, the silver snake gilt starting to flake about the edges.

“Golly, wonder if this belonged to a Slytherin,” Elara said with a soft snort as she thumbed through the yellowing pages. The diagrams inside were not about owls or their migration patterns; Elara caught glimpses of moving models demonstrating harsh, slashing hexes and something called “Fire of the Fiend,” strange, distorting animals bursting from the characters’ wands in rolling swirls.

Elara stuffed the book into her roomy pocket and returned to the shelf. She eventually found what she was looking for, a simple Charm placed upon a letter that made it easier for the owl to find recipients traveling or moving abroad, and Elara copied the spell down on a piece of parchment before returning the volume to its proper place. She headed down to the kitchen.

Once there, Elara shrugged on the outer robes she’d hung by the hearth and straightened her skirt, then beckoned Cygnus over to her. “Kreacher?” she called as the owl settled on the crook of her arm. “Kreacher, I’m stepping out for a few minutes, and I—.”

A small jar sat on the otherwise empty table and caught Elara’s attention. It was an innocuous thing, really, and yet it hadn’t been there when she’d come down for lunch earlier, so Elara paused in her preparation to depart and picked the jar up. Like much of the house, dust coated the glass and the label was so faded the letters were almost illegible, but Elara managed to read, “Derma-Bond. For scars.”

Elara stood, frozen, and stared at the jar without a word. The house-elf came sneaking into the kitchen through the slim door that led to the boiler room and sneered when Elara caught his eye.

“Thank you, Kreacher,” she said with a small, stiff smile.

“Kreacher doesn’t know what the blood-traitor’s daughter is talking about.”

“No, of course not.” She stowed the jar away in her robes, given that her skirt pockets were already stuffed with letters and presents, an extra pair of gloves and the book out of the library. “I’ll be back soon.”

Kreacher sniffed and dragged himself back into the hot boiler room. Elara turned with Cygnus to the hearth and scooped a pinch of Floo Powder out of the silver jar on the mantel. Tossing it into the dying fire, she said, “Diagon Alley!” and disappeared in a whirl of soot and green fire.

Chapter 42: home is nowhere

Chapter Text

xlii. home is nowhere

 

In the southern parts of Oxfordshire, in between here and there, at a crossroads that didn’t lead anywhere in particular, sat a bespectacled witch on an antique trunk and a large serpent lazing in a bed of bluebells.

Harriet Potter turned the crumpled map in her hands and squinted at the lettering, the paper made too bright by the cheery sunshine and the writing refusing to cooperate. She had little experience with mundane maps let alone magical ones, and this map did everything it could to confound the frustrated girl. She turned it again and huffed.

“Set?”

At her feet, the shadows peeled away from the thick patches splayed between the grass and bluebells to form a vague question mark shape.

“Could you—?”

The shadow lifted itself from the dirt like rain in reverse, coming together to form a nebulous umbrella of watery darkness hanging above the girl’s bent head.

“Excellent, cheers,” Harriet said as she went back to the map.

When term came to an end and Harriet arrived in London a month prior, she made no attempt to return to her relatives in Little Whinging. No, she had no desire to see Aunt Petunia, Uncle Vernon, or her cousin Dudley ever again, and she guessed they were be pleased to be shut of her anyway. Rather, Harriet disembarked from the Hogwarts Express and—at Set’s prompting—returned to Diagon Alley.

At first, Harriet rather enjoyed her stay in the Alley. She ate lunch at Florean Fortescue’s or Pofferton’s Puddings on Toad Road, explored the many nooks and crannies of the varied shops, and fell asleep in her bed at the Leaky Cauldron. Diagon Alley and its adjoining streets comprised the biggest magical district in England—but the Wizarding community was really rather small, and it had a very long memory. While everyone didn’t actually know everyone else, they at least knew of each other, or their families, or had a mate who knew someone who knew them. Anonymity was not really a thing for wizards and witches.

Tom, the landlord for the Leaky Cauldron, remembered Harriet from last summer—as did housekeeping, Florean Fortescue and quite a few of the shop owners about the district. She ran into Professor Sinistra once in the pub and had to dive behind a cart to avoid being seen by Professor Snape as he came out of the Apothecary. The manager at Flourish and Blotts always frowned when Harriet passed by his shop. They started to ask…questions, questions about why a scruffy kid was always out and about on her own without her guardians, and she soon began to worry they might write to the magical equivalent of child services. Harriet never wanted to be trapped with people like the Dursleys again.

So, she stayed two nights at the Leaky Cauldron, a third at the Niffler’s Nest in Horizont Alley, a fourth at the Hopping Pot down Carkitt Market, and afterward Harriet visited Globus Mundi Travel Agents to buy a map of Britain’s Wizarding settlements and scrounged up an old, Charmed tent in The Junk Shop. Diagon Alley may have been the largest magical district in England—but it was not the only one.

From there, Harriet set out on an arduous journey of Floo hopping from Diagon Alley to the smaller district of The Cobbled Lane in Blackburn, then on to the Tarland Tavern in Edinburgh, where Harriet exhausted herself and had to spend the night. She’d thought traveling through the Floo Network would be a simple thing, but apparently a body as small as hers was subject to magical exhaustion, as the distance flickering between Floo to Floo to Floo took its toll. Harriet could barely keep her eyes open as she promised the witch behind the bar that her parents would be along later that evening, and she snuck out before dawn.

Afterward, Harriet spent one week on the Isle of Skye, camping in the fens and rolling hills and rocky tors, not far from the village of Giant’s Rest near The Storr. The area was populated by some of the barmiest wizards Harriet had ever met, including a batty potioneer named Ernestine Elderberry, who claimed to be three hundred and fourteen years old and brewed with spit from the fairies she’d met near the Bruach na Frithe. The woman shoved a glass cauldron full of curious, light blue crystals into Harriet’s arms one day—said it was a gift—then went off chasing a flying sheep toward the mountains. The crystals glowed softly whenever Harriet spoke in Parseltongue, and she had no clue what to make of that.

Harriet stayed another week at Elva Hill in Cumbria, where a night market popped into existence every evening after nightfall and one could buy all manner of strange local flora—though not with Galleons. The shopkeepers didn’t look, well, human to Harriet, what with their glowing eyes and sharp ears, and they bartered with puzzling things like a sigh captured in a bottle, or a name, or two hops, or a joke. The stalls would appear in the shadow of the hill itself as the sun dipped into the horizon, and Harriet saw vampires there, and goblins and green-skinned hags, wizards with teeth like wolves, Centaurs and beautiful, white-haired women who the wizards chased after like hungry dogs.

After midnight, she could sometimes see distant lights outside her tent’s walls, and sometimes she heard whispers asking her to come out and play and dance. Fortunately for Harriet, she was adept at ignoring cajoling little voices, and so she stayed cozy in her bed.

Now Harriet sat at the side of a road leading nowhere at all, in front of a sign with no directions, with hot sunshine pounding on the top of her head and Kevin, her snake-golem, coiled in her hair. A wizard at the Hopping Pot tavern with a beard longer than Dumbledore’s had—in a thick, rambling brogue—told her about the Wizarding hamlet of Bantiaumyrddin, which was supposed to be somewhere in Oxfordshire, but Harriet was beginning to think that the old wizard had been a nutter.

Chewing her lip, she pulled her wand out of its brace and rapped the map. “Bantiaumyrddin!”

The ink swirled, searching, and hazy patterns of the path she’d trod appeared, but the way forward remained foggy. Little question marks blossomed from Harriet’s stick figure like anxious sweat.

“Probably saying it wrong,” Harriet grumbled as she stashed her wand away again and folded the map. Hermione would’ve pronounced it correctly, and Harriet wished she was there with her. “Sounds bloody Welsh anyway. Barmy wizard….”

Sighing, Harriet slipped off her trunk and laid in the cooler grass, shifting until a wispy tree branch blocked the sun from hitting her eyes. Livi stirred from his nap to investigate.

Sss…do you know the way?” he asked as his tongue flicked and smelled the air, Kevin mirroring the move against Harriet’s damp temple.

No, I’m not sure,” she replied. Harriet took a Chocolate Frog out of her shorts’ pocket, and though it resembled a melted lump more than an actual frog, she popped it into her mouth and chewed, flipping the card over for her inspection. “Dumbledore again.”

When do we return to the ssstone placcce?

Hogwarts? Not for a while.

The Horned Serpent hissed as he slithered through the plants and over Harriet’s torso, raising himself so his snout hovered close to her face and Harriet blinked. His eyes burned a luminescent blue, black scales hot to the touch, the gem upon the ridge of his brow glittering in the sunshine. “Exxxplain.”

We don’t go back until it’s time for school.”

Why not now?

Because school doesn’t start until September. We’ve been over this, you know.

Livi hissed and twitched as he did whenever Harriet tried to explain something he wasn’t familiar with. Snakes didn’t have much comprehension of school—or time, for that matter, since Livi referred to winter as “the cold time” and summer as “the warm time” with little distinction in between. He ate, slept, and drank as he pleased, be it day or night. “Humansss are ssstupid,” he said, remorseless and uncaring of Harriet’s scandalized expression. “Wasssteful. We ssshould ssstay at the ssstone placcce. The air….” The serpent paused and sent his violet tongue flickering once more. “The air isss besst there.

Harriet took that to mean he liked the magic at Hogwarts, since Livi didn’t much approve of the Muggle places they passed through. They smelled “wrong” to him.

She didn’t reply. Harriet went to stroke his scales and Livi reared back to inspect her hand, licking the smudges of chocolate from her fingertips. Truth be told, Harriet very much wished they could stay at Hogwarts year round too—but, unlike her classmates, she lacked anywhere else to go, so she supposed everyone else would be a bit peeved if they were stuck at the castle all the time.

Lost in thought, Harriet didn’t spot the pair of owls descending on her until Livi hissed a warning, and she had barely enough time to sit up before Elara’s bird, Cygnus, landed on her head. Kevin let out a sound of fear and she quickly tucked him down the front of her blouse before surly Cygnus decided to eat him. The other post-carrier—a spotted barn owl Harriet didn’t recognize—landed a polite distance away, leg extended for her to accept the attached package.

“Ouch, Cygnus, geroff—.”

The black owl pecked at Harriet’s raised hand, then fluttered down to her knee, giving both Harriet and Livi an imperious look that dared them to object. The witch huffed as she rubbed her sore hand.

“And what’s your problem, you daft bird? That hurt.”

Cygnus hooted, louder than before, and held out his leg like the other owl did. Nervous of having her fingers nipped to ribbons, Harriet hesitated before loosening the twine binding the small package in place, but once it dropped, Cygnus took to the air without a backward glance, cuffing Harriet in the head for her efforts. The barn owl acted with better manners and stuck around for Harriet to give him a piece of a Licorice Wand from her pocket.

“What’s this?” Harriet wondered aloud as she opened the lumpy envelope from Elara. Two folded letters fell out, as did two parcels carefully wrapped in plain parchment and spare bits of ribbon. She unfolded the first letter, and grinned as she recognized Hermione’s tidy handwriting. The bushy-haired witch went on at some length about the summer Defense assignment and even included a list of book references Harriet might want to include in her Charms essay, having correctly surmised the bespectacled witch hadn’t finished all her assignments yet. The letter concluded with—

 

Happy birthday, Harriet. I do hope you like your present. I Transfigured it from a bit of silver I liberated from the Malfoys. Stolen silver is the only kind of metal that can hold the Honor Among Thieves Charm—which makes it so items in your possession cannot be Summoned from you. Your wand, for example. I do hope it’s not needed, but it never hurts to be prepared. Stay safe, and don’t go looking for trouble!

Love, Hermione.

 

“Oh,” Harriet said, blinking. It was her birthday? She’d forgotten all about it, which wasn’t surprising, given that Harriet had never had a birthday before she much looked forward to, last year’s being the best in her memory. She opened up the parcel and found a thin, gleaming bangle with the adjustable ends shaped like a snake eating its own tail. The design was rather crude, but Harriet loved it and quickly snapped the bracelet into place on her wrist. “Lovely.”

Grinning, she opened Elara’s gift—and out tumbled a small white teaspoon attached to a long strip of leather. The handle was riddled in tiny runes and inscriptions, and the top bore a familiar crest of a skull and three black birds. Harriet turned the spoon over in her hand, puzzled, then checked Elara’s letter.

 

Harriet—

I hope this letter finds you. I’ve had trouble sending the last few, and Cygnus has been put out that he hasn’t been able to deliver.

 

“That would explain the biting,” Harriet grumbled, reading on.

 

I’ve enclosed your birthday gift, along with Hermione’s, who wished for me to send hers on. Mine is a bit odd, but I think you’ll appreciate it. My ancestors proved to be a pack of highly paranoid individuals, most of them convinced the house-elves were out to get them. To that end, I think it was our great-great aunt Cassiopeia who paid the Bavarians to carve a set of cutlery from the bones of Erklings. However they came about, the set’s Charmed to be self-cleaning and turns black in the presence of most known poisons.

 

Harriet studied at the strange spoon with new consideration. The misadventure with the poisoned tea last term had greatly turned Harriet off the food in the Great Hall, so it would be nice to have a smidgen of reassurance if she was worried. Harriet guessed both Elara and Hermione were still concerned about her if this was what they’d decided to get her for her birthday.

Kevin hissed as she looped the leather about her neck and dropped the spoon down her shirt before she kept reading.

 

I would like it if you came to stay with me for the rest of summer. If you want. Livius is welcome, too. I live at 12 Grimmauld Place, London—the Borough of Islington, to be precise. It’s imperative to remember the address, or it’s quite tricky to find.

Hoping to see you soon,

Elara.

 

“Excellent,” Harriet said, grinning ear to ear. Livi began to nose the parchment, clearly wishing to know what had pleased her, so she told him, “Elara has invited us to come stay with her.

At the ssstone placcce?

No, not Hogwarts. At her home. I’ve not been there before.

Displeased, Livi moved away, receding into the bluebells with a final utterance of “Fine.” The Horned Serpent disliked when plans didn’t coincide with his whims and had no problem letting Harriet know that, so she ignored him and opened her final gift, this one from Hogwarts’ groundskeeper, Hagrid. Inside the torn paper she found a wood flute that appeared hand-carved, and when Harriet blew on the end, it emitted a loud hoot like an owl. She would have to send the half-giant a thank you note.

Harriet laid again in the flowers and folded her hands over her letters, holding them against her chest, as she gazed at the summer sky. A little over a year ago, Harriet knew nothing at all of magic; she had no friends, no prospects. She lived in a cupboard and served her relatives, always terrified the next time Uncle Vernon yelled, he’d start strangling her and wouldn’t let go. One year ago, she traveled into the magical world and met Elara, and Livius. Hogwarts sometimes seemed a very distant dream, but now, in her hands, she held proof of the friendships she’d made, letters signed with “love,” and “hoping to see you soon,” and a “dear Harry” from Hagrid. People cared about strange, orphan Harriet Potter, and she didn’t know if she’d ever get used to it.

“Number Twelve, Grimmauld Place,” she repeated aloud. Her shadow lay still at her side, and Harriet half-fancied Set had his arms crossed over his middle and was staring at the sky, too. If shadows could do such a thing. “We’ll camp out here tonight, then, and set off for London in the morning. I wonder if Elara has a telly?”

She shut her eyes and soaked in the sunshine.

 

A/N: I hope you enjoyed a glimpse into my world-building for the UK magical community! As for magical traveling, I’ve considered what their limitations would be, and I believe that 1) a portkey is an object connecting one space to another via a wizard/witch’s magic. The object thus absorbs the impact from the distance and uses the magic it stores as the inertia for travel. I consider this to be one of the reasons why they’re illegal to create, because I’d say only powerful magical folks would be able to successfully create them. 2) In Floo traveling, the traveler is subjected to extreme velocity and pressure for a duration of time, that time being longer the farther you have to “flit” through the network. 3) Apparition is powered by an individual’s magic. The more powerful you are, the farther you can propel yourself through time and space without your being disintegrating—aka, splinching. Sorry for the long note!

 

Chapter 43: the house of malfoy

Chapter Text

xliii. the house of malfoy

 

Dread filled Hermione’s veins when she heard the approaching tap, tap, tap of his walking stick striking the floor.

It was such a pretentious thing, Hermione thought, his need to strut about with a walking stick like he was the bloody king of England himself. Or one of those white-feathered peacocks on the grounds. She often daydreamed about taking the blasted thing in her hands and cracking it in two over her knee, though these daydreams never moved past the act itself—never included the consequences such a move would reap. There would be consequences, too. Hermione guessed she probably wouldn’t survive breaking Lucius Malfoy’s concealed wand into pieces.

Across from her, Jamie Ingham, the Malfoys’ older Muggle-born ward, heard the same tapping as Hermione and quickly straightened in his chair as he flipped through the text before him and lowered his head. Draco, at the head of the polished table, either didn’t hear his father coming or didn’t care, because he continued to slouch and play with the miniature broom in his hand, sending it sailing around paper obstacles, his school books forgotten on the side.

Mr. Malfoy entered the dining room through the far archway, dressed in his usual Wizarding garb, robes black and his vest royal purple with gleaming, golden buttons. He looked quite prim—puffed up and stuffy, Hermione’s mind provided in a voice that sounded suspiciously like Elara Black—and as she watched him through her lashes, she saw his mouth curl into a sneer.

“Draco,” he barked, startling the pointy-faced boy. “Sit up.”

The younger Malfoy did as told, his cheeks flushed pink, and Hermione fought down her satisfied smirk. She must have not been as discreet as she thought, because Mr. Malfoy rounded on her and extended one long-fingered hand, waiting for Hermione to glance up and meet his unimpressed glower. “Your work, Miss Granger.”

Hermione gave him her incomplete essay on Dr. Ubbly’s Oblivious Unction, and Malfoy skimmed the topic, tutting under his breath.

“Pedantic at best. A shallow analysis reflective of a shallow mind. My, my. I must write the school and ensure you really are the best student of your year. I find that highly suspicious.”

Color invaded Hermione’s cheeks, but she didn’t tear up. Draco snickered—and Mr. Malfoy rounded on him now, his cane striking the table with a heavy thump that caused all three students to jump. “If you’ve time to laugh, Draco, you’ve time to better your own assignment. I seem to recall you were sixth in your year, boy.”

Draco paled and shrank as he fidgeted with his books, not quite meeting Mr. Malfoy’s eye. “Yes, father. But it’s not my fault!” he grumbled. “Two of them were Ravenclaws! And Nott. He’s such a bookworm. And—.” He glared at Hermione. “Granger and Black cheated.”

Mr. Malfoy scoffed, a noise as pompous as his own appearance. Jaime sank farther into his chair like he wanted to disappear into it, and Hermione wondered what his rank had been. “Granger is a Muggle-born, and Black is a ridiculous, thoughtless girl who has little regard for the time and effort of others,” he spat, his tone as vicious as it ever was when Elara came up in conversation. That one of her best friends could hassle and aggrieve Malfoy so much when Hermione couldn’t brought her private joy. “That you could be so easily surpassed by either shows your lack of conviction. If you don’t prove yourself more capable, Draco, I will rethink my offer.”

Draco instantly pulled his books closer, both horrified and elated, a look Hermione couldn’t rightly understand. She looked to Jaime for assistance, but he hadn’t lifted his head from his work and pointedly refused to acknowledge all of her friendly overtures. They’d exchanged a handful of greetings over the summer, half-heard grunts or vague, distrustful looks on Jaime’s part that Hermione didn’t understand—just as she didn’t understand Draco’s suddenly smug mood.

Sometimes, she wished Elara hadn’t been emancipated, that she’d come to stay at the Malfoys as well so Hermione wouldn’t be stuck alone for weeks on end. Elara—pure-blooded and proxy to the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black—could’ve stood up to Mr. Malfoy, unlike Hermione. Draco’s father never struck her or mistreated her of course, but…the revulsion became unbearable after a time.

Mr. Malfoy strutted—for it could not be called walking—out of the room again after verbally tearing Jaime’s work to shreds, leaving the trio to study in peace. Draco shoved off the task once more with a broad grin.

“What has you so pleased?” Hermione demanded. “You’ve done nothing all summer but smirk and gloat, Malfoy. It’s insufferable.”

The blond boy lifted a brow and gave a smug, faux laugh Hermione had heard him practicing in his room before. “Oh, father’s promised me a gift is all, Granger. You see, next year I’m going to be on the Quidditch team, and father’s promised to buy the whole team new brooms.” Malfoy studied his nails. “He’s quite generous.”

“You’re not on the team,” she replied, frowning. “Try-outs don’t take place until the new school year.” Really, Hermione had very little interest in Quidditch or any sport; she knew try-outs hadn’t occurred yet because Harriet was looking forward to them. Attending Quidditch practice would cut into Harriet’s study time, but Hermione thought the rambunctious witch would actually benefit from the exercise. She usually spent an hour of their free period pacing around the table in the library and would only sit when Hermione—or Madam Pince—snapped at her.

Malfoy scoffed and retrieved the toy broom from his pocket where he’d hid it from his father. “Don’t be stupid, Mudblood.”

Don’t call me that.”

He mouthed the word again, and it took everything in Hermione not to hurl a tome at his fat head. The book didn’t deserve that.

Mr. Malfoy returned soon enough with Mrs. Malfoy and the trio of students stowed their books and assignments in their bags to prepare for lunch. Draco relinquished the head of the table to his father and sneered as he sank into a seat by Hermione.

“Draco, don’t make rude faces,” his mother reprimanded.

“Yes, mother.”

Mr. Malfoy leaned his walking stick against the table’s edge as he took his seat and cleared his throat. “Dobby!”

A crack preceded the appearance of the stooped, green-skinned house-elf in his tattered pillowcase. “You called for Dobby, Master Malfoy sir?”

“Serve lunch.”

Dobby disappeared again, and a few moments later he came tottering out of the adjoining kitchen bearing several plates of fresh salad, scones, cream, and jam. Hermione resisted the urge to reach out and assist the short creature as he passed her chair, bowls balanced on his head, his motions quick as he slid dishes before Mr. and Mrs. Malfoy, their son, then Jaime and Hermione. She’d tried to help before and had been promptly chastised.

“How was the Minister today, father?” Draco asked as Dobby poured tea. Again Hermione had to stop herself from offering thanks or gratitude.

“Minister Gaunt is well,” Mr. Malfoy answered. “And busy, of course. He has little time for idle pleasantries, though he sends his greetings to you and Narcissa.” He speared a water chestnut and placed it in his mouth, chewing thoroughly before continuing. “He assures me you will have a…most interesting term at Hogwarts this year.”

What does he mean by that?

Hermione looked up and caught Jaime’s eye, and though the older boy quickly looked away, they did share a single moment of disquiet at the pleased tenor in Mr. Malfoy’s voice. Draco didn’t notice and happily went about eating his food and taking a deep swig of pumpkin juice. “Really? How so, father?”

“Now, now, Draco. You don’t want to ruin the surprise, do you?”

Just then, a saucer slipped through Dobby’s spindly fingers and cracked in two upon the floor. Mr. Malfoy reacted without a word; the cane found itself in the wizard’s hand once more and lashed out, striking Dobby’s head, earning a squeal out of the poor creature and a sharp gasp from Hermione. Dobby cowered, cupping the the bleeding cut above his drooping ear, and Mr. Malfoy glared as he dropped the walking stick back into place.

“Clean it up,” he spat.

Dobby snapped his trembling fingers and the saucer floated upward to the table after repairing itself. Hermione could feel her hands shaking, so she dropped them into her lap, balling them into fists as she stifled the need to shout and rail. She hated this. In any other circumstance, Hermione would have told Mr. Malfoy precisely what she thought of him and his heavy-handed ways—but Hermione couldn’t insult him, couldn’t give him a piece of her mind, because if Mr. Malfoy chose to do so, he could rescind his wardship and she would be forced back to the Muggle world. The Ministry would snap her wand. She would never see Hogwarts again.

It wasn’t right—but what could Hermione do? She was a not quite thirteen-year-old witch with no autonomy in this society, no voice. She had to be practical and cunning, not bold and brash like a Gryffindor. Intervening with no plan of action would only reap consequences for Dobby and herself, and the last thing Hermione wanted to do was make life harder for the house-elves living at the manor. Quite frankly, she feared the end of Mr. Malfoy’s cane as much as the servants—slaves—did.

Mrs. Malfoy noticed how pale the children had gone, including Draco, who hunched his shoulders and stared at his plate, not meeting his mother’s eye. “Lucius,” she reprimanded. “What have we said about punishing the servants at the table?”

Her husband’s pale eyes narrowed at the rebuff, but Mr. Malfoy simpered and nodded. “Of course, my dear. Quite unseemly of me.”

Lunch continued without conversation. Dobby shuffled back into the kitchen, muttering about being a “bad elf,” and Hermione ate little of the provided food, her stomach too twisted into knots for her to force anything more than a few mouthfuls down. Mr. Malfoy excused himself first, and after Dipthy—another Malfoy elf—scuttled through and cleared the meal’s remnants, Mrs. Malfoy set about lecturing them in manners and Wizarding history. Hermione kept her head down for the lesson’s duration.

She could do nothing. She wasn’t powerful or connected, didn’t have the right name like Elara, or six feet of venomous serpent stuffed beneath her shirt like Harriet—but inaction had never sat well with Hermione. She wanted to change how things were, both for house-elves and Muggle-borns, because she knew some Muggle-borns in different families were treated just as poorly as Dobby. Hermione may have been powerless, and yet she refused to give in; one day she’d be able to tell wizards like Mr. Malfoy off. One day she’d be able to stand up and say, “That’s enough!

Later, the house-elves would find a little packet of Muggle ointments and first-aid items outside their pantry door, and Hermione would say nothing at all when she saw Dobby running about with pink and blue plasters stuck to his bruised head. She’d say nothing, but the sight would only further solidify her resolve.

 

Chapter 44: an uninvited guest

Chapter Text

xliv. an uninvited guest

 

Harriet looked down into the cauldron of foul smelling glop and wrinkled her nose.

“Er….” Sitting back on her haunches, she flipped through the open Potions book and fussed with her rolled sleeves. “I don’t…I don’t think I did this right.”

A low, disinterested hiss emanating from beneath the bed answered her.

Oh, wait, it’s supposed to smell like that?” Harriet traced a line in the text and squinted. “Urgh. It says it’s supposed to be ‘golden in hue,’ but mine’s more like spring grass…wait it’s darkening now…I guess it’s not done?” Harriet peaked over the cauldron’s rim again, frowning. Sure enough, the green steadily leached from the thick liquid and became mustard yellow. “Snape stupid summer assignments are just as hard as the rubbish he gives us in class.”

The Girding Potion released a noxious smelling puff and Harriet recoiled, reaching for her mittens to lift the little cauldron onto the cooling rack, hoping yellow was a close enough color for Snape’s discerning criticism. She sat in the middle of her tent’s floor surrounded by open potion ingredients and a few wayward snack wrappers, a roll of parchment and a quill set to the side where she’d been writing her homework while the potion heated in its various stages. Livi had long since grown bored of watching Harriet and had retreated to his favorite hiding spot, though Kevin remained in her old shirt’s breast pocket. Sometimes the golem-snake repeated what Harriet said, and she decided that made him a much better listener than Livi at the moment.

A cool breeze ruffled the magical tent’s wall, making the seemingly solid interior ripple. The lantern sputtered and, after discarding her mittens, Harriet groaned, got to her feet, and wandered over to it. She tapped the lantern’s brass base. “I think Muggles had the right thinking with electricity.”

What isss…electricccity?

It’s like…lightning in wires, in the walls, and it makes lights come on.

Livi poked his nose out from beneath the bed’s wobbly frame. “Thisss…sssoundss foolissh.

Well, Muggles understand it well enough. I can’t explain it like they could.” The lantern sputtered a final time and went out. Harriet stumbled about in the dark until she found the Self-Lighting candles that she needed only to touch for the wicks to flicker into life. “In Hogwarts: A History, it talks about how magic and electricity and—and certain radio waves don’t mix? I can’t remember what it said exactly…but magic’s like a second conduit or something, and it makes stuff inert or unstable. I can’t help but be jealous of my Aunt Petunia just being able to flick a bloody switch sometimes. For adults it’s not so bad I guess, because they can use spells. I hate being underage.”

Sss….” The serpent contemplated Harriet as she poked about her trunk in search of an oil globe she could insert into the bottom of the Charmed lantern. Dr. Filibuster’s Fireworks on Carkitt Market had an Ever-burning Oil variant that would have solved Harriet’s problem, but they wouldn’t sell it to her, because—as a minor—she couldn’t put the fire out if she spilled the oil by accident. Harriet knew they were simply being logical, though she still wished for light-bulbs sometimes.

Magic…isss not meant to be…easssy.”

Livi retreated beneath the bed again, and Harriet puzzled over what he’d said. Magic is not meant to be easy. It certainly wasn’t what Harriet would call easy, not now, at least. When she’d first discovered her heritage, she’d been under the mistaken impression that one could cast spells by flicking around their wand and mumbling funny words—and then she took one look at the diagrams inside her Transfiguration textbook and that theory imploded in her face.

Magic was difficult, and finicky, and wondrous and—at times—terrifying. Hermione once mentioned to Harriet that everything in nature had a balance, and perhaps the balance for witches and wizards who could turn desks into elephants or fly on broomsticks was forsaking things not made from magic or their own hands. Perhaps if you could flick a wand and create light from nothing, you didn’t deserve light-bulbs.

Harriet, lost in thought, watched the candles burn and didn’t hear when the crickets went quiet.

A sudden chime echoed from beneath the bed. Harriet started.

“Livi?”

The chime came again—and suddenly the Charmed flap over the tent’s entrance was carelessly torn aside, and Harriet found herself staring down the lit side of a brandished wand.

A wizard stood in her tent, dressed in navy robes that, given the relatively plain cut and the insignia stitched onto the front pocket, must’ve been a uniform of some kind. The wide brim of his hat hid his eyes from Harriet, but she could still see his grim, self-satisfied smile, the black hair on his upper lip, and the nostrils left bloodless as they flared in anger.

“Finally—there you are, you little shit,” he said in a biting Northern accent. “Been all over Hell’s half acre looking for your stupid arse.”

“Looking for—?” Harriet could do little more than gawk at the man—the intruder—who’d stomped into her tent in the middle of bloody nowhere and now held her at wand-point.

“Looking for you, bloody half-blood hiding in the fucking woods. No one said anything about that—.”

“I don’t know who you are!”

“I’m not here to answer your questions!” He took a breath and seemed to gather himself, the irritation festering behind a composed mask as he soothed his mussed hair. His wand never wavered. “Come along, Miss Potter, I’ve been sent to…collect you.”

The chime came again and though the man ignored it, Harriet realized the sound came from her snake. Livi had made the same sound in the loo at Hogwarts before the troll came stampeding through.

“I’m—I’m not going anywhere with you!” Harriet knew she could be a bit naive and foolish at times, but she absolutely refused to leave with a strange wizard who came barging into her sanctuary in the dead of night. That was just common sense.

What wasn’t common sense was forgetting to strap her wand to her wrist that morning. She’d grown careless gallivanting on her own, as the leather brace grew uncomfortable and sticky in the hot summer sun while Harriet wandered—and she couldn’t use the blasted thing while out of school, so she hadn’t seen the harm in leaving both the wand and the brace on the rumpled bed.

She saw the harm now.

“You’ll be going where I tell you, Potter. My Lord’s not keen on waiting long—.”

Harriet’s eyes flicked toward her wand and she knew he saw the motion, because his mouth opened to incant a spell and his own wand rose.

“Now, now…don’t be difficult, kid….”

She dove to the side just as a burst of red light came zooming at her, and though Harriet managed to dodge, the spell grazed her arm and she landed on the floor, gasping. It felt as if she’d been slugged in the stomach and kicked in the head, simultaneously breathless and dazed and more than a little confused with her glasses askew and one arm limp against her side.

The man approached, a new hex ready—and Set lurched from beneath Harriet, a single column of black darting out to strike the candles and douse the tent in darkness.

“What the fuck—?!”

A single hiss was all the warning the wizard received before Livi bolted from beneath the bed and Harriet felt warm scales rippling against her cheek as the wizard shrieked. He only got out one terrified cry and a half-formed spell that splattered on the canvas wall before his body fell, a heavy thud sounding in the sticky dark.

Harriet’s strangled breaths broke the renewed silence.

“Li—Livius?” The spell’s fuzzy remnants finally dissipated and allowed Harriet to sit up, though she very much dreaded what she’d find. Her hand trembled as it slid along the serpent’s body until—.

Until she found a foot. An unmoving foot attached to an unmoving leg.

“Oh God—Merlin, sweet Salazar Slytherin’s saintly left bollock—!”

The serpent’s coils shifted, and Harriet smelled copper, Livi’s tongue flicking against her cheek. “Misstresss.”

Harriet staggered under his weight as she leapt upright and dashed to the candles, setting them alight one by one. The light only served to illuminate what she already knew; the wizard laid flat on his back like a dead beetle, black tongue lolling out of his open mouth, blood smudged about his upper thigh where The Horned Serpent had only needed to bite once.

Livi killed him like the troll.

Sick crawled up Harriet’s throat and she vomited on the floor.

Misstresss?

Wiping her mouth, Harriet reached out to touch Livi’s head, her fingers shaking so hard they skipped over his horns and along his scales. “I’m—I’m okay—.”

The wizard just stared at the ceiling.

Dead. Dead, he’s dead—.

Harriet’s familiar had killed a man, a man intent on kidnapping her, but a person nonetheless. He hadn’t said who he was or what he wanted, only that he was going to take Harriet with him whether she wanted him to or not. Livi had been protecting her—but would the Ministry see it like that? She knew their policemen were called Aurors because her dad had been one, so Harriet wondered if they’d send Aurors after her. They’d kick her out of Hogwarts. They’d take her to jail. They’d kill Livi.

Her heart raced in her chest.

Who was he? Why—where did he want to take me? She thought about Quirrell and the red spell he’d slung at her in the dungeons, the Mirror of Erised and the unrivaled horror of facing her own mortality as Voldemort shrieked for her death.

“I will let you share in that eternal life, Harriet…. You and your family could live forever….”

Shaking, Harriet straightened her glasses and tried to control her breathing. She couldn’t look away from the wizard.

What if he wasn’t alone? What if there’s more?

As soon as the terrible thought occurred to Harriet, she moved and dashed around her bed to snatch up her wand and brace.

I have to get away, I can’t stay here, I can’t—.

Harriet kicked open the top of her trunk and snatched the Invisibility Cloak off the top of the jumbled interior. She was fortunate the purse she kept her exchanged Muggle money in fell out too, or Harriet would’ve sprinted off into the dark without a pound or a Knut on her person. Her fear thundered in her head until it seemed to echo, drowning every other thought out, a repetitive beat of go, go, go thumping her thick skull.

“Livi, we need to leave—!”

She hefted one coil around her shoulders and the snake managed the rest, sensing the urgency in his witch’s tone. Kevin stirred in her pocket and Harriet poked him further down as she strapped her wand into place and threw the Invisibility Cloak over her head.

What if there’s more, what if—what if he meant to take me to Voldemort—!

Harriet allowed herself one last look at the dead man before clutching Livi to her chest and running into the waiting night.

 

 

A/N: Which magical place would you be most interested in seeing in a future installment? Giant’s Rest near The Storr? Or the Night Market near Elva Hill? I might include both at some point in the series, but I am curious!

Chapter 45: penance for petunia

Chapter Text

xlv. penance for petunia

 

When his arm started to burn, Severus wasn’t surprised.

No, Severus was a man of routine and absolutes; the sun rose in the east, set in the west, fire was hot, ice was cold, and Harriet Potter would somehow, some way, wind up in imminent danger.

Before he’d known about the Vow chaining his life to the brat’s, Severus had already come to expect the ever-present burning in the summertime. The searing and prickling always increased during the holidays, and for the longest time, Severus hadn’t had a single idea why that was. Now, however, he knew why even if he wished he didn’t, because Albus Dumbledore would never forgive him for killing Petunia Evans, even if the bitch was abusing her only niece.

Severus sat up from his slouched position in his armchair and the Potions journal he’d been reading when he dozed off slid to the rug. Air hissed through his clenched teeth as he tightened his hand around his wrist and lurched upright, sleep’s muddled haze already disappearing, his body and mind trained to wake swiftly—though his heart raced and his footing was less than steady. He grabbed his cloak from the hook by his mantel and hesitated by the Floo.

He knew where he must go. Severus had made sure of that before term even ended; finding Potter’s home address had been too easy for Severus’ taste. What if Slytherin had gone looking for it? He’d waited all summer for the opportunity to catch Tuney or her fucking husband putting the girl in danger—in flagrante, as it were. Perhaps it was wrong for Severus to have waited at all, for him to gamble with Potter’s safety, but he was a Slytherin, not a bleeding-heart Gryffindor; he needed to bring evidence before Albus. The Headmaster could be incredibly thick-headed in these matters.

Abuse, be it against a child or a partner, wasn’t common in the Wizarding world, not like it could be among Muggles. Oh, wizards had their own fair share of emotional neglect going on, but pure-bloods had trouble conceiving. When the whole weight of your family legacy rested on a hard-won child’s shoulders, you didn’t beat that child, and you didn’t beat your spouse when they were trained in curses and poisons and knew exactly where you kept your bloody tea. Without evidence, Severus doubted Dumbledore could even conceive of the idea that Petunia might hurt her niece.

Still, Severus hesitated. He hesitated because he feared he might not hold back if he witnessed Petunia hurting Lily’s daughter.

“Fuck,” he cursed when pain flared again. Severus took a pinch of Floo Powder and threw into the grate, snapping, “Number Eight, Wisteria Walk, Surrey!”

The fire blazed green and he braced himself for the dizzying, spiraling pressure of long-distance Floo travel. When he stepped out of the grate, he did so with a soft gasp, bringing in the smell cabbage and cats, the taste of soot heavy on his tongue and in his throat. A Kneazle perched on the back of a tatty couch growled at Severus, and he slipped his wand into his shaking hand.

The light flicked on, and he managed to not whirl about—though Severus did slowly raise his hands when confronted with an older woman wielding a Muggle handgun.

“Who’re you then?” the old Squib demanded, dressed in a fluffy bathrobe with two cats at her feet. She squinted. “…Snape?”

“Madam Figg,” he drawled, hoping the crazy bat didn’t shoot him on accident. He knew Arabella Figg more by chance than anything else, a distant memory from a decade ago of passing in the Order headquarters, and she probably recognized him by notoriety. He’d been told by Albus years ago that the Headmaster had an agent in play near Privet Drive to watch over the girl, but Severus would’ve never guessed it was Arabella Figg until he searched the records for the nearest Floo contact to Potter’s home. “I’ve received…intel that the Potter girl might be in danger and have come to verify her safety for myself.”

The gun lowered, which irked Severus. Any Death Eater with half an ounce of brain power could buy or cook up a Polyjuice Potion and pretend to be him, but the woman did ask any identifying questions or for any of the old Order passwords. Instead, she appeared momentarily confused and scratched her face, a heavy frown deepening her wrinkles. “Danger? Shouldn’t she be off in school?”

Severus lowered his hands and stiffened. “It is August, Figg.”

“August?” The woman had the temerity to look at him as if Severus were the one out of his mind. “Oh, it is, isn’t it? I remember now. I…I don’t believe I’ve seen Harriet since last Christmas.”

He stared. “What.”

“When the Dursleys went on holiday. They always leave the dear behind, sweet girl….”

Sweet fucking Morgana, Albus. Did it ever occur to you to check that your nanny wasn’t a few beans short of every flavor?

His wrist ached. Severus didn’t have time for coddling nattering Squibs in the middle of the night, and so he swept around, whacked himself on the head with his wand to cast a Disillusionment Charm, and strode out into the muggy heat. He stumbled when he got his first look at the street, though he would’ve cursed any witnesses to his dumbfounded expression blind before admitting how the sight staggered him. Severus came from the back-end of Cokeworth, where the houses lined up like soot-stained gravestones in the shadow of the old mill, and yet he couldn’t have prepared himself for the distinctly Muggle reality of Little Whinging.

Oh, yes, he could imagine Tuney living quite happily in one of these uniform homes with their uniform gardens and plain, ugly letterboxes. Tobias Snape used to watch reruns of The Twilight Zone on the telly when he wasn’t too drunk to sit up straight, and Severus had seen images of places like this, surreal middle-grounds extending forever in all directions, the kind of places that could trap a man in his own mind for want of escape. Severus wagered Petunia hadn’t realized it wasn’t the fifties anymore and women could actually leave their houses if they wanted.

He came through an alley along Magnolia Crescent and stopped at Privet Drive’s boundary, concerned the blood-wards Dumbledore swore up and down surrounded the house would push him back—but Severus’ concern was for naught. He reached out, found nothing, and with each incredulous step forward along the tepid street he continued to find nothing until he stood on Tuney’s walk staring at the brass number “4” on the door.

There are no blood-wards.

Swallowing, Severus dismissed the Disillusionment Charm and stomped up the rest of the path, bringing his fist down hard on the door. He had a difficult enough time keeping his right hand clenched around his wand, so he beat the knuckles of his left raw knocking until the neighbor’s curtains fluttered.

“Who in the blazes is that?!” cried a male voice inside the house, loud thumps descending a set of stairs. Lights wavered, and a moment later a corpulent man with a thick mustache, dressed in pinstriped pajamas yanked the door open. Severus was painfully reminded of Horace Slughorn—fat, mustachioed, red-faced—but he shoved that recollection aside as easily as he shoved the man back into his own house. Severus slammed the door behind him.

“What in GOD’S NAME—?!”

Severus flicked his wand in the direction of the man’s face, and the Muggle went quiet, eyes never leaving the thin strip of wood. Ah, the Potions Master thought. So Tuney’s been telling tales. I wonder what she learned from Lily about wizards like me….

The Headmaster would be furious when Severus told him he’d forced his way into a Muggle house, let alone Potter’s, but the insistent burn in his aching limb didn’t allow time for Slytherin subtlety. He’d expected the pain to cease once he arrived at Privet Drive, and yet it continued to build in intensity, a rising pressure biting hard into his seizing muscles and bones until he could barely stand it. “Where is the girl?” Severus demanded in a voice that could chill glaciers.

“What bloody girl?!”

Severus jabbed him with his wand and green sparks singed the Muggle’s shirt. Light, rapid steps came down the stairs adjoined to the miserable little foyer, and he sneered as Petunia Evans—still horse-faced, whip-thin, and sour—came into view. The woman took one look at the darkly clad wizard in her home and shrieked.

“YOU!”

“Nice to see you again, too, Tuney,” Severus said as the woman gawked, revulsion and terror competing for purchase on her narrow face. “But I am not here for pleasantries. The girl’s life has been threatened and I am here to check on her.”

When Petunia’s face adopted the color of curdled milk, Severus’ stomach tightened further in dread. Something in the house felt wrong, wrong beyond the lack of wards, something he couldn’t place as he took in the cabbage rose wallpaper and the stink of cleaning products. He could taste furniture polish in his mouth. The pictures on the walls didn’t move, and he felt as though he were surrounded by portraits of dead bodies. “She’s—she’s not here.”

Where is she?”

Petunia crossed her arms, her eyes flashing toward her husband, then behind her, toward the stairs. “She’s—she’s at a friend’s.”

Fuck this, Severus seethed as he sent a Stunner at the billowing Muggle in front of him and rounded on Petunia.

“Vernon!” she shrieked, moving forward, only to get caught my Severus, his hand curling into a fist on the collar of her nightgown, bringing her head up so he could meet her wide, frightened eyes.

Legilimens!

Muggle minds were not like the minds of witches or wizards, another marked separation between mundane and magical. Magical minds had a thin membrane of sorts that, in the head of an accomplished Occlumens, projected a multi-dimensional barrier of the wizard or witch’s choice, while Muggle’s had no such thing. Severus pulled through Petunia’s mind like a swimmer through water, and he detested the woman from the shallows of her being to the deepest abyss of her psyche.

Seeing him again stirred memories of her childhood, snatches of “Sev!” and “That awful Snape boy” flickering by, chased by a girl with apple-red hair and recollections marred by a green-eyed woman’s fading laughter.

His own words echoed in Petunia’s mind, “Where is she?”, and her thoughts winged through a gallery of Harriet Potter’s upbringing, a veritable haunted museum that set Severus’ teeth on edge.

Dumbledore stood in a pink sitting room with a swaddled infant in his arms. “You must take her, Petunia, for your sister—.”

“You’re a freak, Lily, a freak!”

Petunia held a black-haired toddler at arm’s length and couldn’t breathe when curious green eyes stared at her—.

“Listen to me, Tuney! You have to be careful, Voldemort is—.”

She couldn’t stand it. Couldn’t stand the judgmental staring. Out of sight, she needed the brat out of sight—and she saw the boot cupboard. She opened the door—.

“Get up, you worthless girl!”

A child in bedraggled cast-offs stepped out of the black cupboard and stared at the floor, unable to meet her Aunt’s gaze anymore—.

Petunia listened to Dudley taunt the girl, flesh striking flesh, a pained cry, and disgust for her own bullying son filled her, twisting to hate because it was the girl’s fault, it was always the girl’s fault—.

Severus Snape stood in her pristine foyer like a black demon released from Hell, freak, he was a freak—.

“It’s real for us, not for her—.”

“Where is she?”

Petunia stormed down the steps because her purse had disappeared in the night, and if the girl had stolen it, she swore she’d wouldn’t stop Vernon this time—.

Vernon’s hands closed around the girl’s neck. He’d kill Harriet, kill the green-eyed girl, kill Lily—.

“Should’ve left her at the orphanage, Pet.”

The girl winced when Vernon yelled—.

“Should’ve drowned her the first night, Pet.”

The girl cringed under a raised hand—.

“Should’ve beat the unnaturalness from her, Pet.”

Blood dripped along the girl’s chin—.

“Should’ve left her for the dogs, Pet.”

“I want my letter! It’s mine, and you have no right—!”

Familiar, swirling script marred a sheet of parchment in a young hand, “I must apologize, Miss Evans, but Hogwarts cannot be attended by non-magical persons—.” Goddamn Dumbledore, goddamn the freaks who took her—.

An elderly man in a pointed hat stood in her pink sitting room with condemnation in his blue eyes, stating, “You must take her—.”

Petunia stomped down the stairs. She screamed—.

Vernon held the girl off the floor and shook—.

Snakes filled her foyer—.

Severus Snape stood on her threshold like unholy vengeance and she knew this was penance because—.

She stepped into a snake-filled foyer and screamed because—.

The girl sobbed for hours behind the cupboard door and Vernon wouldn’t relent. Petunia wanted to open the door because—.

She stared at the milling snakes and the open cupboard door and knew true guilt because—.

Severus Snape stood in her foyer demanding “Where is she?”

Petunia didn’t know. She didn’t know because—.

Because the girl was gone.

Severus wrenched himself out of Petunia’s head and snarled, thrusting her away. Petunia collided with the wall at her back and a framed picture of her precious, porcine son fell to the floor, not that either of them or the obese bastard sprawled on the linoleum noticed. Severus and Petunia stared at one another and breathed heavily.

Of the dozens of photos and frames decorating the walls, ascending the stairwell, disappearing into the lounge, not one showed Potter’s face.

“She found a way to that freak school, didn’t she?” Petunia asked with a sniff as she broke the silence, one hand clutching the railing, the other on her chest. “You work for him, don’t you? You work for Dumbledore—?”

Severus took one step closer, and Petunia silenced herself. He trembled with the need to scream. “It’s been over a year. It’s been over a fucking year since Potter ran away, and you never said a fucking word! Where is she, Petunia?! You let an eleven-year-old girl run out there on her own and told nobody!

“That’s all you care about, isn’t it, Snape? Where your precious Potter is. Too bad she doesn’t look much like Lily, eh?” Petunia bared her teeth like a cornered dog. “You couldn’t have the mother, so you want the daughter now, is it?”

A muscle in his remaining eye twitched. “Are you trying to provoke me?” he asked, voice calm as arctic waters—though inside he howled, wordlessly furious, seeing again how the fat Muggle throttled Potter while Petunia did nothing, while Snape stood in a castle five hundred miles away staring at his own hand like a bloody fool—.

He’d never seen the girl look as small as she did when dangling from Vernon Dursley’s squeezing grip.

Severus’ wrist had stopped hurting, but the problem had become so much more complicated. He needed to get to Dumbledore. They needed to find Potter.

“That’s not going to work, Tuney. Out of the two of us—not counting that useless lump on the floor there, he’s only Stunned, you simpering moron—I think you’re the pervert. Tell me; did starving an orphan child help relieve your…frustrations?”

Color rose in Petunia’s cheeks and tears glazed her eyes. Wisely, she said nothing.

“Life must be so difficult for poor, average Tuney. An abusive simpleton for a husband rutting away at you, an even stupider son well on his way to incarceration, and here you sit in a mid-sized house smelling of mediocrity and aerosol spray. Is this—.” Severus flicked a hand toward the house proper. “Everything you dreamed it would be? Is your life so dull you had to abuse your niece for kicks?”

“I didn’t—.”

“Save your excuses. I’m sure Dumbledore would love to hear what you’ve to say for yourself after I tell him what you’ve put his yearly stipend toward.”

He hadn’t thought it possible, but Petunia paled further and Severus almost laughed, almost let the scathing, incredulous guffaws come bursting out of himself because Petunia Dursley showed more emotion about the money than she did for her missing niece. The absolute gall.

“How could you do this to Lily’s daughter?” he demanded, more to release the growing pressure in his chest than to ask for an answer. She didn’t have an answer that could possibly satisfy him. “Had you and Vernon died instead, Lily would’ve—.”

“She’s a freak,” Petunia spat as she straightened and pulled herself from the wall.

“I’m well aware of how you view my kind.”

“No, she’s a freak, Snape.” The woman stepped forward and the Potions Master stepped back, if only to keep desired distance between himself and loathsome woman. “You’ve met her, haven’t you? I can only imagine how that came about—.”

“I teach at her school, you sick degenerative—.”

“She’s a nasty little freak worse than you or—or Lily ever were! Always sneaking about, always whispering in the dark—.”

“An abused child locked in a cupboard whispering? My, how very sinister.” Severus raised his wand again and as Petunia whimpered and he glared, he flicked it toward the boot cupboard. The lock burst off and struck the wall, the door scraping the obnoxious wallpaper when it flung itself open. The interior looked much as it had in Petunia’s insufferable head: cleaning products, buckets, brushes, a hoover. In the back resided what Severus sought, and he kicked aside the bottles full of sterile chemicals as he ducked into the cramped space and yanked the dusty pillow off the cot.

He turned the ratty pillow, inspecting the fabric, and plucked off three black hairs between thumb and forefinger. He found an empty vial in his cloak pocket and stuck the hairs in there, then threw the pillow at Petunia. She caught it on instinct more than anything, and Petunia coughed when a cloud of white dust covered her.

Severus could see the flash of police lights through the covered window, and he grunted as he kicked the cupboard door closed, sealing it with a muttered, “Colloportus.” One of the twitch-curtains must’ve heard Petunia’s shrieking. He stared one last time at the bitter, spiteful woman in her nightdress and curlers, her corpulent husband asleep on the floor still. No matter how he tried, he could see nothing of her sister in Petunia—none of Lily’s spirit, joy, her mischievous smirk or charming guile. Petunia existed in antithesis to everything Lily Evans—Lily Potter—had ever been.

He had to find Potter. He had to speak with the Headmaster.

“Tell them he fell down the stairs,” he said, eyes flicking toward the front wall. “Dumbledore will be in touch. Pray we don’t meet again…Tuney.”

With that said, Severus turned and strode down the hallway, into the kitchen where Potter had served her family like a house-elf, and out into the private yard. He Disillusioned himself again, and—just as he began to Disapparate—a strange thought occurred to Severus.

If Petunia hadn’t been the one to tell Potter how to reach Diagon Alley, who did?

 

 

A/N: to everyone wondering why Harriet ran off and left a tent full of her possessions behind; she’s barely twelve, and terrified. Cut the poor little numpty some slack.

Yes, I gave Mrs. Figg onset dementia. The information she’s been feeding Dumbledore has suffered from that.

I tried to reflect the nebulous quality of Legilimency, since Snape himself says it’s not mind-reading. I think it should be rather confusing and scattered, which makes part of being a great Legilimens sorting the mess out into something intelligible.

Chapter 46: in the morning

Chapter Text

xlvi. in the morning

 

When Harriet finally stumbled upon Number Twelve, Grimmauld Place, she was surprised.

She didn’t know much about pure-bloods. What she did know she’d gathered from snatches of Draco Malfoy’s incessant blathering, the typical behavior displayed by her dorm-mates, or Hermione descending into full-blown lecture mode. Harriet expected Elara—stiff-backed, well-mannered, and proper—to live in a house like the ones in Aunt Petunia’s programs, somewhere flanked with columns and hedges and reflective pools. Draco Malfoy lived in a manor, and so did Pansy. Daphne resided in a castle, and Katherine Runcorn’s family had a six-bedroom estate.

The townhouse in front of Harriet looked large but undeniably derelict, the kind of place one expected ghosts to come pouring out of like bats from a belfry. Light from Number Eleven and Number Thirteen on either side of the house illuminated defects in the walls, cracks marring the bricks, rust eating at the front rail, the stoop littered with years’ worth of decaying leaves. Gargoyles leered from the upper balcony, and Harriet half-thought they might spring to life and attack her if she dared go knock on the door.

Well, the bespectacled witch thought to herself. Elara did mention the place was a bit rundown, and it’s been in the family for generations. Looks like the kind of place a bunch of Slytherins would live—and it’s not like I’ve anywhere else to go.

Swallowing, Harriet walked up the steps and knocked on the door.

It took several minutes before an answer came, during which Harriet continued to look over her shoulder and her heart raced, Livi wrapped tight about her torso beneath the Cloak’s fluttering folds. The door creaked, the handle on the other side twisting, and Harriet let out a breath when Elara Black appeared at the threshold in her dressing gown, long hair falling past her shoulders, tired eyes squinting in the artificial light coming off Number Eleven’s stoop.

Harriet yanked the Cloak off her head. “Elara!”

Elara gave one startled shriek of alarm when Harriet’s head appeared out of nowhere and leapt backwards, tripping over her hem and landing in a heap on the rug.

“Oh, shite—!” Harriet divested herself of the Cloak and hurried to help the other witch to her feet. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to frighten you—.”

She touched Elara’s wrist, fingers moving over stiff skin—and her friend wrenched her arm back, stumbling on her own two feet. “It’s fine,” Elara said as she fixed her sleeve and cleared her throat. “I’m all right, but what are you doing here, Harriet? You scared me! It’s barely past two in the morning!”

“Err, right….”

Harriet threw a harried glance out the open door before Elara shut it, plunging them both into the black, musty dark. She felt horribly claustrophobic suddenly, like the walls were inching nearer, or the high ceiling was coming down, ready to smash her into jelly. Sighing, Elara said, “Mind yourself. Come this way.” Her hand found Harriet’s, and she led the way through the dark, stopping at the corridor’s end, where a set of stairs plunged downward. Dim sconces flickered.

They descended, entering a large, dated kitchen with several attached doors and an archway leading into what looked like a dining room, though sheets had been thrown over the furniture, hiding most of it from view. Instead, there was a table in the kitchen, a clunky, ancient looking thing with knife marks on the surface and feet like an eagle’s. Elara turned a switch and gas lamps in thick, crystal fixtures woke, shining more light on the weathered space. A hearth dominated one wall, mantel blackened by a hundred years or more of fire and soot.

“It’s not much,” Elara said, a faint blush in her cheeks. “The house has been basically sitting empty for over a decade, really, what with my older relations getting on and their health failing—.”

“I like it,” Harriet said. It was the truth; Harriet never felt comfortable in places that were perfectly proper and orderly and clean like Aunt Petunia’s house. The cabinets at Privet Drive had been made of composites, painted a light, sickly yellow, the window festooned in lacy curtains, the air always tasting of lemon cleaner and bleach. The cabinets and cupboards here were made of real, solid wood, darkened by an aged patina earned from years of use. Being below ground, there was no window, only those black doors, one of them wreathed by scorch marks. It was spooky, dusty, and odd; Harriet would always be fond of odd things.

Elara gave a crooked smile, pleased, and gestured at the table. “Well, have a seat. I’ll make tea.”

Harriet sat. After pulling out a chair, she looked at her hands and saw them shaking, the motion strong enough for Elara to see from her place across the room by the ancient hob. Harriet tossed the Invisibility Cloak aside and, slouching, divested herself of Livi’s coils. “You can get off now.

The Horned Serpent hissed, tightening himself, then lowered his body to the floor, slowly circling the legs of Harriet’s chair. Kevin poked a curious nose from his pocket, and Harriet took him in her hand, letting the golem twine through her quivering fingers.

“…are you okay?” Elara asked, voice breaking the quiet whoosh of fire beneath the kettle. “I know I asked you to come, but I didn’t expect you to arrive in the middle of the night, hiding under your Cloak.”

Harriet swallowed. “I—.” What could she say? Livi had killed a man; Livi—her pet, her familiar, her responsibility. That wizard was dead, and he hadn’t hurt her, hadn’t cursed her or struck her. How could Harriet plead self-defense? Would the Aurors come for her? Men like her father? Maybe they’d take her to prison. Maybe she’d wind up in a cell next to Elara’s father.

She didn’t know if she should tell her best friend or not. What if—what if Elara threw her out? Harriet didn’t have anywhere else to go. Instinct had driven her to run to Grimmauld Place simply because she’d been thinking about it for much of the night, and because Elara was here, but maybe Elara didn’t want a murderer in her house. Was Harriet a murderer? She hadn’t wanted to hurt the wizard, honestly, but what had he been doing there? Would she be kicked out of Hogwarts? Would they snap her wand? Maybe they wouldn’t send her to prison. Maybe they’d just hand her back to the Dursleys and let them lock her up in the cupboard, all alone, in the dark, with no escape. What was she going to do? “I—!”

Harriet burst into tears.

Elara jumped and, unsure of what to do, she hurried to finish up the tea and fish out cups from the creaking cupboard overhead. By the time she settled the cups and pot on the table, Harriet’s sobs had subsided into hiccups and wet sniffles. The other witch poured the tea and sat, dragging her chair closer. Harriet stared at Elara’s flowing hair, her patrician features, and snorted—perhaps hysterically so—at how very pretty her friend was. Harriet was scrawny and more round-shouldered than she’d like, with unmanageable hair and crooked teeth and thick, ugly glasses. It almost seemed unfair.

“What’s happened?” Elara asked, voice soft, yet urgent.

Again, Harriet swallowed, and when she found how parched her throat was, she forced herself to take a sip of tea—scalding her tongue in the process. The sting of it centered Harriet’s mind as she forced herself to speak. “Livi…Livi killed someone.”

Elara’s eyes widened, and she glanced down at the snake in question, who was nosing her toes with interest. Harriet thought she might jump to her feet, might scream or demand Harriet leave, and though she braced herself for those possibilities, Elara did nothing. The Black heir drank tea and studied the saucer with a grim expression. “Was it…was it one of your relatives?” she whispered. “Did they hurt you? I can owl my solicitor, or I can find you a proper barrister, if you need.”

It floored Harriet that the other witch could be so composed and rational. Sometimes she thought both Elara and Hermione were adults trapped in the bodies of preteens—until they did something to remind her of their own immaturity, like Hermione bickering with Malfoy, or Elara muttering insults behind Professor Selwyn’s back. “I—no. No, it wasn’t one of my relatives.”

“Then who?”

“I don’t know,” Harriet confessed with a shrug. “I was—I didn’t go back. To the Muggles. I…I ran away, I guess, last summer. I just—.” She cleared her throat and fussed with her hands, irritating Kevin into sinking his small teeth into her thumb. “Ouch, pest, stop that.”

“If you didn’t go home, where have you been?”

“Well, I did a bit of traveling, stayed in some inns, maybe a night or two in a tent—.”

Elara’s hand came up, interrupting her rambling, and Harriet could see the mounting lecture behind her friend’s colorless eyes. “What do you mean a tent? Have you been staying in a tent?”

“Yes, okay? I’ve been staying in a tent!” Harriet snapped, cheeks flushed. “And this bloke I don’t know came waltzing in tonight, wand drawn, saying he’s been looking for me and he’s supposed to take me somewhere, and—and he tried to hex me with something, I don’t know, and then Livi—.”

He’s dead. He’s dead. He tried to kidnap me, and now he’s—.

“He was looking for you?”

“Yes.”

“What did he want?”

“I don’t know.” Harriet rubbed at her eyes and almost knocked her glasses off. “I was in the middle of the woods, miles from town, and he came in with his wand drawn. He—he was threatening, not that he threatened me precisely, but his whole manner and bearing, and—and he was swearing at me—.” She lowered her voice. “He said something about his lord.”

Elara paled. It could be nothing. It could be nothing more than the throwaway address of a pure-blooded wizard speaking of a Noble House’s head, and yet it could have been everything. Harriet only knew of one wizard who creepy men trying to kidnap children might call “my lord.”

Somewhere in the house, Harriet could hear a clock ticking—the low, deep ticking of a big grandfather clock—and portraits deeper in Grimmauld’s confines murmured among one another. It was quieter than Harriet had expected. She’d been inside magical inns and shops and taverns, but she’d never been inside a magical home before, unless one were to count the tent—.

The tent.

Harriet leapt to her feet and banged her knee beneath the table, toppling her tea. Elara flinched.

“My things,” the bespectacled witch gasped, horrified. “My things. I left all of there, with—. I didn’t even consider—! They’ll find the body, and they’ll find my stuff and think I murdered him—.” Maybe she did murder him. Maybe it was all her fault. “—and I’ll go to prison—!”

She took two steps toward the door before Elara caught her by the arm, and when Harriet tried to shrug her off, Elara grasped the shorter girl’s shoulders, holding her steady. “Harriet,” she said, fingers biting down until Harriet stopped trying to run. “Harriet, listen to me. You said this wizard was looking for you, yes?”

“Yes!”

“He tried to take you somewhere against your will? To someone he called ‘my lord?’”

“Yes, Elara, I need to—!”

Elara kept speaking, drowning out Harriet’s out panicked blabbering. “Then who’s to say there aren’t more wizards out looking for you? You can’t go for your things. It’s not safe.”

“But what do I do, then?! I’m such a bloody idiot—!”

“You stay here.” Elara tapped her bare foot on the floor in emphasis.

“What if there are more wizards? What if they follow me here?” What if they want more than a quick word? What if they hurt you?

The taller witch shook her head. “They can’t. The house is warded—I’ve mentioned this before. Just look how difficult it is for me to get owls, typically. No one can find you; you’re safe, okay? You can’t go for your things. We can—I can write my solicitor in the morning. Or the Headmaster. We’ll write someone, and we’ll figure this out. It was self-defense, and you’re not going to be punished for that, Harriet.”

“How can you be so sure?” she asked. Harriet felt tired—tired and miserable and scared. She would do anything for a measure of Elara’s composure and confidence, when all she could do was lean into her friend’s hands, swallowing the urge to sob again. I’m not a baby, she told herself, sucking in air, holding it in her chest until it burned. I’m not going to cry.

Hesitating, Elara pulled her into an awkward hug, and Harriet took advantage of the moment to squeeze the other girl tight. Elara wasn’t one for casual touching, usually, and Harriet had found that she very much liked hugs. “We’ll figure it out,” Elara said once she stepped back. “We’ll get some sleep, and in the morning we’ll know what to do. It’ll be better in the morning.” She nodded, and Harriet nodded in turn, though she didn’t think she agreed with Elara’s assessment. She did not think morning would make anything better. “Come on, you’ll have to sleep in my room. I haven’t tackled any of the others yet.”

Harriet followed her from the kitchen, back into the inky dark of Grimmauld Place, and as they tromped up the stairs beneath the leering gaze of strange, stuffed heads, she couldn’t help but think this year might be even more complicated than the last.

 

 


 

A/N: I take some creative license in Grimmauld’s design and layout.

Chapter 47: bury your secrets

Chapter Text

xlvii. bury your secrets

 

Severus was going to kill Harriet Potter.

Dawn sat heavy upon the horizon, thick and as yellow as Dumbledore’s perduring lemon sherbets, the heat already seeping into the earth and into Severus’ covered shoulders. The sleepless night and several rapid Apparitions across the isle left the Potions Master somewhat listless; he paused in his hike through the desolate wood to catch his breath, glaring at the sprig of evergreen tied together with Potter’s hair floating at eye-level. It continued on, and Severus jerked his cloak out of the leaves, stomping forward.

If he found Potter before the Headmaster, she was going to wish she’d never been born.

The Locater Effigy was, technically, Dark magic—albeit Dark magic Dumbledore turned a blind-eye to if it meant finding Potter before somebody less savory did, though Severus imagined he’d be receiving a rather harsh and tedious lecture later that evening. Breaking and entering, threatening Muggles, performing Dark spells—Severus felt sixteen again, terrified of what the Headmaster would do after he’d gone too far and hexed James Potter’s nose off the bastard’s fat face. Once the urgency passed, Albus would think upon his punishment, and Severus knew it’d be decidedly unpleasant.

Hugging a Weasley, he thought, dredging up the most ridiculous situations he could to keep his mind busy. Becoming chapter president of a Longbottom fan club. Tea with Trelawney—oh, hell, I’d pitch myself off the Astronomy Tower first.

Dumbledore had more concerning issues to attend to at the moment than Severus’ misdemeanors. When the Potions Master had barged into the older wizard’s office at an ungodly hour when any sane man would’ve been fast asleep, he found the Headmaster awake and reading—and surprised to see Severus. That surprise twisted into shock, then anger, then fear as Severus relayed his false tip about Potter possibly being targeted by his past associates and his subsequent trip to Privet Drive. Upon hearing the blood-wards had failed, Dumbledore soared to one of his shelves and pulled forward a silver instrument gone silent, dark, and dusty.

A branch caught the hem of his cloak and Severus slid on the leaves, grunting. What is the brat doing out here? Bantiaumyrddin was fourteen kilometers to the west, but had the girl been there, the Effigy would have brought Severus to the village, not here, not to the middle of the bloody forest with nothing around aside from a Muggle town roughly six kilometers behind him. The Vow let him know she’d escaped danger and yet lived, otherwise Severus would think someone had murdered the girl and dumped her body out here.

Severus was well and truly fuming by the time he crested the rise and stepped into a clearing, prepared to drag Potter back to Hogwarts by the ear if he had to. Slytherin would, hopefully, be preoccupied with some nefarious, long-winded project bent on corrupting impressionable youths, else Severus would have to bring her somewhere else, possibly the old Dumbledore cottage in Godric’s Hollow, or—Merlin forbid—Spinner’s End.

A tent resided in the clearing’s middle. The Locater Effigy lazily drifted closer and closer, until the Charm ceased and dropped onto the canvas with a slight plop. A tent, Severus thought. The girl who survived the Dark Lord’s Killing Curse not once, but twice, is living in a tent. Marvelous.

He brought his feet down hard on the ground, breaking leaves and twigs beneath his boots to announce his presence. The tent’s flap fluttered in the warm air.

“Potter!” Severus shouted, cursing himself for a fool when his voice echoed, and he glanced about the empty woods. “Miss Potter, present yourself, now.”

With no answer forthcoming, Severus kicked the flap aside, stepped into the expanded space beyond—and found himself staring at a dead man.

He would have known the wizard sprawled on the floor was dead by the smell alone and didn’t need to see the blood pooled beneath his leg and backside, nor the ghastly, mottled pallor of his swollen face. Wand in hand, Severus took two cautious steps forward and checked the area, finding no sign of a wayward Slytherin girl. Her possessions lay scattered about the tent: books and used clothes, an open package of Every Flavor Beans, a glass cauldron filled to the brim with rare Mermaid’s Tears—though he had no bloody idea where she’d gotten that. A Girding Potion sat off to the side, congealing in the open air, and Severus glanced down at the summer essay he’d assigned half-completed on the floor.

Frowning, he crouched and laid the backs of his fingers against the cauldron, gauging the iron’s temperature. “Cold,” he murmured, glancing at the dead man. She’d been gone for hours at the least, and Severus guessed the wizard was the cause of the Vow’s reaction last night. He must have threatened Potter, and the girl’s Horned Serpent took care of the rest. “And she walks around with it like it’s a scarf, insolent little fool.”

Severus straightened, crossed the space, and used his foot to angle the wizard’s face toward the morning light. He didn’t recognize the man, but the crest on the front pocket and the robes were clearly Ministry issue. The man’s wand rested in his rigid hand, which further proved he’d threatened the girl, and she’d been so terrified—or simply scared stupid—she left behind everything she owned and ran. Not that she would’ve been able to take the tent; legal Expansion Charms wouldn’t close upon human bodies, living or dead. In fact, they were specifically engineered not to so kidnappers and killers couldn’t go about lugging people about in bloody coin purses. He couldn’t quite picture Potter dragging a dead man outside without the use of her wand.

Severus pinched the bridge of his nose and sighed.

Footsteps moving through the underbrush without discretion jerked his eye’s toward the loose flap where. Severus quickly Disillusioned himself and stepped back into the shadows, confident the dead body on the floor would distract from any discerning shimmers left in the air. Moments later, the flap again open—ripped aside, hanging by a few loose filaments—and another wizard entered the tent.

He was initially dressed as a Muggle, but with a muttered incantation, his navy robes fell past his knees and the hat on his dark head disappeared. “Morgana’s knickers,” he cursed upon seeing the dead man, and with a suspicious glance over his shoulder, the man turned his profile toward the light. Severus froze. He froze because he recognized the wizard.

Cloyd Dogbane had never been much of a Death Eater—though, he had managed to impress the Dark Lord enough to be branded, which, contrary to popular belief, was not a simple feat to attain. Dogbane had flitted through the various Dark social spheres, too stupid to be a researcher like Severus, too impure to follow Lucius, and not fanatical enough for the likes of the Lestranges. In the wake of Voldemort’s downfall, schisms formed between the ranks, the old guard chasing Slytherin, those with a lust for influence falling into Gaunt’s camp, while the sycophantic stood by their defeated Dark Lord—and mostly went to Azkaban.

Severus didn’t think he’d ever spared a thought for Cloyd Dogbane, not even when he gave the man’s name to Dumbledore a dozen years ago. It figured he became a low-level Ministry grunt.

Lifting his wand, Severus summoned forth his will and hissed, “Imperio.”

Yellow mist seeped into Dogbane’s ears, freezing the wizard, who slowly turned to face a Disillusioned Severus.

“Why are you here?” he asked in an undertone, and though Dogbane opened his mouth to answer, the Potions Master disregarded whatever drivel he’d been about to spill and peered into his eyes. Dogbane’s mind proved just as scattered as Petunia’s, if not more so, scarred by Dark magic and the man’s own perverse ideologies, throwing Severus from image to image like one of those Muggle pinball machines. No concrete reason for being in the middle of Oxfordshire existed in his head, only brief flashes of a familiar, dreaded silhouette barking orders that Dogbane was not to question. Those orders had led him—and the lout on the floor—to the tent, but not because of the locale.

Severus sucked air through his teeth as he freed himself from Dogbane’s pitiful brain and stared at the wizard’s listless, blank eyes. The dread that’d been twisting his stomach for hours intensified. He resisted the urge to be sick and drew upon his Occlusion, shutting his unease behind water and ice, letting the edges blur in the murky undertow.

Obliviate,” he muttered, flicking his wand by Dogbane’s temple. The spell took, erasing the past several minutes from the wizard’s head, leaving his consciousness soft and malleable. “You discovered nothing in these woods. You could not find your compatriot and wonder if he’s decided to leave the country and abandon the Ministry. Having no success in finding Harriet Potter, you have the unquestionable urge to return home and drink yourself insouciant. When you awaken, you will make your report to your master.”

Severus took a step to the side and Dogbane swayed for an instant, then shook his head as the Imperius dissolved, leaving the man disoriented and compelled to do as ordered. Severus sneered as Dogbane turned and headed out of the tent. He remembered little of the man, but he did recall Dogbane’s proclivity for drink; the best compulsions centered upon objects, events, and scenarios the cursed person in question found pleasurable. Dogbane gave the dead man and the tent little thought, so focused on getting pissed, he Apparated from one step to the next.

Severus waited. A minute passed, then another, and he exhaled, letting the Disillusionment fall, appearing once more—dark, disheveled, and exhausted—in Potter’s tent. He considered what he’d seen in Dogbane’s thoughts as he lifted his wand, silver light flooding the space as a watery Patronus took form. “Headmaster. The girl’s been attacked and has fled, leaving…matters for me to attend. Gaunt sent out a pair of wizards to find her.” Severus paused. “Someone has informed him of what occurred in June. He is…intrigued.”

The Patronus bounded through the canvas wall, taking the colorless light with it. Again, Severus waited with his arms crossed and his back stiff, listening to the birds sing and the breeze whisper, until silver light again blossomed into being, and a radiant phoenix burst through the wall, the sight just as ostentatious and eye-searing as its caster. “I believe I know where she has gone,” the phoenix echoed. “Return to the castle so we may proceed.

Muttering about demanding old men, Severus dismissed the Headmaster’s summons and turned his attention instead to the wizard upon the floor. Pitiful. Defeated by a scared twelve-year-old and a snake. Wrinkling his nose against the smell, the Potions Master crouched and used his wand to slice the wizard’s left sleeve down to the elbow. Parting the fabric revealed the anticipated Dark Mark, glamored to be inconspicuous unless a person knew it was there.

How does Gaunt know about her? How does he know what happened last term? Who told him?

A silent mobilicorpus sent the body outside, Severus scouring the bloody stains left behind until the floor was somewhat clean, or would at least pass Ministry inspection. Spotting the trunk left at the foot of the bed, he opened it and performed a cursory search for the Invisibility Cloak, releasing a breath when he failed to turn anything up. Either the girl had hidden it well or she’d had enough sense to take it with her.

Another flick of the wand sent Potter’s possessions soaring into the trunk before he sealed it, lock clattering home, the Girding Potion vanishing and her essay—with her bloody name on it, left at the scene of a murder for Merlin’s sake—was tucked into Severus’ pocket. He followed the trunk out of the tent, and once standing in the open wood again, collapsed the structure and shrunk both it and the trunk so he could swipe them off the forest floor and stuff them into a cloak pocket.

Severus found it indicative of his life’s wretched state that he knew the proper spells for digging a grave and had practiced them enough over the years to be proficient. He exhumed six feet of earth and levered the Death Eater into the new hole, the body falling down with a heavy, dull thump, before Severus muttered an incantation and purple flames consumed the dead man.

The smokeless inferno writhed above the grave’s edges, the color reflected in Severus’ blank, tired stare as he watched, his mind roving far from that quiet clearing and the morning-clad forest. He’d buried, burned, dismembered, and destroyed more than one body at the behest of the Dark Lord—be it Voldemort or Slytherin—or Dumbledore. He’d killed as well, though not with the same frequency, and those faces still haunted his unsuspecting thoughts from time to time.

The Wizarding community as a whole mistakenly assumed Death Eaters came into the Dark Lord’s service under the assumption of being racists, kidnappers, rapists, and murderers. Had that been true, the Dark Lord would have had very few followers indeed, aside from maybe Bellatrix, the mad bint. The Dark Lord appealed to a man, or woman’s, desires, and like a compulsion, he found all that was malleable in a person’s mind, in their very soul, until he created something useful to him. He preyed upon pure-blooded fear of Muggle incursion, on a savage man’s need to dominate, on a scholar’s wish to learn. The Dark Lord could twist even those with the purest of hearts into his pawns.

Not that Severus considered himself pure of heart. He snorted at the very idea as the fire simmered and began to disperse. No, even as an angry, idiot teenager, he’d not been naive enough to mistake the Dark Lord for a man of good intentions. However, if Severus had known poison research and Potions mastery would turn into disposing of the bodies of families ruined by the Dark Lord’s more brutal servants, he liked to think he wouldn’t have been fucking stupid enough to kneel at the bastard’s feet. Reality rarely matched expectations, which Severus learned well when he found himself ankle-deep in human viscera, sicking up his own guts, a hair’s breadth away from being tortured mad if he didn’t stop “disappointing” his master. The Dark Lord had no patience for those who disappointed him.

Severus shook himself. Exhaustion plagued him, dredging up pointless memories, which he dismissed and drowned in Occlusion as he rubbed his dry eyes and poured dirt into the grave. The fire died beneath the earth and what dirt the body displaced swiftly dispersed, leaving an innocuous stretch of ground in the forest Severus covered with kicked leaves and twigs.

Appare Vestigium,” he said, and blotches of color came into view, highlighting the traces of magic and residual human presence—the very same residue the Locater Effigy had followed to the clearing in the first place, drawn to the most potent resonance of Potter’s being. Severus lifted his gaze and traced the footsteps leading from the site back toward the Muggle town. Potter had gone that way. At least he knew she wasn’t lost in the countryside somewhere.

The Potions Master went about obliterating the traces, hiding the grave and clearing from both magical detection and mundane sight. When finished, he tucked his wand away and exhaled. I’ve buried bodies for Death Eaters, for the Order, and now for Harriet Potter, Severus thought. Merlin save Lily’s daughter if it’s not the last.

With a final step, the darkly clad wizard Disapparated. Nothing remained but a lingering smell of burning flesh, and even that disappeared into the rising wind.

 


 

A/N: just to be safe, there were two chapters updated, both xlvi. and xlvii. Make sure you read both!

Chapter 48: a most sullen house-elf

Chapter Text

xlviii. a most sullen house-elf

 

Harriet woke to the ugliest creature she had ever seen poking her in the face.

The strength of its miniature glower could’ve matched Professor Snape’s, had the creature been more than three feet tall, stooped, and covered in sallow, sagging folds of flesh. It wore a pillowcase of all things, the hem tatty and impatiently stitched, nose bulbous and red while white hair sprung from its large ears in thick bushels.

“It’s awake,” it croaked.

Harriet flung herself backward, away from the creature, and slammed her head into a solid wood headboard. Stars burst before her eyes. “Ow!”

The lumpy, hunched thing grinned nastily at Harriet. “The blood-traitor’s daughter is telling Kreacher to check on the half-blood.”

“Who—?”

He—or Harriet thought it was a he, a goblin of some kind, maybe? A very rude goblin—hopped off the bed and landed on the floor with a solid thump. Below, Livi stirred the bed skirt and hissed with menace, causing the creature to round his eyes and back away, glaring at the scaled tail poking out from the fabric. He disappeared out the door, leaving it ajar, and Harriet flopped back onto the mattress.

Right. I’m at Elara’s house, in her bedroom.

She stared at the ceiling for a long minute and didn’t move, didn’t do much of anything aside from breathe and let the memories from the night before float through her head like gross, mucky water. Harriet felt like she was drowning in that water, so she squeezed her eyes closed, then opened them wide, taking in such a sharp breath her chest ached. It’s okay. I’m okay. It’s okay.

Harriet studied the room, the funny posters mostly hidden behind tacked up parchment and the garish Gryffindor colors, Elara’s trunk open at the bed’s foot with its tidy contents open for inspection. Harriet thought of her own trunk and cursed herself for an idiot as she sat up, pushing the pads of her fingertips into her shut eyes until she saw stars. How could she leave the bloody trunk behind?

Livius slithered out the open door after the creature, his scales creating the softest rasping sound as his belly rubbed on the old floors, and Harriet hissed, “Don’t go scaring people.

Sss….”

Sighing, Harriet wriggled her way out from under the counterpane and fumbled for her glasses on the nightstand, knocking her wand off in the process. The stick clattered on the floor and Harriet, swearing under her breath, dropped to her knees to look beneath the bed, pushing aside the blanket Livi had made an impromptu nest from so she could snatch up her wand and strap it and her brace to her wrist. She wasn’t going to forget it again.

She glanced at the blurred edge of her shadow, softened by the weak light, and whispered, “Set?”

No response came, which didn’t surprise Harriet, really; Set chose when to make his presence known and not a moment beforehand—typically manifesting just long enough to save her life or throw said life into mayhem. She wished he’d stop throwing things at Parkinson, no matter how loathsome she could be at times.

Rising, Harriet shut the door and shuffled out of her borrowed nightgown, pulling on her clothes from the day prior even as she shuddered and grimaced when the weight of the old shirt settled on her scrawny shoulders. She’d almost forgotten about Kevin until he poked his head out from the pocket and hissed his irked defiance.

Harriet sidled out of the room and into the dark hall, peeking about the gloomy space with hesitation before following the thumps of movement to the next door down. Elara stood by the hearth inside, going through a crooked dresser with what looked like an old fireplace poker, dropping moth-eaten trousers and ancient shorts onto the floor while watching Livi from the corner of her eyes. She seemed vaguely wary—and Harriet guessed she should be, given that Livi killed a man last night.

Livi killed somebody. What will happen to him when they come for me? Will they kill Livi? Should I tell him to run away?

“Harriet? Are you all right?”

Harriet blinked and found Elara had turned from the dresser to study her, poker hanging uncertainly from a sooty hand. “Yeah,” Harriet said. “I—.” She cleared her throat, swallowed, and tried again. “Morning. What—what are you doing in here?”

“Oh.” Elara looked at the poker as if she hadn’t realized she was holding it. “Well, you’ll need a room to sleep in, yes? I thought you might like this one next to mine, though there are others, if you prefer. No offense; you kick like a horse in your sleep.”

Harriet couldn’t help but snort. “I’m sorry.”

“It’s fine.” Elara went back to poking through the drawer. “The house is, um, old? I told you this before. My relatives were—well, frankly, most of my relatives were mad, or close enough to mad. There’s a fairly good chance someone’s either left a nasty hex laying about and it’s gone to seed, or they cursed their pants to chew off your fingers.”

Harriet stared at the dresser in horror. Not a moment later, Elara found something solid inside the drawer and flipped it out from under the musty clothes, an old shoes landing on the floor with a heavy thump. The leather split from the sole and shaped itself into little teeth before the shoe came flying and snarling at Harriet, who leapt back, banging her shoulder into the door. “Ow!”

With a grunt, Elara swung the poker and stabbed the shoe, pinning it to the floor. It struggled, so Elara hit it again, and the shoe gave one last gasp before quieting. Elara prodded it a few times to make sure it was well and truly defeated before shoving it off into her discarded pile. “Biting Hex.”

A thump and a squeal came from the window, and the two girls turned to see Livi partially ensconced in the writhing curtains, from which a cloud of miniature blue men with wings came screaming out of. Livi, unabashed, peeked from behind the fabric, tiny legs disappearing into his maw.

Livi!” Harriet hissed, worried her snake had just evicted some kind of pet, but Elara only smirked.

“Maybe the Doxies will stop tearing the curtains to shreds now. The repellent they sell in Diagon Alley does not work.”

Livi swallowed the Doxy whole and flicked his tongue in Harriet’s direction, clearly dismissing her concerns.

Elara finished clearing out one drawer and moved onto the next, seeming in no particular hurry, both girls lost in their own thoughts as they best tried to approach the events from last night. “Why don’t you use your wand?” Harriet blurted out.

“Pardon?”

“Your wand.” She waved at the mess. “Malfoy was bangin’ on about how stupid he thinks some families are to adhere to the ‘no magic’ thing in the summers because the Ministry can’t tell if magic’s cast in a magical home or something? This is a magical house, so can’t you use magic?”

Comprehension dawned in Elara’s expression, and she muttered a soft, “Ah,” as she kept on with the poker. “That’s a ward; Uncle Cygnus told me about it, and not every family has someone who can cast it or afford the wardsmith to make it. The Ministry’s Trace is always active on wands, but in places like Diagon or Hogwarts or other public areas, they don’t follow the spells. They can’t really tell whose wand did what. If you were to walk into the heart of London and start casting, the Ministry would be notified because it’s a Muggle area. Private dwellings can have the Untraceable Ward sealed on them, but the ward has to be keyed to an adult’s wand, and well—.” Here Elara shrugged. They were no adults at Grimmauld.

Harriet remained quiet for a time, stroking a finger over Kevin’s head as the golem continued to pout in her pocket. “Who was that earlier that woke me up?”

“Woke you up?”

“Yeah, he—it? He?—came in and poked me in the face until I got up!”

“Poked you in the—?” Elara’s confused questioning cut off with an abrupt scowl as she slammed the drawer shut. “Kreacher.”

A loud crack heralded the sudden return of the wrinkled creature, and Harriet hit the door again, swearing when her elbow collided with the solid wood. The creature leered at Harriet before turning his attention to Elara, who glared down her straight nose and met the sullen imp glower for glower. “I said to check on her, not wake her, didn’t I?”

The creature—Kreacher? If that wasn’t an apt name, Harriet didn’t know what was—tilted his head back and sneered, the folds on his wizened face quivering. “Kreacher was just checking. He had to check if it was still alive.”

“Don’t call her it.”

Kreacher sniffed. “Whatever the blood-traitor’s daughter wishes. Kreacher lives to serve the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black.”

“I mean it, Kreacher!”

The imp sneered. “Of course, Mistress.”

Harriet had never heard Elara swear, but she looked very close to doing so as her face flushed an angry red. “Clean this up,” she said, pointing at the pile of discarded clothes.

“Of course, Mistress.” Kreacher snapped his fingers, and the pile disappeared. “Does the blood-traitor’s daughter or the half-breed need anything else?”

“No.”

He tottered off after that, Harriet carefully maneuvering around him until she came to stand by Elara. The door slammed on its own with a loud bang!

“He makes me so furious,” Elara muttered as she dropped the poker back onto the hearth’s rack. Her hand was left sooty, and upon spying the mess, Elara’s lip curled and she pulled out a handkerchief from her skirt pocket. “If I didn’t think he’d quite literally murder me in my sleep, I’d give him clothes and be done with it.”

“But didn’t you just give him clothes…?”

“No. It’s more an expression than anything, since you have to hand a house-elf clothes to free them. That’s why Kreacher wears that grubby pillowcase.”

That was a house-elf?” Harriet had heard of them before—they came up in conversation often enough in Slytherin House—but she’d never seen one before.

“Yes. Probably the oldest and most sullen house-elf in all of Great Britain, really.” She stopped wiping her hand and let out a frustrated sigh. “We should have breakfast. Come on….”

Elara led the way back into the hall and down the stairs, seeming to know the path well enough in the dimly lit passage, pausing only once to mutter about a covered portrait that Harriet didn’t quite hear before they moved on. The kitchen was much as it had been earlier that very morning, the sconces coming on with reluctance, Harriet’s Invisibility Cloak slung atop the shifted chairs. Elara fished out a box of tea from somewhere, and Harriet went about picking ingredients from the cupboard Charmed to stay cool.

They didn’t say anything to one another until they were seated at the table, a plate of breakfast before each girl, Harriet’s stomach still too tense to manage much else besides a bite or two toast. Finally, she plucked up the courage to break the silence. “What am I going to do, Elara?”

The older girl—usually so much more composed than Harriet—bit her lip and chased a bit of egg with her fork. “I’m not…not really sure. Like I said last night, I can write my solicitor. He can at least find out if the D.M.L.E has…issued a warrant? Though I wouldn’t think they’d do that. I think they’d be more worried about your safety. Most likely.”

The uncertainty in Elara’s voice did little to spare Harriet’s dwindling spirits. Her face paled considerably as she dropped bacon crumbles into her front pocket for Kevin’s benefit. “Do they send little girls to prison in the magical world?”

“Don’t be preposterous.” Elara didn’t quite meet her eyes as she went about making another cuppa. “What kind of society would put little girls in gaol?”

“The kind of societies that have blokes calling themselves Dark Lords who go about trying to kill babies?”

“You really shouldn’t be so flippant about that, please.” Elara stirred milk into her tea, and when she released the spoon, it continued to spiral in lazy circles. “What happened last night was self-defense.”

“But what about Livi?”

“Perhaps…perhaps you could say it was a wild snake?”

“Would anybody believe that?”

Elara shrugged as she stood up from the table and gathered their dishes, bringing the lot to the sink. “They have the burden of proof, just like in the Muggle justice system.”

“The what?”

“They have to prove your snake killed him. They have to prove you own a snake—and given that no one knows you’re a Parselmouth, they’re not about to believe you’ve kept a Horned Serpent around.”

“Remember what Snape said at Halloween, though? That if he ever heard me say anything as ‘brain dead’ as needing proof, he’d have me dissecting cauldrons or something for the next six years?”

“Yes, well, Snape’s a—.” Elara dropped a spoon and it clattered against the cast-iron sink. “Not a very nice man. However, we have to worry about the Ministry, not Snape at the moment, so I think it’d be best if I wrote to Mr. Piers. He can probably tell us what to do.”

Harriet hummed her assent, glumly kicking her feet back and forth as she gazed into her empty cup and tried to make sense of the lumpy tea bits left behind. Elara was a good friend—maybe even a better friend than Harriet deserved, as she hadn’t slammed the door in her face when Harriet showed up at an indecent hour trailing all sorts of nonsense. Harriet’s own flesh and blood would’ve never treated her half as well. They didn’t even give her a bedroom.

Crackling from the hearth drew Harriet’s attention. The cinders of old wood resting in its belly shifted and sparked, sending up a plume of green embers. She hadn’t seen Elara light it, though she guessed it could have been that—Kreacher fellow, sneaking about.

“Elara,” Harriet asked aloud, frowning.

From her spot by the sink, Elara answered with a preoccupied, “Hmm?”, her hands slick with soap.

“Why’s your fire green? I’ve only seen that in Diagon Alley.”

“What?” Elara turned off the water.

“I said, why’s your fire green—.”

Elara whirled around. “Harriet, get away from there—!”

The other witch’s shouted warning came too late, for she hadn’t finished speaking before the flames burst high and licked the mantel—issuing forth the black-clad figure of a familiar wizard stepping from the simmering coals. Harriet knocked her teacup off the table and it shattered on the floor.

Severus Snape straightened to his full height, and, with a dismissive look at the mess, sneered, “Potter.”

Harriet gulped.

 


 

A/N: Sorry for the late update! Real life is murderous.

 

Chapter 49: dumbledore's decision

Chapter Text

xlix. dumbledore’s decision

 

Harriet had no words. Her mouth moved, and yet she couldn’t make a sound come out.

The Potions Master stepped fully from the hearth and his robes settled about his lanky frame, the grim man fitting well with Grimmauld’s less than chipper decor. Harriet couldn’t begin to guess what Professor Snape did over his summers, but it certainly wasn’t sunbathing; he was paler than ever and exhausted, black smudges marring his eyelids, oily hair windblown and sporting a few bits of leaves. The expression he wore was caught somewhere between vindicated and furious—which did not bode well for Harriet.

In an instant, Elara came to her side, dripping suds and water from her wet sleeves, a spoon held in her hand instead of her wand. “How did you get through the Floo?” she demanded.

Snape didn’t answer. He sneered and took two steps to the side. Harriet wondered what he was doing—and then the fire sputtered again, flaring bright green, and a second wizard stepped past the grate as they swept into the kitchen.

Headmaster Dumbledore made for a far more impressive, if less terrifying, figure than Professor Snape.

“Ah, Harriet. There you are,” the older wizard said with gentle smile. “You gave us quite a fright, my dear.”

Harriet continued to gawk like a gormless fool. Elara came to her senses first.

“Excuse me, H-Headmaster? But how did you—?” Elara gestured at the fireplace with her spoon, then dropped the wet utensil on the table, cheeks turning pink.

“Of course. Pardon our intrusion, Miss Black, and rest assured, your home’s formidable wards are still perfectly intact. You see, we suspected Miss Potter might be here and, worried about her safety, I asked a favor of a dear friend and old pupil working in the Department of Magical Transportation at the Ministry.” Dumbledore gave a mild shrug after his explanation—which Harriet took to mean he asked a former student to help him and Snape do a little secret breaking and entering through Elara’s protected Floo. Harriet, shocked and still a touch hysterical from her eventful night, choked on a laugh.

Snape glared.

“Forgive me for saying, Headmaster,” Snape spoke in his most oily tone, the one he always used before verbally eviscerating Longbottom’s worst potions. “But I believe Misses Black and Potter can overlook our intrusion, considering a man is dead and Potter here might well be guilty of his murder.”

Both Harriet and Elara gaped. How does he know?! “I—I didn’t!” Harriet cried, all thoughts of claiming ignorance escaping her head like bubbles popping one by one. Standing in front of her headmaster and professor, Harriet felt very much like a criminal about to be charged with the most heinous of crimes.

“No, it was that snake you insist on strutting about with! Wrapped around your insolent little neck—!”

“Severus,” Professor Dumbledore said, lifting a hand. Professor Snape cut off abruptly and lowered his head, dark hair falling forward around his stiff face. “I believe our dear Potions Master is simply concerned for you, Harriet—.” Elara stifled a snort. “You see, when we learned of a threat made against your person, Professor Snape went to check on you at home. He was surprised to learn that, not only were you not there, but you hadn’t been seen by your relatives since last summer.”

All eyes fell upon Harriet and she felt her face heat, the disapproval clear in Dumbledore’s voice. “So?” she retorted. “That’s not—. It doesn’t—. You said someone threatened me?”

The quick misdirection didn’t fool either wizard, but the Headmaster was content to answer her. “Yes. Indirectly, really.”

“It didn’t feel indirectly when he tried to curse me!”

Dumbledore’s eyes sharpened. “And were you cursed, Harriet? Are you hurt anywhere?”

She flushed a bit more, eyes dancing between the two wizards. “He—I think he used the same spell Quirrell did in the dungeons. A red one. It—it grazed my arm a bit and I felt breathless and…dazed.”

The older wizard nodded his head as if he’d expected as much. “Your attacker used a Stunning Spell, if I am not mistaken. We don’t teach the incantation until your fourth year at Hogwarts.”

“What’s going to happen to me now, Professor? Am I…am I in trouble?”

Headmaster Dumbledore sighed and glanced about Elara’s drab kitchen. “I believe we should have a seat and share a nice cup of tea before we have our conversation. So long as Miss Black doesn’t mind our imposition?”

“Harriet’s not imposing,” Elara said with the faintest trace of ‘but you are’ lingering in her tone. Harriet didn’t have a sliver of the kind of nerve it must take to stare down her nose at Albus Dumbledore like Elara could. “She lives here.”

Does she now?” Snape cut in, watching her with a derisive eye. “As far as the school records are concerned, Potter lives at Number Four, Privet Drive, in Surrey—or was it a tent in the middle of the woods? Forgive me if I have things…confused.”

“Severus, would you see to making that tea?” Dumbledore said, and even Harriet heard the reprimand in that softly voiced order. Snape narrowed his eyes, but he jerked his head in a short nod and swept past the girls deeper into the kitchen. Elara looked somewhat alarmed by the Potions Master’s presence as he started rifling through her cabinets, yet she said nothing to stop him.

Dumbledore ushered Harriet over to one of the chairs and she sat, Dumbledore taking a spot across from her, Elara sliding into the seat at Harriet’s side. Snape was still making the tea—like a Muggle, which Harriet thought was the weirdest thing she’d seen today.

“You’re not in trouble, Harriet,” the Headmaster began. “The matter has been taken care of already, and you won’t be hearing an inquiry from the Ministry. I would, however, ask that you not speak of what happened with anyone outside of this room—though, I will amend that request to include Miss Granger as an allowable confidante.” He smiled as Snape set a cup before him, thanking the dour wizard. Snape gave Harriet a cup as well—dropped it, really, flecking the table with dark tea—and she ignored it. Ever since Quirrell dosed her cuppa, she hadn’t much liked tea not prepared by herself or someone she trusted implicitly, like Elara. “If someone were to bring up the topic with you, please feign ignorance and find either myself or Professor Snape. Is that understood?”

Harriet nodded. Elara was looking at her own tea as if Snape had spat in it, and the Potions Master had neglected to take a seat, opting to stand behind Dumbledore like a looming bailiff waiting for the order to drag Harriet off to the dungeons. “Yes, professor.”

“Good. I must also express some concern about your familiar.” Noting Harriet’s instant alarm and opened mouth, Dumbledore lifted his hand—much as he had with Snape some minutes prior—and she fell silent. “Your Horned Serpent isn’t in trouble either, but in light of these events, I worry your familiar may pose a danger to you or your classmates.”

“Livi would never,” Harriet argued, though a queasy feeling had started building in her middle. “He—he was only protecting me!”

“And what would happen should he feel you were threatened by a fellow student? If you, perhaps, became frightened by misplaced bullying? Your familiar, clever and loyal as I am sure he is, is still an animal, Harriet. Animals are a wonderful source of companionship, but they are wild at heart and we must remember for our protection and theirs that they are not human and not capable of discerning what we think is right and what is wrong. That is not their natural state of being. In a moment of stress, your Livi would act to protect you the only way he understands how, and we would be unable to help his victim. I doubt you’d want a classmate dead over what might be a schoolyard feud, and I wouldn’t wish such a burden upon you, my girl.”

She slouched, tired eyes coming to rest on the table and the full cup sitting there. “What am I supposed to do?” Harriet asked in a quiet, defeated voice. She could find no fault in the Headmaster’s logic; Livi often did what Livi wanted with little regard to Harriet’s wishes, though they usually could come to some kind of concession. Picturing a scenario wherein she might be in a fight with another student proved difficult, and yet Harriet knew Livi wouldn’t hesitate to bite someone attacking her, even if their assault ended up being benign.

“You will need to order him not to attack a student under any circumstance, and I will ask you to leave your familiar in your dormitory from now on. I’m certain we can arrange supervised time with Hagrid, our game keeper, so you and Livi may venture out onto the grounds for fresh air from time to time.”

Harriet didn’t like it, but Dumbledore could have given worse ultimatums. She simply nodded, still staring at her tea.

The Headmaster took a sip from his own cup before setting it down again with a soft clink. “Why did you not return to the Dursleys this summer?”

The bespectacled witch stiffened and jerked her head just high enough to look at Dumbledore’s beard, but she didn’t meet his eyes. Instead of answering, she said, “I won’t go back.” She wanted to sound strong and mature, like a young woman who knew her own mind and had a rational point to make—but Harriet just sounded like a frightened little girl. “I won’t!”

“Now, Harriet—.”

“I won’t!” She stood, knees wobbly as a newborn colt’s, face gone ghastly pale in the kitchen’s wan lighting. She kept thinking about the cupboard of all things, and Harriet wasn’t sure why; the Dursleys had been wretched for her entire life, giving her plenty of more unpleasant experiences to draw upon, and yet the cupboard haunted her.

“She doesn’t have to,” Elara said, sounding far more sure of herself than Harriet did, though Harriet noticed how pale her friend had gone, her eyes not quite meeting the Headmaster’s either. “She can stay here, if she wants. I’m technically Head of my family, so she can stay with me.”

“Technically you’re nothing, Black,” Snape said. “By law, your father—.” Here he gnashed his teeth and looked somewhat mutinous, though Harriet couldn’t say why. “remains Head of the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black, and you, merely the proxy.”

“My father’s going to rot in Azkaban for the rest of his life,” Elara retorted. “So the ‘proxy’ bit hardly matters at all, does it? Sir? And I’m emancipated.”

Dumbledore interrupted them. “While I applaud your initiative in securing your independence, Miss Black, your emancipation does not extend to Harriet.”

“Can I get emancipated?” Harriet asked, perking up.

A resounding ‘no’ came from all three corners, and Harriet looked at her best friend as if she’d grievously betrayed her. Elara shifted in her chair and explained in an undertone, “What Cygnus did wasn’t all strictly…legal. Or repeatable.”

“Oh.”

“Which brings us back to the main topic of conversation.” Dumbledore leveled a serious look in Harriet’s direction and she stiffened her spine, chin up. “Returning to the Dursleys.”

Before Harriet could say anything, Snape bent forward far enough to mutter, “Headmaster,” and Dumbledore turned to meet his Potions Master’s open stare. They continued to look silently at one another for a good minute or so while Elara and Harriet watched and waited, both befuddled. What are they doing?

Finally, Dumbledore broke away, face harder than before, his thoughts inscrutable in that mysterious way of his.

“Don’t make me go back,” Harriet softly pleaded. She wouldn’t stay if he did, and she didn’t want to deceive the Headmaster, not like that, but she wouldn’t stay with the Dursleys. “Please, Headmaster.”

Dumbledore didn’t respond. He gazed at the table instead and stroked fingers through his beard as he turned thoughts through his formidable brain. Snape fidgeted—actually fidgeted—behind the man, flicking leaves from his oily hair. “Miss Black,” the older wizard said at last, raising his eyes to Elara’s level. “How earnest you are in your hopes of housing Harriet here?”

“Very,” she responded, though the surreptitious tugging of her sleeves gave away her nervousness.

The Headmaster let out a sigh, then nodded. “Usually, if one of our esteemed professors discovers a guardian is incapable of caring for their charge, we reach out to the Ministry’s Department of Welfare, and they either seek a relative better suited for child care or find a family willing to accept a new ward. However, your case is not…usual, Harriet.”

Her mind flashed back to the last time she’d sat in the Headmaster’s office, Quirrell’s body covered in a white sheet, her scar still burning and itching despite Madam Pomfrey’s topical cream on her skin, Dumbledore sad and remorseful as he told her just what really happened that Hallowe’en almost eleven years ago.

“Because…because you think staying with Muggles, with the Dursleys, makes me safer.”

“Yes,” he replied, watching her. Harriet had yet to retake her seat. “Forgive me, my girl; I expressed my wishes to your aunt and uncle that night you lost your parents and asked them to raise you as their own, providing them a stipend and explaining you would, no matter their arguments, be coming to Hogwarts when you turned eleven. The fault for your treatment at Number Four lies with me; I should have checked on your situation myself, or sent someone in my confidence. For that, I apologize.”

Harriet stared at her shoes and awkwardly shuffled. She wanted to be angry at Professor Dumbledore, wanted to be furious that he’d sent her to live with the Dursleys, but she couldn’t muster the feeling. Maybe she’d be able to if he decided she had to go back there, especially if he knew what happened, but truly she reserved that kind of emotion for Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon. It was their fault, not Dumbledore’s.

“Your mother’s sacrifice placed very powerful wards upon your blood, so long as you could call a place of your mother’s family home. It is very complicated and esoteric magic—and by that I mean it is really only ever understood by those who devote their lives to its study. We spoke of it before, briefly, but I digress; Voldemort and his compatriots may not be able to reach you so long as you remain with your aunt and uncle, but I cannot accept their treatment of you, and I cannot ask that you return to a place where you are not safe and cared for.”

Harriet was so relieved she started to tremble and probably would have ended up flat on the floor if Elara hadn’t tugged her back into her seat. No more Dursleys, she thought. No more cupboard.

Dumbledore suddenly smiled. “Besides, I don’t want you to lie to me, Harriet, and I understand ordering you to return and stay with your relatives would force you to do so. I have found in my long acquaintance with Slytherins, that the very best way to ensure a Slytherin tells the truth is to ask of them only things they do not the feel the need to lie about.”

Snape, who’d gone eerily silent while Dumbledore spoke, snorted.

“For your safety, Harriet, we cannot go to the Ministry and ask for them to find you a suitable home. It would be best if only a select few were aware of your situation and knew of your whereabouts. So, again, I turn my attention to you, Miss Black. You are very gracious in offering your home to Harriet and I am sure she is immensely grateful; however, Harriet—and you, my dear, regardless of your emancipation—are children, and I cannot in good conscience abandon you to your own devices.”

Harriet and Elara exchanged uneasy glances.

“Harriet may stay here for the summer if you accept a few of my conditions. If you cannot accept, we will have to come up with another solution.”

“Headmaster,” Snape drawled. “Do you think appropriate for her to stay in…this house?”

Harriet didn’t know what the man meant by that, though maybe Elara did, because her cheeks flushed with color and Dumbledore ignored Snape yet again. “I would ask that you allow for a guardian of my choosing to room here in order to protect and watch over you both. I would also ask that you allow for certain objects in your home to be rendered inert or removed; you may be surprised to learn I have visited Grimmauld Place in the past, and I’ve known some of your family to collect harmful Dark objects not suitable to a house with children in residence. I would promise that only trusted individuals would be allowed access to or given knowledge of your home.”

Uncomfortable, Harriet fought the sudden urge to bite her nails or fidget with the cold teacup. He was asking too much of Elara—way too much, considering she’d already said Harriet could stay here, that she’d opened the door when Harriet showed up in the dead of night, nattering on about wizards out to get her—.

“Okay, sir,” Elara said, cutting off Harriet’s wayward thoughts. She actually looked a bit relieved, then Harriet remembered the biting shoes and decided Elara would be pleased to have someone with a usable wand who could take care of nonsense like that. “That’ll be fine.”

“Excellent.” Dumbledore gently smacked the palm of his hand against the table instead of clapping in approval. “I do believe that is all we have to discuss at the present, unless you have any questions?”

Harriet and Elara shook their heads.

“Very well, then.” The Headmaster rose and straightened his robes. He turned with deliberate effort to the face the Potions Master, who froze when Dumbledore’s blue eyes fell upon him. “I do hope you enjoy your stay, Severus.”

“What?!” the three of them exclaimed at once—though not as loudly as Snape, who looked very near having some sort of fit. “Really now, Albus—.”

“I can think of no one better suited.”

Albus—.”

Elara’s expression made it seem as if she’d swallowed a whole lemon and Harriet wondered if they’d survive the month until the train came to take them back to school. Snape was going to murder them both.

“You deserve a holiday, my boy.” The words should’ve been pleasant enough, but something in the Headmaster’s tone and his gimlet eye brought the three of them up short, Snape pressing his mouth into a firm, furious line as Professor Dumbledore stared him down. Harriet didn’t know what Snape had done, but she didn’t fancy being in his shoes at the moment. “Enjoy it.”

He stepped up to the Floo, took a pinch of silvery powder from the dish on the mantel, and tossed it into the grate. Dumbledore said, “I’ll be in touch,” as the flames rose as green as writhing Slytherin curtains, and he called out, “Hogwarts, Headmaster’s office.”

In a flash, Professor Dumbledore was gone.

 

Chapter 50: dinner with a dungeon bat

Chapter Text

l. dinner with a dungeon bat

 

The fire barely had an opportunity to settle before the two Slytherin girls realized Professor Dumbledore had abandoned them in the kitchen with a fuming Severus Snape.

Harriet glanced at Elara as the Potions Master continued to stare at the hearth, expression blank, though Harriet thought he’d gone paler than usual, the outrage seeming to billow outward from his body like a humid cloud. Elara didn’t look nervous like Harriet did; she looked more annoyed, which Harriet guessed the other girl was entitled to. The headmaster had foisted an unwilling house guest onto her.

Snape spun around and both girls jolted in their chairs as if he’d thrown a curse at them. He dipped a hand into one of his many pockets, and Harriet thought they were going to be hexed for sure this time—and yet, Snape didn’t pull out his wand. Rather, he held out a closed fist toward Harriet, and when she did little more than stare at him like a frightened bird ready to fly, Snape sighed.

“Don’t just sit there like a brain-dead fool—take this, Potter.”

Hesitating, Harriet extended her hand, palm up, and Snape opened his fist over it, letting something about the size of a matchbook drop into her grasp. “Oh, hey!” Harriet exclaimed. “It’s my trunk—.”

She had only a second to move out of the way when Snape flicked his fingers and the trunk returned to its proper size, slamming down on the table with an almighty bang. Harriet glowered as Snape smirked like he was proud of himself, though the look disappeared as swiftly as it’d come when he looked to Elara again.

Both Harriet and Elara gulped.

Snape pinched the bridge of his nose between his thumb and forefinger and mustered some measure of patience—or most likely tolerance—before he dipped his hand back into his pockets, retrieving a battered pocket watch. He considered the watch with a baleful glare, then flicked his wand toward the mantel. The carriage clock there, covered in cobwebs and decidedly older than Harriet great grandparents, suddenly appeared from under its grubby coat and began to tick once more.

“I will return at seven this evening, at which point a bedroom had better have been set aside for my usage, Black.”

Elara just glared.

“You will stay in this house—not one toe outside of it—until I’ve returned. Rest assured, what patience I have has been utterly decimated by the Headmaster, and I’ve none to spare on you two dunderheads today.”

“Err,” Harriet asked, still somewhat dazed by the Headmaster’s proclamation and the sudden, overwhelming relief of not having to return to the Dursleys. “Where are you going?”

Snape gave her an incredulous look and didn’t bother to answer; rather, he walked straight to the hearth, scooped up a handful of Floo Powder, and said an address in such a quiet undertone, neither Elara nor Harriet heard what he’d said. The man disappeared as Dumbledore had—though with considerably more furious cloak snapping.

The soot hadn’t had a chance to settle before Elara whacked Harriet’s arm. “Ow, hey—!”

“What are you thinking, asking the great bat where he’s going? Who cares?” She let out an aggravated sigh and sank into her chair again. “Our Headmaster’s crazy. Or well on his way to senile; can wizards go senile?”

Harriet shuffled closer to her friend and, uncertain of herself, touched Elara’s shoulder. “I’m…sorry,” she muttered, eyes on the floor. The Headmaster asked too much of Elara; it wasn’t fair for the other girl to not only open her home to Harriet, but to bloody Snape as well—and whoever else Professor Dumbledore deemed necessary to come ferret through the Black family antiques. Harriet didn’t like feeling like this; still scared, anxious, unsure if she’d inadvertently destroyed or irrevocably strained the first friendship she’d ever made.

Elara blinked and seemed to drag herself from her darkening mood, meeting Harriet’s downcast eyes. “No,” she said slowly. “No—I want you to stay here far more than I care about Snape or whatever rubbish the Headmaster thinks needs to be gotten rid of. Honestly, my grandmother cursed everything right down to the nails in the floorboards.”

Harriet smiled and the tense mood in the stuffy kitchen lightened. The horrid night prior was catching up with her, all the running through the woods in the dead of the night, tossing and turning in an unfamiliar bed, causing the bespectacled witch to slump against the solid table and let her head drop onto the top of her trunk with a heavy thump.

My trunk.

“Bloody hell,” Harriet said aloud.

“If Hermione were here, she’d scold you for saying that.”

“Never mind that—my trunk, Elara! I left it in the tent with—you know!”

“And?”

And Snape just handed it to me! Which means he—he was the one who—!” Found the dead wizard. In the middle of the woods. Merlin.

Neither girl knew what to say to that sentiment, and so, by mutual assent, they ignored it. “Let’s take the trunk up before Kreacher tries to help. He’s not, um, very helpful, really, when he’s in a mood.”

The trunk wasn’t heavy, not when one took it properly by the handle and thus activated the Featherlight Charm on it. Harriet dragged it up to the third floor where her bedroom and dozing snake waited, first door on the right, with Elara’s just past it, the landing and hall also holding a linen closet Elara warned her away from, a study the older girl had been concentrating her efforts on recently, a bath and another bedroom. Harriet glanced at the empty bedroom, then at Elara, brow raised in question.

Elara shook her head. “There’s three more bedrooms upstairs and quarters in the attic. He can take one of those—or sleep with Kreacher in the boiler room. Whatever he’d prefer.”

Harriet snorted, though a strain of guilt plucked at her middle; Dumbledore said “the matter” had been “taken care of,” but what did the Headmaster mean by that? If Snape had her trunk, did that mean he had to…to take care of it? The sudden image of Professor Snape digging a grave with a shovel like in the movies filled Harriet’s head and struck her dumb for a moment—not because it was terribly difficult to imagine Snape of all people digging a grave, but because he was doing it to hide a body Harriet’s familiar had killed.

The headmaster never did say who had threatened her.

“Harriet?”

“Hmm?”

“Will you help me with…something?”

Harriet was already nodding before she asked what Elara needed her to do. In answer, Elara turned heel and they marched back out of Harriet’s dusty bedroom and down to the second floor, entering a dim, hushed library.

“Be careful,” Elara said as she turned the switch for the gas lamps. “Cygnus told me those volumes there, on the higher shelf, are dangerous.”

Considering everything from the furniture to the shoes seemed to be dangerous in the house, Harriet paid particular attention to the shelves Elara indicated and stayed well away. Whatever those books did, Harriet didn’t want to know. “What’re we doing in here?”

The taller witch stopped in front of the hearth and sharply rapped on the frame of a portrait depicting a distinguished, snoozing wizard with a pointy beard and sharp, slanted eyebrows. A thunderous snort escaped him as he woke.

“Er—?! What’s this—?! Brats! Don’t you know better than to leave a man to his rest?!”

“Where are the family grimoires?” Elara asked of the wizard, her voice level but brooking no argument.

The wizard narrowed his eyes. “Now why would you be looking for those?”

“Because Uncle Cygnus told me they were in here and that they’ve been in the family since before we were a family.” Elara sounded testy even to Harriet’s ears. Today was already proving trying to them both. “I need to move them.”

“And why’s that?”

While Elara bickered with the wizard—a Black ancestor apparently—Harriet studied the portrait and tried to puzzle out where she’d seen the man before. It must have been at Hogwarts, considering the castle contained hundreds upon hundreds of old portraits and moving paintings, and yet Harriet could’ve sworn….

“Are you—,” she interrupted, blushing. “Aren’t you a headmaster?”

The wizard’s distinct brow rose. “I was indeed,” he sniffed, nose in the air, doing a close impression of Malfoy. “Phineas Nigellus Black—the most hated Headmaster to ever grace Hogwarts.” He seemed particularly proud of that achievement.

Elara tutted. “I guess we’ve established how Professor Dumbledore knew you were here, Harriet.”

Professor Black huffed but didn’t deny the claim.

“The Headmaster wants to have someone sweep the house for Dark objects; I mean to move the grimoires somewhere safe,” Elara explained, a hint of color in her cheeks as she admitted the less than legal state of her family’s old magic. “The rest I don’t care about, considering it either tries to eat, bite, strangle, or stab anyone who touches it.”

“Strangle—?!”

“The curtains in the trophy room are strongly hexed.”

“You’ve a trophy room—?”

“As enlightening as this conversation is,” Professor Black drawled, doing a damnable impression of Professor Snape at his silkiest. “You’re boring me. The grimoires are kept on the next aisle over, in a black trunk. Or so they were the last I saw them. Do be careful, brat—and if you’re looking for a place to hide them, may I recommend the safe in the first floor lavatory? It is warded against…curious eyes.”

The pair of witches found the trunk in question, though it proved far too heavy for them to lift off the shelf, let alone carry down to the lower level. Elara summoned Kreacher and he helped them levitate the heavy, sealed trunk down the stairs—though twice he leered at Harriet and muttered something about dropping the box on her feet.

It took the better part of an hour pressing and pulling and tapping about the cramped, dingy loo for Elara to find the large panel safe hidden behind a glamored section of tiles. Inside, they discovered a cache of Galleons, several snoring portraits of dour Black ancestors, what looked like three petrified heads, and a glittering centipede preserved in a jar. The girls spent another twenty minutes devoted to hefting the trunk inside the vault, followed by much sweating on Harriet’s part and a bout of wheezing from Elara.

They tromped upstairs afterward and made a trifling attempt to clean Harriet’s new room, though both witches were tired after their eventful evening and thus spent much of their time chatting and poking about through various cupboards. They broke for lunch around midday, then spent the remainder of the afternoon on the fourth floor, in a filthy game room smelling of mold and dead things. They played chess on a board where the enchanted pieces screamed bloody murder as they died. Elara soundly beat Harriet twice before they couldn’t stomach the racket anymore.

At half-past six, Harriet and Elara headed back downstairs, walking side by side down the dim-lit hall to the creaking stairs.

“Where do you think Snape went today?” Harriet asked.

“I would guess he went to argue more with the headmaster,” Elara replied, mouth twisting in a repressed grimaced. “I doubt he was successful.”

Snape was not, in fact, successful with any further negotiations. At precisely seven in the evening, the carriage clock chimed and a heavy knock struck the front door loud enough to be heard in the kitchen basement. Both witches shared spooked looks, not quite forgetting Harriet’s escape from the woods and the wizards chasing her, and so Elara sent Kreacher to open the door and let Snape in—if it was indeed Snape standing out on the porch. The wizard came stalking into the room some minutes later, a decidedly unhappy look on his severe face.

“Potter, what are you doing?” he demanded once he spotted the short witch standing at the cooker, and Harriet—leaning over the pot with her sleeves rolled back past her skinny elbows—eyed him with a puzzled look.

“Err—making supper? Sir?”

“Black, is there a reason you’ve set Potter to work instead of using your house-elf?”

Elara, setting out bowls on the table, frowned at Snape. “You can eat Kreacher’s cooking if you want. I wouldn’t recommend it,” she said. When Snape narrowed his eyes, she swallowed and muttered, “Professor,” before hastily setting out the spoons.

“And where am I to stay in this mouldering ruin?”

“There’s, um, some bedrooms on the fourth level not in use. Sir.”

Snape dropped into the chair at the head of the table and Elara nudged one of the bowls closer to him. When the Potions Master didn’t react, she added a spoon and a cup to his setting and retreated into the kitchen.

“Unbearable grump,” she muttered as she dropped a cutting board onto the counter and set in on slicing apart a loaf of bread. Harriet snorted, and both girls ducked their heads when Snape directed a sour glare in their direction.

Supper was finished soon, and while Elara set out the bread, Harriet brought the pot to the table and dished herself some stew. Elara served herself next, and then Snape, the three settling in to eat in awkward silence. Harriet had seen Snape eat in the Great Hall, of course, but she found it rather disconcerting to witness the event at such proximity. It was hard to think that any of her professors did boring, normal things like eat, or sleep, or exist anywhere outside the confines of Hogwarts.

The silence broke when Livius—smelling food—nudged open the basement door and came slithering into the room, startling Snape and Elara so badly the latter knocked over her water glass. Snape flicked his wand and cleared the mess before she could react.

Sss...” the serpent hissed as he raised himself into Harriet’s lap and proceeded to sniff her food. “What isss thisss?

My dinner,” Harriet replied, dunking a heel of bread into the stew. Livi nosed the bowl hard enough to slop some onto the table and she cursed around a mouthful of food. “Hey!

Livi snapped up a piece of meat and swallowed it whole. “Sss…don’t likesss.”

Well, it wasn’t meant for you!” Harriet growled, tugging on his horn, earning a miffed hiss in reply.

“Potter!”

Snape’s exclamation brought Harriet’s attention back to her tablemates. Elara was paler than usual, and Snape sat stiffly in his chair, knuckles white around his spoon, and Harriet guessed watching her tussle with a large, venomous snake was a bit off-putting.

“What?” she asked. “He’s being a brat.”

“Tell your pet to leave while we are eating.”

Harriet sighed, wiping her mouth on her stretched out sleeve. “The professor wants you to go while we’re eating.

Livi seemed disinclined to do as told and said as much, prompting a quick, furtive argument between witch and snake that ended with said snake leaving in a huff, though not before trailing over Professor Snape’s boots. He stiffened and scowled at Harriet until Livi disappeared. Several minutes passed before the man moved.

“Regardless of the headmaster’s mandate, I haven’t the time—nor the desire—to babysit you two miscreants for the remainder of the summer. He’s arranged for various minders during the day, and I will be here in the evenings. If you wake me, you had best be dying or prepared to do so. Am I understood?”

“Yes, sir,” the two witches grumbled in reply, though the question was certainly a rhetorical one.

“You are not to leave this house without Dumbledore’s chosen babysitter.”

Elara scowled and opened her mouth, then thought better of what she meant to say when she caught Snape’s eye. Harriet slurped her stew and their combined wordless condemnation prompted her to set the bowl back on the table and blush, fidgeting with her spoon.

Seeming to not know what else to say, the Potions Master curled his lip and strode from the room, leaving his half-eaten meal behind. The door snapped closed at his heels and Elara let out a puff of air, slouching in her chair. Harriet resumed her own dining.

“I can’t believe we have to spend the rest of the summer with him,” Elara muttered, head in her hands. “God help us both.”

Harriet slurped her stew.

Chapter 51: slytherin games

Chapter Text

li. slytherin games

 

Hermione stared at the grim rocaille on the ceiling and released a gusty sigh.

Despite the Charms inlaid into the parlor walls, August’s heat still seeped inside and filled most of the residents with a warm, sleepy lassitude. She said most and not all because Draco, like the majority of twelve-year-old boys, was an endless turbine of potential energy even on the hottest and stuffiest of days, and when Greg and Vincent couldn’t come over, the Malfoy scion had taken to following Hermione around and pestering the daylights out of her.

Hermione huffed. I don’t know why he can’t harass Jaime, she thought. If I could get away with hexing him, I would!

She lay with her back pressed against the unyielding metal balcony, her robes bundled up in an impromptu pillow behind her head, a thick volume on topical potions open and forgotten against her middle. Frankly, Hermione was bored of studying. She loved reading, but the Malfoy library leaned toward dubious, dry tomes, and spending almost every day ensconced in the Manor with her nose buried in a ponderous book got dull even for a girl like her. There were only so many pages on the viscosity of pureed webcaps and speculations on orellanin viability Hermione could read before her eyes started to glaze.

It was lovely outside, if hot. She would rather swallow her own tongue than admit to any Malfoy how beautiful she found their home, the lush grounds hemmed in yew hedges, the gardens bursting with wild, delicate flora from remote locales, the antique furnishings all crafted by hand or wand by Wizarding craftsmen or Malfoy ancestors. She stared at the railing quite near her face and marveled at how all the fine, intricate whorls had been formed and set by spells instead of by hammers and fire.

The balcony itself was part of the library, though it extended past the library confines and above the neighboring parlor—the Yellow Room, Hermione thought it was called, though most of the walls were paneled in old, oiled oak with only small stretches of visible bricks painted pale chartreuse here and there. The Malfoys only occasionally visited the library itself as far as Hermione knew, and she’d never seen anyone aside from herself utilize the upper balcony. It made for an excellent, if boring, place to hide.

Hermione wrapped her arms around the book and huffed again. She’d had no letters from Elara or Harriet, not that she was terribly surprised by this, not when she could barely write to them herself, or to her own parents. She missed her mum and dad a great deal, and yet Hermione wished to speak with her friends more than with her family, veritably bursting with magical curiosity as she was, a curiosity her parents wouldn’t—couldn’t—understand.

Voices drifted in the distance. Hermione dozed, thinking about mushrooms and home, a Slytherin green dorm room beneath a lake and the cool common room lit by silver lanterns—until the voices drew nearer and Hermione shook off the daze just as the door into the Yellow Room popped open.

“—Draco, of course, is looking forward to Potions next year. He was tutored by Lucius as a boy, you know—and he speaks highly of your management style in the classroom.”

“I imagine he’s more enthralled by the idea of joining the Quidditch team than he is by my curriculum, Narcissa,” a familiar baritone drawled. Stiffening, Hermione rolled onto her side and peeked into the parlor below, watching as Mrs. Malfoy—draped in summery, robin’s egg blue robes—came sauntering in, followed by the ominous presence of Professor Snape.

What is he doing here?

“Can I interest you in something to drink?” Mrs. Malfoy asked as she sank into one of the armchairs and Snape sat on the opposing sofa, not bothering to remove his outer robes. Must not be here for long, then. “Tea? Or perhaps something stronger?”

“Tea would be adequate.”

Mrs. Malfoy simpered and called for Dobby, ordering the nervous house-elf to deliver a tea service. He did so, and Draco’s mother used two delicate swishes of her wand to pour the Potions Master’s drink and levitate the cup into his long-fingered hands. Snape pressed the rim to his lips, but Hermione could tell from her vantage that he didn’t drink anything.

“It’s been too long since your last visit, Severus. I suppose the old fool keeps you busy throughout the holidays.”

“Exceedingly so,” the professor replied, setting his cup and saucer down upon the coffee table. “When other…individuals aren’t demanding my attention.”

The subtlest of ticks touched Mrs. Malfoy’s face and she upturned her nose. “Indeed.” She sipped tea with practiced grace. “One has to wonder whose business brought you to our door today.”

“Allow me to be plain and allay your fears; I am here to ask you for a personal favor, Narcissa.”

Hermione shifted, rustling slightly, and Snape’s vaguely avian profile twitched in her direction, the sunlight coming through the window playing over his face, deepening those strange scars surrounding his left eye and brow. He moved again, ducking from the light, and Hermione held her breath until the wizard resumed faux-drinking his tea.

“A favor?” Mrs. Malfoy asked, her mouth tipping into a very smug grin. “Well now I am intrigued.”

“A favor for your family, I should specify.”

“For the family?” The witch quirked a brow and drank her tea, little finger extended with perfect ease. “How charitable. Are you certain you’re not here for Lucius?”

“No, I’m certain Lucius’ attentions are best spent…elsewhere.”

Hermione frowned in thought as she peered down at the two Slytherin alumni, watching as they traded seemingly innocuous comments, all the while circling a point of conversation Hermione hadn’t yet grasped. If Snape meant to ask for a favor for the Malfoys—a concept that confused the young witch in its redundancy—wouldn’t he want to speak with Draco’s father? But what was it he had said? ‘A favor for your family.’ That could mean the Malfoys, certainly, and yet it could mean something else entirely; after all, Narcissa had not been born a Malfoy.

Mrs. Malfoy set down her own cup on the coffee table. “Oh?”

“How often do you brush off your copy of Etiquette and Artifice?” Professor Snape folded his hands together and leaned forward.

“Often enough, I should say. Darling boy, my Draco, but Lucius lets him run wild—.” She paused and considered the wizard. “Why do you ask?”

“I have been charged with two wards, so to speak. Scions of old families.” He smirked when Mrs. Malfoy’s interest visibly piqued. “As I’ve not the time nor the inclination to play nursemaid, other…minders have been arranged by invested parties. I simply mean to make certain at least one such individual is outside a certain purview and more amenable to a Slytherin mindset.”

Hermione’s brain whirred as quickly as Mrs. Malfoy’s, the two people in the parlor falling into a stilted silence as the Malfoy matriarch turned over the Potions Master’s words and Hermione did the same.

“And this would be a…favor for my family?”

“Indeed.”

Black! The name pinged off the inside of Hermione’s skull and she nearly gasped aloud. Of course! Draco’s mother is a Black by blood, making them her family! If Professor Snape is talking about a pure-blood scion in the Black family, he must mean Elara. But why ever would he be minding her? And who is the second person he mentioned?

Mrs. Malfoy crossed her legs with an elegant flutter of silk and leaned into her chair, seemingly at ease in her own parlor, playing Slytherin word games like the conversation was little more than an afternoon jaunt on the lawn. “How very interesting. Poor boy, this hardly seems a favor.”

“The favor would be asking you not to inform Lucius,” he scoffed. “And to bring that bloody book.”

Mrs. Malfoy laughed. “You must exaggerate, dear Severus. I’ve met the girl, you know, and she isn’t so wickedly terrible.”

“You’ve not met the other.”

Who is he talking about? Hermione growled in frustration. Who besides Elara? A pure-blood heir—but wait! You’re an idiot, Hermione Granger! He said old families, not pure-bloods! Is he talking about Harriet, then? Is Harriet with Elara? If they were speaking of that stuffy book on wizarding etiquette Mrs. Malfoy tutored her and Draco out of, then Professor Snape must mean Harriet. Hermione let out a silent sigh at the thought of the younger girl’s table manners—all elbows and unwieldy knife action. Her relatives are horrid people.

“Hmm. Perhaps I will consider the arrangement.”

Hermione rolled her eyes. Rubbish. It wasn’t really a favor at all; Professor Snape was asking Mrs. Malfoy to mind Elara and Harriet like she minded Hermione and Draco, which would give the Malfoy matriarch influence over the current Black proxy, even if only a smidgen, though Hermione had serious doubts if Elara would allow even that much. The Malfoys were not a family who overlooked what clout they were afforded in any magical affairs, and Mrs. Malfoy wasn’t going to pass up this opportunity, not when it could later reflect poorly on the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black, and thus reflect poorly on Narcissa as well.

There were always layers upon layers to the interactions of Slytherins.

Her hands itched with the need to write a letter to her friends. What was happening out there in the wider world? Hermione hated feeling so stifled, kept isolated and ignorant, while events transpired beyond the manor walls. Something significant must have occurred if Professor Snape was minding Harriet; had the Headmaster removed her from her relatives? If he had, then why had she been placed in Snape’s care? Or, as she assumed, thrown into the man’s hands and promptly shuffled into someone else’s? Was Harriet staying with Elara? Were they in danger? Would she be foisted off into a pure-blood family for mentorship like Hermione?

No, the bushy-haired girl surmised. That’s why the professor doesn’t want Lucius to know. He doesn’t want word trickling down to the Ministry, and the Headmaster won’t want Harriet foisted into potentially dangerous hands.

“I’ll have to consult my schedule. I’m terribly busy, especially in the summers, with Draco home—and I do mean to keep him close during the holidays. I wish Hogwarts would allow students to come home during the weekends. Surely you could slip a word to that old fool—?”

Mrs. Malfoy paused mid-word and gazed into the middle distance, snapping back to herself just as swiftly as she had drifted off, hand pausing above her drink. “Lucius is home.” Hermione grimaced and guessed Draco’s mum must have felt the wards shifting from her back to the head of the household. “I’ll go and gather him. It really has been too long since your last visit, Severus. Lucius will be glad to see you.”

She rose and disappeared with the sharp click of heels, and Hermione laid still on the upper balcony, watching the Potions Master’s countenance slide from snide superiority to a tired grimace, then to nothing at all, his expression like opaque glass she could see nothing through. I should leave, Hermione decided as she nibbled on her lip. Before Mr. Malfoy shows up. Heaven help me if he catches me eavesdropping….

Another glance into the parlor showed that the dark wizard had vanished without a sound, which shouldn’t have surprised Hermione, given how Professor Snape glided through Hogwarts’ corridors like a sure-footed cat harrying his prey, yet did so all the same. Swallowing, she made up her mind and quickly rolled onto her knees, yanking her wrinkled robes on over her arms before plucking the heavy book up from the balcony floor. Hermione made her way through the open portal between the walls and hustled into the library proper, letting out a small breath of relief as she reached the iron ladder and started down.

I probably won’t get to hear what happened until September, Hermione groused as she held onto the railing with her free hand and clasped the book under her arm with the other. It’s not as if I could write and ask, even if I could send a letter. That’d be terribly irresponsible and, well, stupid of me if I went about probing into Elara’s business and brought it to Malfoy’s attention. I hope Harriet’s all right. What could have possibly happened to have her removed from her family? Why would Snape risk Mrs. Malfoy telling her husband just to have her watch them?

Hermione hopped off the last step. She turned—and let out a breathless shriek when she found herself standing before the looming Potions Master.

“Oh, you—you scared me, Professor!” she said, blood draining from her face. Why was he in the library? When had he gotten there?

He smirked, the same half-crooked simper he delivered right before verbally eviscerating a misbehaving student in his classroom and Hermione felt her blood run cold. “Did you hear anything…interesting, Miss Granger?”

“I-interesting, sir?”

“Yes, interesting, girl. Do you hear anything you might…think to repeat?”

Hermione clutched the thick tome to her chest like a shield and shook her head. “N-no, Professor. I—I was just studying. I fell asleep in the rows. Didn’t hear anything at all.”

The wizard wasn’t convinced of the lie, of course, but he did give a single, affirming jerk of his chin before he swept back under the mezzanine and to the parlor’s closed door. Hermione didn’t move until he disappeared from sight, and a moment later she could hear the faint drone of Lucius Malfoy’s unctuous voice greeting the man.

She made good on her escape while she could and all but ran from the room.

Chapter 52: the tree that flourishes

Chapter Text

lii. the tree that flourishes

 

It took Elara a long time to fall asleep the first night Snape stayed in Grimmauld Place.

Though the wizard taught at her school, he was—for all intents and purposes—a stranger, a silent, sharp-tongued intruder whom Elara had threatened only weeks before, a stranger who now had unfettered access to her home. She didn’t sleep well in proximity to strangers, those first few weeks at Hogwarts made less difficult by the presence of other similarly aged girls, but ever since the orphanage, ever since they came for her in the dead of night and dragged her from her bed, Elara had been a light sleeper. She stared at the ceiling every time the floorboards overhead creaked and didn’t nod off until well after midnight.

As such, her mood was less than pleasant at breakfast, where she and Harriet ate food prepared by a Hogwarts house-elf named Rikkety, who’d been deputized by Snape to bring their meals from the castle. They saw no sign of the Potions Master that morning, and once the dishes were cleared and their familiars fed, they found themselves waiting restlessly by the Floo for their first minder to step through.

Said minder didn’t so much as step through the Floo as come barreling out and collide with Harriet, collapsing into a heap of soot, swears, and bent elbows.

“Oh, shite! I’m so sorry!” the pink-haired witch cried as she leapt to her feet and dragged Harriet upright, nearly dropping the dazed girl again in the process of smacking ash from her robes. “I really did think I had it that time, but I must’ve turned at the last minute. Figures, I’m dead clumsy—but there you are! Good as new!”

Elara stared at the witch—Nymphadora, her second cousin, who hated being called Nymphadora—and right at her heels the fire blazed green again, admitting the familiar figure of Nymphadora’s pretty mum, Andromeda.

“Hello again,” the older woman greeted, entering the room with far more aplomb than her daughter. “It’s nice to see you well, Elara.”

Elara answered her with a tight-lipped nod, suspicious of Andromeda’s presence, and wondered if the Headmaster had an alternative motive for asking her here. She introduced Harriet, and was again introduced to Nymphadora— “Tonks!”—before they migrated to the living room on the second floor.

Tonks proved as clumsy as promised, and Elara was surprised to learn that, as unlikely as it seemed, she was a promising new recruit in the Aurory. “I spend most of my time shadowing a mad bugger named Alastor Moody,” she explained as they poked about through the ruined furniture. “Told him I had a family emergency today, so he let me off.”

“He’s going to be displeased if he finds out you lied to him, Dora,” Andromeda said from her spot on her conjured chair.

“You’d get tired of him too, mum, if he kept shouting ‘CONSTANT VIGILANCE!’ at you through the loo door.”

Harriet laughed outright and Elara smirked, settling farther into her spot on the dusty sofa by Andromeda. Tonks was invaluable in picking out what was and wasn’t cursed in the room while her mum set the furniture back to rights, the witch proficient in the kind of household magic neither Elara or Harriet had seen at Hogwarts yet. It probably isn’t taught there, she mused. It’s probably something passed on from mother to daughter through the generations.

She felt a small pang of loss at that thought.

Elara watched as Andromeda drew her wand over old wood and torn cushions, returning luster and tying together loose threads as dust lifted into the air and vanished out of sight. Bit by bit, the room emerged from its own ruin; the afternoon wore on and the strange witches who’d invaded her home returned Elara’s living space to something of its former glory. To be sure, the defunct wallpaper needed to be stripped, the floors refinished, and the antique chairs reupholstered, but she could see something livable in it now.

A tapestry of the Black family hung on the wall near the hearth, larger than any single tapestry really had the right to be, moth-eaten at the edges and riddled with charred holes, like someone had taken a cigarette to certain branches and burned them off. Andromeda came to stand before it, and when she shooed Tonks and Harriet from the room to see about lunch, Elara stood next to her, since the witch’s ploy to get the others out of the room wasn’t lost on her.

“Aunt Walburga was overly dramatic for most of her life,” Andromeda sniffed, dark eyes flickering over the ruined tree. “She was fanatical about family, right up until they disappointed her. She took it upon herself to ‘prune’ certain people and keep our House…pure.” Andromeda pointed her wand at one mark, whispered a spell and twisted her wrist, pulling back like a tailor threading a needle. Before their eyes, the burned edges spun new fibers, coming together until the name ‘Andromeda Gallatea Black-Tonks’ came into view. She spun her wand again, and two new branches crept from the scroll bearing her moniker, one for her husband and one for her Metamorphmagus daughter.

Andromeda turned to Elara, a soft, sad smile on her winsome face, and Elara blinked, unsure of what to make of her regard. “Muggles have an expression about being able to choose your friends, but not your relatives.”

“I know,” Elara replied. “I was raised with Muggles.”

“Were you?”

“Yes.” She said nothing more on the subject.

Andromeda nodded once, then corrected another flaw on the tapestry, revealing ‘Marius Cygnus Black’ between Pollux and Dorea Black. From Dorea spilled another cluster, expanding the tapestry, the tree growing and twisting like a living thing, making way for Charlus Potter, then Fleamont and Euphemia, James and Lily, and finally ‘Harriet Dorea Potter.’

Elara brushed her fingertips over the name and if Andromeda noticed, she said nothing. She regrew other sections and the tapestry flourished, the whole of it shifting until one burned hole came to the center, to the head of the tree, and Andromeda returned Sirius Black’s name, added Marlene McKinnon, and then Elara’s own.

I wonder if everyone in the Black family knows how to do this. Do they have their own tapestries at home?

“Did you move the grimoires?”

Elara started, eyes wide as she faced the woman. “Excuse me?”

“You moved the family grimoires, did you not?” When Elara didn’t reply, Andromeda nodded. “Good. I would recommend taking them to Gringotts. Dora or myself can accompany you, if you wish.”

“…why?” Elara asked, confused. Dumbledore had said he wanted to remove or neutralize anything dangerous in the house, which would definitely include the grimoires. Why would Andromeda offer to help hide them? “Didn’t Professor Dumbledore ask you get to rid of things like those?”

“Professor Dumbledore asked me to help watch over you and Harriet, with the warning that you were quite resentful of needing adult supervision because of your emancipation.” Andromeda chuckled when Elara glared. “The Headmaster himself is a half-blood, but he understands something of pure-blood eccentricity and the nature of our…histories. The family may have descended into bigotry and madness, but it needn’t stay there; you are the Head of the House of Black now, Elara, and under your direction it will either flourish and thrive in the new millennium, or it will die. That said, growing does not mean forgetting one’s roots or destroying your beginning, and Albus understands that.”

Andromeda reached out to tuck wayward strands of hair behind Elara’s ear and brush dust from her cheek. Elara bore the touch, though she knew Andromeda must sense her hesitancy.

“I may have been disowned when I married a Muggle-born, but Ted is…gone now, because of the Minister’s laws. The Blacks are my family, for all that I wished I could sometimes choose my relatives differently. I believe the Headmaster asked for me to watch over you and little Harriet because while he cannot condone our old magics, not in the presence of impressionable children, he doesn’t wish to strip your identity from you—or from Harriet, who doesn’t have any family left now, aside from you.”

Andromeda twirled her wand, whispering the proper incantation, and the tree moved once more to bring the Potter branch of the family nearer her own, both Elara and Harriet nearer the top, like the fresh, new growth of a real tree, full of potential to bring the branches higher still, or break and splinter with rot.

“I’m not an official member of Albus’…group, but I have been informed something of Harriet’s past and the hardships she faces. There’s a lot of weight on her shoulders, and there’s also a lot of weight on yours. The Blacks are the oldest magical family in the kingdom, and people will look to you to model how pure-blood families are meant to carry themselves in the coming years. It’s a burden I ran away from, because while I love my husband and my sisters, I was also eager to marry outside the family and distance myself from the politics. You don’t have that option. You will have to be strong, for your own good, for Harriet’s, and for the rest of us as well.”

Elara swallowed, lowered her eyes, and nodded. Strong. Elara didn’t know if she was strong so much as determined, and that determination had gotten her away from St. Giles’, had returned her to the House of Black, had seen her through Cygnus’ death and her first year at Hogwarts. It had steadied her through the revelation that her father was a madman who’d betrayed her best friend’s mum and dad, a man who’d made Harriet a target of the Darkest wizard alive.

She hoped it would see her through more trials yet.

Andromeda touched her again, a light pat on the shoulder, before she turned away. “I’ll just go check on those two and make sure Dora hasn’t broken what’s left of the china.”

Andromeda left, and Elara remained behind, lost deep in thought as she studied the restored Black tapestry and considered the witch’s words.

Chapter 53: when opportunity knocks

Chapter Text

liii. when opportunity knocks

 

The following days set a precedence for what Harriet and Elara expected for the rest of their summer. In the morning, they woke to a warm breakfast served by Rikkety, a house-elf whom Kreacher hated on principle and whom also doted on Harriet with a worried, frantic energy neither witch could properly guess the source of. After breakfast, they cleared their dishes, then waited to see who would be stepping through the Floo.

On the second day, they met Emmeline Vance, a stately looking Ravenclaw in her mid-fifties with an emerald shawl draped over her shoulders, and rather than staying in the house to clean, the witch snuck them out to watch a professional Quidditch game at the hidden arena in the Northumberland forests. Harriet didn’t think Elara had much interest in Quidditch at all, but Harriet was enthralled, watching the players soar like hawks overhead, cheering on the Warwick Warriors against the Appleby Arrows for the sport of it.

Professor McGonagall came through the Floo on the third day, which made Harriet and Elara both uneasy at first. While the Transfiguration professor wasn’t partisan like Professor Snape, she was more distantly polite with Slytherins than she was with other Houses, and the severe witch herself didn’t seem to know what to make of them when she entered Grimmauld Place. Harriet doubted she’d ever been asked to babysit Slytherins before.

She thawed over the day’s course, finding an easy camaraderie with Elara, who excelled in Transfiguration and had dozens upon dozens of questions about Animagi, while Harriet, with her general lack of off-putting Slytherin guile, earned softer affection from the stern professor. Harriet wondered if McGonagall had liked her parents, both Gryffindors, and if that residual fondness made it easier for her to like Harriet, too. Sometimes the bespectacled witch remembered the Hat had almost placed her in the House of Lions, and sometimes she wondered how her life would have turned out if it had.

They got Snape on the fourth day—or, rather, Snape was in the house on the fourth day, clearing out the potions lab in the basement, the one connected to the kitchen through the scorched, battered door, and he told them to leave him be unless they were poisoned, bleeding, on fire, or otherwise incapacitated. So, Harriet and Elara played chess and poked about the library, looking for tomes Elara might wish to hide away or anything Hermione would be interested in reading. Harriet found a book of jinxes she wished she could try on Pansy or Longbottom.

The fifth day saw them out in the magically enlarged yard with genial Professor Sprout, tackling the wild and—frankly—lethal foliage that had grown unchecked over the decades, the stone fountain choked with algae, the shed consumed by crawlers, the greenhouse bursting with the kinds of plants one needed a machete to tame. True to form, Elara killed half of what she touched, and Professor Sprout set her to pulling weeds, tutting all the while.

Headmaster Dumbledore came the next day and didn’t stay for the entirety of the afternoon, only through lunch. Elara muttered about him probably wanting to comb through the house himself, but the venerated wizard expressed little interest in exploring and instead returned the kitchen to its pristine state with a flourish of his wand, inviting both girls to sit down for tea. He inquired after their time at Grimmauld and questioned Harriet further about the Dursleys, which she answered begrudgingly, and about the woods, the memory of which still terrified her. He asked to meet Livi, and on the way upstairs to find the irascible serpent, the portrait of Elara’s grandmother started screaming filth at the Headmaster when they passed her landing. Elara flushed a brilliant shade of crimson, but Dumbledore simply shrugged and conjured a pair curtains over her frame.

On the seventh day, both witches woke and tromped down the stairs together, wondering who they might meet or see today.

“D’you think it’ll be another professor?” Harriet asked as they sat at the table and Rikkety came bobbing out of the kitchen, bowls of porridge and fresh fruit balanced on her head. They took their meals with quiet “thank you”s, which sent Rikkety into delighted squeals that didn’t taper off until she disappeared.

“I would assume they’re too busy to watch us,” Elara replied after swallowing the first bite. “Term will begin in just a few weeks, and they need to prepare just like we do.”

“Maybe Madam Vance will come back.” Harriet perked up, remembering the match and the general excitement of being among so many other witches and wizards. “She was nice.”

Elara smirked. “You just want to watch more Quidditch.”

Grumbling, Harriet spooned porridge into her mouth, though she didn’t deny the claim. She’d also be pleased if Andromeda and Tonks came back, since she thought stories from Tonks’ job at the Ministry were exciting. “As long as it’s not Snape again. It’s not our fault that old cauldron attacked him. He knows most everything’s bloody cursed in the house.” Said cauldron left a livid welt on the man’s jaw when the iron lid apparently flung itself at him like a discus. Snape had been absolutely foul throughout dinner.

“It might be Dumbledore again.”

“Really? I thought he’d be more busy than anyone else.”

“No one has touched the library yet. I know he wants to; where else would you find Dark magic if not in books about Dark magic?”

“You mean like that little green book with the snake on it that you hide in your journal? The one with the Ignis Monstrum spell in it?”

Elara glared. “Don’t tell anyone about that.”

“I’m not going to,” Harriet replied as she raised her hands in surrender. “But seriously, that spells looks like it could burn down the bloody house.”

“We’re not allowed to do magic. You know that.”

“Doesn’t stop it from being dangerous, though.”

Whatever comment Elara had in response to that would have to wait, because Kreacher came stumping into the kitchen with a bewildered raven tucked under his arm. He let go of the rumpled black bird and it soared over to Harriet, both witches staring mutely at the strange creature as it stuck out a leg and hopped closer.

Harriet Potter,” it croaked.

“It talked!” Harriet exclaimed, almost upending her breakfast when she jumped in her chair.

“Ravens are capable of mimicking speech,” Elara informed her. For a second, she reminded Harriet of Hermione. “You can speak to snakes, but you’re shocked by this?”

“Oh, ha ha,” Harriet told her. She noticed the scrap of parchment attached to the raven’s leg, and once she pulled it loose, the parchment resized itself into a proper letter and a thin, worn book. The raven vanished in a sudden puff of smoke. “…you’re not going to tell me ravens can disappear into thin air on a whim, are you?”

“No, I can’t say I am.” Elara frowned at the letter in Harriet’s hands. “I’ve never seen a raven deliver post.”

“Me neither.”

“Perhaps you should wait to open it—?”

Harriet pried the seal free, raising an eyebrow at Elara’s miffed expression. “You said there’s half a dozen wards on the house screening what gets sent here.”

“Yes. Screening owls. Not ravens that are obviously Charmed or cursed or hexed to vanish when they’ve finished their deliveries.”

Harriet hummed in acknowledgment as she peeled back the missive’s top flap and began to read.

 

Chère Mlle. Potter,

 

I found myself surprised, yet delighted, to receive your letter this summer. The incident that occurred in regards to a certain object of my possession was an unfortunate event, and I cannot accept your apologies for its loss. I have been made aware of the particulars concerning the attempted theft, and must instead extend my own earnest regrets for what harm you came to whilst my possession was kept at Poudlard. Your defense of its acquisition is admirable, and I am humbled by the concern you have extended on my behalf. You need not worry for myself, or my Perenelle. All will be well.

Albus tells me you are a witch with a particular talent for Defense. Please, accept my apologies and the book I have enclosed with this letter. It proved invaluable to me in my boyhood, so many years ago.

 

Respectueusement,

Nicholas Flamel

Gran. Sorc., Prix de Flamel; Première Classe, Alch. Ma., Def. Ma.

 

“It’s from Mr. Flamel,” Harriet said, turning the book over so she could study the wrinkled spine.

Nicholas Flamel?”

“Mhm.” Harriet extended her arm across the table and handed the letter over. “I asked Professor Dumbledore if I could write to him so I could apologize about the Stone, and though the headmaster said I didn’t need to, I still sent him a letter at the end of term.”

“And it took him this long to get back to you?”

Harriet shrugged. “I didn’t think he’d reply at all. When you’re six hundred something years old, I bet you move a bit slower, right?”

Shaking her head, Elara perused the missive from Flamel while Harriet opened the book and carefully pulled apart the papery vellum. “Un Guide…Sur la Connaissance des…Ténèbres. It’s in French!” Harriet despaired, flipping through a few more pages, finding them all written in the same flowery, foreign language.

Elara wrinkled her nose in thought. “It’s a ‘Guide on….’ Something. ‘Understanding the Dark?’ Maybe? I think.”

“I didn’t know you knew French.”

“I don’t. ‘Ténèbres’ is a common enough word in the old library books that I looked it up, and ‘Connaissance’ has a Latin root.”

“You know Latin?!”

“Yes. I had to learn it at—. At the place I was, before. Professor McGonagall told us learning the basic forms becomes mandatory this year in Transfiguration. Latin really is imperative to understanding spells.”

“God, you sound like Hermione,” Harriet groused, slumping her shoulders as she set aside the book so she could concentrate on her breakfast. She felt more than a little stupid; the Nicholas Flamel had sent her a nice letter and a book—but she couldn’t read it.

Elara considered the younger witch as she carefully refolded the letter and handed it back. “Hermione knows French,” she said slowly. “She’d be delighted to translate it with you.”

Glum, Harriet tucked the letter away and shoved a spoonful of porridge into her mouth. Elara was right, of course. Hermione would love to translate an old book that used to belong to Nicholas Flamel, but that didn’t stop Harriet from thinking herself helpless and a bit dimwitted. Both Elara and Hermione had helped her study last term to achieve her good marks, and Harriet wished she was more capable on her own.

The Floo flared green, putting an end to her pitying thoughts.

“Two Galleons says it’s someone new,” Harriet muttered as she pushed her chair back and stood.

“I’m not betting, Harriet.”

“Aw, you’re no fun.”

The fire rose, a sudden gasp of flames transposing from one Floo to the other, and suddenly a slender, unfamiliar witch in bespoke robes appeared before their hearth.

Elara jumped to her feet. “Absolutely not!” she said, brows furrowed. “I did not agree to—!”

“Do not be tiresome,” the witch tutted in a posh tone Harriet had come to expect from pure-bloods and their children. “I’ve been told you’re to accept any minder you’re assigned, and Severus has asked me here as a favor. My time is limited, and you will be on your best behavior.”

Elara stiffened, color flaring in her pale cheeks. “I won’t go back with you.”

“I have not asked you to, impertinent child,” the woman snapped. Confused, Harriet looked between the two and almost jumped when the witch rounded on her. The woman was tall and fair, her blond hair light as could be and perfectly coiffed, emeralds dangling on silver clasps from her lobes, gray eyes hard and calculating. Studying the elegant woman, Harriet thought she looked quite like—.

“Malfoy,” she sputtered, causing the woman’s eyes to narrow farther. “I, um, mean you’re Mrs. Malfoy, right? You look like your son.”

“Yes, quite.” She proffered one dainty hand and Harriet, utterly at a loss for what else to do, took it in her own and shook with the woman. “I am Narcissa Malfoy, and I have been asked to teach you and Miss Black—.” She cut a look to a still fuming Elara. “—etiquette. You are?”

“H-Harriet Potter, ma’am.”

Potter?” She lifted a perfectly groomed brow, though her face remained otherwise passive. “Oh, Severus is always so careful with his wording…very well. Miss Potter, is this how you dress to greet guests?”

Harriet glanced down at herself, taking in the rumpled school shirt and skirt, having dressed in them today after finding she had little else clean in her trunk. One sleeve was rolled to the elbow, the other left flat and unbuttoned, a bit of porridge on the sleeve, her hair its usual tangle of uncombed locks. “…yes?”

That was not the answer Narcissa Malfoy apparently wanted, and only two flicks of her wand later, Harriet’s shirt was tucked in, buttoned correctly, and her wild hair tightly bound in a single plait. “Ow, hey—!”

“Sit down, Miss Potter.”

Harriet didn’t wish to sit down but she did so anyway, because pissing off a woman who referred to Professor Snape by his first name would only bring the unholy terror of a furious Potions Master down upon their poor heads. Obeying didn’t mean Harriet didn’t sulk, however.

“I don’t need etiquette lessons,” Elara snapped, arms crossed over her middle. “I don’t want them.”

“Don’t want them? What a silly thing to say, Miss Black.” Mrs. Malfoy smiled and it almost looked genuine. “I’m assured you need the lessons, as your greeting shows a distinct lack of manners, and I had come to expect better of you, cousin. As for wanting, what is the alternative? You don’t want to know Wizarding etiquette? You would rather you—and Miss Potter, by default—both remained unsophisticated apes posing as the Heads of old families?” She lowered herself into one of the empty chair with considerable grace, crossing one leg over the other, soothing the skirt of her silk robes. “A good Slytherin knows to take advantage of the opportunities presented to them. Surely my father taught you that.”

The muscles in Elara’s jaw jumped, and Harriet thought she’d argue with Draco’s mum, tell her to bugger off and get them in heaps of trouble with Snape—but then Elara reluctantly nodded and directed her sullen stare at the table as she sank into her own seat.

Again, Mrs. Malfoy smiled, all her teeth perfectly white and straight, her eyes the same gray as Elara’s. “Wonderful. I do so love the chance to spend time with family. Now, for your first lesson….”

 


 

A/N: I haven’t seen the new FB film, which I’m told has Nicholas Flamel in it? I have my own characterization of him in my head that probably won’t mesh with the film. That’s more important later on. “Prix de Flamel; Première Classe” is my approximation of a French Order of Merlin, and then “Alch. Ma.,” for Alchemy Master, “Def. Ma.,” for Defense Master.

Chapter 54: on the devil's shoulder

Chapter Text

liv. on the devil’s shoulder

 

Hogwarts’ empty halls echoed with a yearning, desperate silence that reflected Severus’ every breath and every step with exacting mimicry.

Severus himself yearned for the silence ten months out of every year, more than grateful for what simple measure of peace he could find in the time between the dunderheads’ departure and his looming responsibilities. Hogwarts, in contrast, was barren and empty, longing for the return of her children in the fall, and when he brushed his fingertips against the stone wall, he could feel the sentience of a thousand years of magic saturation rippling under his touch, rising, trickling into his palm and mind.

Because Severus, to his chagrin, was very much still a child to a castle older than Merlin himself.

He stood for a time in the shadows between the sunlit cloister windows and drew strength from the castle and the quiet, his dark eyes closed, his thoughts and emotions and memories shifting in the black, frozen depths of his Occluded mind. He sunk some memories deeper into the morass and lifted others, some limned in ice and hoarfrost, decoys to the quiet recesses where dangerous recollections buried themselves deep. Only when the ice extended to the shores of his consciousness did he open his eyes again.

Severus would pay a price for the Occlusion later; all or nothing, Albus had said when he first taught his budding spy how to Occlude and read minds. One cannot simply shift and displace their mental landscape without exacerbating cause and effect; suppressing natural emotion only served to deepen it later, like a Muggle pressure cooker, worsening his predisposition for being a bastard. When his shields thawed, he’d more surly and short-tempered than ever, and Potter and Black would most likely suffer the consequences of his mood at dinner. He could theoretically Occlude through the evening, but should his mind not find equilibrium before sleep, the nightmares would come again.

Severus wagered the brats would rather deal with his usual vitriol than his night terrors bringing down the house.

Rolling his shoulders back, the Potions Master departed the castle’s warmth and delved into the dungeons below.

Slytherin wasn’t hard to find; he mostly kept to the House from which he’d stolen his namesake, and when the students were gone, he frequented the subterranean common room and sprawled in the same winged armchair by the main hearth, a glass of elf wine in hand, his eyes fixed on the painting of a rowan tree hung above the mantel.

Though the man’s time as a student had been far before Severus’ own, the Potions Master needed little effort to imagine the wizard had been exactly as he was now; recumbent in that unofficial throne ceded to the most feared or respected Slytherin, the best seat in the house, as it were, near the warmest fire with the rest of the common room in sight, a position of power in the petty struggles of adolescence. Severus, of course, never sat there—nor did he care to.

“My lord,” Severus drawled as he entered the room and came to stand in the periphery of Slytherin’s vision. The other wizard waved him forward.

“Severus,” he acknowledged. “Take a seat, won’t you.”

The Potions Master did as ordered, pulling his robes to one side with a practiced motion as he lowered himself onto one of the accompanying sofas. He studied the other wizard, jaw tight against recriminating thoughts, thinking that Slytherin was not so far removed in looks from the Dark Lord Severus had knelt to all those years ago. Slytherin was, after all, the same man, a clone of some kind, a homunculus perhaps—undoubtedly a creature of Dark magic, but essentially still Tom Riddle and maybe more Tom Riddle than Voldemort had been at the end. If such a thing were possible.

Time and hard-won wisdom had stripped the veneer and glamour from Severus’ eyes; where he once saw pride, he saw only arrogance. Where he once saw power and prestige, he saw a well-dressed squatter, a malicious swindler, a liar, a thief. Neither Severus nor the Headmaster could roust the bastard from the castle, so he was an unequivocally powerful liar, but a liar all the same—a blight, a very slow poison taking root and rotting the magical world at its heart. The pernicious corruption of impressionable youths would be their destruction one day.

What a fucking moron he’d been to ever proffer his arm for Riddle’s mark.

Slytherin said nothing for several minutes, content to take his time and finish his idle perusal of the painting and make the Potions Master wait. “Pleasant summer, Severus?”

“Yes, my lord. Busy, as well. The old man ensures I have little idle time on my hands.”

“You know what they say about idle hands and the devil.” Slytherin grinned and swirled his wine. Severus didn’t tell him that expression was a Muggle euphemism. “He’s just trying to keep you honest and on the path of righteous virtue, ‘my dear boy.’” He laughed outright.

The corners of Severus’ mouth quirked and he folded his hands together between his knees, the picture of relaxed and negligent, all thoughts of sneering and snapping and spitting at Slytherin kept well-hidden from the man and from himself. “Indeed. He did, however, happen to send me on a very…interesting errand the other day.”

“Did he, now?”

“Yes, my lord.” Severus drew his thumb over his knuckles, a calculated, thoughtful motion. “Forgive my impertinence, but I must ask if I’ve trodden on one of your many plans and haven’t been informed.”

Slytherin’s expression sharpened. “Explain.”

“The Headmaster sent me along to…clean up after a conflict between Gaunt’s men and Harriet Potter’s guardian.” Not technically a lie, if one were to consider the chit’s Horned Serpent in such a capacity. Of course, Severus wasn’t about to tell Slytherin the girl was vulnerable, and it wasn’t like Dogbane had the opportunity to report back on her whereabouts, thus eliminating the chance Slytherin had learned of her circumstances through a Ministry mole.

Slytherin set the wine glass down and leaned forward ever so slightly, and though he said nothing, his attention honed in on Severus like a snake spotting a juicy rat.

“It seems the Minister was curious to learn what had transpired with the girl in June.”

The other wizard rose and stood over Severus, red eyes glinting. “And you believe I was foolish enough to impart this information to Gaunt?” He sneered the name with particular venom.

“It is not my place to believe anything as such, my lord. It is your information to do with as you will; I simply wish to know if I should be suppressing knowledge of the event, or if I have been remiss in knowing your wishes regarding the matter.” The Potions Master’s smooth, unctuous tone never wavered even as the skin about his eyes tightened in increments.

Slytherin bore his teeth and the wine glass sailed into the hearth without him touching it, shattering, the painted snake entwined in the rowan hissing in irritation. “Of course I want the information suppressed, you fool!” The wizard began to pace between the armchair and the glass-strewn hearth, making no sound but for his snarling and the swish of rippling cloth. “I did not want the girl brought to his attention anymore than it has been, let alone the Ministers. I seek to secure the girl’s potential for the Knights—sssomeone seeks to play us. Someone dares share my secrets with Gaunt!

It was as Severus expected, then. He knew Slytherin would “seek to secure” any of his House for the Knights of Walpurgis—his chosen name for his Death Eaters—so his specific attention on Harriet wasn’t shocking, especially not after the scene they discovered in Albus’ office. He hadn’t been certain, however, whether Slytherin had fed information to his Dark Lord counterpart for some heretofore unknown and undoubtedly dastardly plan, or if the man had a leak in his network of sympathizers and confidantes.

It seemed Slytherin had been betrayed.

“An unfortunate, but ultimately worthless event for a traitor to play his hand on, my lord,” Severus murmured, watching Slytherin round on him with murder in his red eyes, the Potions Master modulating his every word. “Quirrell’s own incompetence and weakened state led to his demise. I would not lay any claims of prodigal ability at Potter’s feet; she simply benefited from pure dumb luck.”

The bastard was listening to him now, focused instead of idly hearing Severus, and so the younger wizard pressed his advantage, taking care not to lay undue suspicion. “A useful tool, to be sure, but not more so than her year mates. The traitor has extended his reach for fool’s gold.”

Slytherin smiled then, all sharp teeth and no guile, and though Severus didn’t know if the wizard believed him about Potter’s supposed worthlessness, he had successfully redirected his attention—for now. Slytherin had intimated far too much interest in Potter after June; whatever happened in that office, whatever new secret Albus was trying to bury, whatever had made the Headmaster pale and morosely reflective, Severus did not want bloody Slytherin privy to.

Not for the first time, he wished the girl had gone to a different House. Severus didn’t know how to keep her from Slytherin’s clutches. He didn’t know if he could.

The Dark wizard sat in his chair again, a veritable king in his throne—one who didn’t need a crown to remind a man he could grind him into so much dust beneath his heel. “Leave me,” Slytherin ordered, and Severus didn’t hesitate, standing from the couch and bowing his head before he strode from the room.

He didn’t breathe again until he reached his own quarters.

 

X

 

The migraine pulsed white-hot behind his left eye, wreathing itself like Devil’s Snare about his brain, and Severus could only press the side of the cool vial to his temple and mutter invectives under his breath until the potion kicked in. The bitterness of willow extract on his tongue matched his mood, and he swallowed it, shoving away all thoughts of Slytherin and traitors, unwilling to brood more upon the potentially dangerous situation.

If one suspects their boat has sprung a leak, they will search for the breach. Upon finding and fixing that leak, the very first thing a wise person would do is check for another.

In this droll metaphor, Severus was the second leak—much finer, much harder to find, but he didn’t need some bloody idiot hemorrhaging information to bring Slytherin’s discerning eye down upon him as well. The harsh truth of having a double-agent was knowing that agent fed information, however selective, to your enemies, and then deciding at what point that agent crosses the line between obedience and dissension. Severus came perilously close to the line again and again over the years. Slytherin’s last warning to him had been losing his eye. There would be no second warning.

He tucked the vial into his robe pocket and crossed the room to the Floo, throwing in a pinch of silver powder. It was very nearly seven in the evening. Severus spoke the address and the pass phrase Albus had lifted from the poor blighter in the Department of Magical Transportation, then stepped through the whirling fire to the kitchen of Grimmauld Place.

The smell of Earl Grey overcame the choking soot, and Severus looked around to find Minerva seated at the table with a cuppa, staring into the milky liquid with a distant eyes.

“Are you their minder for the day?” he sneered, flicking the last bit of ash from his robes. The older witch lifted her head and arched a brow.

“Good evening, Severus,” she said, ignoring his jibe, gesturing to the chair across from her. A brush of magic jerked it away from the table. “Tea?”

He considered declining with his usual aspersive snark, but in the end simply grunted and dropped into the seat, accepting a conjured cup and pouring himself a serving from the kettle. The two professors drank in silence, the oppressive quiet of the house coming to rest on their shoulders until Severus could little stand the resulting stillness. “So…how did the old fool guilt you into watching brats during your holiday?”

Minerva snorted and sipped her tea. “They’re well behaved girls, quiet and studious—hardly brats,” she commented, smirking. “Neither came out very much like their fathers, did they?”

“You mean arrogant, destructive, or deranged? No, I can’t say they did. But there’s still time for those symptoms to present themselves.”

She tutted and lifted her gaze, letting it rove past Severus to the china hutch bearing ancestral plates, to the ancient kitchen and its aged cupboards. Someone had spelled the room clean and returned vigor to the furnishings, but it remained dimly lit, old-fashioned, and touched by the Dark. “I can see why Sirius turned out as he did, being raised in this place. Sometimes, no matter how we try, it’s impossible to escape our roots.”

Severus didn’t want to talk about Sirius fucking Black. He didn’t want to think about his own roots—about Tobias Snape and the back-end of Cokeworth, because if a privileged prat like rich, pretty boy Sirius couldn’t escape his fate, then Severus had no chance at all. He tightened his grip on the teacup.

“I told Albus it’s not right to keep the children here, even said I would house them at Elphinstone’s old cottage in Hogsmeade, but the protections are sound and Miss Black is intractable.”

You mean pig-headed and irritating. Severus wondered where Black had grown up, since it obviously hadn’t been here. Potter once commented on Black’s great-uncle, whom Severus knew for certain from Narcissa had enclosed himself in this wretched place after falling out with his remaining daughter, and so Black couldn’t have been with Cygnus. Not for long, at any rate.

“An orphanage.”

Blinking, Severus realized he’d spoken aloud—and Minerva had answered. “Pardon?”

“An Muggle orphanage in Wiltshire,” she explained, lips pursed with her signature displeasure. “I checked the Book after Albus….” Pausing, Minerva seemed to struggle for the right word, a flush of anger in her cheeks, the Scottish brogue curling the edges of her voice. “After Albus told me about the Dursleys and asked for my assistance. I’m sure you know, but the letters that go out to incoming and ongoing students in the summer are automated by the Book and the Quill through a regiment of Protean Charms mimicking the first letter I write and the year’s requirements set by the Board, and though I oversee that every letter goes out, I haven’t the time to check and verify all the addresses.”

“Perhaps you should make the time,” Severus retorted with a measure of censure and anger, Petunia’s memories rising like bile from the pit of his mind.

Minerva shot him a look, and yet didn’t defend herself. “Yes. Perhaps I should. Miss Potter’s address, as you’ve already learned, was listed for The Cupboard Under the Stairs. Miss Black’s was listed as St. Giles’ Institute in Wiltshire.”

“And this didn’t necessitate a visit from a representative?”

“No. She’s a pure-blood; both her parents are magical, and the Quill noted her down as such. The same with Miss Potter. Only Muggle-borns are indicated as needing a representative from the school to deliver their missive—and to inform them of Gaunt’s bleeding MPA law.”

“The letter system is flawed.” He made no mention of the MPA, as stating the obvious irritated him.

“Yes,” Minerva acceded. “And I will be watching it more carefully from now on, though you know as well as I do that abuse in Wizarding households isn’t at all common, and I can’t very well go and strip the Quill or the Book of their Charms because they’ve made mistakes, no matter how wrong. The Board would have my head.” She sipped her tea, frowning. “She wrote to me over the summer—Miss Black, that is. She was very careful with what she said, and while some of her questions struck me as odd coming from a pure-blood, her rhetoric…I assumed her guardian was coaching her to be more precocious and curious. I never suspected she’d been raised in a Muggle environment. She’s very clever, Severus.”

“Did Miss Potter write to you as well?”

“No. Why?”

The Potions Master glowered at his cup and tried to make sense of this mess. How in the hell did the girl reach Diagon Alley? Who told her? Who took her there? If Black was clever, then Potter was cunning, because for all that she seemed an affable, if odd, girl, Potter trusted little and played her secrets close to the chest. “Never mind.”

“Och, you sound like Albus when you do that.”

“That’s not a compliment.” Severus set aside his empty cup. “Next you’ll be expecting me to proffer a bowl of lemon candies. Maybe keep a tin of peppermints on my desk for the children?”

Minerva chuckled and poured herself another serving, doctoring the cup to her liking. “I don’t think the students would eat anything you handed them, Severus.”

He sneered. “Good.”

The cat just rolled her eyes and moved the conversation onto other topics. “Speaking of letters,” she said. “I’ve handed Miss Black and Miss Potter their school lists this morning. They’ll be in need of a trip to Diagon.”

“I assume, knowing Albus, I’ll have the dubious honor of ensuring they get there.”

“Most likely, yes. You are the closest thing we have to a real Head of Slytherin, and the girls are Slytherins, after all.”

“Joy.”

A prickling sensation began in his right wrist, creeping through the skin of his palm, and by the time Black came barging into the room, Severus had already regained his feet. “Professor—!” Black paused when she saw the Potions Master but she nonetheless continued, wringing her gloved hands. “Er—there’s a chair in the parlor trying to eat Harriet.”

Severus swept past the witch and climbed the stairs, hearing the thumps and muffled swearing echoing into the main corridor as he crossed below the leering elf heads and approached the front parlor. A chair had, indeed, made a go of devouring the bespectacled witch, seeming to have thrown her back into its cushions like a duck swallowing its meal whole, the seat raised to pin her in place. The girl’s reading material had dropped on the floor when she’d attempted to sit, and her small fists balled and struck the furled arms while the chair growled.

Severus stared at the scene before him.

“Bloody, stupid, fucking—!”

“Miss Potter!” Minerva had come up behind the Potions Master and now clutched at her chest. “Where on earth did you hear such language?!”

By now the girl was more than a little red in the face, straining to yank her weight out of the ravenous seat, and Severus thought she may well started cursing at Minerva if no one assisted her. ‘Well behaved’ indeed.

Severus slashed his wand and the chair fell to pieces. Potter hit the floor with a loud, indignant thump.

Pinching the bridge of his nose, the Potions Master turned and strode back into the hall. Summer could not end swiftly enough.

 


 

A/N: “The Knights of Walpurgis” was Rowling’s original name for the Death Eaters, based off of “Walpurgis Night,” a Christian holiday wherein bonfires are lit to ward away evil spirits and witches.

Chapter 55: alley brawlers

Chapter Text

lv. alley brawlers

 

Harriet took a bite of blueberry ice cream and sighed.

Summer seemed heavier in the Alley than in the rest of London, burning hot and implacable, laying sticky perspiration on the back of Harriet’s neck, melting her frozen confection almost faster than she could eat it. Diagon was crowded with witches and wizards getting school supplies for their kids or taking advantage of the summer’s end sales, milling from the North to South ends, spilling out of Gringotts with varying disgruntled faces. She saw Professor Selwyn walking with boxes under his arm and Professor Sinistra swanned by holding half of a telescope like it was her first-born child. She thought Longbottom made an appearance, but it was difficult to see in the crush of bodies.

Harriet could little believe that she’d only known she was a witch for a year. Livi shifted under her shirt and Harriet patted his side.

“We still need our books from Flourish and Blotts, and Harriet needs more clothes from Madam Malkin’s or Twilfitt’s,” Elara said aloud as she studiously checked her list, legs crossed at the ankles below her chair, a soft pink flush on her fair skin from the sun. She looked much too warm in Harriet’s opinion, but she wore the same long-sleeved dress and gloves she always did, the buttons on the collar done all the way to the top. “I need to visit Madam Malkin’s as well.”

“Alright,” Tonks replied, a dab of pistachio ice cream on her chin, her hair electric blue and eye-catching. “Malkin’s is up by Flourish and Blotts, so we should probably wander down to Twilfitt’s on the South end, then come back up.”

“Harriet needs to visit Weeoanwhisker’s on Horizont for a haircut.”

“Harriet is sitting right here,” the girl in question groused. “And I don’t need a haircut.”

“It’d be best to do it before term starts,” Elara argued. “Or you’ll have to have Madam Pomfrey do it and she’s not fussed with making it look nice.”

“As long as we’re back to meet Snape at the Apothecary on time,” Tonks said, leaning her chair on its back legs. “I don’t much fancy making the bat wait.”

Elara wrinkled her nose as she folded her list and placed it inside her robe pocket. Harriet wondered how she could stand all that black. “Is he honestly going to spend the whole day there?”

“He said something about doing the school account,” Harriet put in, finishing off her ice cream. Yeah, he said that in between all the mutterings about meddling old fools and babysitting. They’d left that morning with Tonks and Professor Snape, the latter peeling off the second they’d arrived to go to Slug and Jiggers, saying he’d be there if needed and they should meet him at the store when ready to leave—which, incidentally, was no later than three. He also told Harriet and Elara that if they wandered off, he’d make sure they spent all of next summer locked inside Grimmauld Place.

Harriet grimaced at the thought.

“Alright, you lot!” Tonks said as she jumped to her feet and nearly trod on a bloke trying to reach his own table. “Finished with your lunch, yeah? Got all your packages still?”

Both girls obediently patted their pockets to ensure their shrunken parcels were still stashed inside.

“Good! On to Twilfitt’s, then. And maybe we’ll pop into Gambol and Japes right quick, love their Wet-Start fireworks….”

The trio of witches left the patio outside Florean Fortescue’s and entered the fray, Tonks and Elara easily parting the way with their taller stature and Tonks’ loping gait. Harriet, in contrast, found herself getting trod on more often than not and had difficulty keeping up. Somebody dropped a crate with a fire-breathing chicken inside and caused a mild panic.

“Excuse me, I need to—.” She squeezed by a witch carrying a heavy cauldron and craned her neck in an attempt to see more than thighs and backsides. A flash of electric blue caught Harriet’s eye and she headed after it, trapped behind a broad wizard and his darkly clad witch, neither inclined to jostle about and let Harriet through. The bespectacled girl let out an aggravated breath and contented herself with following the crowd in the direction Tonks had gone. Behind her, a bloke in maroon robes came stomping out of the crowd to yell at the man who’d been carrying the chicken crate.

Sss….” Livi stirred beneath Harriet’s loose shirt and laid his angular head on her collarbone, creating an odd lump she hoped no one looked at too closely. “Hungry.

You have to wait,” she hissed in reply, lifting her collar over her mouth. “I told you it’d probably be better to stay at the house with Kevin. Kreacher would’ve fed you.

Muttering elf-creature isss annoying,” the serpent grumped. “And Misstresss isss warm.”

“So you’ve said before.” Harriet sighed and gently poked his nose until he lowered it into a less obvious position. “I’ll try to get you a snack before we go back.”

The pair in front of Harriet finally turned away. Harriet lifted her head to get her bearings and—.

Stopped. She blinked once, twice, opened her mouth, and shut it again. She didn’t know where she was.

Spinning in a tight circle, Harriet looked at the narrow, grubby brick walls and searched for a familiar landmark, something to orient herself, given that she’d spent a considerable amount of time in London’s Wizarding district exploring its many recesses and should recognize where she was. Few shops dotted the row she stood in, and those that did had grubby, hard to read signs, some boarded up with their windows covered by old Daily Prophets.

Witches and wizards still crowded the street—but they were different too, rougher, a perfidious smell choking the air that Harriet didn’t rightly have a name for, something thick and cloying, mixed with the odor of unwashed body and spoiled potion. Swallowing, Harriet ducked her head and turned on her heels, heading back the way she’d come.

The row opened into a warren of shorter passages through dimly lit and shadowed breaks in the high walls, men and women crowded in the mouths of seedy shops, leering at Harriet when they caught sight of her. The bespectacled witch had done her fair share of traveling to new locales over the summer, but that was always with a sense of direction and destination, map in hand and a set course in mind. This was different; Diagon Alley had vanished and Harriet hadn’t a clue where it’d gone, where she was, or how she’d gotten here.

She felt the weight of eyes burning into the back of her neck.

“Okay,” Harriet whispered to herself, heart beating heavy and wet in her throat, her hands sweaty. “Okay, don’t panic, numpty. I couldn’t have come that far. I must have taken a wrong turn—stay hidden,” she added to Livius, who had begun to stir beneath her clothes, sensing her agitation. The last thing she needed was him biting someone out in broad daylight.

Pausing in her harried wandering, Harriet looked down at her feet and muttered, “Set.” She waited, hoping he’d heard her, but when a repeated utterance of the name did nothing, Harriet cursed under her breath and stomped a foot. “Oh, you git. Where are you when I need you?”

She picked up the pace, and then Harriet bit her lip, stopping again, trying to recall what she could of the path here and wishing she hadn’t been so distracted by Livi’s peckishness and her own wool-gathering. Snape’s going to bloody murder me.

“Ooh, there’s a pretty lass,” crooned a witch leaning in the doorway of Dystyl Phaelanges. Dusty bones cluttered the display window.

“Scrawny little bint,” her wizard companion said, puffing on his pipe. He glared at Harriet while the witch smiled, sending shivers down Harriet’s spine.

“Lost, little lamb?” the witch asked. “Need a hand?”

“Err—no,” Harriet managed to say before scuttling off, the witch and wizard guffawing in her wake. She came to the next corner and took it, telling herself the sooner she found the end of this place, the sooner she’d be able to find the beginning. Gut sinking, Harriet became more and more certain with every step that she’d somehow managed to take that blighted archway into Knockturn Alley, the one place in the district she’d always stayed away from, as it was emphatically not for untended children. “Shite.”

She backed out of a little leeway that dead-ended with a place called McHavelock’s Wizarding Headgear, where a loitering wizard with a scraggly beard watched her too close for comfort, and continued instead up a set of short, broad stone steps. Harriet didn’t remember taking any steps before so she knew she must be going in the wrong direction, but heading back the way she’d come seemed a terrible idea, and she remembered Knockturn opened somewhere along Toad Road just as it did Diagon. So long as she got out of Knockturn, Harriet could find her way back to Tonks and Elara.

She tried not to run; the fastest way to make herself vulnerable was to run about scared and lost, so Harriet forced her spine stiff and blanked her face, pretending she knew her own business and wouldn’t be fussed with someone trying to interfere. She was a Slytherin, for Merlin’s sake, and one thing the older Slytherins loved to do late at night in the common room was brag about their adventures in Knockturn Alley. Harriet guessed most of their supposed exploits were a load of dragon dung, but most had one common thread; the Floo Network connected to Borgin and Burkes.

If she could find the shop, she’d have another place to escape—exit—from.

She turned onto another passage, darker than the last, and she thought the lane ahead looked brighter and more open than any of the rest she’d seen so far. Harriet rushed forward—and hurtled headlong into the cobblestones when the bite of a Tripping Jinx caught her unawares by the ankles. Harriet threw out her hands to catch her weight, scouring her palms on the rough stones, saving Livi from the brunt of the impact even as her knees and elbows throbbed. Her glasses skittered away, thrown by her momentum, and Harriet cursed her bloody eyesight as she rolled to her back and yanked her wand free of its brace.

It was the wizard she’d seen before, the one with the scraggly beard and low cap, moving purposely toward her with his wand extended. Harriet readied herself to hex the bollocks off the bastard, when she felt the soft brush of robes against her cheek, and the approaching wizard backed off as if spooked. He walked backward until he reached the alley mouth and disappeared.

Harriet glanced up to see her savior—and decided she might not be saved after all.

Standing stiff and poised, Professor Slytherin looked down his nose at Harriet crumpled on the ground, several emotions flickering over his face one by one, like a man switching masks, trying them on until he had the one that fit best. His red eyes narrowed. “Miss…Potter.”

“P-Professor Slytherin,” she managed, scrambling to her feet on her own. A small gash bled on her right hand, stinging where dirt had gotten into the wound, and her bones ached from colliding with the stones. She squinted, searching for her glasses, but the light was low and the walls too textured—.

Slytherin snapped his fingers, and Harriet’s spectacles came darting up from a groove in the lane, landing squarely in his palm. He curled his lip at the dirt and shoved them into Harriet’s hand, who quickly put them back into place, wincing at the long, spidery cracks marring one of the lenses. “Thank you, Professor.”

He made a noise of acknowledgment, half-hum and half-scoff, then said, “Far be it from me to discourage…extracurricular interests, but you’re not meant to be down here on your own. Where is your guardian?”

“We got separated,” Harriet rushed to explain. “I’m—I didn’t mean to come down here.”

“Hmm.” He considered her for a long, uncomfortable moment, then Slytherin extended his hand, and though Harriet didn’t much want to touch him, she reached out to take hold of it, Slytherin’s fingers snapping into place around hers. His skin was ice cold and Harriet’s neck hurt.

Without explanation, Professor Slytherin started off in a new direction and Harriet had to jog to keep up, lest the wizard drag her through the streets like an unhappy dog on a leash. Those people who’d sneered and watched Harriet from their shop stoops now quickly found other places to be or shrank into the shadows, eyes averted, all but jumping out of Slytherin’s way. For his part, the professor simply looked bored, face slack and eyes half-closed, like his mind was a million leagues away from that dingy alley and the girl he yanked along by the arm.

Through the twisting byways they went until, from one step to the next, they came out from under a thick stone arch and once more entered the wider, louder congregation floating along the middle of Diagon Alley. Harriet barely had time to take in a relieved breath before they were off again, Slytherin towing her through the throng faster than before, heading straight into a dense cluster comprised mostly of giggling, middle-aged witches.

Harriet!

Professor Slytherin came to a sudden halt and Elara darted out of the crowd, colliding with Harriet, ripping her hand out of Slytherin’s grasp. Harriet heard the older girl whisper, “Thank God,” as Elara squeezed her tight and Harriet coughed. Livi grunted a complaint.

“Can’t breathe, Elara—.”

A wizard bellowed aloud when Tonks came careening into their little group, having elbowed the unfortunate man in a sensitive area to get him out of her way. “Merlin’s balls!” the auror almost wailed, clapping both hands onto Harriet’s arms, narrowly missing Livi’s coils. The serpent in question drew himself tighter around his witch’s middle and hissed in warning, the sound going unheard in the louder hubbub. “Where did you go?! Are you trying to get me murdered? Because I swear, Harriet, there are kinder ways to go about it—.”

Tonks choked when she caught sight of Professor Slytherin favoring her with a contemptuous look. “Miss Tonks,” he said, his smile hard. “How very…surprising. Does the Aurory often order you to babysit?”

Pale and obviously spooked, Tonks quietly acknowledged him with a muttered, “Professor,” and gathered Harriet nearer, away from the wizard.

“Do try to keep better track of your charges, hmm? You never know where they might…wander.”

Tonks nodded, not meeting his eyes, and Slytherin bled back into the crowd the way they’d come, presumably to return to Knockturn Alley—though he did glance at Harriet once more before disappearing. Tonks exhaled and straightened once he was out of sight—then thumped the shorter witch on the top of her head.

“Ouch!” Harriet shouted, hands jumping to the sore spot. “What was that for?!”

“For giving me a heart attack!” Tonk replied. She still looked rather pale, Harriet noted. “Holy Helga, don’t tell Snape. Please don’t tell Snape; they won’t find enough of my body parts for the coffin.”

“That’d be a waste of perfectly good potion ingredients,” Elara said in an eerily accurate imitation of the aforementioned Potions Master, and Harriet—relieved to be away from Knockturn Alley and her Defense professor—started giggling.

“You’re not funny,” Tonks said, scowling. A witch fighting her way to the front of the crowd jostled her, and Tonks looked around with a wince. “Hell—we don’t have time for this lot. You still have that list of stuff you needed from Malkin’s and Twilfitt’s, cousin?”

Elara did, of course, still have the list, and she brought it out, handing it to Tonks. “Alright, then. I’m going to dash and get your clothes—don’t worry, they have Sizing Charms, so everything should fit right—and you two are going to get your books. You’re going to stay right here at Flourish and Blotts until I come back, right? Not a toe out line! And stick together! Buddy system!”

“We’re not babies,” Harriet complained, though she didn’t protest when Elara took one of her hands, giving it a squeeze. “We’ll stay right here.”

“No wandering off?”

“I didn’t wander off, I got lost in the stupid crowd.”

Tonks snorted. “Yeah, well…. In case there’s an emergency—.” She lifted a hand and pointed out Slug and Jiggers only three doors down from Flourish and Blotts. Snape was supposedly there still. “But, like I said, only an emergency—.”

After getting several more assurances they wouldn’t let each other out their sights and would stay in Flourish and Blotts, Tonks took off at high speed, meaning to get the rest of their stuff before they had to meet Snape at the apothecary and leave. Elara didn’t release Harriet’s hand and started to bodily shove witches and wizards out of the way, her glare sharp enough to head off any protests, and they came to a stop before the shop’s entrance.

“’Meet the author of Magical Me!’” Harriet read aloud from the glittering banner strung across the facia. “Who’s the author of Magical Me?

“Him.” Elara jerked her chin toward the front display window, in which a teetering stack of purple books had been set up, a blond, smiling wizard’s portrait blowing kisses at the witches pressed up to the glass.

“Er…?”

Harriet didn’t know what to say to that, and instead let Elara pull her inside the bookshop like putty through a very tight tube, the interior hot and muggy, the skinny manager who’d frowned when Harriet passed through too often in the beginning of the summer looking quite harassed at the moment. The tables in the front where they’d put out the different year bundles last summer had disappeared.

“Where’s the book?”

“They’ve moved them for the stupid signing, obviously. We can find them ourselves, come on….”

Elara and Harriet headed down an aisle, finding themselves among a few other Hogwarts students instead of a gaggling horde of twitter-pated, middle-aged witches. “D’you think we’re going to be like that when we’re older?” Harriet asked, earning a scandalized look from her friend. “I’m serious. Do our brains go wonky or something at a certain age? Turn to pudding—? Hey, Hermione!

Harriet had been set to complain more about the buzzing witches when she caught a glimpse of bushy, brunette hair from the corner of her eye, flouncing around the corner from Autumnal Charms to Applications of Dactyliomancy. The hair in question came whipping back into sight when Hermione—balancing an absolute mountain of books—ran into their row.

“Elara! Harriet!”

A bit of awkward shuffling followed, the books having to be set down on the floor before the trio of witches could embrace, grinning from ear to ear. “Enjoying your summer, Hermione?” Elara asked.

“Well enough,” she answered, pulling back to study her friends, tucking her frazzled hair behind her ears. “Oh, Harriet, what happened to your glasses? You’re covered in dirt and—your hand! What have you done?”

She fussed over the bespectacled witch, muttering, “Oculus Reparo,” as she tapped her wand against Harriet’s glasses, while Elara pulled a handkerchief from her skirt pocket and wrapped it around her bleeding palm.

“Long story,” Harriet said as her cheeks pinked. “I, um, well—I tripped.” Which technically wasn’t a lie.

Both Elara and Hermione gave her a look clearly indicating they didn’t believe her, but instead of pushing the issue, Hermione shook her head. “Never mind. I haven’t much time before the Malfoys come back for me. What have you been up to these past weeks? I might have, well, been eavesdropping a bit in the library, and I heard about you staying with Elara from Snape of all people….”

They shared an abbreviated and vague conversation on the events that had occurred over the last week or so, mindful of the potential ears listening in all around them. Hermione, for her part, summed up her vacation in just a few words. “I’ve been studying. That’s it, really. Mr. Malfoy quizzes us almost daily.”

“Are you…enjoying it?” Harriet asked, not sure if she should. Hermione loved testing her knowledge, but the look on her face didn’t look nearly half so pleased as Harriet would have thought.

“Not especially, no. You know I rather like learning, and I am learning so many things—did you know there’s fifteen different schools of magic in Transfiguration alone? Professor McGonagall’s mastery had an emphasis in eight of the fields, including Animation, Transmutation, and Golemnry, though obviously the professor’s main emphasis was in Transformation.”

“What the heck is Golemnry?”

“The production of golems—you know what a golem is, Harriet, you carry one in your shirt pocket half the time. Anyway; no, I can’t say I much enjoy the testing. It’s incredibly stressful.”

Someone let out a put-upon sigh behind them, and the three witches turned to see Neville Longbottom standing in the middle of the aisle with his arms crossed. He stood with Ron Weasley and Dean Thomas as well, the latter pair busy chortling over a garishly colored book of joke jinxes. “Get out of the way, Slytherins,” the Boy Who Lived grumbled.

“Bugger off, Longbottom.”

Harriet,” Hermione reprimanded. “Really!”

“You’re blocking the row,” Longbottom snapped—which was true, once the witches considered Hermione’s stack of books and their own bodies.

“Oh….” They shuffled over, moving the books with them, and Longbottom passed by. Ron and Dean barely spared them any attention at all.

Harriet hated the anger that swelled in her guts, that petty, envious feeling she got every time she had to look at Longbottom, especially after what Headmaster Dumbledore had said at the end of the year. He had parents, friends, fame—Harriet didn’t much want fame, but she despised how her own family had been reduced to some footnote in a textbook when Longbottom hadn’t actually done anything.

Gritting her teeth, Harriet shoved the feeling away and reminded herself she had much to be grateful for, and though her childhood hadn’t been ideal, she had a home now—and a git of a pseudo-guardian who was going to be furious if they didn’t get their textbooks together on time. At least he cared, in his own way. The Dursleys wouldn’t have bothered with getting mad; they’d have just left her there.

“C’mon, we need our books….”

Hermione, having already gathered her own texts, helped Harriet and Elara find what they needed, and afterward Harriet wandered into the fiction section while Elara and Hermione argued over the reliability of a Transfiguration author. Harriet idly flipped through a few wizarding novels, her thoughts drifting toward Knockturn, wondering what Professor Slytherin had been doing down there. In the end, she decided she really didn’t want to know and it would be wiser to keep her mouth shut.

Those people in the street were terrified of him….

By the time they found their way back toward the front of the shop to make their purchases, the crowd had become impossibly thick, and Elara had one hand fisted in the hem of Harriet’s shirt so they wouldn’t be separated. They paid for their school books, then allowed themselves to be swept aside like flotsam since none of the three young witches could leave the store without their guardian.

“Hermione, do you have anything to eat?”

“I think I have a Cauldron Cake in my robe pocket, why?”

“Can I have a piece?”

Puzzled, Hermione found the Cauldron Cake and peeled back the wrapper, handing over the allotted bite of sweet bread—which Harriet promptly stuck under the collar of her shirt. At first the older witch blinked, confused, and then her eyes narrowed. “Are you daft?she hissed. “Really, Harriet. Why would you bring him with you—?”

“Potter, did you just stick Cauldron Cake down your shirt?” The smarmy voice of Draco Malfoy startled the trio tucked in the corner, and he came slinking over, primly dressed in silver-tooled robes, haughty smirk firmly in place.

Harriet scowled. “No,” she lied, wiping her fingers clean on her collar, feeling Livi swallow the bit of cake whole with a satisfied huff.

Malfoy didn’t believe her, but he only shook his head. “Merlin, you’re a weird witch.”

The gathered spectators chose that moment to burst into applause, and Harriet strained to see a blond, resplendent wizard with gleaming white teeth come swanning out of the employee lounge. “Yes, hello! Lovely—how lovely it is to be here! Thank you!”

He waved at the gathered witches and winked, earning more than a few delighted gasps and bursts of excited giggling. “Who is that?” Harriet asked, wrinkling her nose.

“Gilderoy Lockhart,” Hermione said, breathless, and when Harriet glanced over, she found her friend’s face had turned a startling shade of pink. “He’s—quite brilliant, really. His books are fascinating—here, I’ll lend you one of mine….”

“Brilliantly stupid,” Malfoy quipped, frowning at Hermione as she slipped a shrunken copy of Gadding with Ghouls into Harriet’s hands. “What’s wrong with you Granger? You’ve gone all red.”

“N-nothing!”

“You don’t fancy that pompous git, do you?”

Hermione reddened further, and Elara intervened. “Deflecting a crush of your own, Malfoy?” she drawled. “How unexpected.”

“Shut up, Black.”

“Is your father here, Draco? Is it time to leave?” Hermione asked, shooting Elara a grateful look. “I assume that’s why you’re bothering with us.”

“Yes, he sent me to fetch you. He’s just over—father!

Their small group managed to look around in time to witness Mr. Malfoy get slugged by a slightly balding, red-haired bloke in patched robes, and they toppled over into one of the shelves, books raining on them and the crowd. Witches shrieked, a shorter, red-haired woman screaming “Arthur!” louder than the rest while the harassed store manager burst into tears. Two boys somewhere in the thick of things started yelling, “Get him, Dad!” and a photographer from the Daily Prophet clicked away on his camera like mad.

Torn between running to his father’s rescue and not getting punched for the effort, Draco stood frozen, mouth agape.

“Break it up, you two! Break it up!” boomed a familiar voice. Harriet smiled when she saw Hagrid squeeze his way through the entrance, nudging aside witches with little effort on his part to reach Mr. Malfoy and the red-haired wizard, yanking the pair apart by the scruffs of their necks. “That’s ‘nuff of that!”

Mr. Malfoy staggered on his own two feet and yanked his tailored robes back into place, his eye already purpling, pale hair splayed about his shoulders. It irked Harriet that, like his son, he still managed to look pretty even when mussed and angry—the git. “Unhand me, I’m on the Board of Governors and could have you dismissed in an instant—.” Mr. Malfoy sucked in a ragged breath. “Draco! Hermione! We are leaving; I won’t patronize an establishment that serves such…commoners.”

Draco shuffled forward, one hand latched on Hermione’s sleeve, and Hermione cast a final, despairing look at Harriet and Elara before she let herself be steered from the store. The witch who’d screamed was busy mopping the red-haired wizard’s—Arthur?—bloodied lip, all while furiously berating him for brawling in public. Harriet spotted Fred and George Weasley standing nearby, and guessed the couple had to be their mum and dad.

As the book signing continued, and Lockhart went into raptures when he spotted Longbottom among the onlookers, Harriet caught Elara’s eye and the other witch suddenly grinned, white teeth bright with plain humor. “Do you think it would be inappropriate for me to send Mr. Weasley a thank you gift?” she asked. “Because that was amazing.”

Harriet laughed.

  


 

A/N: Random note I’ll probably extrapolate more on later in the story, but I’m not going to magically fix Harriet’s eye-sight. It bothers me when fics change that aspect of Harry right off, like it’s some kind of horrid flaw. Magic has its limits, and I want to preserve that part that seems to quintessentially Harriet.

Poor Tonks. She was 99% prepared for Snape to murder her, no doubt.

Chapter 56: summer's end

Chapter Text

lvi. summer’s end

 

Bang. Bang. Bang.

The noise resounded in the house’s confines each time Elara’s trunk came down hard on a step. Harriet, twiddling her thumbs in the kitchen, listened to the sound and was torn between amusement and being horribly anxious as she watched Snape—seated on the other side of the table—grow progressively more irritated.

Bang. Bang. Bang.

“Will you pick that up?!” the Potions Master suddenly bellowed, startling Harriet and, from the sound of squawking out in the hall, several of the Black portraits. Elara must have heard the man, but she did not, in fact, pick the trunk up, and continued her downward trek through the main corridor, the basement steps, and then into the kitchen itself. She dropped the trunk in question by Harriet’s next to the Floo, and though she didn’t quite meet Snape’s eyes, Elara smirked as she took her seat.

She’s going to land us both in detention as soon as school starts, Harriet thought, though she couldn’t quite hide her own smile. ‘Ten points for blinking, Miss Black. Is that air you’re breathing, Miss Potter? Ten points.’

“If you two are quite done,” Snape sneered, his arms crossed and expression stern. Harriet bit her tongue before she could protest that she had come down as soon as he told her to and hadn’t been the one slamming her trunk on every step. “Term starts tomorrow. I expect you to have all of your things together and be ready to depart at precisely ten tomorrow morning.”

“I don’t understand why we can’t Floo directly to Hogsmeade later in the evening,” Elara said. “It doesn’t make sense to me.”

“Do you assume you’re the first person to ever consider the thought?” Snape snapped. “You and every other pure-blood’s get wishes to Floo directly into the village—which any Dark wizard seeking to extort money from an old family would know, wouldn’t they? Do try to use your brain. Special dispensation is granted only to those living within a set distance of the village, otherwise all students are expected to ride the train for security purposes, whether they want to or not.”

Elara crossed her arms and said nothing else.

“Your petulant attitude is tiring, Black.”

The witch might have risen to the bait had Harriet not chosen that moment to cough, loudly, into her hand. Snape glowered at both of them.

“As I was saying…you will leave precisely at ten. Floo access opening onto the station is restricted as it is in Hogsmeade—again, for security purposes, not that I should have to explain myself to you. Access between Grimmauld and Kings Cross will be open for precisely five minutes. Should you miss that window, you are not to leave the house—and should your excuse for doing so be anything other than the spontaneous loss of a limb or an act of God, I will have you scrubbing cauldrons for the year. You will send your wretched bird to Hogwarts if you miss the train.”

Said wretched bird scowled at the Potions Master, if birds could scowl. Cygnus and ancient Percival both perched on the metal bar above the Charmed ice chest, seeming to listen in on the conversation. “Yes, professor.”

Elara muttered under her breath again, which Snape took exception to, and while they snarled at one another for their perceived insults, Harriet slipped out of her chair and meandered back upstairs. She had her pajamas and a change of clothes for the morning laid out on the foot of her bed, but otherwise her room at Grimmauld Place was empty once more, and it made Harriet a tad nervous. Would she be able to come back next summer? What about Yule?

Sitting on the mattress’ edge, Harriet toed off her tennis shoes and Livi slithered out from his nest beneath the bed to investigate.

We’re going to Hogwarts tomorrow,” she informed the serpent, watching as he inspected her shoes, then turned his attention to her, violet tongue flickering.

The ssstone placcce?”

Yes.” Harriet scratched her chin and sighed. “Remember we talked about you having to stay in the dorm from now on?”

The frustrated noise coming out of Livi proved that yes, he did in fact remember that particular conversation and had not warmed to the topic since they’d first discussed it. Harriet and Elara had dug out a few old books on owl training that had Charms to prevent biting, and they planned on showing Hermione to see if the brilliant witch could figure out how to adapt the Charms to a snake—not that Harriet was thrilled about virtually muzzling her familiar. It would let her take him out of the dorm, however.

Professor Dumbledore worried about the students and Harriet knew Livi wasn’t a pet, not really. He was a wild animal, magical enough to have ‘equivalent human sapience’ as Hermione would say, and the thought of cursing him—even with something meant to protect them both—sat heavy and uncomfortable in her middle. Livi lifted his head and Harriet reached out to rub the scales on his nose, small fingers skirting around the glittering gem set in his skull.

She wanted Livi with her. Harriet couldn’t forget what had almost happened mere months ago, when Professor Quirrell—out hunting for any likely candidate who could get him the Stone—had nabbed her from the dungeons and dragged her to Dumbledore’s office. She almost died. Livi could have protected her had she not left him behind. What she’d witnessed in the woods had been nightmare worthy, but she vastly preferred how things had turned out to being kidnapped or killed or—worse.

Staring at her shadow, wondering where Set had gone off to, Harriet mulled over the events of her summer and considered the approaching school year. Back to Hogwarts. She didn’t know if she was excited or nervous.

The thumping returned, much lighter than before, and Elara came stomping into the room, throwing herself onto the bed next to Harriet with her arms crossed and her face set in a scowl. “I hate him,” she declared.

Thinking of Uncle Vernon and the Dursleys, Harriet shrugged. “He’s not so bad.”

Elara turned her head to glare at Harriet, who smirked, and the older girl relented, returning her gaze to the ceiling. “No, I guess not. He is insufferable, though.”

“I bet you even people who like Snape probably hate him a bit. It’s a requirement.”

They giggled, then settled, Harriet helping Livi onto the bed so he could curl into a heap against her side. Touching his scales again, she hummed in thought. “What d’you think this year’s going to be like?”

“Normal, hopefully.”

“D’you….” Harriet hesitated. “Do you think that—that I’ll be in danger there? With all this stuff happening this summer? Is the Dark Lord behind it?”

“I don’t know, Harriet, truly. I do know we’ll need to be cautious and keep our eyes open. Nobody suspected Professor Quirrell, remember?”

“Yeah.” Unnerved, the bespectacled witch pulled Livi closer and cuddled his coils as one might cuddle a puppy. “I don’t like it. Wasn’t the whole point of them making a spectacle of Longbottom to make sure I wouldn’t get this kind of attention?”

“In theory. But like Snape said, you’re a trouble magnet.”

“Am not!” Harriet nudged Elara’s side. “Wait, when did he say that?”

“After you left the kitchen. He gave me a lecture on keeping our noses clean and our heads down.”

“That’s odd.”

“What? Him not wanting you to get into any mischief? He does that a lot if you’ve noticed.”

“Well, now that you mention it—but, no. Trouble magnet. That’s a Muggle euphemism, isn’t it? It’s odd that Snape would use it.”

Elara’s lips pressed into a line, her hand pushing Livi’s tail away without thought so she could sit up. “Not really. He’s at least a half-blood, so he might have a Muggle for a parent, or be Muggle-born for all we know.”

No,” Harriet gasped, shocked by the idea. She suddenly had an image of Snape lounging in Aunt Petunia’s house watching telly and found it absurd. “How do you know that?”

“There’s no ‘House of Snape,’ either active or defunct. He could be foreign, of course, but I know he attended Hogwarts, since he was Head of Slytherin for two years, and only Hogwarts alumni are allowed to be Heads of Houses. The Blacks keep reams of logs tracking the different Houses through the years, going back past the Norman Invasion, and in 1544, when then the old Circles formed the Wizengamot, there were three hundred and thirty-three recognized Houses. Uncle Cygnus had me review or at least skim most of it, and I never saw a House of Snape. Logic dictates he’s most likely a half-blood.”

“You and Hermione read way too much,” Harriet grumped, falling back into the bed, her legs hanging off the edge. It did make sense; she’d heard Snape say Muggle things before, little snippets she guessed he could have picked up over the years from his students. It was an interesting tidbit of information she tucked away to consider later.

“You read just as much as we do—just not the same content.”

“I like Muggle fantasy novels. Wizard fantasy novels are weird—they follow these jumps in logic I just don’t get and how they describe Muggle stuff is absurd.”

They chatted for a while on inconsequential things, until Elara yawned and Harriet’s eyes grew heavy, though she felt anxious and uneasy about their upcoming trip back to Hogwarts. The older witch returned to her room, leaving Harriet to settle Livi in the mess of blankets under the bed and change into pajamas. Once finished, she tapped the rune on the base of her dusty lamp, plunging the bedroom into darkness. Moonlight puddled around the curtain bottoms, and in the colorless glow she saw Set flick and curl.

Harriet glowered at the shadows as she flopped into her blankets, dropping her glasses onto the night table. “Fat lot of help you were yesterday,” she snapped. “I almost got kidnapped and—I don’t know—harvested for fingernails!”

Set continued to flicker and curl, remorseless, amorphous, and Harriet sighed. “Fine.”

Pulling the sheet up to her chin, Harriet let her blurry gaze rest on the ceiling, splashes of light from the Muggle street and threadbare moonlight coloring the dusty boards. Set made shadow puppets in the blotches, and though Harriet wanted to stay irked, she smiled at memories of funny cartoons dancing on the cupboard’s roof, her childish giggles earning Aunt Petunia’s suspicion—and her fear.

Harriet fell asleep and dreamed she was at Hogwarts. She dreamed of making a potion in Snape’s eerie classroom, her desk the only one there, the stirring rod clasped tight in her small hand as Harriet counted the turns. Someone banged on the door and snarled, “Let me in,” but Harriet concentrated on her work, leaving the door alone.

She wouldn’t remember the dream when she woke.

 


 

A/N: Finallllllly going back Hogwarts! The beginning of this year was not supposed to be that long, but it had a lot of very important exposition that sets up quite a few events for this year and the next few. Especially that little Wizengamot tidbit *cough, cough*

Chapter 57: welcome back

Chapter Text

lvii. welcome back

 

At precisely ten o’clock the next morning, Harriet and Elara stepped through the Floo at Grimmauld Place to Platform Nine and Three-Quarters and were both quite pleased when nothing went amiss. Harriet had expected something to go terribly wrong somewhere and thus bring the Wrath of Snape down on their heads.

“All right, Elara?” she asked as the dark-haired witch swayed in place, looking green.

“’Ine,” she grunted—and Harriet wrinkled her nose when she spat out half a peeled ginger root. Elara tossed it in the bin to be Vanished and rolled her eyes. “It’s for nausea, Harriet.”

“Oh, right.”

Given the train had another hour before departure, few students had arrived and most that had still mingled on the platform with their parents, going through their trunks to check if they’d missed anything or trying to calm fussy, caged familiars. Elara and Harriet went in search of a compartment and found one they liked in the back of the train, settling in to wait for Hermione.

It didn’t take long for the final member of their trio to arrive; both girls saw Hermione walk onto the platform with the Malfoy family and Jamie Ingham, looking eager to be going back to school and also eager to escape her handlers. The bushy-haired witch nodded quickly to something said to her by Mrs. Malfoy, and then dashed off when the older witch turned her head.

Elara stood. “I’ll go find her.”

A few minutes later, Elara returned with Hermione in tow, the latter ranting in a low, furious undertone about how much she despised Draco Malfoy.

“—little toad uprooted half the Affable Azaleas in the greenhouse and has the gall to blame it on me! Me! Of course, Mrs. Malfoy didn’t believe him for an instant, but he still earned us all an hour-long lecture on respecting the gardens—and in the middle of Malfoy Senior’s tirade, he leans back and crushes the Highlander Ivy! I got told off for not stopping him—! Oh, hello, Harriet.”

“Hi, Hermione.”

“How are you then?”

Anxious. Nervous. A bit scared. “Err—good, I guess. Sounds like you’ve had better days, though.”

Hermione let out an aggrieved huff as she sank into an empty seat. “It’ll be a relief to get back to school. I’ve missed you both terribly. How was living at Elara’s house?”

“Er, pretty great.”

Elara scoffed as she sank onto the bench across from them. “Most everything is still cursed, broken, or otherwise out of order. Should it be visible to Muggles, I would fully expect to arrive home at Yule to find a condemned sign on the door.”

“Surely it isn’t that bad.”

They chatted about the grim—and often fascinating—secrets to be found inside of Grimmauld Place while the train and the platform slowly filled, the volume of voices increasing as departure time neared. Harriet kicked her feet while Elara and Hermione argued, thinking about their trip to Hogsmeade last year. A lot, and very little, had changed since then.

The conversation eventually turned to the letter Harriet had received from Nicholas Flamel, and she pulled down her trunk long enough to fish out the French book for Hermione to flip through. The other witch went into instant raptures, rattling off fluid French paragraphs that fairly boggled Harriet’s mind and earned a reproving tut from Elara. By then, the train had begun to move, and Hermione whipped out a Self-Inking Quill from her own satchel and a fresh roll of parchment to start translating the author foreword.

“It’s about recognizing Dark magic, defining it and understanding its origins. Oh, books like these aren’t really popular in England anymore—not after Grindelwald and, well, You-Know-Who. Fascinating. Do you mind if I keep this while I work on the translation? But you really should learn a few of these phrases—they come up in other branches of magic, and it’ll be beneficial in the long run. I’ll just be sure to make a note here….”

“Of course. Thanks for all your help, Hermione.”

They subsided into a comfortable quiet wherein Harriet watched London disappear outside their window, Elara brought out one of her family’s journals to read, and Hermione scribbled away on the parchment. The silence lasted for a handful of minutes before the compartment door clattered open and two girls stuck their heads in.

“Hey, do you mind if we sit here?” asked the first, her face heavily freckled and her ginger hair hastily tied back. “Everyone else is full.”

“Of course,” Hermione replied. She rose and quickly gathered her scattered things, making room on the bench next to her while Harriet stood to help the newcomers heave their trunks into the overhead rack. She proved a bit too short to manage on her own, and Elara had to stand and assist, trying her hardest not to smirk.

“Thanks,” the red-head said as she sat, heaving a relieved sigh. She wore what looked like Muggle clothes, but Harriet—who’d had a bit of a fascination for wizard fashion ever since she first walked into the Leaky Cauldron and saw how very odd the styles were—could tell the threading about the seams had been done by hand or by wand, not by machine, and an animated Quidditch player flew on the shirt’s front. Faded as he was, he still tipped them a wink and flew around a flaking, orange “CC” logo.

The second girl sat as well, blonde hair falling in haphazard waves past her thin shoulders. “Hello,” she said, her wide, silvery eyes passing over the trio of dark-haired witches. She dressed in tights and a plum-colored dress, a spot of mulch on one knee, almost as if she’d knelt quickly in the garden for something before leaving home. She balanced a little wooden box in her lap as well as a folded newspaper. “I’m Luna.”

“And I’m Ginny,” the other girl added.

“Hermione Granger,” Hermione said, extending a hand for the pair to shake. “How do you do? This is Harriet and Elara.”

Feeling a touch sheepish in the presence of strangers, Harriet smiled, and Elara only gave a nod.

“I don’t think I’ve seen you before. Are you both first years?”

Luna and Ginny nodded.

“We’re second years. Are you excited about starting school? Do you know what Houses you think you’ll be in?”

“Gryffindor,” Ginny said without hesitation, shrugging her shoulder with affected ease. Harriet could tell by the way she nibbled her lip that Ginny wasn’t as certain as she seemed. “My whole family’s been Gryffindors for as long as anyone can remember, apparently.”

Before Luna could answer, the compartment door slid open again, and Harriet groaned when Draco Malfoy sauntered in. He didn’t get far, and there was little space as is, so Crabbe and Goyle loomed in the empty corridor, the latter sporting a smudge of chocolate on his cheek. “Granger, you ran off to find the House losers, I see.”

“My friends.” Hermione stuck her nose in the air. “If that’s what you mean, then yes.”

Malfoy scoffed and dropped onto the bench, forcing Elara over, which squished Harriet into the window. “Whatever, Granger.” He seemed to realize the two younger girls were there and scrutinized Ginny in specific, nose wrinkling. “Red hair and hand-me-down clothes? You must be a Weasley. I didn’t know that their brood had any girls in it.”

“Don’t be an arsehole, Malfoy.”

Harriet, really—.”

“I thought you didn’t like Weasleys, Potter?” Malfoy asked, interrupting Hermione. “Especially after what you did to Ron, the Gormless Gryffindor.”

Harriet went to object, when Ginny blinked and let out a soft sound of recognition. “Potter. Harriet Potter? Aren’t you the one who beat up Ron last year?”

Harriet blushed scarlet and sputtered. “I—! I didn’t beat him up!” Malfoy started to laugh, and even Hermione looked very near cracking a smile. “Hey! I didn’t! I just—punched him in the mouth a bit.”

Expecting anger, Harriet was surprised Ginny smirked, tucking a bit of loose hair behind her ear. “He probably deserved it. Ron can be thick at times.”

“Like the rest of you Weasleys,” Malfoy sneered. He crossed his arms and ignored their pointed glances with a haughty scoff.

“Draco,” Hermione said, her patience far outlasting Harriet’s own, though she stressed the syllables of the boy’s name like she wanted to hurl them physically at his head. “What are you doing here?”

“I was looking for Longbottom. I haven’t seen him.” When he mentioned Neville, Ginny’s face lit up like a ripe tomato, and Malfoy snickered cruelly. “That’s right, the Prat Who Lived was staying with your family for part of the summer at your hovel, wasn’t he?”

“How do you even know that?”

“Read the paper, Potter—or can’t you read with those ugly things you call glasses?”

Elara snapped her journal closed, the sound moving everyone’s attention to her as she, in turn, directed a cold look at Malfoy. “You’ve been sufficiently irritating and can leave now. Perhaps I should write to your mother and mention your deplorable lack of manners in the presence of ladies.”

The mention of Mrs. Malfoy had Draco rising and shuffling off, though not before his half-hearted utterance of “not seeing any ladies present” was heard. He stormed through the door, slamming it shut behind him and his goons, though the latch didn’t catch, and it rattled open again.

“Merlin, he’s annoying,” Harriet muttered. “Was he like that all summer, Hermione?”

“Yes. I’m sorry about him. But never mind—what were you saying before, Luna?”

“Nothing in particular. Dad and Mum were both Ravenclaws, so I think I’d like to go there—but you never know where you’ll end up until you get there, do you?” Her voice lilted in question as if she meant for someone to actually answer, and when no one did, Luna shrugged. Harriet wasn’t sure, but she thought the other girl might have a sprig of mugwort tucked behind her ear. “Oh, well.”

They chatted for a while—or Hermione mostly told the two what to expect from their first year and listed all the qualifications of the professors while Harriet tried to reel in her enthusiasm and Ginny just blinked, dazed by Hermione’s zeal. Elara returned to her journal, and Luna, humming under her breath, brought out the paper—The Quibbler—she had and disappeared behind its pages. Harriet scratched her neck while Livi dozed beneath her loose shirt.

“What do you think that Malfoy bloke meant by not being able to find N-Neville?” Ginny asked at one point, her cheeks faintly pink. “He went through the barrier with my brother, right after me and my dad, and Luna and her dad.”

“Maybe he’s just avoiding Malfoy,” Harriet said, shrugging. The trolley witch came around, and Harriet was quick to empty her purse, buying lunch for the compartment, and though Hermione frowned over the mound of sugary confections, she didn’t reject the proffered package of Toothflossing Stringmints. “Like Hermione did last year. She came diving through the door and hid under the window until he passed by.”

“I was tempted to the same this year, but I figured he would stop to harass you and Elara anyway.”

“He seems very confused,” Luna commented as she unwrapped a Cauldron Cake, licking her sticky fingertips. “His head must be full of Wrackspurts.”

“Full of—what now?” Hermione gave the blonde witch a puzzled look. “‘Wrackspurts?’”

“Wrackspurts. Tiny creatures that fly into your ears and make your brain go fuzzy.”

Ginny winced and rubbed the side of her nose, though Luna didn’t seem to notice. “Luna and her dad believe in some, um, different stuff than a lot of witches and wizards.”

“So, they’re imaginary.”

“No, they’re not.”

“But I’ve never read anything on wrackspurts before.”

“Just because you haven’t read about them doesn’t make them less real,” Luna insisted.

“Malfoy’s full of something, but I don’t think it’s Wrackspurts.”

Harriet, honestly.”

“I didn’t say anything.”

Noise in the corridor paused their conversation as two older boys passed by the compartment’s open door. “I swear I saw it!”

“Did you smuggle Butterbeer onto the train again, Cormac? McGonagall will find out and write your da if you can’t keep it together.”

“I’m not mucking about, I really did see it! There was a flying car, clear as day!”

“You’re delusional, mate.”

The pair drifted out of earshot, and Elara rose to slide the door shut. Harriet looked out the window—seeing nothing aside from the rolling green of the countryside and a fat plume of steam coming out the front engine—and then looked to the others. “Did he just say a flying car?”

 

x X x

 

Soon enough, the train rolled to a stop at Hogsmeade station, and a flock of black-robed students disembarked, their laughter and shouts echoing off the trees into the evening air and the neighboring village. Harriet pointed out Hagrid and Professor Selwyn to Ginny and Luna, who went to the half-giant and sour-faced History of Magic professor with the rest of the incoming first years so they could be shepherded across the lake. In contrast, Harriet and the rest continued along the platform to the line of waiting carriages and Professor Flitwick, who made sure everyone made it off the station and didn’t wander into Hogsmeade.

Harriet glanced at the ghoulish Thestral drawing their carriage. She didn’t mention it to Elara or Hermione.

The wheels clattered on the road as they out, passing through the gates flanked by large, winged boars on stone pillars, and through the trees Hogwarts came into view, just as brilliant and beautiful as Harriet remembered it, and her heart thrummed with anticipation. She loved living with Elara—but the castle felt like home, a home she’d never known before. After such an eventful summer spent traveling all over the magical settlements in Great Britain, it seemed to Harriet as if a knot in her middle loosened once she caught sight of the towers silhouetted against the spangled sky.

As second years, they followed the rest of the student body straight into the Great Hall and found seats at the four tables, the noise volume increasing as spots filled and professors filed in from the faculty door. Harriet spotted her Head of House as soon as he sauntered in and quickly looked away when his head snapped in her direction.

The Sorting took place, and Harriet clapped when Luna was placed in Ravenclaw and Ginny in Gryffindor, the latter hailed by raucous cheers from the Weasley twins and their prefect brother Percy. Harriet scanned their table, but she didn’t spot Ron anywhere—or Longbottom. Where’d they go?

The clapping dwindled as Headmaster Dumbledore rose from his seat at the Head Table and lifted his arm for quiet. “Ah, how wonderful it is to see you all again—or to see you for the first time! Welcome to another year at Hogwarts!”

More applause came from the assembled students seated at their respective House tables, and Harriet watched as Professor Dumbledore smiled and waited for quiet again.

“Before we dig in to our delectable meals, lend me your ears for a moment longer so I may list a few start-of-term announcements. Firstly, I am delighted to introduce our newest member of staff, Professor Burbage, who will be teaching Muggle Studies.” An older brunette witch with a tentative smile rose when acknowledged and bobbed her head. Clapping again ensued, as did a fair measure of muttering when students speculated on just what had happened to Professor Quirrell.

“At least this one doesn’t look keen on murdering me,” Harriet whispered to Elara at her side.

“Yes, but neither did Quirrell.”

“True.”

“—the first Hogsmeade trip for third years and above is scheduled to be in December,” Professor Dumbledore continued. “And Quidditch trials will be held next week for the respective House teams. Please contact Madam Hooch with any questions—.”

Across the table from Harriet and her friends, Draco straightened in his spot between Crabbe and Goyle, a smug expression Harriet didn’t like one bit tugging at his mouth. “Slytherin will be taking the Cup this year,” he asserted. “Father’s made a rather generous contribution; he bought the entire team Nimbus Two-Thousand-and-Ones—much better than the Nimbus Two-Thousand, that shoddy twig Longbottom rides. I’ll be the new Seeker, of course.”

On the other side of Crabbe, the muscle-bound sixth year Marcus Flint grunted. “Not until I see you sit a broom, Malfoy. If you can’t fly, doesn’t matter what model you got.”

“I can fly!”

A few upperclassmen shushed him when Malfoy’s indignant outburst drew the heavy gaze of Professor Slytherin. Headmaster Dumbledore cleared his throat.

“Ah, well—I’ll save the remainder of the announcements after the feast. For now, tuck in!”

The gleaming golden dishes and chargers filled with food at the wizard’s words and the students wasted no time piling their plates high with scrumptious delicacies. Harriet didn’t notice at first; she was too busy looking at Malfoy, a sinking feeling in her middle spoiling her appetite. She had wanted to try out as Seeker this year. It was no secret in Slytherin House that Terence Higgs, their current Seeker, was simply the best of a terrible situation, and Harriet had hoped that—though she’d never played Quidditch before—she would at least be able to try out. Apparently, there was no point.

Elara followed her attention across the table to the blond prat now listing broom specifications to Goyle, who honestly looked as if he’d heard all this a hundred times before. “Everything all right, Harriet?”

“Yeah,” the bespectacled witch muttered, snapping out of her own sullen thoughts to reach for the mashed potatoes. “I’m fine.”

They were halfway through the meal when Hermione pointed out that Snape wasn’t present, and indeed, his chair remained conspicuously empty between Professors Selwyn and Slytherin. Filch came slinking through the faculty door, dressed in his usual frayed housecoat with Mrs. Norris at his heels, and went straight to the Headmaster, muttering something in his ear. Professor Dumbledore nodded, wiping his mouth with his napkin, and leaned over to maybe repeat what Filch had said to Professor McGonagall—whose lips pursed in a thin, disapproving line before they both stood and followed Filch from the hall.

Harriet wondered what that was about.

The professor returned before dessert finished, and Headmaster Dumbledore issued his cursory warning against magic in the corridors and noted any products from Gambols and Japes or Zonko’s would be confiscated by Filch if found in their possession. He left off the warning against certain death if they wandered on the third-floor corridor, which was nice, and then dismissed them off to bed. Harriet gladly stumbled to her feet and trailed Prefect Farley down to the dungeons.

In the cold, subterranean shadows beneath the lake, the silver lanterns glowed like soft stars in the dark of space, shapes flickering in the murky tide beyond the common room windows, the air in their lungs smelling of earth and salt, wood smoke and green things. Harriet gave half-hearted greetings to her other dormmates—Parkinson, Bulstrode, Greengrass, Davis, and Runcorn all accounted for—and fell into her bed, Livi hissing in her ear as he tightened his slipping coils.

She listened to the water sigh, the other girls whispering among one another, and fell asleep in minutes.

It was nice to be home.

 


 

A/N: *Harriet arriving like a nice, normal student* “Golly, I hope this year’s nice and average.” *distant cackling ensues*

I also brought Luna into the story earlier (like I did with Tonks). In canon, the Lovegoods live near Ottery St Catchpole, and given how small the wizarding community is, I doubt the Lovegoods wouldn’t be friendly with their neighbors, the Weasleys. I find it likely two witches of the same age living in the same area would be friends, and that the Weasleys would be quick to offer their support for Xenophilius and Luna after her mother died only a year or so before she was set to go to Hogwarts. Anyway, that’s just my theory.

Chapter 58: strike a king

Chapter Text

lviii. strike a king

 

In Hogwarts, rumors circulated with the kind of practiced efficiency the professors direly wished the students would portray in their classwork, and so by the time Harriet sat down to eat breakfast the next morning, she had already learned the newest bit of scandal involving Neville Longbottom.

“A flying car? Really?” Harriet asked Hermione as she picked over her eggs.

“According to Pansy, who heard it from Parvarti,” she said with a delicate sniff that portrayed her regard for idle gossip. “But that’s all hearsay. I would imagine that if they had truly crashed a flying Ford Anglia into the Whomping Willow, they wouldn’t be here this morning.”

They both glanced toward the Gryffindor table, where they found Longbottom and Weasley seated with Finnigan and Thomas. None of the four second years looked up from their plates, even when their classmates jostled and pestered them for information.

“He is the Boy Who Lived,” Harriet said, old anger prickling along her nerves. “I doubt he could get expelled for anything, short of murder. The Prophet would never let the Headmaster live it down.”

Snape came down along the table and passed out schedules for the Slytherins. Harriet took hers and could barely hold back a groan. “Look at this!” she complained once the Potions Master moved off. “Defense and Potions right in the morning! And Astronomy tonight!”

A furrow appeared between Hermione’s brows. “And Charms and History of Magic after lunch.” Her eyes flickered toward the Head Table, where Professor Selwyn was doctoring his English breakfast tea to his liking. Harriet winced in sympathy.

Elara—eyes scrunched, mouth set in a hard grimace—arrived, and Harriet slid down the bench to give her room. Snape returned, her schedule in hand, and he glowered at the half-asleep witch in warning before he let her take it from him. Elara glanced at the listed classes, grunted, and lowered her head to the table, bumping a platter of sausages. None of the other second years looked pleased either; the Slytherin professors were notably more difficult to handle, even to their own House, and having all four on their first day was dreadful.

Sighing, Harriet managed a few more bites of breakfast, then pulled her school bag onto her shoulder. “I’m going to go now. I don’t want to be late.” Not after what happened this summer with Slytherin.

“All right. We’ll catch up with you in just a few minutes.”

Harriet departed the Great Hall and climbed the marble steps, finding her way to the corridor where the Defense classroom and Slytherin’s office were kept. The professor never opened the door early—never opened it until he was good and ready to do so—so she sank to the floor by the entrance and leaned on the wall, fishing through her bag until she found Hermione’s copy of Gadding With Ghouls. She flicked past the bulky author foreword.

Hermione appeared soon, as promised, walking with a marginally more alert Elara, who was listening to something Daphne Greengrass was saying. The rest of the Slytherins arrived before the Gryffindors—the latter of whom descended with their usual loud raucous centered around L0ngbottom. The Boy Who Lived grinned when Seamus mimicked driving a car and laughed.

“Longbottom,” Draco said, narrowing his eyes at the taller boy. “Did you and the Weasel really crash a car into the Whomping Willow?”

The Gryffindors snickered as if in on a good joke, and Longbottom shrugged, the corner of his lips quirked. “Even if I did, why would I tell you anything, Malfoy?”

Draco flushed and mouthed off while Crabbe and Goyle scowled. Harriet, still sitting on the floor with her book, was tempted to tell Malfoy he shouldn’t try to be clever since it never seemed to work out for him—but she opted for Slytherin solidarity and said nothing. Elara offered her hand, and Harriet used it to get to her feet.

The classroom door slammed open, putting an effective end to the squabbling in the corridor. Neither House was inclined to go inside; Hermione proved the bravest of the lot by crossing the threshold first, though she did take hold of Harriet’s sleeve and drag her in after her. The ill-lit room was as eerie as she recalled, the bones of skeletal creatures casting patterns on the walls, the professor standing still as stone at his lectern with his black robes gleaming in the torchlight like a snake’s skin.

Harriet gulped.

Professor Slytherin said nothing as they hurried toward their desks, though his red eyes followed their movements easily enough, a small, cold smile fixed over his mouth. Harriet stuffed Gadding With Ghouls away into her bag and took out her wand, laying it on the desk before her. She missed the weight of Livi’s coils and wished she was back in the dorm with him, still sleeping.

Slytherin stepped out from behind his lectern, and a hush fell over the room.

“Welcome to your second year of Defense Against the Dark Arts,” he said, lacing his hands together before himself. “You know who I am. Again, I will be your instructor, your guide, into the enticing and perilous realm of the Dark Arts—and ensuing protections, of course. You have been under my tutelage for a year; some of your number have learned well, others….” He sneered, eyes flicking toward the Gryffindor side of the room. “No matter. You have another chance to prove yourselves competent. Last year, we concentrated on the manifestation of shields. This term, we will venture into the use of offensive spells.”

“Like dueling?” Dean blurted out.

“Two points from Gryffindor, Thomas,” Slytherin said, barely tilting his head to acknowledge the question. “No, not ‘like dueling.’ I will not be instructing you in dueling. I do not waste my time with ineptitude.”

Harriet wrinkled her nose as she watched the wizard idly pace. Why wouldn’t he teach them dueling? That seemed strange to her.

“You have been taught the theory and basic use of the Knockback Jinx and have witnessed its use prior in this class. Today, you will learn its practical application. Longbottom!” Slytherin swished his wand toward the opposing end of the aisle, summoning the familiar crimson lion marker. He smirked. “To your mark.”

The Boy Who Lived scowled, but showed better restraint than Harriet thought someone else might have when he nodded, rising from his desk to go stand at the glowing lion.

“You have already had experience, Longbottom, and so I expect some semblance of competency from you. Demonstrate the Knockback Jinx upon me.”

A few students shared curious looks, and most of the Gryffindors leaned forward in their seats, eager to see their top student jinx the Head of Slytherin. Even Neville grinned, though he was quick to hide the expression when he lifted his wand and faced the professor. “Of course, sir. Flipendo!

The jinx came quick, like he meant to take the wizard off guard, but Professor Slytherin merely flicked his own wand, and a wordless shield appeared before him, absorbing the spell. “Again.”

Twice more Neville fired the Knockback Jinx, and twice more Slytherin deflected it with nothing more than a twitch of his arm. “A passable effort. Sit down, Longbottom.”

He did as said, and Professor Slytherin called on Zabini, who took his place at a green snake marker and proceeded to throw spells at their instructor. Harriet could tell the difference in Zabini and Longbottom’s casting as soon as he began; Neville’s jinxes, when they connected with the barrier, sent ripples through the opaque distortion, whereas Zabini’s seemed to strike a solid obstacle. She guessed their spells had differing strengths.

He called on Goyle next—who managed nothing at all—and then Dunbar, who made an acceptable effort, though her third jinx fizzled out before it could actually hit Slytherin’s shield. Elara did better, but she didn’t show the same competency as Longbottom, and Weasley’s wand seemed to be malfunctioning, since it backfired and turned the boy’s hair blue.

Harriet watched like the rest of her classmates, but as she watched, her mind drifted back to a chapter she’d read in the “Compendivm” Elara had given her at Yule. The book was thick, and much of it proved beyond either Harriet’s comprehension or attention span, but she did recall a section that spoke on magical control. She’d been interested at first because she hoped it might share a few tips to ensure her Transfiguration attempts went less awry, but instead Harriet had read about the importance of stance and movement, how the body acted to build a kind of momentum and applied additional force to outgoing spells.

Magic really was much more complicated than she would have guessed a year ago.

“Miss Potter. You’re next.”

Harriet blinked, then scrambled to her feet—nearly forgetting her wand on the desk. She snatched it up, then hurried over to the waiting mark on the far end of the aisle, her stomach flopping about in her middle when she faced the waiting wizard. Professor Slytherin arched a brow. “Anytime now, Miss Potter.”

Feeling the impatient eyes of her classmates upon her, Harriet shoved aside her thoughts on the Compendivm and did just as she’d seen the others do, flicking her wand at the wrist, calling out, “Flipendo!

The jinx flew down the aisle. In an instant, Professor Slytherin summoned yet another non-verbal shield, and Harriet’s spell dissipated against it without anything more than the slightest of ripples. Neville, on the Gryffindor side of the room, snorted, and his cohorts grinned as if half of them hadn’t already failed the bloody exercise. He’s like Dudley, she fumed, heat suffusing her cheeks. Every time I went up to the board in class to spell a word or solve a problem, he laughed—no matter if I was wrong or right.

Grinding her teeth, Harriet lifted her wand again. Instead of merely flicking it, she stepped into the motion, brought her arm forward, and shouted, “Flipendo!

The jinx shot across the space between her and the professor just as it had before. However, when it impacted the summoned shield, the barrier shuddered, the resulting thwack! loud enough to hurt their ears, and Professor Slytherin’s eyes widened a fraction as his feet slid several inches on the stone floor. The class gasped.

Emboldened, Harriet lifted her wand again. “Flipendo!

She couldn’t say how she knew it, given that the wizard was using only non-verbals, but the moment he threw up his shield, she knew it was different from the simple one he’d used before. This time, his feet didn’t slide and the barrier didn’t ripple; Harriet’s jinx struck the shield—and then it came flying right back at her. She didn’t have time to do anything more than flinch before it hit her, and she slammed into the floor.

Harriet must have passed out, because next she knew, she blinked open bleary eyes to find Professor Slytherin leaning over her, a cruel scowl fixed on his face. For a moment, she felt as if she’d seen those glinting red eyes somewhere else, leering at her in her dreams from the thick shadows of the cupboard, behind every nightmare vision of Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia, reflected in the Mirror of Erised. She felt cold and terrified.

“Shite,” Harriet wheezed when the ache in her back and neck became apparent. He changed spells. He knew that would happen. Why would he do that?!

“Be prepared to catch whatever you throw,” Professor Slytherin hissed, straightening. He turned away, robes flaring, and returned to his place at the head of the room. “Five points from Slytherin. We don’t curse like Muggle filth in my classroom, Potter.”

Trembling, Harriet returned to her seat.

Chapter 59: leaves of green

Chapter Text

lix. leaves of green

 

When Friday finally arrived, Hermione—for all her love of lectures and learning—was looking forward to the weekend.

Their first week back had been…trying. Not for any specific reason, but rather an annoying culmination of many small, frustrating reasons. Elara, dealing with an influx of legal letters concerning the House of Black estate, stayed awake late into the night at her carrell in the dorm and was noticeably shorter with the rest of them—mostly Pansy, who had recently taken to wearing floral perfumes that triggered the Black heir’s allergies. Katherine had acquired a new cat who did not get along with Millicent’s, prompting several arguments between the two witches, and more than once they ended up with Prefect Farley in their dorm, chastising them for acting like naughty children.

Draco had taken to continuing his summer behavior, namely irritating and nagging Hermione until she felt very near hexing him just for a moment of silence. He harped on and on about the new brooms his father had ordered, the ones that would be arriving just in time for the tryouts next week, his unveiled enthusiasm pestering not only Hermione, but several of their upperclassmen and their unfortunate peers. Somehow, he always seemed to be there, trailing along behind her in the corridors with Gregory and Vincent, the two larger boys long since inured to Malfoy theatrics. His voice grated on her nerves.

Harriet was especially annoyed by Draco, and each time he started in on another meandering “my father did this, my father did that” spiel, she made an inconspicuous exit from whatever room the Malfoy heir and his goons were inhabiting. Hermione knew Harriet wanted to play Quidditch and didn’t think it even remotely fair she would probably be denied trying out simply because Lucius Malfoy could throw away gold on racing brooms for the whole team. It wasn’t fair, and yet the insidious social hierarchy in Slytherin House they’d thus far been spared from couldn’t be bucked, and Hermione imagined they’d run into problems with it again and again as they grew older.

Elara was aware of the silent hierarchy as well. That was why both Hermione and the severe witch would subtly turn themselves and Harriet away from certain couches in the common room, away from places at Slytherin’s table, why they paused and let specific students walk before them in the halls. There was an unspoken rule in their House about showing respect to your betters, and for all that Hermione fumed at the notion of having betters, she picked her battles and kept her head down.

The philosophers knew change did not occur overnight, even with magic. The most potent potions brewed for months or years, and they always had the best results.

The Slytherins left Defense on Friday eager to reach the greenhouses out on the grounds for Herbology. The first breath of fresh afternoon air invigorated Hermione after spending the last hour trapped in the dark classroom with Professor Slytherin and their surly Gryffindor peers. Harriet mumbled invectives as they walked from the castle into the warm sunshine, and even Hermione didn’t have the heart to chastise her language after watching the girl be put upon by their cold professor.

Hermione was aware the bespectacled witch had seen their Head of House over the summer in Diagon Alley, and while Harriet had insisted nothing had happened in their meeting, whatever had occurred had shifted Professor Slytherin’s behavior from indifferent to almost malicious. He pushed Harriet harder than any of them, and Hermione couldn’t say why. He never incanted aloud during their lessons, but she knew he changed his shields from the basic Protego form simply to throw Harriet off—or to literally throw her, as was the case today.

“He’s a foul git,” Harriet whispered so others wouldn’t overhear, one hand rubbing the small of her back. She uttered these words without the same begrudging admiration she held for Snape, who was also often denounced as a ‘bloody git’ for his sarcastic tongue and keenness for detention. “He almost squished Kevin.”

“Aren’t you supposed to leave him in the dorm?”

“No, I’m supposed to leave Livi in the dorm. Kevin is harmless.” She lifted her other hand from her pocket, revealing the Transfigured golem wrapped about her fingers, his tiny fangs sinking into her knuckle. Hermione lifted a brow and Harriet blushed. “Well, he’s upset because he almost got squashed, Hermione! He’s usually harmless—ow, Kevin!” Her voice curtailed into intelligible hisses.

Hermione just shook her head and pondered Professor Slytherin’s curious behavior as they crossed the courtyard and came upon the section of grounds given over to the greenhouses and Hogwarts’ other agricultural pursuits. Plump Professor Sprout waited for them there with a box of earmuffs under her arm, and she smiled at the mingling Slytherins and Ravenclaws as they approached. “Good afternoon, lads and lasses! First class of the year, and I’ve something exciting lined up for us.”

Next to Harriet, Elara paled, her face decidedly pinched.

“We’re in Greenhouse Three today. This way!”

They trailed after her like ducklings, Harriet snickering as she poked Elara’s arm. “Don’t murder anything too rare today, Elara.”

“Be quiet, brat. I just need gloves.”

Hermione shook her head again and rolled her eyes as they entered the humid greenhouse, the smell of flowers and earth filling her nose. Several tables with barren pots encumbered the middle of the space, and Professor Sprout took Elara by the arm without a word, positioning her away from what looked like a valuable Venomous Tentacula. Elara flushed but didn’t protest the move, Hermione and Harriet coming to stand with her.

“Oh, hello Terry, Anthony!”

The two Ravenclaws found places across from them at the table, and both greeted the three Slytherin witches with pleasant grins. “Hi, Hermione. How’s your first week back treating you?” Terry asked as he pulled on a pair of gardening gloves.

“Well enough,” she replied, hesitating. “Defense has been a bit….”

Anthony snorted. “Brutal?” Hermione nodded, and he and Terry exchanged knowing looks. “We’ve heard from a few upper years that Professor Slytherin’s classes grow more intense with every year you matriculate.”

You mean it’s worse than it is now?

Next to her, Harriet frowned as she adjusted her glasses, her gaze unusually intent upon the empty pots before them. “He told us he wouldn’t be teaching us dueling. Does he ever teach dueling?”

“No,” Terry responded, shrugging. He accepted the bag of mixed soil for their table from Professor Sprout, wrinkling his nose at the odor. “He was adamant on that point in our class.”

Why though?” Harriet asked with exasperation. In truth, Hermione was curious as well; she’d thought dueling a significant part of defense, if a bit specialized, but Slytherin restricted them to theory and relative application in his classroom. He’d claimed he did ‘not waste his time with ineptitude,’ but that was hardly an excuse in Hermione’s opinion. All students were inept until taught!

“It’s obvious, isn’t it?” Anthony said with a raised brow, showing a hint of that Ravenclaw shrewdness. It wasn’t obvious to Hermione—a fact that rankled to no end—and so she barely stopped herself from pouting when Elara, spilling manure into her pot, answered.

“He doesn’t want others to observe and disseminate his weaknesses. Students often share the strengths and weaknesses of their masters in any subject; in dueling, learning the soft spots in an apprentice’s skill can reveal soft spots in their master’s.”

“Quite right.” Anthony grinned, but then quickly sobered. “My great-aunt told me he’s the reason that Dumbledore, you know—.” He waggled his right arm—indicating the Headmaster’s lack of said limb. “And that’s Dumbledore, the wizard who fought and took down Grindelwald! Old Slytherin probably has enough enemies, you know? Doesn’t want them getting the drop on him.”

“That’s preposterous,” Hermione snapped. “If he was the one who—who mutilated the Headmaster, I highly doubt Professor Slytherin would be teaching here!”

“I’m just telling you what I was told. My great-uncle’s good friends with Dumbledore—Newt Scamander, he is. He was there when Dumbledore dueled Grindelwald, and he says he can’t imagine the kind of skill or power that could best the man.”

Hermione couldn’t imagine it either. For all his dotty ways, Professor Dumbledore radiated competency, and was quick as a whip with his wand—even while using his left hand. No one truly knows what happened to his arm. The rumors say he lost it seven or eight years ago now, but if he HAD lost it in a duel with Professor Slytherin, he wouldn’t have allowed the man to teach here, would he? Or did the Board override him? No, no, Hermione, that’s…that’s mad. Highly improbable.

She refused the thought of how ‘highly improbable’ she found most of the wizarding world.

“That’s enough chatter now, quiet down! Take a pair of earmuffs from the box coming around.” The box in question landed on their table last of all, and the two boys quickly dove in to avoid the pink, furry pair floating near the top. Elara ended up with that pair, much to her apparent displeasure. Next came the smocks, which they shrugged on over their arms to protect their robes from whatever activity they’d be doing today.

“Now,” Professor Sprout said, flicking her wand, bringing forward a grubby cart burdened with heavy clay pots. Hermione studied the spiked tops of the plants inside those pots—and suddenly the earmuffs made much more sense. Mandrakes. Of course! “Can anyone tell me what we have here?”

Hermione’s hand shot up, as did a few of the Ravenclaws’, and Professor Sprout nodded to Hermione with an indulgent smile. “Mandrakes,” Hermione said, feeling smug. “Specifically Mandragora Offininarum, as evidenced by the curvature in the leaves, not to be confused with Mandragora autumnalis, or Podophyllum pataltum, an American variant.”

“Excellent response, Miss Granger! Take five points for Slytherin.”

Hermione smiled—until she heard Draco hiss at the table next to theirs, his mouth twisted in mockery, though the sentiment fell flat, as ridiculous as he looked in his overlarge gloves and stained smock. “Do you have to regurgitate a textbook every time you open your mouth, Granger?”

“Bugger off, Malfoy,” Harriet snarled too low for Professor Sprout to hear, the witch carefully placing mandrakes before everyone with stern warnings not to touch them yet. “Anything’s better than listening to the shite that comes out of yours.”

“How crass. You’d best watch yourself, Potter.”

“Or what? Are you going to tell Crabbe and Goyle to punch a girl?”

“I’m not gonna punch a girl,” Crabbe grunted.

“My mum would box my ears,” Goyle added.

Malfoy glowered. “You two are worthless.”

Professor Sprout reached their side of the greenhouse and set out more mandrakes. Going by the chastising glint in her eye, Hermione guessed she’d heard some of what had been said. “No mucking about today, am I understood? You’re second years, and that means we’ll be dealing with finickier flora from now on, and my plants deserve your full attention. Understood?”

A low chorus of “Yes, Professor Sprout,” echoed from the accrued students.

“Miss Granger, can you tell us why we’ll be needing our earmuffs today?”

“Because the cry of a mandrake is fatal to any who hears it.” The class took perceptible steps back from their tables and the waiting plants. “The cry of a full-grown mandrake is fatal, I should say. Sorry, Professor.”

“Very good, Miss Granger. Take another two points for Slytherin. Now!” She clapped her hands together, bits of dry clay flaking from her worn gloves. “These mandrakes here are still toddlers, but they’ve outgrown their current pots and need to be replanted. Their cries won’t kill you, but they will put you out for a good few hours, so when I give the word, I want you all to put your earmuffs on and make sure they’re snug. I’ll demonstrate with this first one, and then you’ll be working with your own—gloves on, Miss Black.”

“Yes, Professor Sprout.”

The older witch nodded, then gestured for them to don their earmuffs, Hermione fussing with her hair until the padding lay flush against her skin. A Dampening Charm on the earmuffs further reduced noise, until all she could hear was the thump of her own heart and the faint whistle of her breath. Professor Sprout grasped the base of the green stalk, and then yanked upward.

Hermione had seen the illustrations before, but nothing could have quite prepared her for the reality of seeing a squalling, lumpy, hideous and infant-like root being pulled from the dirt.

Professor Sprout plopped the displeased mandrake down into the larger pot already partly filled with soil, then used what was left in the sack to pour more around the mandrake until it disappeared underneath. She gave the class a wave, then took off her earmuffs, signaling for the others to do the same.

“There! Not so hard, right? Once earmuffs go on again, no removing them until I give the signal. Everyone ready? Okay! Earmuffs on!”

The next forty minutes of class passed in silence as the second-years fought and struggled with their temperamental mandrakes. Truly, Professor Sprout made it look easy, when the planting in actuality proved much more difficult. The mandrakes flailed, kicking and punching, tiny, toothless mouths biting hard through their padded gloves. Roger Malone’s plant put up such a fight, it knocked his earmuffs askew and he ended up sprawled on the greenhouse floor, out cold. Professor Sprout hurried over, gesturing for the rest of them to continue their tasks.

With half of her mandrake submerged, Hermione paused to wipe sweat off her brow—and happened to glance up just as Elara nipped off a few of her own mandrake’s leaves, carefully folding them into a piece of parchment before sticking that parchment into her robes. Their eyes met, and Hermione mouthed, “What are you doing?

Frowning, Elara shrugged, then pretended she didn’t see Hermione’s questioning stare.

What is she up to? Hermione wondered—though, she did have an inkling as to what the taller witch might want mandrake leaves for. But she wouldn’t do THAT, would she? Oh, she could get in so much trouble!

Hermione’s eyes flickered to Harriet—Harriet, who kept a magical snake as large as a python under her bed, and sometimes under her shirt.

Hermione was not reassured.

When class ended, they stripped off their gloves and grubby smocks, sweaty and tired and more than ready for dinner to commence in the Great Hall. “What are you on about?” Hermione demanded of Elara, careful not to be overheard. Draco made as if to follow them—but one look from Professor Sprout had him, Crabbe, and Goyle going on ahead, leaving Hermione, Elara, and Harriet to trail along behind the departing students. The sun shone warm and golden still, though evening was not far off.

“Nothing.”

“Don’t nothing me, I’m not thick.” Hermione pointed at the pocket Elara usually kept her old, worn journal in. “You’re not thinking about—about doing that, are you?”

“And if I was?”

“Well, I’d have to say how utterly reckless it’d be! You could get arrested, or die, or be expelled—!”

They came to a stop when Elara raised her hand and pointed to Harriet, who’d stepped from the path and left the courtyard, walking down the grassy slope toward the lake. Unease pulled at Hermione’s heart; of course, she knew it was silly to get worked up over such a simple diversion, but Harriet had nearly died several times over the last year alone, and seeing her suddenly stroll away from the castle where the professors dwelt had Hermione’s pulse jumping. Where is she going?

They followed, and Harriet headed to the bottom of the hill, one hand on her bag, a familiar blonde standing barefoot at the water’s edge.

“Hey, Luna!” Harriet called, drawing the attention of the new Ravenclaw witch. “Whatcha doing?”

Luna blinked, and looked first at Harriet, then at Hermione and Elara, before turning her gaze once more to rippling shallows. “Oh. I was looking for Plimpies.”

“For what?”

“Plimpies. Little round fish with long legs and webbed feet.”

Harriet looked in the water too, then shrugged. “I’ve never heard of those before. You should probably come back and look on the weekend. It’s almost dinner time, and curfew for the first, second, and third years is just after that. We’re not supposed to be on the grounds once it starts getting dark.”

The grass crunched under approaching feet, and a burst of red appeared in the corner of Hermione’s eye. “Luna!” Ginny Weasley shouted, relief evident in her voice. “Why’d you wander off without saying anything?”

“Hi, Ginny,” Luna said, seeming oblivious to the other girl’s distress. Ginny gave Harriet a considering look as she went to Luna’s side—and Hermione wondered if it was because of their House, since she hadn’t displayed the same reticence on the train. Gryffindors proved rather intolerant of Slytherins—and vice versa, typically. “They’re quite nice, you know. Especially for Slytherins.”

Hermione bristled. Elara didn’t react, but a flash of hurt flickered through Harriet’s face before her expression stilled.

“Yeah?” Ginny commented as if she didn’t believe what Luna said. For Slytherins. “Well, c’mon, let’s get to dinner…where are your shoes this time…?”

The pair moved off, and Harriet rejoined Hermione and Elara, her face blank, eyes on the bent blades of grass. She stuck her hand into her robes and brought out Kevin, fiddling with the Transfiguration golem until he was coiled about her fingers—shiny, freshly scabbed bite marks on her knuckles from his tiny fangs.

“Harriet….”

“We’re going to miss dinner,” the bespectacled witch said, speaking softly. “Let’s go.”

She set off at a fast clip before Hermione could say anything else. The breeze rustled in the forest’s eaves, and the lake moved at their backs, the Giant Squid a distant spectator on the gleaming surface, basking in the late afternoon light.

“It bothers her,” Elara spoke first.

“What does?”

They started walking again, one of Elara’s hands in her robe pocket. “People’s perceptions of Slytherins.”

“I don’t think Luna or Ginny meant anything by it, really. It—with people like Malfoy around, misconceptions are bound to arise.”

“But it still bothers her.”

Hermione pursed her lips, recalling the hurt in Harriet’s eyes and her own irritation when hearing that qualifier, “For Slytherins.

She noted how Elara kept hold of the parchment concealing the mandrake leaves, and instead of broaching the subject again, Hermione bit her tongue. No, she wouldn’t say anything. Friends supported one another—even in their most reckless ambitions.

If her friend wanted to dabble in Animagus transformation, who was Hermione to argue?

Chapter 60: mischief

Chapter Text

lx. mischief

 

“Of course, the Two Thousand One blows the Two Thousand model out of the water, both in speed and in handling. Normally, I wouldn’t claim there’s much of a difference between models—but Nimbus Racing really outdid themselves this time. The oh-One is a complete departure from its predecessor. It makes Loser Longbottom’s twig look like—.”

Elara snapped her Charms text closed and shut her eyes, searching for the patience she used to employ to get through Father Phillips’ worst Sunday sermons, when she’d sit between Matron Fitzgerald and Kaleb Sanders on the pew, the latter calling her the devil under his breath, the former pinching her side every time her attention wandered. She could still hear his voice like the bang of a hammer on a stubborn nail, “Many will say to me in that day, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? And in thy name cast our devils? And in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from ye workers of iniquity.”

Workers of iniquity, Elara hissed in her thoughts, eyes squeezed shut. Like he would know iniquity if it came and smacked him in the face.

Draco blathered on, leaning on a wing chair by the main hearth, chatting in the ear of the sixth year Hubert Fawly, who didn’t much care for the sport itself as he did the money to be made off of it. The longer the blond boy waxed poetic about the broom, the more tempted Elara was to write his mother. Oh, for certain Mrs. Malfoy thought the world of her boy and Draco could do no wrong in her eyes, but boasting like this was grossly uncouth. Narcissa would chastise him.

Despite her misgivings, Elara found she didn’t dislike Mrs. Malfoy—or, at least, the etiquette lessons she gave her and Harriet. Elara had nice manners. She had to, given the sisters in St. Giles’ were quick to swat elbows off tables and nag anyone who lifted a cup of tea with all five fingers braced on the tableware. Mealtimes were always stressful there, but Elara had learned, unlike Harriet, who’d admitted—after much interrogation—that she’d never been permitted at the family table like a person before Hogwarts. She hadn’t been struck like Elara, but in many ways the neglect Harriet experienced seemed worse.

Etiquette lessons gave them both a way to better immerse themselves in wizarding society, so no matter how boring Elara thought the revision, she…appreciated the time Narcissa Malfoy spent teaching them. Half the clergy had been of the opinion women and children should stand about silent as halfwits, so at the very least Elara was happy to know witches were not usually considered idle trophies for chauvinists.

It wasn’t very ladylike to hex prats, however, no matter how they ran at the mouth, and Elara didn’t want to cross Narcissa. She had enough trouble with Lucius poking and prodding and stirring up issues for her with the Ministry. She was twelve for God’s sake, and she had to spend far too much time cross-referencing Mr. Piers’ letters with the dictionary just to understand what her solicitor was doing to secure her House and complete due diligence.

A quiet snap stirred Elara from her deeper ruminations, and she glanced across the table to Harriet. The bespectacled witch was staring very hard at her splotched Potions essay, which she’d have to rewrite, since Snape didn’t accept messy work. Her hand formed a fist around her broken quill—and, in the background, Draco continued to talk as if he’d already made the Quidditch team.

“Harriet…?” Hermione asked, pausing in her discourse about the Guild of Ethical Potioneering and Standards and their stance on the Shrinking Potion, the subject of Harriet’s essay.

“Sorry,” Harriet said, letting go of the quill. “Sorry, I—I think I’m just going to go to bed.” She pushed her things into a messy pile and shoved it into her satchel before flinging that over her shoulder, leaving behind nothing but the broken quill and a decided air of frustration. Hermione, lips pursed, watched her go, and then glanced toward the common room’s main hearth.

“It isn’t fair,” she whispered, glaring at the blond boy, but given how far their table was situated from any of the hearths, Elara doubted anyone could see them beneath the silver lanterns. “It’s ridiculous. There must be someone we can go to.”

“He’s not doing anything wrong, technically. Bribing is so prevalent because it is difficult to prove, Hermione.” Elara rubbed her temple, exhaling. “Besides, if we threw a fit over this, it’d deprive the whole team of new racing brooms. We’re hardly popular as is; Harriet would have no chance at the team then.”

Hermione scowled but didn’t seem surprised, having undoubtedly considered the idea before. Elara spent another ten minutes sitting there, tracing the bent corners of her Charms text, during which Tracey Davis—who was horribly stuck up for a half-blood without an actual House—came over and started asking Hermione about the Potions essay. Elara excused herself and headed toward the dorm.

“—just prove you’re halfway decent, Malfoy,” Flint was saying, slouched over on one of the better couches. “Old Hooch is already suspicious, and I ain’t starting the year out with a penalty again. Slytherin would be right pissed.”

Malfoy scoffed and tossed back his head, adopting a low timbre in an ill-attempt to disguise his prepubescent voice. “Don’t be absurd. I’ve been flying since I was a baby—we even have our own pitch at the manor, you see. Not regulation, but good enough—.”

Elara sucked air through her teeth as she entered the corridor housing rooms for Slytherin’s female population, lost in thought. The dorm she shared with the others was empty despite the encroaching curfew for the younger years—aside from Harriet, who sat at her messy carrell, hunched over and scribbling with her quill.

“What’s that?” Elara asked.

“Working on a letter to Mr. Flamel,” Harriet grumbled in reply, clearly still irked by Malfoy’s behavior. She scribbled out a line on the parchment, leaving behind inky streaks. “Hermione’s translated the first few chapters for me—y’know she found a translation Charm in the library? It’s a bit finicky, but it’s really useful.”

“I know, she showed me.”

“So I can read enough of the book now to thank him. It’s interesting.” Harriet scratched out another line, concentrating. “I was going to ask if he knew any curses I could use to throw prats off their fancy broomsticks, but I decided that probably wasn’t my brightest idea.”

Elara snorted as she leaned on the shelves next to Harriet and picked a discarded sweet wrapper from the desk, flicking it into the bin. “No, probably not. I’m sure we can find something on our own anyway. I do own a library full of dubious Dark books, remember?”

Scoffing, Harriet discarded her draft, crumpling the parchment in her fist. “Yeah, I remember. Elara…do you think I’m making a fuss for nothing? I mean, it’s just Quidditch, right? I don’t need Quidditch—and I could always try out later, for Chaser or something, when the Chasers leave.” Even as she spoke, Elara knew Harriet’s heart wasn’t in it. She’d been excited to try for Seeker. “I should probably just be happy the team has new brooms.”

Elara opened her mouth—and paused, thinking, remembering. She recalled wanting to be in the choir at St. Giles’, not because she could sing, but because everyone else had been part of it, and the Matron relegated her to the piano. She thought of all the similar times she’d been told to be thankful for what she was given and to not want, and Elara imagined Harriet’s own childhood had been riddled with identical circumstances. She was thankful for so much in this life, but it wasn’t a crime to want, and to be upset when what one wanted was taken away so unfairly.

Be thankful, Matron Fitzgerald used to snap. In some places of the world, girls like you still get stoned to death, Miss Black.

“…Are you going to the tryouts tomorrow?” she asked, staring at the silver lantern overhead, brow furrowed.

“Not much point, is there?”

“I think you should go.”

“Really?”

“Yes. Malfoy still has to sit a broom; if he can’t, then you’ll have your chance.”

Harriet heaved a sigh, but didn’t argue. Instead, she changed the subject. “What d’you think Tonks would like for Yule?”

Elara dropped her gaze from the lantern, puzzled. “Yule?”

“Yeah, I was going to get gifts for our minders. It seemed like a good idea.” Harriet shrugged, then gave her a cheeky grin. “I was going to sign both our names, of course, so if they hated anything, I could say it was your idea.”

Elara scowled, and Harriet laughed. They argued over prospective thank-you gifts, noticeably skirting the subject of potentially having to give Snape something, until the other girls filtered into the dorm, yawning and dragging their feet. Elara got ready for bed, but once she slipped behind her hangings and laid down, she didn’t sleep. Instead, she listened to the muffled movements of the other Slytherin girls, the lights dimming when Prefect Farley came to make sure they’d settled in, though the moonlight still threw weak, watery ripples on the ceiling through the windows.

She didn’t know exactly how long she stayed there, unmoving, though it was certainly long enough to doze for a time and for Millicent’s snoring to interrupt the Black Lake’s gentle roving. Elara peeled open heavy eyelids and, grunting, sat up, feeling about in the dark until she laid her hand on her wand, and then the slim, leather-bound book she kept hidden in her nightstand drawer.

The dungeon floor nipped at her feet when Elara stood. Still, she forewent her slippers and shrugged on her dressing gown, wand and book in hand, pulling back the hangings inch by inch so the rings wouldn’t drag on the rail. It was quiet—aside from the snoring, and the soft, low breaths escaping the sleeping girls, though Elara did hear Livius rustling about in his nest below Harriet’s bed. Pocketing her spellbook, she was quick to move on before anyone woke.

Out in the corridor, Elara stopped before she could step into the common room, hanging back out of sight as she peeked around the corner. No one was about, having wandered off to their own beds hours ago, leaving the hearths to smolder and shed guttering light through the cavernous space. Elara squinted in the gloom at the painting above the mantel; Harriet had warned both her and Hermione against the watching snake depicted therein, but Elara couldn’t see the creature at the moment. Good.

“What are you doing?”

The furious whisper coming from behind her almost killed Elara. She dropped her wand and whispered “Jesus Christ,” before she could catch herself, clutching at her hammering heart as she whirled about to see Hermione standing there in her night things. “You scared me!”

“Never mind that!” Hermione whispered as Elara picked up her wand again. “What are you doing, sneaking out of the dorm? If any of the teachers catch you out in the castle after hours—!”

“I’m not leaving the common room.”

“Not leaving the—?”

“Shh!”

Elara hurried quietly across the main floor to the opposing corridor, keeping her eyes open for movement—either painted or corporeal. To her credit, Hermione didn’t hiss her name again, though she did follow closely at Elara’s heels, her face set in grim condemnation. That condemnation twisted into confusion when Elara stopped before the door to the second year boys’ dorm and withdrew her book from her gown’s pocket.

“Elara—.”

“Just keep a lookout.” Elara lit her wand with a muttered Lumos, bringing the book closer to her nose. She found the proper spell and, pointing her wand at the door’s handle, whispered, “Colloportus.

The lock gave a small click when it closed, and both witches held their breath, waiting, listening hard enough for their heartbeats to sound loud and threatening in their own ears.

Hermione didn’t need further explanation to realize what Elara was on about. “They’ll unlock that in no time,” she said. “It won’t stop him from going tryouts.”

“No, but this will.” Elara flipped a page and studied the depicted diagram, watching the little wizard move his hand. “Epoximise.”

Nothing happened.

“Is that the Permanent Sticking Charm? Where did you find that?”

“It’s not,” Elara whispered, darting a quick look around the narrow corridor. “There’s a counter for this one, but it’s obscure. It will take time to undo. Epoximise!” Again, nothing happened. Elara sucked in a miffed breath through her nose and tightened her hold on the book.

Hermione, for all her misgivings on their current situation, rolled her eyes and whipped out her own wand. “You’re doing it wrong.”

“No, I’m not, I’m doing it just as it is in the book—.”

“Watch.” Hermione flicked her wand and gave it more of a swish than Elara had. “Epoximise!” The door’s wood groaned as it adhered itself to the frame. Elara ignored Hermione’s smug grin, and the bushy-haired witch flourished her wand again. “Silencio! That should hold through practice. Hopefully. I haven’t practiced it much.”

“Yes, but you’re brilliant. It’ll stick.” Elara and Hermione shared mischievous smiles, then turned back to the common room, dismissing their wand light. It was still silent but for the lake’s movement and the gentle tapping of their cold, bare feet on the stone floor.

“You don’t think we should tell Harriet, do you?”

“No. She won’t like it.”

“It’s not cheating. Not—not precisely.

“Of course not,” Elara murmured, lowering her voice more as they entered their own dorm again. Millicent continued to snore. “Like Flint said, Draco needs to sit a broom to secure his spot. It’s not our fault if he doesn’t show up, is it?”


A/N: Elara - “Nice dreams you got there, Draco…be a shame if someone…” *dramatic closeup* “RUINED THEM.”

Chapter 61: flightless bird

Chapter Text

lxi. flightless bird

 

The summer breeze came warm and unexpected over the loch, filled with newly curled leaves already falling for the autumn not quite upon them, though hints of it lingered at the Forest’s borders. Out in the sunshine, however, it grew hot, and Harriet welcomed the breeze as she leaned on the stands at her back, elbows propped on the seat. Her legs swayed back and forth, toes barely skimming the grass, and out on the pitch the Slytherin team ran their drills.

Harriet shut her eyes and soaked in the warmth like a lounging reptile. She missed Livi, and made a mental note to ask Hagrid that afternoon if she could spend time on the grounds with him. Of course, she didn’t think Hagrid would say no, but if he did, she would probably bring Livi out anyway, and avoid Snape like the plague. He’d ignored her and Elara for the most part, concentrating his vitriol on Longbottom and the Gryffindors—but Harriet knew it wouldn’t take much for him to remember all the times they’d been impertinent over the summer hols, and then they’d really be in for it.

Despite the heat, Harriet shivered.

Adrian Pucey and Graham Montague whipped by overhead, voices jubilant, chased by one of the team’s Beaters, Peregrine Derrick. Other Slytherins dotted the length and breadth of the stands, watching the team enjoy their new brooms, or just using the tryouts as an excuse to get out of the castle for a bit. Terrance Higgs stood next to Marcus Flint, their heads bent together, deep in discussion.

She was the only person to show for the Seeker position, given Malfoy’s rambling had scared off anyone else’s interest. Harriet kept expecting to see the pointy-faced bastard come swaggering onto the pitch, but the longer she waited, the more mystified she became. He knows he’s supposed to be here, Harriet thought. What’s his game now?

Flint crossed his sizable arms and suddenly kicked the chest containing the Quaffle and Bludgers. The latter banged against the trunk’s lid, and with a shouted word to Derrick and Bole, the Beaters flew down to release the balls. Pucey and Montague quickly scooped up the Quaffle when it was thrown into the air, and Bole batted both Bludgers away as he and Derrick took to the skies again.

Higgs shook his head again and Flint hit the trunk a second time.

Harriet stopped kicking her feet and, for wont of anything else to do, took out Gadding With Ghouls from her robe pocket, finding her last bookmarked spot. Gilderoy Lockhart was about to confront Perry Fidious, who’d been using ghouls to terrify Muggles into leaving a village so he could purchase the land on the cheap. Gilderoy bounded into the locked barn housing the captured creatures and said, “You have become a fool, Perry Fidious, and yet pitiable. You might still have turned away from folly and evil, and have been of service. But you choose to stay and gnaw the ends of your own plots.

Harriet paused, rereading the last line.

Gnaw the ends of your own plots.

That…that was familiar, but where had she heard it before? Harriet was certain she’d come across the line, and it hadn’t been in Gadding With Ghouls—which, in all honestly, read suspiciously like the cartoons Dudley would watch in the morning, all very showy and unsubtle. Where had she seen the phrase before?

An hour passed, then two. The Chasers landed, as did the Keeper Bletchley, the three huddling close with Flint and Higgs as the team had some kind of secret meeting.

Feet thumped on the wooden steps, and Harriet looked up to see Elara and Hermione walking over, the pair sharing a brief, furtive argument before they straightened, finding seats next to her. Elara didn’t look much different in her monochromatic weekend attire, which Pansy loved to deride, though Hermione wore a pretty green tartan skirt and a new blouse. “Is practice over?” the latter asked, glancing toward the assembled team.

“I dunno,” Harriet said, brow quirked at the obvious attempt to shift attention back to the pitch. “Malfoy hasn’t shown up yet.”

Hermione and Elara both looked straight ahead. “Oh, well. How unfortunate.”

“Unfortunate…?”

A commotion on the field interrupted Harriet. “What is the problem, Mr. Flint?” Harriet hadn’t realized Madam Hooch was here, but the hawk-eyed instructor strode out toward the Slytherin team all the same, clearly irritated about something. “I’m here to supervise tryouts for your new Seeker—and though I’ve been here twiddling my thumbs for more than two hours, I’ve yet to see a single candidate!”

“Our, err, main hopeful isn’t here yet, ma’am.”

“Oh? Would this be the hopeful who so charitably donated all these new brooms?” she demanded. Flint flushed despite himself, a furious glint in his hard, beady eyes. “I don’t put my nose in House business, Mr. Flint, but I will not stand aside and allow such a blatant display of bribery come to fruition when your hopeful cannot even deign to attend their own tryout!”

“It ain’t bribery, Madam Hooch!”

“No? Then observe one of your other hopefuls.” With that, the flight instructor whirled about and jabbed a sharp finger toward Harriet, who flinched like the witch had chucked something at her. Dressed in trousers and a plain green shirt, she was obviously the only one dressed for flying. “You! What’s your name, girl?”

“P-Potter, ma’am.”

“Potter. You’re here to tryout for Seeker, yes?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Then get over here.”

Harriet hopped to her feet—dropping Gadding With Ghouls—and scuttled onto the pitch, moved by the force of Hooch’s voice. The older witch sent one final warning glare in Flint’s direction before she stomped over back to her position on the shaded bench. Coming closer to Flint, Harriet found herself craning her head back to meet the towering boy’s glower.

“You better not be mucking about, Potter,” he seethed through crooked teeth. “Hooch is brassed off enough without you fucking about.”

“I’m not.”

“And I guess you don’t know where that prat Malfoy is at either, do you?”

“No.” Though Harriet had a sneaking suspicion Elara and Hermione might.

“Then get on a broom and take a lap.”

Harriet hurried over the empty chest, by which lay two new, gleaming brooms—one for Flint, and one for the prospective Seeker. The team towered over her, all a good head and shoulders above the short witch in height, sneering at the nervous girl as she passed through them and stuck her hand out above one of the brooms. She didn’t need to say anything; it leapt into her palm, and Harriet clasped her fingers about the handle.

She threw one leg over the broom, feeling the Charms hum to life with tangible heat against her skin, Charms far stronger than the ones she’d felt on the old school brooms. In hindsight, she should’ve expected the speed of it—but Harriet kicked off a little too hard, compensating for a lack of mobility not present in the Two Thousand One, and almost went arse over elbow into the sod. Snickers rose from the Slytherin team as Harriet blushed scarlet, ears burning as she re-situated herself on the broom and tried again.

The second attempt went far smoother, and as Harriet leaned her weight into the flight, shifting on instinct, she picked up speed and relaxed her nervous grip. The wind howled in her ears, sliding through her hair, cold after sitting in the sun for so long, her cheeks pink with a sunburn Hermione would chastise her about later. She completed her first lap, and then went on into a second, pushing herself faster, enthralled with the effortless speed and smooth, sinuous glide. Malfoy hadn’t been bluffing about the broom’s qualifications.

The Slytherins were far less inclined to mocking when she slowed by them, though they didn’t look entirely pleased, either. “I’m lettin’ the Snitch out,” Flint snapped. “Give it a minute head-start, then I’m timing how long it takes you to catch it, Potter!”

She did as instructed, and it took her only a minute to spot the wayward sparkle of gold in the corner of her eye and dart after it, returning to Flint with the Snitch struggling in her small hand. He set it free twice more, and both times Harriet found it, smirking at the Chaser torn between being miffed and excited. “Derrick, Bole—get that bag of—what’re they called? Dolf balls?—get that bag and start hitting em’ up there!”

The golf balls—and honestly, Harriet wondered how Flint didn’t know about golf of all things, the blinkered idiot—were soon whizzing through the air, the loud smack of the Beater bats striking the little balls echoing across the pitch. Harriet flew after the balls, catching each one, tossing them back toward the watching team. They didn’t let up until Harriet dipped too low in a dive and ended up skinning a knee against the ground, at which point Hooch intervened and told Flint to end practice.

She landed by the team, weak-kneed and winded, Hooch and her friends crossing the grass to join them. “Well! Excellent flying, Miss Potter. Truly exceptional,” Hooch said, clapping her gloved hands together before taking out her wand and pointing it at Harriet’s knee. The shorter witch jolted at the answering sting as the scrape healed, but she nonetheless muttered her thanks. “It seems to me you’ve found yourself an excellent Seeker, Mr. Flint.”

Marcus pursed his lips. The rest of the team exchanged uneasy looks, gripping their new broomsticks tight, before they all shrugged. “Yeah,” Flint grunted. “I guess you’re right, Madam Hooch.”

Tired as she was, Harriet still grinned from ear to ear.

“Excellent.”

Madam Hooch made to leave the pitch, which also left Harriet standing under Flint’s harsh, unhappy scrutiny. The Quidditch captain took the Nimbus from her and laid it with the others. “All right, Potter,” he snapped. “You’ve got potential—but this ain’t like a real match, and you know bugger all about our strats. You won’t be late to a single practice, you hear me?”

“Yes.”

He scoffed, thick brow furrowed. “Bloody Malfoy,” he muttered, heaving a heavy, bothered breath. “There’s a track out by the lake we’re allowed to run on, and I suggest you use it, half-blood. You’re the right build for a Seeker, but you’re too scrawny for a long game. One blow from a Bludger and you’d be out, and the winds during the winter storms we play in aren’t to be arsed with. You need more stamina than you have now. You got it?”

“Yes,” Harriet said again, because she’d say anything at this point, all but bouncing on the balls of her feet. “I understand.”

“Fine. Welcome to the team, Potter.”

The rest of the players echoed Flint’s sentiment, some with more enthusiasm than others, and the captain called an end to the tryouts. The balls went back into the chest, and Harriet could barely wait for the older Slytherins to wander off before throwing herself at Hermione and Elara, arms going about their necks, very nearly bringing Elara’s head down hard on Hermione’s.

“Yes!” she crowed, laughing. “I can’t believe it. I really can’t. Malfoy was going on and on about how much he wanted this—but where is he? Flint told him to show up half a dozen times with most of the House listening, so what’s he playing at? He—.” Harriet paused, drawing back to spy Elara and Hermione’s passive, innocent faces. “…what’d you do?”

“Do? Do what?” Hermione asked, fussing with her hair. “No need to be paranoid, Harriet. I’m sure Draco is just—.” She looked to Elara for help.

“Detained.”

“Yes, detain—no, not detained, not really—.”

Harriet laughed again before she could help herself, too pleased for much else, giddy with expectation. She was fairly sure practice would prove harder than she expected, given how peeved Flint was with Malfoy skiving off tryouts and forcing him to accept Hooch’s appointment of Harriet. She would work hard despite whatever her teammates threw at her, however, because nothing beat the feeling of wind against her face, the world falling away below her feet. It was exhilarating.

“D’you think lunch is still on? I’m famished.”

“No, lunch will be over by now. Honestly, Flint kept tryouts going far longer than he should have.”

“I didn’t even notice.”

“Madam Hooch did, which is why she forced him to make a decision.”

Harriet hummed low in thought as she gathered Gadding With Ghouls from her spot in the stands and they set off out of the stadium, her heart considerably lighter than it’d been on the way down. She’d done it. She’d made the team. “Thanks for convincing me to come, Elara.”

The taller girl smiled slightly, the corner of her lips hitching upward. “Nothing ventured, nothing gained, as they say.”

“John Heywood said that,” Hermione put in. They came out from under the stadium’s shadow, beginning their uphill hike toward the castle. “In his ‘Dialogue Containing the Number in Effect of All the Proverbs in the English Tongue.’”

Of course you’d know that, Hermione. No other rational human being would.”

“He said ‘Noght veter noght haue spare to speke spare to spede.’ I remember it because the translations in that passage argued about whether Heywood actually said the phrase, or if he stole it from an earlier French proverb.”

Harriet glanced at her. “Well, that just sounds like gibberish to me.”

“It means ‘nothing ventured, nothing had; if you don’t speak, you don’t advance—.’”

“POTTER!”

All three witches paused, halting Hermione’s impromptu and somewhat anxious lecture on John Heywood’s blathering as Draco Malfoy came storming out of the upper courtyard in a high fury, Crabbe and Goyle struggling to keep up with his stride. Color flushed his normally pale face, his tidy hair in a terrible disarray, robes disheveled and wrinkled.

“This is your fault!” he howled, balled fists trembling as he marched down the hill. “You lying, scheming little half-blood! You bloody well cheated, you foul—.”

“What are you on about?” Harriet demanded, scowling. “I haven’t done a thing to you.”

He stopped about a yard from them, sneering. “If it wasn’t you, then it was one of your dirty blooded cronies—.”

“Your accusations are totally baseless, Draco,” Hermione interrupted, voice gone high—which, Harriet noted—was a sure sign the girl was lying. What did they do? she pondered to herself, not entirely sure if she should be pleased with her friends. She wanted to play, yes, but what type of trouble would Malfoy stir up? Was it worth it?

“I wasn’t talking to you, Mudblood!”

“Don’t call her that!” Harriet shouted.

“I’ll call her whatever I like—.”

During their argument, which had only grown in volume, Elara began smirking, and when Draco’s flashing eyes suddenly darted to her, the taller witch grinned fully—a harsh, victorious grin that set Malfoy off. “Did you have trouble getting out of bed today, Draco?”

Enraged, he grappled for his wand, pointing it at them, snarling, “Flipendo!

Harriet had her own wand in hand before he could incant his spell, and her shield sprung to life, hurling the hex right back into the blond boy’s pointy face. There was a loud, sudden crack! and Malfoy hit the grass, sliding a few centimeters, blood gushing from his busted nose.

Of course, this was the part at which Professor Snape came wheeling out of the courtyard, black robes billowing behind him, only to find Harriet standing over a bloodied, whimpering Malfoy with her wand drawn.

The expression on the severe wizard’s face could have withered thunderclouds.

“Detention, Potter,” he said, voice cold, furious. “For a week.”

Harriet’s jaw dropped. “But I—.”

“Sir, it wasn’t Harriet’s—.”

Do not make me repeat myself,” Snape hissed as he loomed over their quivering group. The sunshine and warm, balmy air seemed to crawl away from him, and Harriet had to wonder if there really was some merit to those rumors about him being a vampire. The great ruddy bat. “Go to the common room. I will see to Mr. Malfoy.”

“But—.”

Go!

Harriet and the others didn’t need to be told again. The three witches—plus Crabbe and Goyle—tromped into the castle proper and delved into the dungeons’ waiting dark, leaving behind the blissful daylight and laughter drifting up from the grounds. Harriet didn’t dare look back for fear of seeing Snape following in their shadow.

It was a wretched end to an otherwise great day.

 


A/N: Sorry for the wait. Had finals and I’m graduating. *throws confetti.* So here’s a chapter!

Chapter 62: nameless thing

Chapter Text

lxii. nameless thing

 

Harriet took each step down into the dungeons with a heavy, indignant huff.

This detention wasn’t fair. It wasn’t her fault Malfoy was a prat, it’s wasn’t her fault he couldn’t show up to tryouts on time, and it most certainly wasn’t her fault he wound up bloodied on the grass; Snape couldn’t blame her for the berk’s own spell rebounding off her shield and smacking him in the face. No matter where the blame lay, however, Snape seemed determined to ruin Harriet’s mood, and upset anger heated her face.

It’s not fair.

Her knuckles hit the Potions’ classroom door with unnecessary force.

“Enter.”

Harriet did as bid, knowing better than to throw the door open and let it bounce on the wall like Snape did, because she’d been cuffed upside the head enough times by Uncle Vernon to understand slamming things about wouldn’t win her any points. She thought it might make her feel a bit better, but the detention hadn’t even started yet, and the great bat sounded like he was already in a mood.

She found Snape standing behind his own desk at the head of the room, the space lit by the eerie, sputtering green flames coiling beneath an active cauldron, the sharp angles of the wizard’s face rendered gruesome and grim as he leaned over the rim. He didn’t look up at Harriet, instead concentrating on his work, two bottles Charmed to hover overhead and tip their contents into the bubbling stew at even increments as Snape stirred with one hand and incanted spells with the other.

Awkward, Harriet stood at the side of the desk, and her anger deflated without anywhere to direct it. “Err, professor—?”

He flicked his wand toward the entrance. The door crashed shut, stealing what little light from the corridor managed to sneak inside, and Harriet’s heart kicked the inside of her ribs. The professor moved again, and a few of the torches bracketed to the walls sputtered into life.

“Sit, Potter.”

Harriet sat at the closest desk, which—given the ink, quill, and parchment laid out on its surface—had been prepped for her arrival. Guess I’m doing lines tonight. She unfurled the parchment’s top, and let out a huff as she read the first sentence already written in Snape’s spidery script.

I will think before I act like an imbecile.

Snape looked up from his cauldron. “Problem, Potter?”

Glowering, Harriet met the man’s black stare and said, “Not at all, professor.”

“Then you had best reassess your attitude, as I will not accept any disrespect from you in my classroom.”

Her anger sparked again, and before she could stop herself, Harriet blurted out, “It’s not fair!” Knowing Snape’s stance on fair, she rushed on to explain, “I didn’t do anything! Malfoy attacked us!”

Snape sneered, the green light of the flame catching on his crooked teeth. “Oh? You did nothing? Nothing at all?”

“Nothing!”

“Then how is it Mr. Malfoy wound up on the ground with a broken nose, hmm?”

Harriet hesitated. Technically, she had done something, hadn’t she? If not exactly what Snape thought, she still took out her wand and cast a spell. “Well, I—.”

“Exactly,” Snape said without letting Harriet finish her thought. “You did something, and for that something, you are in detention. If you think Mr. Malfoy escaped without his own form of punishment, then you are mistaken, and it is not your place to second guess how I discipline my students—be it you, or him.”

“I didn’t do anything wrong!”

“Miss Potter—.”

“It’s not fair!

“Silence!” the professor snapped, his hand stilling on the cauldron’s ladle. Harriet realized she’d been shouting, and color flushed her cheeks. All the same, she refused to lower her gaze from Snape’s. “I told you, I will not tolerate disrespect in my classroom. Write your lines.”

“But—.”

Write.”

Biting back an irritated sigh, Harriet snatched up the quill, dunked it in the inkwell, and began to messily scrawl out the bloody line she was meant to copy. The first copy, and the second, resembled chicken scratch more than actual words, but by the time Snape returned to his potion and she reached her tenth repetition, the prickling in her neck subsided, color fading, and all that remained was the day’s exhaustion. Harriet dabbed at her parchment, grousing over Snape, over Malfoy, over his stupid fat head and his stupid father buying the whole team brooms. All this drama, simply because he wouldn’t try for his spot like a normal person.

“I didn’t attack him, sir,” Harriet said into the quiet, speaking softer than before. “I just used a Shield Charm.”

The ladle made a solid thunk as it came to a stop against the rim, and Snape straightened, flicking his hair back with a negligent jerk of his head. He placed both hands on the edge of his desk and leaned forward as if he, too, was tired. “You are not in detention for attacking a student, girl. You are in detention because you did not think.”

“I don’t understand.”

Snape’s eyes narrowed. “Don’t be an idiot. You have been at Hogwarts long enough to know there is a certain bias against our House, Miss Potter. You are not a Gryffindor; you do not have the luxury of acting first and begging forgiveness like those in the saintly house of red and gold. This time, it was an inner-House feud, and I was the one to come upon the scene; next time, it might be Longbottom you throw in the dirt, and it won’t be me, but rather someone who goes running with the story to the Daily Prophet, smearing your name and reputation over a pointless schoolyard tiff.”

“But I—.” Harriet paused, fiddling with the quill. The Potions Master had a point, she knew. Sometimes, in primary, Dudley would chase her somewhere out of bounds, using his ruddy friends to herd her in, and by the time a teacher found them, it’d be her that was in trouble yet again. No matter how she argued, it always stood that Dudley was in the right, and she’d been caught red-handed. Perception was an important tool in learning to get along. “I didn’t even mean what I did, though. It was just—an instinct.”

“Which is all well and good in dueling, but you are not an animal, and you are not controlled by those instincts. You must hone them to obey your whims, not the other way around. I have no plans to stand as a character witness at your Wizengamot trial when you’re charged for accidental murder simply because you acted on instinct.” He snapped his fingers and a cutting board popped into existence, clattering on Harriet’s desk, followed by a knife and a bundle of knotgrass. “Dice. Three-fourths of an inch.”

Harriet took to her new task with better spirits, since dicing a plant beat scrubbing cauldrons or writing lines or whatever other unpleasant tasks Snape could whip out of his sleeve. “What was I supposed to do, professor? Just let Malfoy attack Elara?”

“Yes.” Harriet wrinkled her nose and, without glancing at her, Snape rolled his eyes. “Black is an emancipated, proxy-Head of her House, and—to be frank—a girl. Draco would have come out much worse in this idiotic confrontation had she been the one with the broken nose and not him. After you and your little friends pulled your Quidditch coup—.” A pointed look stopped Harriet from arguing. “Mr. Malfoy will be searching for ways to undermine your privilege and see you removed from the team. Him bloodying Black would have brought censure upon Mr. Malfoy.”

Harriet chopped at the green shoots in front of her with more vigor. Stupid blond prat.

“I said dice, not pulverize, Potter….”

They worked in silence for a while, interrupted only by the cauldron’s lazy bubbling, the study tapping of the knife on wood, and the occasional, soft winnowing of Snape’s magic as he spelled diced knotgrass into the forming concoction. Harriet mulled over everything he’d said about Malfoy, and found she had very little taste for such things; honestly, she’d much rather just hex him and get it over with than muck about with mind games, but Professor Snape wasn’t wrong. Hadn’t it been instinct that threw her fist into Ron’s mouth last year? Snape told her off then, too, and she’d been stuck elbow-deep in mucky cauldrons for most of the night.

No, Harriet didn’t believe she’d be able to stand aside and let Malfoy curse her friends, but she could be smarter about it, couldn’t she? She always lamented not being as clever or quick-witted as Hermione or Elara, but she didn’t want to be a twit like Goyle or Crabbe, who always acted with their fists instead of their brains.

Sighing through her nose, Harriet kept dicing, pausing only to scratch at her neck and rub her tired eyes. “Professor?” she asked.

“What?”

“Why are there so many different Shield Charms? And why do they act funny against different spells?”

“Define funny, Potter.”

“Well, I mean, I read books that talk about different Shield Charms, yeah? And they all say different shields react in certain ways against different spells, how some are better used here instead of there, and I don’t understand how people know when to use those shields, cos’ your opponent’s not going to announce their attack, are they?”

“Some fools do, or as good as,” Snape muttered. Pausing in his brewing, the Potions Master straightened and considered her question, tracing a long finger against his chin in thought. “Dueling tests not only your knowledge of spells, but how you read your opponent and interpret their spellcraft. In competitive dueling—or in true battle—many spells are incanted silently, and it is up to you to understand your opponent’s body language, and consult Birch’s Law.”

“Birch’s Law?”

Professor Snape jerked his head in a nod, then picked his black wand up off the desk to wave over his cauldron, a still, blue mist settling atop the liquid, bringing it to stasis. “Slytherin doesn’t teach proper dueling, so I doubt he touches upon the principle much in his classes, but I know Professor McGonagall will be instructing you about the theory in your fourth year or so, if you dunderheads prove receptive to the concept. Birch’s Law, also known as a spell’s V.E.R.D, encompasses the properties of viscosity, elasticity, refraction, and density.” As he spoke, Snape flicked his wand at the blackboard behind him, and his familiar handwriting crept across the dusty expanse. Harriet wriggled her spoiled parchment out from under the cutting board and started taking notes.

“Viscosity examines the magnitude of a spell’s internal friction. Elasticity, simply put, examines a spell’s propensity for bouncing, and is not as vital in rough dueling as a full comprehension of refraction, the dispersion of VIBGYOR—violet, indigo, blue, green, yellow, orange, and red—light. The colors descend the refractive index; violet spells are incredibly difficult to deflect, whereas red spells are not. Density, or the compaction of a substance, measures the energy amassed within a spell, and in relation to its viscosity and elasticity, affect its deflection. Spells of incredibly low density with a high refraction index and little elasticity can rarely be reflected and thus need to be dodged or intercepted.”

Harriet scribbled as fast as she could, not interrupting, because Snape seemed lost in his own lecture, and Harriet didn’t want him to change his mind about giving her this information—even if it did sound impossibly complicated.

“Different variations of the Shield Charm exist to reach and counter the various VERDs of dangerous spells, but reaching the higher refection index requires a faster vibration of energy, and thus tires the witch or wizard out faster should they continually incant powerful shields against meaningless assault. On the inverse, a witch or wizard on the offensive would be best served by an arsenal of spells relatively low on the refraction index and thus less powerful, but less likely to wear on the user before they can break their opponent’s defenses. The ENT, or Elemental Negation Transformation, can supersede a spell’s VERD, which is how a water shield low upon the refraction index can neutralize or counter a more powerful fire spell—.” Snape paused, coming back to himself, and turned on Harriet, the muscle in his jaw working. “Is any of this penetrating your thick skull, or am I wasting my breath?”

“Some,” Harriet admitted, stifling a tired yawn, still copying the information he’d thrown onto the blackboard. “I don’t understand how anyone could think about all this during a duel, though.”

“The key is memorization, Potter—and, should that fail you, knowledge of stance and color theory. Magic travels in certain ways through the body depending on the desired spell and its effects. Wizarding societies to the east refer to the various chakra points in the body, from which they theorize different spells originate, depending upon their elemental base. Harnessing these spells is done with different gestures and manipulations of the wand or hand.”

Harriet scratched her neck, smudging ink on her collar. “Hermione once told me most Charms are tossed and hexes are thrown.”

“A simplistic explanation, but suitable for your purposes. Charms are ‘underhand,’ whereas many curses and heavier spells are ‘overhand,’ yes.” Snape exhaled and rubbed his forehead. “In simple terms, dodge spells colored green, blue, indigo, or violet. They will be more difficult, or impossible, to counter.”

Harriet scribbled this final note at the bottom of her sheet, wanting to ask “What if you can’t dodge?”, but she guessed that’s what the rest of his theory spiel had been all about. Maybe she could write to Mr. Flamel and ask him about it. He could probably explain with more patience than a tired Snape.

Setting the quill aside, Harriet folded her notes up, the ink quick to dry. Snape wasn’t paying attention to her; he balanced a hip against the desk’s solid lip and leaned upon it as he studied the board, lost in fathomless thoughts far beyond Harriet’s comprehension.

“Professor Slytherin always throws my spells back at me,” she commented, continuing with the rest of the knotgrass. Shifting, Snape returned to the cauldron and set about clearing his station. He waved a hand over the flame and it went out.

“Obviously.”

“He does it on purpose. No matter how—how hard I throw my spells, his shield proves stronger.”

The wizard produced several crystal vials from his robe pockets, then used the ladle to dribble the sickly mixture into each one until the potion was gone. “We did have a discussion about you using your head, did we not? Think, Potter. What would you have to gain by getting past Professor Slytherin’s shield? Nothing.”

“I am thinking! I just want to do it once. Just to prove to myself that I can.” Harriet squeezed the knife’s handle, remembering the utter terror that seized her when Slytherin had leaned over her the first time, hissing “Be ready to catch what you throw.” She knew nothing good could come of besting her proud Defense Professor at his own game, and yet….

Snape considered her as he dismissed the cauldron back to the counter by the dripping sink. He appeared to be having a silent argument with himself, a losing argument, one he finally settled with an irritated grunt. “Don’t concentrate on breaking through his shield. You haven’t the repertoire to breach his defenses, even on a negligible level, but he will underestimate you. Part of dueling—not that Slytherin would ever engage in an honest duel with a student, Potter—is controlling and manipulating your environment, as well as your opponent. What is the floor in the Defense class made of?”

“Um?” Baffled by the strange question, it took Harriet longer than it should have to say, “S-stone? I think.”

Snape pinched the bridge of his nose, then manually wrote the numbers “2.5” to “3” with the abbreviation “g/cm” and a little floating three on the board. It looked suspiciously like maths to Harriet. “Use Granger to help you find a spell whose elasticity reacts with this density. Aim for the floor at Slytherin’s feet. Most variations of the Shield Charm protect only the torso and head, but his barrier will be powerful and extend to his ankles. Should you succeed in finding the proper spell, it will ricochet off the floor, dip below his shield, and hit him.” Snape’s eyes hardened again. “If you go through with this fool’s errand, be ready to face the consequences of his displeasure.”

Harriet took out her notes again, printed the numbers, and underlined Hermione’s name twice, knowing that her friend could make much more sense of Snape’s information than she could at the moment. Apparently, some spells bounced and some didn’t, some were sticky and some weren’t, and different shields blocked differently colored hexes and curses because of something called refraction. Her nose wrinkled as she considered how much more difficult dueling was than just pointing your wand at someone.

Well, it’d have to be, she thought, stuffing the parchment away again. Sure, I could block Malfoy easy enough—but he’s twelve and doesn’t know anything yet. If everyone could get by with a simple Shield Charm, I doubt Voldemort would have gotten anywhere at all.

Snape gathered the completed vials together, levitating several when his hands were filled. “Finish the knotgrass,” the wizard instructed before swooping away, heading toward the storage cupboard on the opposite side of the room. Harriet heard the cupboard door swing open on its decrepit hinges, then swing shut—and she took the opportunity to quickly dice the rest of the grass shoots, doing a shoddy job, but finishing the task in seconds. She wanted to get back to the dorms and talk to Hermione before she went off to bed.

He won’t notice if they’re not all three-fourths of an inch, right? Right? He probably would, but hopefully not until Harriet was several corridors away.

Spotting a cleaning rag left on the professor’s desk, Harriet hopped to her feet and went to grab it, thinking she should tidy her workspace before Snape returned—when a sound stopped her cold.

Sso hungry…sso hungry….” A voice breathed, tickling at her ears, seeming to come from nowhere and everywhere—from Harriet herself, even. “Let usss kill…let usss rip…blood, yesss…let usss tasste—.”

“Potter?”

Jolting, Harriet spun too quickly on her heels and fell against Snape’s desk, bruising her back on the hard, unyielding wood. Surprised by her reaction, Snape did little more than stare at her, brow raised. “…Potter?” he repeated, voice less stern.

“I—. D-did you say something?” she asked, voice gone high, eyes wide. What had that voice been? Had she imagined it? Surely if Snape had heard someone whispering about killing someone he wouldn’t be so composed. It was getting late, and though Harriet had never been one to hear voices before, Quidditch had tired her out, and stressing over her detention for the remainder of the afternoon had wrung her of what energy remained. The voice reminded Harriet of that nameless, terrifying thing in her nightmares, that harsh crooning clawing at the inside of her head, oozing from the dark places in the cupboard and between the floorboards at Grimmauld and from behind Professor Slytherin’s every barbed word—.

It’s not real, Harriet told herself, swallowing. It’s never real.

She strained her ears, but she heard nothing aside from her heart’s rapid beating and the very slight rush of Snape’s breathing.

“Yes, I told you to leave your mess and get out of my sight.” Snape furrowed his brow. “…what are you doing?”

“I—tripped,” Harriet stuttered, as if the man hadn’t just witnessed that for himself. “Do I—do I have detention again tomorrow? Professor?”

Scowling, Snape said, “No. I have better ways to spend my evening than minding disrespectful brats. I will forget the rest of your detentions for this incident. Don’t make me regret my leniency, Potter.”

“I won’t.” She scrambled to her feet, straightening her robes and glasses. “Can I go? Sir?”

The suspicion hadn’t left his face yet, but Snape just frowned and crossed his arms, black robes falling around him like a bat’s wings closing for the night. “Yes. Leave.”

Muttering good night, Harriet bolted for the door—and she didn’t stop running until she was safely shut inside the Slytherin common room, leaving behind the sullen Potions Master, the sickly smell of knotgrass, and all creepy, imagined voices whispering in her ears.


A/N: Harriet - “…You mean I can’t just yeet the wand out of their hands?” Snape - “…no.” Sorry for the gratuitous magical theory.

Chapter 63: apology

Chapter Text

lxiii. apology

 

When the morning light came creeping through the lake’s shallows and Harriet opened her eyes to the dappled green glow warming her bedsheets, she could little remember the eerie voice she’d heard in the dungeons the night before. Indeed, the whole evening felt fuzzy to Harriet, and if it weren’t for the rumpled sheet of parchment she unearthed from her used robes, she would have thought it all just another strange dream.

She stared down at the page, touching the spidery letters at the top, and thought, Snape was in an odd mood.

Being a Sunday, Millicent and Pansy still slept, the latter snoring into her silk pillows, but the rest of the beds were empty and made, leaving Harriet to make her way into the washroom on her own, getting ready for the day. Livius stuck his nose out from under the bed’s skirts when she returned, but he otherwise remained quiet, content to remain in his nest, the Warming Charm thrown over his blankets by Hermione. Kevin went into his favored pocket in her robes.

Once washed and dressed, Harriet grabbed her school bag and headed into the common room, but found neither Hermione or Elara there. She continued out of the dorms into the castle itself, and—yawning all the while—meandered to the library.

She ended up taking the wrong corridor twice, passing a bust without a face three times, and each time she did, it asked her odd, raspy questions. Finally, she found a portrait of a witch herding geese who was kind enough to point out the proper path—interrupted by loud, obnoxious honking every other syllable—and Harriet managed to get to her destination.

“There you are, Harriet,” Hermione said, lifting her head from a yellowing tome as the bespectacled witch wandered over to the table. Others sat with Hermione, including Elara—slumped in her seat and half-asleep—the Ravenclaws Terry Boot and Anthony Goldstein, and—surprisingly—Ginny Weasley and Luna Lovegood. The two first years looked up when Hermione spoke.

“Hello, Harriet,” Luna said, pale eyes wide as they faceted on the other girl.

“’Lo,” Harriet replied to Luna and the table in general, taking the seat left open at Elara’s side. The taller witch dragged her own bag off the chair with a tired grunt. “Bit keen for studying on a Sunday, aren’t you all?”

“You missed breakfast,” Hermione informed her with an imperious arch of her brow. “So no, it’s not early at all, really.”

Elara and Weasley seemed to disagree, but neither chose to say anything. The latter had dark circles under her eyes and appeared paler than usual behind her numerous freckles, and though her bias against Slytherin still stung, Harriet asked, “How are you, Ginny?”

Ginny shrugged.

Madam Pince made her rounds, lurking like an angry, well-read vulture, and so their conversation subsided, the two younger students consulting what looked like Hermione’s Transfiguration notes from the year before while Hermione tackled a Charms project with the Ravenclaws and Elara paged through a Herbology text, working on a supplemental essay for Sprout.

Harriet took out her notes from the evening prior and, smoothing the sheet against, neatly tore off the bit holding her lines, leaving behind her hasty scribbles about Birch’s Law.

“Hermione?” she asked, getting the other witch’s attention. “D’you know anything about Birch’s Law? Or—VERD?”

“VERD?” Anthony said before Hermione had the chance. “Professor Flitwick told us we won’t touch any of Horwell Birch’s theorems until well into our fourth year—and only in Arithmancy, after we cover Agrippa.”

Hermione clicked her tongue. “Birch’s theorems aren’t strictly Arithmancy. VERD, in particular, is covered in other subjects beyond Arithmancy, Anthony. Especially in Defense.”

Terry snorted. “No. Too close to dueling practice, and the older Ravenclaws tell us Professor Slytherin doesn’t teach anything resembling proper dueling.”

“Why do you ask, Harriet?” Hermione said, ignoring Terry, who shared a smirk with Anthony. “Is this for class?”

“…You could say that.” Harriet slid the parchment to Hermione, who reached over her amounting stack of texts to pick it up and bring it closer to the light coming through the open window.

“Merlin, your handwriting—.”

“I know,” Harriet interrupted a bit testily. “I rushed to write all I could.”

“Was this in—?”

“Yes,” she interrupted again, eyes flicking toward the Ravenclaws, then away. “We got onto a bit of a tangent.”

“I’ll say.” Hermione squinted and brought the parchment closer to her nose. “You’re looking for a spell that will rebound against a density two point five to three grams per cubic centimeter. You’re going to need an equation for that—.” With a lazy gesture, Terry reached and snatched the parchment from Hermione. “Boot!”

“It’s stone,” he said—also squinting when he tried to decipher Harriet’s smudged words. “A non-porous stone. Granite, mayhaps. You’re looking for a spell that’ll bounce on the castle’s floor or walls.”

“You don’t need an equation for that,” Anthony supplied, grinning. “After all, experience is the best teacher, isn’t it? I say, most of our first-year curriculum should rebound, shouldn’t they, Terry?”

“Theoretically. It also depends upon a spell’s inertia. A flipendo usually dissipates upon hitting a solid obstacle, but I’ve seen it ricochet when it hits with enough force.”

“Don’t encourage her to go throwing hexes at the walls hoping they bounce back.” Hermione took the parchment back, scowling, and handed it to Harriet. “What’s this for, anyway?”

“Just some, um, extra credit?” Harriet winced at the weak excuse. “I’ll show you the assignment later.”

Clearly there wasn’t an extra credit assignment under the sun Hermione hadn’t heard about and completed, and so she opened her mouth to question Harriet—when Elara nudged her chair with her foot, expression flat, knowing. Hermione’s mouth snapped shut, lips thinning.

“There should be books on Birch’s Law over there,” Elara said, tipping her chin across the library toward the far stacks. “If you’re interested.”

“Thanks.”

Harriet stood and wandered in the direction Elara had indicated, though she shied away from the idea of unearthing some thick, overzealous book from the Stone Age filled with maths and equations and a thousand other things that would make her head hurt. Reading something like that was always a chore, but if she wished to write Mr. Flamel, she needed a better grasp on the subject, lest she sound like a bumbling fool wasting his time with simple nonsense. With that thought in mind, Harriet entered the dusty section devoted to Magical Theory and Laws.

Ten minutes of searching provided little insight, and Harriet slid a dusty scroll on Abu Musa Jabir’s nonsensical ramblings back onto the shelf, reaching for another.

“Harriet?” Startled, the bespectacled witch turned to find Ginny standing a few paces away, looking uncertain about what she was doing there exactly. She fiddled with the ends of her red hair and waited for Harriet to look at her before speaking again. “Listen, I just wanted to say I’m—sorry, about what happened at the lake before. It wasn’t right, I know. Ever since I was little, my brothers have always filled my head with all these stories about Slytherins being terrible and liars and—.” Ginny paused, fiddling with her hair again, tugging hard on the edges. “Did you know our mums got on?”

Harriet didn’t know that, and she didn’t know why Ginny brought it up. What’s her angle? “No,” she said slowly, choosing her words and another book. “I don’t…I wasn’t told a lot about my parents.” Nothing at all, if it wasn’t a bunch of lies.

“My uncles were Aurors who worked with your dad supposedly, and so the—Potters were invited over a lot. My mum was gonna have Ron and your mum was gonna have—well, have you—and so they became friends.” Ginny colored. “I wrote a letter home, and I…mentioned you. Mum told me about being friends with Lily Potter. I just—felt silly, after she told me that. You, Elara, and Hermione were really nice to me and Luna, and I should’ve known my brothers were having me on. So I’m sorry.”

“I understand,” Harriet said, because she did understand—but she did not say it was alright, because it wasn’t. Why did she always have to apologize for her House? People always liked to whip out the fact that “Merlin was a Slytherin” when defending Slytherin’s honor—but the bloody wizard hadn’t been at Hogwarts for a thousand years! Harriet didn’t like that Slytherins always had to make up for some slight, some perceived injustice done by others in their House, how the Dark Lord’s shadow seemed to stretch wide and sully those who didn’t have a thing to do with him. It wasn’t Ginny’s fault, and yet it irked Harriet all the same.

The feeling sat heavy and convoluted in Harriet’s stomach, but she shoved it away, because she appreciated the image Ginny painted; her dad and mum with friends, being invited over for dinner, enjoying life. She did, however, change the subject. “You look tired, Ginny,” she told the other girl, reading the spine of another tome. She couldn’t make heads or tails of the language. “Are you liking Hogwarts?”

“Yes,” the other girl said, perhaps a bit too quickly. “I do miss home, though. I haven’t been getting enough sleep.”

“Doesn’t Gryffindor have a curfew? Our prefects are strict about it.”

“We do, but the prefects don’t seem to care much. My brother Percy tries to bully us off to the dorms, but he forgets to get to bed himself with all his studying. The common room’s loud because—.” Ginny suddenly flushed a darker red than her hair, and Harriet thought steam might come flooding from her ears at any second. “…because of Neville Longbottom.”

The last words came out in a worshipful hush, and Harriet didn’t fight the urge to roll her eyes, though Ginny couldn’t see, not with her face pointed at the shelves. Bloody Longbottom.

“He’s…he’s not really how I’d thought he’d be,” Ginny admitted, quietly, as if she didn’t really mean want to. “He’s great, of course! But he’s….”

“People rarely live up to their reputations, good or bad.” Harriet took down another scroll, checking the title. She had no desire to hear Ginny Weasley wax poetic about the Boy Who Lived. Not after what she learned at the end of last term. “If he’s keeping you up, tell the prat to be quiet.”

Ginny’s eyes grew round as Galleons. “He’s—he defeated You-Know-Who. You can’t call him a p-prat.”

The Headmaster’s voice came back to Harriet, echoing “he is no more the cause of Voldemort’s downfall than myself or this candy dish,” and though the absurd imagery peculated a kind of quiet hilarity in her head, Harriet didn’t find the sentiment very funny. She was still bitter over the years she spent in the cupboard while Neville Longbottom had lived the kind of life she still couldn’t properly imagine.

“I’ll believe it when I see it,” Harriet muttered.

“What?”

Harriet cleared her throat, pretending she didn’t hear the question. “Listen, Ginny. Neville and I don’t get on. I mean, you probably don’t want my advice, yeah? But, you should form an opinion based on who he is, not what he’s done.” Supposedly done. “He’s just another student. I can’t speak for him, but he’d probably appreciate someone trying to see him for who he is.”

Harriet left then, walking from the stacks empty-handed, ignoring her friends’ questioning looks as she resumed her seat and dug out her own Charms essay instead. She’d continue her research later, when she had time to tell Hermione and Elara exactly what happened in detention, and when she had the opportunity to do as Anthony said, and test which spells would work best for getting past Professor Slytherin’s shield.

Across the table, Luna smiled—a vacuous, if friendly, gesture—and though Harriet tried to return it, her heart wasn’t in it.

Chapter 64: kill a king

Chapter Text

lxiv. kill a king

 

“This has got to be the worst idea you’ve ever had.”

Hermione, Elara, and Harriet stood clumped in the sunlit corridor beyond their Defense Against the Dark Arts classroom, waiting for the door to finally open. Hermione spoke the thought aloud, just as she had for most of the morning, and for most of the Monday prior to today, shaking her head each time Harriet discreetly took aim at the hard, stone floor and fired another low-level hex at it. They were late for Transfiguration yesterday, having to stop by the infirmary after a forceful furnunculus struck Harriet in the face, and Hermione’s best efforts to reduce the swelling proved fruitless. Madam Pomfrey didn’t believe their excuse about a misfired spell, and Professor McGonagall gave them a tongue lashing for their tardiness.

Elara—who was not as opposed to the occasional spot of mischief—kept frowning.

“I can’t believe Professor Snape would encourage this,” Hermione whispered. “This is exactly the kind of thing he usually tells us not to do!”

“He might have a reason,” Elara muttered. She eyed Draco, who stood nearest them, and though he kept sending murderous glances in Harriet’s direction, he otherwise remained deep in conversation with Nott. Hermione knew he’d sent several letters home, and given how sullen his mood had been on Sunday and Monday, she gathered Mr. and Mrs. Malfoy weren’t overly impressed with his whinging—or his being bested by a bunch of underage witches.

“How so?”

Elara shrugged, attempting nonchalance, though she kept wringing her hands inside her sleeves. “We know Professor Slytherin has…favorites.” This was true. Several of the older Slytherins often boasted about earning their professor’s regard, and though Hermione admitted to preening whenever professors praised her work, compliments from Professor Slytherin always carried a double-edged bitterness, scarcely given, and yet just as cutting as his insults. “Maybe this is Snape’s way of making sure Harriet doesn’t become a…favorite.”

“Maybe this is his newest attempt to get Harriet murdered.”

The witch in question huffed, readjusting her glasses, shifting her weight from foot to foot. “You know it was Quirrell who tried that, Hermione.”

“Quirrell’s actions do not preclude Professor Snape’s.” Not that Hermione truly believed Professor Snape meant Harriet harm, but a healthy dose of wariness would serve them all well—and honestly, what was the Potions Master thinking, helping Harriet find a way past Professor Slytherin’s protego? It was idiotic. Did he mean to have her murdered? Expelled? Because Hermione thought both options a possibility when dealing with their inimical Head of House.

“He warned me against doing this, you know,” Harriet said. “I think he called me a fool, and then said something about being ready for the consequences.”

“Why are you doing this?” Hermione had asked before, naturally, and she received the same answer now as she had then.

“I just have to.”

Hermione didn’t understand. Trouble invariably found Harriet with startling frequency, but it was unlike the bespectacled witch to cause her own problems, and Hermione couldn’t wrap her head around her reasoning. She didn’t have to do anything; indeed, it seemed more imperative she do nothing, and should this risky plan work—which, Hermione wasn’t convinced it would—Harriet would more than likely regret her actions. Purposefully seeking a way in which to strike a professor, even in a scenario where such a thing became plausible, would get her in so much trouble.

I just have to.

Why, Hermione wanted to demand, but she didn’t, knowing how her temper rose when presented with a vexing problem. No answer was forthcoming, either because Harriet didn’t want to explain, or couldn’t. Perhaps, instead of Hermione simply not understanding, she couldn’t understand; in contrast to Harriet, Hermione grew up well-loved and sheltered, hungry for knowledge but otherwise fed, safe, comfortable. If she’d been raised as Harriet had, questioning when her next meal would come, terrified her beast of a relative might turn around one day and make good on their violent threats, Hermione might want to prove she could best someone like Professor Slytherin too, if only to know she could. There was a powerful sense of security in knowing someone you found threatening could be—theoretically—defeated.

Lost in thought, nibbling her lip, Hermione almost missed when the door eased open, assisted by magic and a strong, sudden breeze. The students dressed in green and silver entered first—though Elara snagged Harriet’s sleeve and held her back, whispering low and furious, saying something Hermione couldn’t hear. Whatever she said, Harriet shook her off and marched into the classroom, shoulders rigid and head held high, taking her accustomed seat near the front. Hermione and Elara followed her, sharing apprehensive looks.

Professor Slytherin stood before his lectern, dressed in his ever-present robes of black with the fine, emerald lining hemming the inside. He waited, silent, wand in hand, for the final Gryffindor straggler to make it past the threshold, then he brandished his hand, slamming the door shut in their wake. The sudden, hard bang! stifled what little conversation had endured the transition from the hall to the classroom.

“Good afternoon, students.”

“Good afternoon, Professor Slytherin.”

He smiled, a bleak, ominous bearing of straight, white teeth. “Take out your essays on the etymology of the Conjunctivitis Curse. I will be Summoning them to me.”

Papers crinkled and bodies shifted as Slytherins and Gryffindors alike shuffled through their bags to find their rolled-up essays. Professor Slytherin waited thirty seconds at the most before snapping his fingers, sending twenty or so scrolls sailing toward his desk at the far corner of the room. They settled in a tidy pyramid. “Now,” the wizard said as he drifted from behind his lectern, robes rippling, the torchlight glinting on the shined silver buttons of his waistcoat. “We will be continuing with our practical studies, today examining the proper form and usage of the curse I had you write your essays on. If you did your research, performing the curse should be a simple task.” A few students mumbled under their breath, uneasy, and Slytherin smiled all the more. “Let’s see. How about…Longbottom. Yes, Mr. Longbottom, you’re first. To the mark.”

The Boy Who Lived made his way to the lion mark, and as he began what had become a standard ritual with the Defense professor, Hermione turned ever so slightly in her chair, looking at Harriet. The green-eyed girl glanced in her direction, and then away, watching Professor Slytherin and Longbottom, so Hermione looked to Elara instead. The Black witch didn’t look away, but she always held her face so stiffly, Hermione couldn’t tell what she was thinking.

Oh, I hope Harriet changed her mind, Hermione moaned in her own head. She prayed the reality of being in the classroom in front of the Defense Master had swayed Harriet from her path, and yet Hermione acknowledged the futility in such thinking. Harriet was not one to frighten easily. She carries around one of the world’s deadliest magical serpents under her shirt, for Pete’s sake.

Parkinson followed Longbottom, then Bullstrode, Finnigan, and Goyle. Hermione’s turn came before Harriet’s, and her concentration suffered to such an extent she could only make a half-hearted attempt at the curse, earning herself a snide comment from the professor and a few low snickers out of the Gryffindors. Elara went, putting forth a better—if no less disinterested—effort. Slytherin wiled his way through the accrued bodies, until finally—.

“Miss Potter,” Professor Slytherin called, grinning again. “Our last participant today. To the mark.”

Harriet stood, straightening her skirt. If she hadn’t been looking for it, Hermione would have missed how the other witch’s hands shook.

This a bad idea. A very bad, very, very, bad idea—.

The short walk to the green marker seemed to take an age, when in reality, Harriet found her place a few short seconds later and turned to face Professor Slytherin, her wand already drawn. Oh, but how she looked so small standing there, half her hair escaping the quick plait Elara had finished for her that morning, cardigan a size too big, robes slightly askew—and yet, Hermione couldn’t deny a certain fluidity to her movements, an instinctual grace no one else in the class could quite mimic. Harriet just seemed to know where to put her feet on instinct, bending her knees, raising her arms. Hermione always felt awkward when she took the mark; if Harriet did, she gave no indication.

Without warning, the short witch took a breath and lunged forward, shouting, “Oculi irritare!

A quick burst of mustard yellow light flew toward Professor Slytherin, who waited with his shield already raised. Hermione noted how his wand hand twitched inside his sleeve, and she knew he’d wordlessly adjusted his spell again, strengthening it against Harriet’s oddly powerful attacks. Indeed, the Conjunctivitis Curse struck his shield, immediately slinging itself back at the witch, and Hermione held her breath, waiting for it to hit Harriet, when—.

Harriet dodged.

In the split second of time between the spell hitting Slytherin’s protego and firing back at her, Harriet dipped below the curse, eyes bright, lit up in the ugly glow, and her arm darted forward, wand out—.

Locomotor Mortis!

The purple curse burst forth, the angle low, losing momentum against the platform, until it caught the stones properly, rocketing upward just as it dipped beneath the defined edge of Slytherin’s transparent shield.

The wizard’s legs snapped together, and in that instant, as he swayed, Hermione saw sheer, incredulous disbelief in the wizard’s red eyes.

And then, fury overcame him.

The Leg-Locker Curse didn’t even last a full second before Professor Slytherin broke it, stepping forward, into his next spell, and the whole of the classroom held its breath in shocked terror. The wizard’s arm whipped down—not toward Harriet, as Hermione had expected, but rather to the side, the familiar light of a flipendo skidding right, spiraling, catching the stones just as Harriet’s curse had so it could sail around the hasty shield the bespectacled witch had thrown up, striking her right in the side. The force of the spell threw Harriet off her feet and into Lavender Brown’s desk.

“Harriet!” Hermione screamed, unable to help herself. How did he do that?! Is she okay?! Harriet tried that spell half a dozen times, but she couldn’t get it to ricochet; how could he do it?!

“Sssilence!” Professor Slytherin hissed. It wasn’t necessary; the whole of the classroom had descended into a deadly, terrible hush broken only by Harriet’s short, quiet panting. She was quick to rise, mumbling a quiet apology to Lavender as the stunned Gryffindor picked her glasses off the floor and handed them over. “I do believe we are using the Conjunctivitis Curse today, Potter. Not the Leg-Locker Curse.”

Professor Slytherin’s voice hit Hermione’s ear like oil, cold and slick and moments away from being ignited into a fiery cataclysm. The professor had his arms at his sides, pale hands clenching and unclenching in tight, furious fists.

“Well, girl?”

All eyes waited on Harriet as she swallowed, head down, eyes on the floor. “Sorry, Professor,” she lied. “I didn’t mean to. It was an accident.”

“An accident—.” The wizard took a silent step closer and Hermione stiffened. “An accident. Ah, yes…how very…unfortunate. An accident. Thirty points from Slytherin.”

To their credit, none of Harriet’s housemates batted an eye. Neither did the Gryffindors.

“Allow me to make one thing very clear to you all; I will not tolerate another…accident in my classroom. I am gracious in allowing you children to practice your craft upon a superior wizard such as myself, but I will not submit to being your practice dummy. You puling little—.” He stopped himself, taking a breath. He ran a hand through his hair, straightening the mussed curl that fell across his furrowed brow. Hermione had never seen him come so close to losing his temper; the professor’s constant, falsely genuine mask cracked enough to show a truly alarming visage behind it. “Do I make myself clear?”

Everyone nodded.

Do I?

“Yes, Professor Slytherin!”

Harriet said nothing. She looked like she was having difficulty breathing, one hand folded over her neck, the other arm wrapped about her ribs. Professor Slytherin flicked his wand at the classroom door, and it crashed open again, two of the torches going out in the draft. Smoke tinged the air. “Class dismissed.”

The students hesitated, caught unprepared, but they moved a moment later, rushing to gather their things and get out of the room. Elara snatched up Harriet’s things, seeing as the shorter girl had been the first one out the door, Professor Slytherin’s gaze never leaving her until Harriet vanished into the corridor. Hermione and Elara rushed after her, and they needed only descend the stairs to the first floor, finding Harriet slumped alone on the steps, out of breath and sweating profusely.

“Are you all right?” Hermione asked as she knelt, worried. “He didn’t break your ribs, did he?!”

“No,” Harriet wheezed. “It’s—. My neck.”

Her neck?

Slowly, Elara set down their satchels and reached out, tugging Harriet’s collar to the one side. The old curse scar was livid, skin raised, red, the white veins as stark as real lightning against her flesh.

That doesn’t make any sense. Did the scar have some sort of reaction with the Knockback Jinx? It hasn’t before, but then, Slytherin wasn’t the one casting it then. It was Harriet herself, the spells coming off his barriers.

Groaning, Harriet lifted the edge of her shirt, displaying just enough of her side to reveal the fresh bruises already forming. They looked painful, but not serious. “Merlin,” she grunted, jerking the fabric back into place. Her breathing leveled out as the pain faded in her eyes, color leaching from the raw, angry tissue about the curse scar. They could hear the rest of their class descending the stairs now, so they rose, Hermione keeping a hand on Harriet’s elbow, making sure she didn’t stumble. “Consequences be damned. He’s such an arsehole.”

“Honestly, Harriet.”

Elara started to laugh.

Chapter 65: serpent charmer

Chapter Text

lxv. serpent charmer

Cold morning air cut into Harriet's lungs and she savored the burn, holding it in, until she let it go with a hard, shuddering exhale.

Her sneakers hit the ground under her with steady thumps, the earth unyielding, chilled, compacted by a thousand years of a thousand feet following the same trail along the edge of the Black Lake. Cliffs overshadow part of the path, the natural divots and shelves bearing evidence of forgotten parties thrown by the upper years, initials and hearts carved deep into the rocks. Ahead, the Forbidden Forest crawled up from the shore, and the path loped away from the water into the trees, skirting the deeper woods, passing the far Gagwilde Tower on its final curve to the North Gate.

Harriet paused below the cliffs to study the hundreds of names left behind from previous generations. The low waves lapped at the sand, and the sound echoed here, sparse sunlight reflecting upward from the water, casting incongruous lines on the rocks. Behind her, Harriet could hear Hermione and Elara trying to keep pace.

"You wouldn't have to do anything else," Elara told Hermione, words choppy and breathless. "You would only have to mix the potion. I've already gathered the dew, the moth, and will have the leaf soon."

"You need more than that," Hermione retorted, flipping her frizzy hair. "What about a place to store it, hmm? What if someone tampers with it? Or it gets disturbed? It's very finicky, according to the books."

"I've a safe box with a Stabilizing Charm on it prepared."

"Did you get that out of your precious journal too?"

"Yes, actually."

"What are you two arguing about?" Harriet asked as the pair drew level with her, and both immediately slowed their speed, red in the face, breath escaping in sharp bursts. All three witches wore shorts, high socks, and their school sweaters, though Hermione had managed to smuggle in a Muggle track jacket with a zipper somehow. They'd only been jogging for ten minutes or so, and already felt winded at best and outright exhausted at worst.

"Elara—." Hermione began, balancing one fist on her hip. "Wants me to make her an Animagus Potion."

"Animagus? Like Professor McGonagall?"

"Yes, exactly like Professor McGonagall."

Harriet wrinkled her nose in thought, knocking sediment from her sneakers. They weren't due to cover Animagi for quite some time, but Harriet had skimmed ahead, thinking it'd be awesome to change into an animal—until she read how devilishly difficult the whole process was. "Isn't that illegal?"

"Technically," Elara managed before Hermione could, scowling at the bushy-haired witch. "Just as that Horned Serpent you keep under your bed is technically illegal, too."

"I was just asking, Merlin. Leave Livi be."

"It isn't illegal to try," Elara continued, some of the tension leaving her brow. "There is nothing written in the school bylaws or Ministry edicts that prohibits trying; only success."

Harriet snorted. "Seriously?"

"Yes. I've checked."

"Just because it isn't illegal doesn't mean you should do it," Hermione insisted, both hands on her hips now, a lecture looming like a storm cloud in the distance. "Amateur Animagi transformations are incredibly dangerous—especially given your age!"

"At Uagadou, they learn when they're fourteen or so. A year is not a large difference, and there's no guarantee I could even attempt a transformation until next year, anyway."

"It doesn't matter! In 1962, Gail Patt attempted the transformation for her Transfiguration N.E.W.T extracurricular project and wound up getting stuck as a canary! A canary! They couldn't ever change her back, because she lost her humanity! The conversion between human and animal psyche is temperamental!"

"Will you lower your voice?" Elara snapped. "I understand it's dangerous, Hermione. I'm not a fool. For every failure, there's a story of success. It's something I wish—need—to do, no matter your feelings on the subject."

"You don't need to do it—just as Harriet didn't need to curse Professor Slytherin!"

Harriet winced. A week had passed since their disastrous practical assessment, and their Head of House still glowered at Harriet whenever he saw her. They hadn't had another practical—no one had, in any year, and Draco had been quick to blame Harriet for their increased theoretical course load, bringing down the scathing attention of the upper years on her head. Two sixth years almost tripped her down the stairs the evening prior.

"Don't drag me into this."

"I'm just asking you to make the potion," Elara said. "Not to attempt it with me."

"Well, I won't." Hermione stuck her nose in the air and crossed her arms, turning to the water. Elara let out a harangued sigh, and suddenly rounded on Harriet.

"Harriet will make it, then."

"Wh—? Hold on—."

"If Hermione won't, you will, won't you?" Elara arched a brow, the corner of her mouth twitching upward.

"Wait—I don't—I don't know anything about the potion—."

"Oh, that shouldn't matter," Elara said, and Harriet saw how Hermione's shoulders stiffened. "After all, the efficacy of the potion isn't important at all."

An incredulous grunt left Hermione, and she whirled around. "I do not appreciate being blackmailed, Elara Black!" she snapped. "You know very well the potion's quality directly affects the success rate of proper transformation!"

Elara's widened her eyes, expression falsely innocent. "Does it, now?"

"Have you given any thought to what might happen if I messed up in making the potion? What would happen then?"

"You won't," Elara asserted, her answering smile softer, more genuine. It punctured Hermione's rising frustration, and her posture loosened. "And for the record, I believe Harriet could brew it as well—but, she's not familiar with the potion like you are, and if I brewed it, it'd be an absolute nightmare."

Sour, Hermione picked up her feet and started on the path again, urging them to follow along. "I'll think about it. That's all I'm promising."

"Thank you."

They walked for the remaining stretch by the shore, and when the steps led into the forest's skinny saplings, Harriet took the lead again, leaning into a slow jog. Flint and Boyle passed them at a considerably faster clip, both nodding their heads at Harriet, ignoring the other witches, and they saw Hufflepuff's Seeker, Cedric Diggory, as well. He was far friendlier, and actually matched their pace for a few minutes, chatting about Quidditch and classes and the Giant Squid, whose conspicuous presence loomed on the Lake's surface at their backs. He left soon after, though not without telling Harriet he looked forward to playing against her in their first match.

Thinking about having actually play Quidditch made Harriet queasy, and she pushed herself to run faster, Hermione and Elara chasing after her. What if she failed? What if she fell off her broom? Or froze in the air? She'd be the laughing stock of the entire school.

They hadn't even reached Gagwilde Tower, the school's farthest outpost, when the three witches stumbled to a halt, Harriet holding on tight to her side.

"Harr—Harriet, are you okay?" Hermione panted, bent over, hands on her knees. "Oh, I—I know I said exercising with you would be a good idea, but I forgot—forgot how exhausting it is—."

"My bloody ribs still hurt," Harriet complained, trying to rub the pain out of the offending injury. She knew nothing had been broken—since, thanks to Dudley, she was intimately familiar with the feeling of broken ribs—but the healing bruises ached, showing the outline of where her body had struck Lavender's desk. Honestly, Harriet had been convinced the wizard had killed her for a second after his spell landed. She'd never encounter a flipendo that powerful before.

Is that how he got it to bounce? she wondered. How did he manage to circle my shield? I didn't know that was possible.

"I told—told you to go to Madam Pomfrey."

"Madam Pomfrey reports all injuries to our Head of House."

"You're being ridiculous."

"Am I? Professor Slytherin would probably chuck me off the Astronomy Tower if he found out I went tellin' tales."

Elara suddenly sat in the grass, one hand to her chest, head down between her knees.

"Elara? You alright?"

The taller girl waved them both off with a hoarse, "Give me a moment," but when that moment passed and Elara continued to gasp for air, Harriet touched her shoulder. "I can't—can't catch my breath." Her face had gone deathly pale, almost blue, and her hand ran from her chest to her throat as if trying to coax the air back into her lungs.

"I think we should get her back to the castle," Harriet said. She grasped Elara's arm, and when the other witch didn't jerk away, she levered the arm around her shoulders and pulled. Harriet almost wound up in the dirt too, and would have fallen if Hermione hadn't hurried to catch Elara's other arm. Between the two of them, they got their friend upright, and set off as fast as they could across the grounds.

Running pell-mell on the dew-streaked grass proved more difficult than traversing the worn path, and by the time they came in sight of the castle's entrance, all three witches could hardly breathe, and Harriet felt as if a lead weight hung from her shoulder, yanking hard on the limb. Blood pounded in her bruises, and she wanted nothing more than to lay on the cold earth and pass out.

Sweating and wheezing, Harriet and Hermione managed to drag Elara—growing bluer than before—through the doors into the entrance hall. Given the early hour, no one was out and about to witness their graceless staggering, and Harriet couldn't decide if that was a good thing or not. They still had half the castle left to traverse to reach the infirmary.

"What in the blazes are you three doing?"

Harriet jumped, and from the lower dungeon corridor came Professor Snape, slinking up from the depths like a foul-tempered bottom dweller, skin sallow and eyes ringed in black as if he hadn't gotten a second of sleep last night. He brought with him the smell of bitter herbs and brine—which only reaffirmed the ghoulish imagery in Harriet's head.

"It's not even an hour past dawn, and you're already up to no good, Potter?"

"It's Elara, Professor," Hermione said before Harriet could argue. "I think she's having an asthma attack."

The wizard lost his sneer and his eyes snapped to the witch in question, taking in her stark complexion and short, wheezing breaths. He stepped nearer, and his black wand appeared from his sleeve, Snape levering it at Elara's throat as she looked at him with wide, panicked eyes. "Anapneo."

Elara wheezed and coughed, but she did manage to breathe somewhat easier than before, the pained, pinched expression on her face smoothing.

Snape's wand disappeared back into his sleeve. "Bring her along. Quickly now."

"But, Professor—."

"Quickly and silently, Granger."

Elara leaned on them for support, and they descended into the subterranean dungeons, chasing Snape's black cloak cutting through the sputtering torchlight. He led them straight to his office, a place Harriet had had the misfortune of visiting once or twice for detention, though Snape usually conducted those in the classroom. He waved a hand to dismiss the wards and opened the door, leaving the three witches to follow after him into the cluttered space, pointing at the stiff, worn chair set before his desk. "Put her there."

They dropped Elara into the seat, and Harriet rubbed her sore shoulder with a groan of relief. The smell clinging to Snape thickened here, emanating from a little iron cauldron set on a narrow counter between an overburdened shelf and a rickety cabinet. She hadn't a clue what he'd been brewing. The professor himself stopped before a large portrait showing a turbaned man and two cobras, the painted wizard playing a low, winding tune on a carved flute— "A pungi," Hermione supplied in undertone, seeing where Harriet's eye had wandered. Snape touched the portrait's frame and it swung inward, revealing a second room larger than the office itself.

"Those must be his private stores," Hermione muttered, watching as Snape dismissed another ward and opened a thick-paned cabinet door, revealing several shelves stocked with all manner of potions. "I can only imagine what he has tucked away in there. Look, those are Hungarian Horntail scales! Those are highly regulated. And there—that's a jar of Banshee screams."

"Banshee screams? Isn't that just—air?"

"Don't be silly, Harriet."

Harriet didn't think it a silly question, but she nonetheless shrugged and let Hermione continue peeking inside Snape's storeroom while the man's back was turned. She let her attention drift instead to the portrait door, hanging not quite open and not quite closed, the charmer taking a break from his music to lounge on a reed mat. The snakes hovered at the edge of their basket, tongues flickering. One cobra turned to the other and hissed.

"The dark one isss having visitorsss, he isss."

"Hatchlingsss, they are."

"What doesss he want with them, we wondersss?"

The second, more cohesive cobra bobbed its head, peering at them. "The Mudblood and the mad one and the whissspering hatchling, yesss."

Harriet stiffened.

"What isss they doing here, we wondersss?"

"The Massster will want to know, he will."

"Yesss, yesss."

Snape shouldered his way into the office again, and the snakes quickly dipped into their basket, out of sight. 'Master,' the one had said. Harriet knew enough about snakes to understand the way they addressed people; their species shared a keenness for adjectives, the "loud one" and the "fat one" and the "dark one" common enough in their speech, while they referred to Parselmouths as "Speakers." Harriet had never heard the term "Mistress" until she chose to step past the Dursleys' threshold and follow Set into the unknown. She couldn't be certain, but she believed the difference in address came with allegiance—and she was damn sure the only Speaker in the castle who could be called "Master" was Professor Slytherin.

Professor Slytherin had snakes watching Snape.

The Potions Master tipped Elara's head back and all but dumped the contents of a slim, slightly orange vial down the witch's throat. Sputtering, Elara shoved his hand away and retched.

"Hold your breath, Black. Do not vomit in my office."

Harriet frowned as Elara did as told, pressing a trembling hand to her mouth. "You could have warned her."

Snape narrowed his eyes.

"Err. Sir."

A tense moment passed them by, and finally Elara began to breathe without difficulty, her first inhalations raspy and stilted, but soon smooth and quiet, the blue color fading from her lips. Snape asked her questions in his bored, tired drawl—did her chest feel tight, did she feel the urge to cough, had her lungs cleared—and as Elara answered, Harriet thought about the portrait. Did Snape know about the snakes? She could admit he was bloody clever, but even clever people overlooked obvious things. Snape walked about in a part of the castle filled with snake totems and memorabilia; Harriet thought it plausible he might not realize just what he had hanging on his wall.

"You're fine," Snape grunted, banishing the empty vial back into his storeroom, slamming the portrait closed with a swish of his wand. "You do realize the track is out of bounds for first and second years, do you not? Don't lie to me, I know exactly where you were, girl. Did you dunderheads never think to consider this situation is precisely why you are not allowed out on the grounds before decent human beings have rolled out of their beds?"

He continued on in that vein for some time, and Harriet tuned the professor out, deciding he was exaggerating—or lying outright. She'd seen other Quidditch players out running, after all, and nothing in the rulebook said she couldn't go out simply because she was younger.

"Potter, are you listening?"

"Yes, sir," she replied, blinking. Snape did not look convinced, but the man had obviously had little sleep and couldn't be arsed with her attitude this morning.

"Black, do refrain from doing anything too strenuous in the future, lest you choke and expire." His tone implied he wouldn't be terribly upset if that happened, and Elara scowled, the haughty lines of her face sharpened with derision. "Get out, all of you. Breakfast is soon, and I mean to enjoy what's left of my morning before you pester me again."

Hermione hurried from the room, followed by Elara, who shot Snape one final withering glance the Potions Master ignored in favor of staring Harriet down, who lingered overlong by his desk, fidgeting with her sleeves.

"What is it now, Potter?"

She almost left, hating how he'd taunted Elara even as he assisted the witch, but Harriet's ribs kept throbbing, a stern reminder of Professor Slytherin's hateful, mocking teachings, and so she squared her shoulders and remained. "Sir? Can I have a bit of parchment? And a quill?"

"…why?"

"To write down those notes you wanted. From class, you know."

Snape and Harriet stared at one another, the former suspicious, the latter keeping her back to the storeroom, a fierce expression holding her young face. If he scoffed and tossed her out, then Harriet would go, and would keep what she knew to herself—but Snape didn't scoff. He held her gaze, searching for something, and though he looked wary, the Potions Master wordlessly slid a sheet of parchment and a tatty, prepped quill toward her.

It all seemed so very dramatic to Harriet, this cloak and dagger game, and she was certain any other professor would've demanded she drop the pretense and be frank, but Snape didn't. Harriet leaned forward and scribbled out a line on the page.

"Thanks for helping Elara, sir."

"Out, Potter."

She went, and after the door swung softly shut, Harriet didn't see how Snape took the parchment in hand and read the untidy line. She didn't see him hold the parchment over an open candle and watch the words burn.

The serpent charmer has watchful friends, professor.


A/N: Some random factoids! According to Rowling, the bit about Uagadou students becoming Animagi at fourteen is canon. Elara's birthday is January 17th, making her roughly seven months older than Harriet, and about three months younger than Hermione.

Harriet: "I have to run for Quidditch."

Hermione: "We should all do it!"

Elara: *literally dies*

Chapter 66: the door opens

Chapter Text

lxvi. the door opens

 

September gave way to October just as it did every year: slowly, reluctantly, and then all at once. The last vestiges of summer released their earthly hold and the Hogwarts populace bid farewell to warm, sunny days spent idle on the castle’s lawns. Iron-clad clouds became commonplace outside their windows, and Harriet often bemoaned the shift in weather as the clouds thickened and October skipped by. It was going to be a long, cold winter.

Their classes were more difficult than they’d been the year before, the professors already keen to prepare them for their third year, when their magical study would become “serious,” new electives added to their schedules, nascent plans for future careers and exploits formed. Professor Slytherin resumed their practical lessons, though he didn’t stop fixing Harriet with a gimlet eye each time he saw her, as if the bespectacled witch were a particularly vexing issue he hadn’t yet decided how to handle. Some days, he stopped her in the corridors and asked how her studies were progressing. Other days, he heckled and belittled her, finding excuses to dock points or assign grueling detentions with Filch.

Harriet wished he’d make up his mind.

She exchanged several letters with Mr. Flamel, who she learned harbored a fierce passion for magical theory in all its shapes and forms, and thoroughly enjoyed expounding on his thoughts and ideas, so long as he had an attentive, interested audience. Harriet wrote to others as well: Madam Vance, Tonks and her mum, and even Narcissa Malfoy, the latter of whom reprimanded Harriet to improve her penmanship and to get along with Draco. Tonks wrote about her day to day at the Aurory, and Harriet always looked forward to reading her funny anecdotes.

On Hallowe’en, a day Harriet—unlike the majority of students—dreaded, she woke to find a different kind of letter left on her nightstand.

Yawning, Harriet searched the blankets for her glasses—poking and prodding at Livi to shift him about—and picked the letter up, peeling back the familiar, sticky wax seal.

 

Dearest Harriet,

It has been brought to my attention that I—and, by extension, your relatives—have been negligent in considering your welfare on this inauspicious anniversary. Again, I must beg your forgiveness for an old man’s wandering mind, and ask you to allow me to make up for your aunt and uncle’s remiss behavior. I have requested your professors allow you to skip your morning classes, and should you desire it, I will be available at nine o’clock in my office to take you to visit your parents.

Yours in sincerity,

Albus Dumbledore.

- P.S., I enjoy Tangy Toffee.

 

Harriet stared at the short missive after she finished reading it, gaze distant, looking at something she couldn’t rightly see. Her stomach twisted, and she felt—strange. Visit your parents. It was a nice euphemism, considering her parents had died eleven years ago today, interred in the earth sixth feet under and yet inexorably out of reach. Harriet didn’t know if she wanted to see their graves, if she wanted to ignore the whole holiday, or if she wanted to just stay in bed and forget she was an orphan raised in a cupboard without a real guardian to talk to.

“What’s that?”

Elara stood at the side of Harriet’s bed inside the curtains, though for how long, Harriet couldn’t say. Livi nosed the other girl’s dressing gown, searching for treats, and without missing a beat, Elara reached into Harriet’s nightstand and withdrew a Snake Snack, carefully handing it over to the excited serpent so he’d leave her be. Harriet watched this transaction without thought, giving Elara the letter. She read it, then sighed.

“Are you going to go?” she asked, and Harriet shrugged one shoulder, unsure of what to say. Elara tucked a hunk of Harriet’s wild hair behind her ear, and the younger witch looked up at her friend. “You should go with Professor Dumbledore. I think it’ll be good for you to have something…concrete, tangible. Something you can actually remember about them, even if it’s not really the memory you want to have.”

“Maybe you’re right.”

And so, when Harriet dressed for the day, she forewent her school uniform and dressed in the trousers, sweater, and casual robes she usually saved for the weekend, though she did throw her Slytherin scarf around her neck. She skipped breakfast, and when the hour approached nine, she left the near-silent dorms and walked to the Headmaster’s office, listening to her own footsteps echo in the empty halls.

She gave the password, Tangy Toffee, to the gargoyle, and climbed the spiraling stairs, ignoring the tight, nervous sensation gripping her middle when she knocked and stepped inside the waiting office. The door to the closet where Quirrell almost murdered her was firmly closed.

“Harriet, my girl. You’re right on time.”

Professor Dumbledore sat behind his desk with an open book on its surface, a heavy, flat bauble kept on the page to mark his place. He smiled, though the gesture lacked its usual brightness, and even his attire appeared less luminous, Professor Dumbledore dressed in darker, Gryffindor crimson robes with a gray cape that looped over his right side, hiding his lack of an arm. “Ready to leave?”

“Yes, sir,” Harriet said, uneasy. She didn’t wish to be ungrateful—after all, how many other people got half the day off and a personal escort by the Headmaster?—but she couldn’t quite blunt the frazzled edge of her unsettled mood. If Dumbledore noticed, he chose not to say anything. He gestured for her to come closer, then stuck his hand into his pocket to retrieve an empty lemon sherbet wrapper. Harriet glanced at it, then at the Headmaster, brow quirked.

“It’s a Portkey. Have you traveled by Portkey before, Harriet?”

“No, sir.”

“Oh, it’s easy enough to do. Just hold on to that edge there—tightly, make sure not to let go. Usually, the wards won’t allow the use of Portkeys within the grounds, but I’ve tweaked them just for this morning.” He chuckled. “Now, Portkeys are often set to timers, but I’ve given this one a password. Are you certain you’re ready? Do you have a firm grip?”

Harriet pinched her side of the wrapper harder. “Yes, Professor.”

“Good! Here we go, then.” Dumbledore cleared his throat. “Ariana.”

In an instant, it felt as if Harriet had swallowed a large fish hook, and it tugged sharply behind her navel, throwing her forward, but not into the desk. There was a great, flashing whirl of color and pressure, her head gone light and woozy, and Harriet didn’t think she could’ve let go of the wrapper even if she wanted to. Her hand simply froze upon the paper—until her feet hit something solid, knees buckling, and only Professor Dumbledore’s hand tight upon her elbow kept Harriet from sprawling on the ground.

“Here we are,” he said, and Harriet straightened with a gasp, pushing her hair back from her eyes.

They stood in a quiet lane bordered by tidy cottages and thick, old-growth trees, the sun overhead blocked by dense holly branches. It was a quaint village; Harriet spotted a post office and a corner shop across the square where a stone church and a graveyard lay in quiet repose. The church’s bells chimed the hour—nine, deep-bellied gongs—and the sound echoed, chased by the wind and the occasional distant voice. Not far beyond the church, the country sprawled wild and stark in the morning’s crisp, unremitting light.

“Where are we, professor?” Harriet asked.

“Godric’s Hollow. Though technically a Muggle establishment, wizards and witches have been settling en masse in the area for a thousand years.” He retrieved his wand, shortening Harriet’s robes into a coat, changing his own attire into a suit with a checkered tie. “That said, it’s best we blend in, my dear.”

A strange frisson went through the young witch as she studied the village she knew her family had lived and died in eleven years ago. She’d avoided the place on her English tour that summer, though before her travels came to an abrupt end outside Bantiaumyrddin, she’d considered visiting, just once. “…I didn’t know they were buried here.”

“It was James’ wish. Though the Potters have a sizable plot at the Stinchcombe Estate, James and Lily grew to like Godric’s Hollow very much. James stipulated in his will that, should the worst come to pass, he and your mother wished to be laid to rest here.”

Harriet didn’t know what to say to that, so she looked down at her shoes. Professor Dumbledore held out his hand, and Harriet took it, her fingers dwarfed by his long, wizened ones. “It’s just over here.”

She followed him to the graveyard, passing through the iron kissing gate into the rows and rows of rising tombstones. Cracks and moss marred some of the ancient plots, devouring old markers, time and the elements wearing away names, dates, and faces until nothing, not even a memory, remained. The magical headstones held up better than the Muggle ones, but they too suffered in the passage of years, Charms wearing thin, letting rust and decay nibble at the graves’ edges.

Her parents had been interred beneath a shared marker neatly placed between the others, the spot inconspicuous but clean, the stone a bright, gleaming marble. Someone left a bundle of red spider lilies resting against the stone. Harriet could scarcely bring herself to read what had been engraved.

 

IN LOVING MEMORY

of

James Fleamont Potter | Lily Anne Potter

27 March 1960 - 31 October 1981 | 30 January 1960 - 31 October 1981

“The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.”

 

“I—what does that mean?” Harriet asked, voice gone thin, strained. “I don’t understand.”

“It’s a quote from Corinthians,” Dumbledore softly answered. “Some interpret it to mean there is life after death, and others believe it means we should not fear our end, that death is but an enemy for us to conquer and accept, another part of life.”

Harriet still didn’t understand very well, but she understood very little at the moment, the world at once too big and too small, thoughts in disarray. “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do.”

“How so, my girl?”

“I don’t—I don’t know what I’m supposed to think. What I’m supposed to feel.” Harriet swallowed. “I never knew them. I—it’s silly, isn’t it? To miss something that never was? I miss them so, so much sometimes, and I’ve so much to be thankful for—Elara giving me a place to stay, and everyone who helped watch over us this summer, but I…. They’ll never be there. I’ll never have that house I grew up in, with my mum and dad waiting for me to come back from school. They’ll never send me a letter, never say they’re proud of me or disappointed or—I’ll never get to chat with my dad about Quidditch, and I’ll never get to ask mum about girl stuff.” Harriet let out a short, breathless laugh. “They’re just a footnote in a wizarding history book now, and I just feel…so sad, Professor. Especially today. It’s been years; I should be over it, shouldn’t I? Am I weak for being so miserable?”

The Headmaster touched her shoulder, and Harriet kept her stinging eyes on the ground, tracing the lines of the spider lilies. Who left those here? She would most likely never know; her parents, after all, had lived entire lives before her, lives she could only learn about in half-remembered snippets and vague, side-comments given by strangers.

She didn’t have flowers. She should have thought to bring some.

“You’re allowed to grieve for what might have been, Harriet. Tears are not an evil thing; it is, perhaps, worse to deny them. Your mother’s love saved you that night so very long ago, and it does not make you weak to mourn losing that love.”

Harriet nodded and sniffled, swallowing again.

They stood side by side in silence for several minutes, each lost to their respective thoughts, Harriet’s gaze on her family’s graves, Dumbledore’s eyes drawn somewhere else in the cemetery, to another plot and another marker Harriet couldn’t see. He allowed the young girl another moment of introspection before emitting a low, thoughtful hum. “Your father was quite the prankster in school, you know.”

Harriet looked up. “Was he?”

“Oh, yes, most definitely. He and his cohorts once managed to smuggle a whole quart of Nettle Itching Powder into my sock drawer.”

“How on earth did he manage that?!”

“I believe he convinced one of the school’s more impressionable house-elves to assist him.” Dumbledore shook his head, beard twitching. “At the time, neither I—nor my poor feet—found their antics very funny. They received a whole week of detentions for that.”

Harriet laughed.

“And your mother—.” Dumbledore paused. “Your mother had a way of inspiring the best in people, not unlike yourself, my dear girl.”

“I don’t think I inspire anyone, Professor.”

“I wouldn’t be so sure about that.” He retrieved his wand from his pocket again, then used a spell to conjure a bouquet of white carnations, levitating it over to Harriet so she could lay the magical flowers down next to the fresh lilies. Tucking his wand away, Dumbledore extended his hand, and Harriet took it once more in her own, allowing the elderly wizard to slowly urge her away.

“I once knew a boy who was, in many ways, similar to you, Harriet.”

“How so?”

“He was an orphan who never got to know his parents. He was a brilliant wizard, just as you’re a brilliant witch, a Slytherin—a lad of immense promise. Yet, for every similarity you share, there are innumerable differences. He was cruel, motivated by anger, bitterness. Where you feel grief and love, he felt only betrayal and hate.”

They walked from the cemetery and passed the church, crossing under a tree’s thick shadow. Harriet shivered.

“You’re talking about…about him, aren’t you, Headmaster?”

“Yes.”

“…are we really so similar?”

Professor Dumbledore shook his head and looked down at Harriet, his blue eyes dim in the brighter sunlight. “No, Harriet. I once told you Lord Voldemort is many, many things, a man of infinite evil, but he was once just a boy, as you are just a girl. The Dark has led many souls astray; grief and sadness can so often turn to anger and corrupt impressionable hearts. Your parents wouldn’t have wanted that for you.”

They passed by an empty lot where the grass grew high and swayed in the cold breeze. It was a lovely village; Harriet could see why her parents had grown so fond of it. She liked to imagine them living here; maybe they shopped at that corner market, or went to that pub, mingling with the Muggles. Maybe they sat on that bench there, below that maple’s creaking eaves, arm in arm.

She knew the professor’s words to be true; so often anger crept up on her, hot surges of prickling frustration directed at Longbottom for living, her parents for dying, at Voldemort, the Ministry, Dumbledore, the world. Two hours. All it took was two hours for a war to end, two hours between their deaths and Longbottom’s supposed ascension—though, in the end, it hadn’t been Longbottom at all. It had always been Lily, as if she’d simply been fated to die that night, regardless of her daughter’s fate.

“Why did he come, Professor? Why did he come for us?”

“That’s a story for another day, I fear.”

She squeezed his hand, and didn’t question the wizard further. “I am angry sometimes,” Harriet admitted, not meeting his eyes. “But I—I know I’m not alone. I’m angry they were taken from me, but I know I still have people like Elara and Hermione who love me, and that’s what really matters, right?”

Professor Dumbledore smiled. “I couldn’t have said it better myself.”

“Thanks for bringing me today, sir.”

“You’re very welcome, dear girl.”

 

x X x

 

After returning to the castle, Harriet did not resume her classes. Rather, she spent the remainder of the day in her dorm with Livius and Kevin, the former pleased to have her attention, the latter too scatterbrained to notice a difference. She thought hard on what the Headmaster had told her, staring at the canopy of her bed, stroking Livi’s smooth, warm coils. She tried to imagine the Dark Lord as Dumbledore had described him—a clever orphan boy in Slytherin—but she couldn’t picture him as anything but that half-formed monstrosity stuck to the back of Quirrell’s head.

You’re clever too, aren’t you, Harriet? A Slytherin, like me.

Harriet rolled onto her side, frowning.

I can give them back to you, silly girl. What Voldemort takes away, he can return….

The oddest remembrances about that day always struck Harriet at off moments; she best recalled how the Mirror of Erised had shattered, green light lurid on the glass, Set’s shadow swelling higher and higher as if he meant to consume Quirrell whole, the Ravenclaw alum crumpling into a dead, motionless heap. Harriet had been most terrified by the temptation she’d felt in that split second, thinking of her mother’s hand in her hair, her father’s crooked smile, the warmth of unequivocal, parental love.

I will let you share in that eternal life, Harriet….

“No one lives forever,” the bespectacled witch softly whispered. Not her parents, not her, and not Lord Voldemort.

Livi hissed in affirmation.

“Harriet?” A gentle knock landed on the door before it creaked open, Hermione sticking her head inside. “Harriet, are you all right? The feast is due to start soon, and you’ve not had a thing to eat all day.”

“Yeah, I’m okay,” Harriet replied, sitting up. “Lemme grab my robes and I’ll be there in a tick.”

“Okay.” Hermione went to leave, then hesitated. “Elara…told me you went to see your parents’ graves today.”

“Mhm.”

“Are you—? Well, if you want to talk about it….”

“I’m fine, Hermione.” Harriet smiled, the gesture not as forced as it might have been had she not visited Godric’s Hollow. Elara had been right; having something concrete of her parents, even something as grim as a plot in a graveyard in a village miles and miles away, helped. “Let’s go to the feast, I’m starved.”

They left the dorm together, finding Elara waiting in the common room, chatting with Daphne Greengrass. They picked up Bulstrode and Parkinson on their way to the Great Hall, the benches and tables already crowded despite dinner not being due to start for another ten minutes. Harriet and her friends found spots closer to the Head Table than she’d like, but they nonetheless sat, ready for the festivities to begin.

“Where have you been all day, Potter?” Malfoy spat as he shoved a first year out of the way and took the place on the other side of Hermione. The bushy-haired witch frowned, decidedly unpleased with this arrangement. “Must be so difficult, being the teacher’s pet. Did you get told off at all for playing sick?”

Elara scoffed. “You’re just jealous no one likes you enough to keep you as a pet, Malfoy.”

The blond boy flushed. “Why are you always butting in, Black?”

“Apologies, you speak so loudly, I’m sure there’s someone across the hall who doesn’t think you’re talking to them.”

Harriet laughed, and so did Blaise Zabini, seated next to Draco, and the older Carrow twins, whom Harriet didn’t know very well. Defeated for the moment, Draco settled on the bench, scowling at Zabini, who just shook his head and changed the subject.

The professors arrived, trickling inside alone or in pairs, some more enthused to be there than others. Snape paused long enough to tell off a couple of Hufflepuffs who got too rowdy, and Slytherin sauntered by his House’s table, expression placid, his presence dimming the conversation until he moved off. The Headmaster had changed into a pair of eye-searing orange robes with moving bats on the hem, and Professor McGonagall had on a traditional witch’s hat. Dumbledore announced the feast with little fanfare—a miracle, really—and the empty platters stretched across the tables filled with all manner of delectable treats and desserts.

“You’d think they’d make a passing effort to provide something healthy, wouldn’t you?” Hermione sniffed, glaring at an iced tart that glared right back at her. “Tarts before dinner, honestly!”

“You sound like my grandmother, Granger,” Pansy complained. “Why don’t you go sit with the other old hags?”

“That’s incredibly rude.”

“So’s eating with your kind at the table—ouch!”

Harriet tossed a mild Stinging Jinx—a favorite of Mrs. Malfoy—under the table, feigning innocence, though Hermione wasn’t fooled. Smirking, she pushed another tart onto Harriet’s plate.

They dined on whatever took their fancy, and even Hermione—notorious for her dislike of sweets—found a suitable platter of savory pastries to suit her appetite. The Gryffindors devolved into a raucous mess not ten minutes into the meal, and Professor McGonagall had to leave her own meal to sort them out, the Ravenclaws debating hotly about the location of the school ghosts, the Slytherins keeping their own conversations under a respectable decibel. Accipto Lestrange, a fourth year, kept spiking people’s drinks with some fancy, foreign Firewhisky, until Snape came swooping down from his seat and confiscated it all.

The first course ended and the second course began— “More dessert?”—and Harriet let out a content sigh, rubbing at her tired eyes. Around her, many of the other students yawned and leaned against one another’s shoulders, burning through what little energy the sugar gave, so she guessed they didn’t have long before the Headmaster dismissed them for the night. At the Head Table, Professor Dumbledore fixed himself a cup of tea while lending an ear to Professor Flitwick, the shorter wizard standing on his seat to make himself heard. Professor Slytherin’s brow was furrowed as he looked about the Great Hall, and Snape had already disappeared for the evening, as had a few of the other professors Harriet didn’t know. Madam Pomfrey watched her charges eat their confections with a kind of grim acceptance. The sight made Harriet grin.

Given the volume in the hall and her own distraction, Harriet almost didn’t hear the murderous whispering—but when she did, it was all she could pay attention to.

Time to kill…kill…kill…Blood…BLOOD….

Her goblet fell with an unheard clatter, splashing pumpkin juice over a tray of pudding, a jack-o-lantern going out with a stifled hiss. “What the hell, Potter!” someone said, but Harriet didn’t pay them any mind. She gulped, mouth terribly dry, her heart racing in her chest as she slowly turned her head, searching for the source of the voice, looking at the happy, sleepy faces surrounding her, finding nothing suspicious. No one else seemed to have heard what she did.

I didn’t imagine it, Harriet thought. Once was a coincidence—but twice? Why did no one else hear it? Was someone having a laugh? Was she—was she going mad? Did the voice exist as some kind of manifestation of her nightmares clawing its way out of her subconscious? What did the wizards do to people who heard bloody voices in their head? It was bad enough her shadow moved on its own—they’d lock her up and throw away the key if she started hearing things.

“Harriet?”

“I—I don’t feel well,” she said, which was true enough. Her stomach twisted with nerves and her gorge rose, the taste of bile on the back of her tongue, so Harriet stood and hurried from the hall, one hand on her wrist, clasped tight over the wand sheathed there. Someone was taking the mickey out of her—they had to be. Perhaps an older Slytherin, paid off by Malfoy, still sour over losing out on his Quidditch spot. They wanted her to think she’d cracked—.

It’s bloody working!

Trying to steady her racing pulse, Harriet forced herself to slow as she crossed the entrance hall, leaving the bright glow of the festivities behind her, squinting in the softer lighting of torches and dimmed braziers. The main doors had been shut tight for the night, the wind rising in the dark beyond the diamond-paned windows, buffeting the aged glass, howling where it managed to sneak through the cracks. Water dripped against stone—a measured, rhythmic splash—and Harriet looked about for the source—.

On the far wall, at the foot of the main stairs, words gleamed dull and red in the light, splattered across the surface in a liquid Harriet swore must be blood.

 

The Chamber of Secrets has been opened. Enemies of the heir, beware.

 

The blood dripped into a puddle at the base of the wall, and the rising wind screamed louder than the white noise echoing in Harriet’s skull. There, by the words, something hung stiff and limp from a bent torch bracket, something brown, furred—.

That’s Mrs. Norris. Filch’s cat. Someone killed—.

Harriet’s hands shook as she stared, speechless, confused—terrified. She didn’t stand there a moment longer, didn’t wait for someone to find her here. Harriet turned heel, and ran.

Chapter 67: voices

Chapter Text

lxvii. voices

 

It took Hermione and Elara longer to find her than Harriet had expected, but it was only a matter of time before they came rushing into the dormitory.

Elara needed only jerk aside the curtains to spot the bespectacled witch sitting cross-legged in the middle of her bed, pale and wide-eyed, and she nodded. “So you did see it, then?”

“Of course I saw it!” Harriet hissed, eyes darting about the room to ensure they were alone. “I might wear glasses, but I’m not blind.”

“Why didn’t you come back to the hall?” Hermione asked. “What if someone noticed you were gone?”

“I couldn’t have returned to the hall. I looked like I’d seen—.” A ghost, Harriet’s mind supplied, but no, that was a Muggle euphemism, one that didn’t make sense in the magical world. “—well, like I’d seen a dead cat hanging off the bloody wall! And I wasn’t going to just stand there, like a loon.”

“She’s not dead,” Hermione corrected, laying a comforting hand on Harriet’s arm. “Professor Dumbledore said Mrs. Norris has been Petrified.”

“Petrified? How?”

“He wasn’t sure—.”

“Or he just didn’t say,” Elara added, sitting at the foot of the bed.

“Or that, yes. But he did say she could be un-Petrified, eventually.”

Eventually? “Do they know who did it?”

“No—did you see anything?”

Harriet glanced at the door again. “…no.”

Just then, a loud bang struck the wood, and all three girls flinched. “Professor Slytherin wants us all in the common room in five minutes!” Prefect Farley shouted before moving off to the next dorm. They heard her repeat the message to the first years, her voice dwindling into the distance, trailed by footsteps and muffled muttering.

Harriet exchanged uneasy looks with the others. “Is it just me,” she asked. “Or is this suspiciously like last Hallowe’en?”

“If Snape starts threatening us with detention, it’ll be exactly like last Hallowe’en.” Elara stood and tugged on her cuffs. She seemed unflappable, but Harriet saw the twitch in her restless fingers. “Let’s get this over with.”

The three said little else and exited the dorm, filtering into the common room with the rest of the Slytherins, who stood below the silver lanterns furiously whispering with one another like a bed of snakes curled under a heat lamp. Apparently, Filch had a near-breakdown in the hall when he saw his cat, only coming to his senses when Dumbledore arrived and reassured the caretaker. Harriet had little fondness in her heart for the man— “the Squib” as many upper-year Slytherins referred to him—or for his despicable feline, but that didn’t mean she thought he or his pet should be attacked.

Who would do something like this? And what did their message mean?

Professor Slytherin entered the common room with Snape at his back, the latter dark and looming, stripped of his robes and cravat as if he’d been caught preparing for bed, while Professor Slytherin floated on a slowly simmering tide of his own ire, cold in his fury, the same look in his eyes Harriet had seen a second before he hexed her into Lavender’s desk.

Harriet drew back farther into the shadows, resting her shoulders on the cold stone wall.

“Here we are again, another year—another Samhain wasted, squandered by some puerile fool’s absurdity. Again, I am forced to waste my time,” Slytherin hissed, teeth clicking hard on the elongated syllables. He took another step into the room, and those Slytherins nearest their Defense instructor edged away, leaning deeper into their seats, heads lowered. “I am unclear of the reasoning behind this pathetic display, but if you are the perpetrator of this…prank, you are going to want to listen very closely.” Slytherin’s voice dropped and nobody dared breathe. “This ceases now. If I discover who you are, there are far worse consequences to fear than mere expulsion.” He met the gazes of his watching students one by one, and for the second his eyes flicked to Harriet’s, she felt…chilled, like she was pressing her face into thick, frozen slush, the feeling pricking against her cheeks, her eyes, along her chin, down her neck—.

It lasted for only a second, then Professor Slytherin moved on, uninterested, and Harriet blinked. What was that?

He gave a few more scathing, carelessly veiled threats before re-numerating the House rules with heavy emphasis on curfew, while Snape did a silent headcount, thumb tapping a fingertip until all students were accounted for. “Any Slytherin caught out after curfew will suffer the consequences—unpleasant consequences. This will be your only warning.”

He turned then and left the dorms, Snape following in his wake without uttering a single word. No one found their voice at first, sharing brief, furtive glances as if expecting the wizards to come back. Then, a seventh year—Sven Rustwing—broke the silence when he started to laugh.

“I never thought Slytherin would get so bent out of shape over a Squib’s cat!”

Everyone started talking then, harsh laughs and squeaks of disbelief, outrage, amusement. It sounded like a flock of well-mannered, aristocratic birds flustered over their feathers to Harriet, but she ignored all this in favor of dragging both Hermione and Elara to their favored corner in the common room, the one farthest from the main hearth and its waiting, watchful serpent.

“What was that all about?” she asked, gesturing at the entrance. “And what’s the—Chamber of Secrets?”

For once, Hermione didn’t have an answer for Harriet, her mouth forming a tight-lipped moue as she scowled at the floor. “I’m sure I’ve read the name somewhere before, but I…. I know for certain it’s in Hogwarts: A History, but I don’t have my own copy—.”

“Harriet does.”

Hermione blinked, clearly surprised. “You do? Have you read it?”

Harriet didn’t know if she should be insulted Hermione sounded so astonished. “Yes, most of it. Bit dry.”

“A bit dry?! But it’s so fascinating—!”

They hurried back into their dorm, Pansy, Daphne, and Katherine already inside, deep in their own speculations. Harriet strode up to her trunk and unlocked the top, bypassing the higher drawers in favor of the lower compartment she didn’t have a chance to use very often. The trunk’s innards were replaced with a rickety wood ladder leading down into a dark hole.

Neither Hermione nor Elara made a move to enter.

Sighing, Harriet took out her wand and muttered, “Lumos,” holding it between her teeth as she threw one leg over the trunk’s lip.

“What—what are you doing, Potter?” Pansy—having glanced up to sneer when they entered—saw Harriet standing on the top rung of her ladder inside her trunk, and Harriet—mouth full—threw the other girl a rude hand gesture before continuing down.

“You’re such a bloody gremlin, Potter, seriously—and aren’t Extension Charms illegal?”

“Not on family heirlooms,” Elara breezily replied. “You’d know that if the Parkinsons had anything worth saving.”

Whatever Pansy’s remark was, Harriet didn’t hear it, the witch’s voice distorted once Harriet dropped the last few feet into the trunk’s bottom. Her friends followed, and Elara shut the lid after, sealing them inside the stuffy, semi-darkness permeating the trunk’s extra room.

Harriet spat out her wand. “Err, lemme find—.”

She fumbled for the lantern sitting on the worktop, tapping her finger against the base to ignite the magical light. It was by no means a large space; the expanded room held little more than a half-dozen shelves above a chipped counter, a worktop varnished in aged patina, and an old cabinet with the Potter crest fashioned on the doors. Harriet kept the books she wasn’t using often—like Hogwarts: A History—on the shelves, making for a tidy, if modest, library.

“I didn’t know you had this place,” Elara said, glancing at the paneled walls stained by spots where frames once hung long before Harriet’s birth. “Pansy can’t lock us in here, can she?”

“No. It can’t be locked with people inside.” Harriet tugged a step out from under the worktop, using it to kneel on the counter and reach the higher shelf.

“Is that—is that a terrarium?” Hermione, puzzled, glanced over the glass tank where it sat on the floor by the cabinet.

“It’s Livi’s.”

“Why is he always under your bed if he has a tank?”

“Because he’s snooty, Hermione, and he doesn’t like going in unless he has to. Here, help me with this….” Hermione lifted her arms to brace Harriet as she tugged the thick volume free and lowered it with a loud thud. “D’you remember where the bit about the Chamber would be?”

“I think so, yes. Oh, this is the collector’s edition! I heard it’s has a whole extra chapter about—but never mind that right now. Bring the light closer, please? Yes, just like that….”

Hermione flipped through the sections, scrutinizing the title pages, muttering under her breath as her finger trailed down the paragraphs. Waiting, Harriet sat on the counter and kicked her feet, while Elara peered into the empty terrarium and at the little chipped teacup Kevin enjoyed napping in.

“Here it is: ‘the Chamber of Secrets is the most enigmatic of all tales concerning the establishing of Hogwarts. It is said to be the parting legacy of the founder, Salazar Slytherin, a powerful wizard famous for his dislike of Muggle-borns. Slytherin left the school after arguing with his fellow founders, and the legend of the Chamber arises in its eponymous secrecy, for Slytherin never shared its location with another. That hasn’t stopped the student body from carrying on the Chamber’s rumor for centuries, stating only Slytherin’s alleged ‘true heir’ could open the Chamber and use what magic lies within to purge Hogwarts of its Muggle-born population. Exhaustive searches have never discovered such a place, and it is believed most likely fictional.’ That’s it?” Hermione glowered at the book as if it’d let her down. “But that doesn’t give us any information!”

“It does explain why Draco shouted, ‘You’re next, Mudbloods!’ before the Headmaster arrived. How does he know about the Chamber?”

“That prat said what—?!”

“His father knows everything,” Hermione said, flinching at the inadvertent compliment paid to Mr. Malfoy. “He’s very informed, I should say. This is exactly the kind of thing he’d make it his business to know.”

“Malfoy’s juvenile, but do you believe him capable of Petrifying Mrs. Norris?”

“No…Draco’s a wretched little beast most of the time, but not—malicious enough, or clever enough, to come up with a plan like this. Besides, he was at the feast….”

As Hermione and Elara spoke, Harriet reread the passage—just a paragraph really, listed among other far-flung memories and urban legends, cursed vaults and hidden Ravenclaw libraries, a singing toilet and long-lost reliquaries. “That’s why Slytherin is so angry, isn’t it? It basically says Slytherin’s heir would come and kill all the students with non-magical parents. He’s the Heir of Slytherin.”

“Well, him or Minister Gaunt,” Hermione corrected. “Neither have children and both claim to be Slytherin’s final living heir—and it’s like Rustwing said, Professor Slytherin reacted rather…oddly, considering.”

“Or not oddly at all.”

“What do you mean, Elara?”

The taller witch crossed her arms and leaned a hip on the worktop. “Supposing the Chamber is rubbish, someone still attacked Filch’s cat and said ‘beware the Heir.’ Everyone knows, or thinks, that’s Professor Slytherin. It could possibly be someone trying to.…” She flipped a hand, searching for the right word. “Please him? Get his attention? He does earn a lot of fanatic regard from a few of the upperclassmen. Maybe they thought this would make him happy.”

“You’re right. Hmm…do you think it was an upperclassman, then? Maybe Rustwing. He was quick to express disbelief in Professor Slytherin’s reaction….”

Harriet carefully closed Hogwarts: A History and took it in her arms, holding the thick book to her chest. “I….” She had to tell them. No matter how mad they thought her, Harriet needed to tell her friends what had happened in the Great Hall. “I, um, heard something. At the Feast.”

“What do you mean? Is that why you left so suddenly?”

“Yes.” She ran her fingers along the book’s edges, then sighed. “I heard a…voice.” An inadequate summary, in Harriet’s opinion; she couldn’t describe how the words had crawled through her ears, how it felt like…like madness, all that bloodlust and hatred and need—.

A furrow appeared between Hermione’s brows. “Whose?”

“I don’t know.”

“Given we were sitting with over two hundred other people, what was different about this particular voice?” Her mouth popped open. “Oh! Were they talking about what was going to happen to Mr. Filch’s cat?”

“Not exactly?” Harriet returned the hefty tome to its proper shelf, turning her back on the other witches, attempting to order her thoughts. The lantern flickered, and she thought she saw Set moving on the wall behind Elara, but her friends didn’t notice. “They…they said it’s ‘time to kill’ and something about ‘blood.’ They didn’t mention Mrs. Norris.” She faced the others again, not missing their disturbed expressions. “Did either of you hear anything?”

Mute, Elara and Hermione shook their heads. Having expected as much, Harriet shut her eyes.

“Harriet….”

“I’m not mad.”

Hermione huffed. “I wasn’t going to say you were,” she snapped. “But it’s been a very long day for you—for all of us. Is it possible you misheard? Or perhaps picked up on one of the others talking? Like Professor Slytherin pointed out, it is Samhain, and some older students—like the Weasley twins—always use it as an excuse to scare the younger years.”

Of course, it was possible; Harriet had to acknowledge the feasibility of Hermione’s suggestion because it had been a long day and she was rather exhausted. Anything was possible, and the more time that passed, the more intangible the words became, muddled and fuzzy, distant from that cramped trunk smelling of cinnamon and cloves. It seemed as if hours and hours had passed since Harriet sat eating supper.

“I didn’t mishear,” she said, decisive. “Because I heard it before, when I had detention with Snape.”

“Professor Snape?”

“And no, before you ask, he didn’t hear anything either. He was in the storeroom.”

Hermione suddenly looked uncertain, biting her lower lip and fiddling with her hair. “…Professor Snape did leave early this evening….”

“So?” Harriet frowned—and then considered Hermione’s words, a breathless snort escaping her. “Come off it. You don’t really think Snape’s—?”

“I don’t know what to think, now do I?” Hermione interrupted, eyes bright. “You said yourself, you’ve encountered this voice twice—once while alone in his company, and then again when he serendipitously left the feast early. Whoever attacked Mrs. Norris couldn’t have been in the Great Hall, and they needed an understanding of Dark magic to Petrify her. Professor Snape is an ideal suspect.”

Harriet scoffed again, ready to argue—when Elara shook her head. “No. Harriet’s right.”

“No? Elara, you hate Professor Snape more than either of us!”

“Hating the man has no bearing on his status as a suspect. After spending half a summer trapped in the same house as him, I can honestly say it’s doubtful Snape would do something like this.”

Seeing Harriet bob her head in agreement, Hermione demanded Elara explain what she meant.

“He thrives on solitude and quiet. On the days he was meant to mind us, he sequestered himself in the potions lab and we wouldn’t see him until dinner time. It’s the same reason he’s always going after us to obey the rules; surly as he is, Snape just wants order.”

Harriet nodded again. “He’s a bit…high-strung for all this.”

“Exactly,” Elara said. “I wouldn’t write Slytherin off, despite everything he said. I think it’s a student, but Slytherin usually enjoys games like this.”

“It’s not a game,” Hermione replied. Her eyes fell to the floor, the lantern’s light touching upon their glassy surface. “Especially not at the expense of Muggle-borns.”

“I didn’t mean it like that, Hermione.”

“I know, I know.”

With nothing left to say, the three witches climbed from the trunk, and were greeted by Pansy’s ill-spirited taunts and Millicent’s loud, unbothered snores. Harriet got ready for bed, and as she slid between her cool sheets, she tried to make sense of what she’d seen, and what she’d heard, wondering what would drive a person to paint that kind of madness on a wall. The Chamber of Secrets has been opened. Enemies of the heir, beware.

Who did it? Why? And what was going to happen now?

Harriet had no answers to any of these questions. She buried her anxious, tired head in her pillows, and tried to get some sleep.

Chapter 68: history, legend

Chapter Text

lxviii. history, legend

 

Rumors abounded in the week following Mrs. Norris’ attack, and though it took a few days, everyone came to the same conclusion the House of Serpents had decided on Hallowe’en; Professor Slytherin was the only known Heir of Slytherin at Hogwarts, and thus the most likely candidate to have opened it.

The Defense professor was never pleasant; he came across more genial and welcoming than other Slytherin professors, like Snape or Selwyn, but his tone always carried venom, menace and retribution paid in equal measure with his compliments and advice. After Hallowe’en, Professor Slytherin’s previous disposition became a fond, summery remembrance, replaced by a cold, suspicious attitude he didn’t bother to hide from his students. Though Harriet didn’t have Defense the following Monday, they heard complaints traded by the other Houses and years about Snape and Selwyn overseeing all of Slytherin’s classes. The professor returned by Tuesday—and most everyone wished he’d stayed away longer.

On Wednesday, the second year Slytherins dragged their weary bodies out of bed and tromped off to Defense first thing in the morning, only to be assigned a lengthy essay and told to get started during class. Professor Slytherin sat at his desk for the duration of the lesson, engrossed in a thick, dusty scroll, turning all questions back upon their askers with unsubtle disdain. He deducted points from anyone who spoke, and so they sat in stifling silence, quills scratching at their scrolls, Slytherin’s red gaze sharp and punishing each and every time he looked up.

Attending their following Potions class with an overworked Snape proved just as—if not more—difficult.

“Partner with Granger, Black,” Snape ordered before Elara had a chance to get out her potions kit. “I haven’t the time nor the patience to scrape your mess off the ceiling today.”

The Gryffindors snickered.

“Ten points for disrupting class, Longbottom.”

The snickering died out in an instant. “Seriously?”

“Ten more points.”

No one was inclined to say much of anything in class after that, and Harriet kept her attention on her cauldron, lest she wind up in yet another detention. Elara and Hermione traded off tasks, Elara keeping her hands away from the potion or the ingredients themselves, attempting to look busy while Hermione did most of the work herself. Dean Thomas splashed Shrinking Solution on himself when class was nearly over, resulting in a very strange, pudgy baby arm flapping about in his sleeve and an irate Snape. The Slytherins escaped the dungeons while the Potions Master berated Dean and his friends.

“Foul bat,” Elara muttered as they walked toward the Great Hall for lunch. “McGonagall is going to be furious about him taking all those points from Gryffindor.”

“She’ll make up for it in Transfiguration tomorrow, just you wait. ‘Breathing, Mr. Longbottom? Excellent technique. Forty points for Gryffindor.” Elara snorted and though Hermione tutted, Harriet caught the small smile tipping the edge of her mouth. “Last night at Quidditch practice last night, Flint and the others commented that all the essays they got back for Defense had Snape’s handwriting on them—his handwriting, and apparently a lot of scathing remarks.”

Hermione gaped in horror. “Professor Slytherin wouldn’t pass off his duties as a teacher!”

“It would explain Snape’s mood today,” Elara said, ignoring Hermione’s indignation. “I couldn’t imagine the terror of having Snape in Defense as well.”

Harriet’s thoughts flashed to an early evening in the Potions classroom, remembering Snape standing at the board, writing out numbers and theories while Harriet rushed to copy every word. “You know,” she said. “I don’t think Snape would be a terrible Defense professor.”

“All the more reason to discredit Professor Slytherin,” Hermione murmured as they came upon the entrance hall. Longbottom and his cronies came rushing by, keen to put as much space between themselves and the dungeons. “He’s a Potions Master with distinctions in all five branches, but he also received a distinction in Charms—Defense, specifically, and he initially applied to Hogwarts as a Defense instructor before taking the post for Potions.”

“Hermione, I know you’ve told us a dozen times you’ve looked up the professors’ qualifications, but how on earth do you know that?”

“Well, that last bit might just be gossip from the older students—but it makes an awful lot of sense!”

Harriet and Elara ribbed Hermione over her less than stellar sources all throughout lunch, until Hermione was quite cross with both of them and chose to sit with Sally-Anne Perks in Charms instead of at their table. Harriet kept levitating little apology notes over to her desk, and Hermione turned all of them to ashes, much to Elara’s amusement and Sally-Anne’s anxiety. They eventually grew bored with their game and turned their minds to their studies, listening to Professor Flitwick lecture on the etymology of the spells ‘Rennervate’ and ‘Enervate,’ and why you should never ever mix up the two.

Hermione joined with them again on the way to History of Magic, readjusting the strap on her bag. “Did you finish your essay, Harriet?”

“Yeah. Why?”

“You’ve been busy with training in the morning and practice at night. You need to have enough time for your homework.”

“I finished it in Slytherin’s class.”

“What! You could get in so much trouble for that!”

“It wasn’t as if he was paying attention to us anyway, for Merlin’s sake….”

They stopped in the corridor outside the dusty chamber used for History of Magic, standing with several Hufflepuffs from their year who gathered together, murmuring, tossing furtive looks in their direction. What’s their issue—oh.

Despite all the rumors and Professor Slytherin’s strange behavior, the Chamber of Secrets business had been pushed to the back of Harriet’s mind, displaced in favor of Quidditch practice, training in the morning, and keeping on task with her studies. She kept listening for the ghoulish voice, but she heard nothing suspicious over the last few days. Professor Sprout was waiting for her Mandrakes to mature, and Professor Dumbledore assured everyone Filch’s cat would be good as new when the plants grew and Snape made the Mandrake Restorative Draught. She’d almost forgotten the negative attitudes the rest of the school had taken toward Slytherin students.

The chamber door swung open. “Get in, find your seats,” Professor Selwyn said from the threshold, one hand still on the door, eyes narrowed behind his spectacles. “Entwhistle, you had best not be bringing food into my classroom, boy….”

The three Slytherin witches found seats in the back, letting the Hufflepuffs fill the middle while the rest of their year took up the front. It was the only class Hermione didn’t insist on grabbing a spot closest to the board, but neither Elara or Harriet questioned her about it, especially after Hallowe’en last year. Harriet didn’t much like History of Magic; Professor Selwyn took what could be a fascinating subject and made it tedious, snarking about Muggles and Muggle-borns, interspersing rants about the superiority of magic that had nothing to do with magic and everything to do with his own fat head. He hated Hermione and Harriet for their Muggle blood, and hated Elara for being from the “Most Ancient” House of Black, a title he fully believed belonged to House Selwyn.

It was all pointless to Harriet and her friends, who sat in the back and did their best to learn something.

The rest of the students dribbled inside, and the door closed with a muted thump, Professor Selwyn ordering them to pass their essays up to the front for him to collect. “Now,” he said, snatching the final scroll from Runcorn’s desk, transferring them in an awkward shuffle to his own larger desk. “Today, we’ll be turning our attention from the Battle in the Black Forest to the International Warlock Convention of 1289, which arose as a direct result of the Battle’s outcome—.”

Professor Selwyn came to a sudden halt when someone raised their hand. “What is it, Macmillan?”

Harriet didn’t know Ernie Macmillan well. She didn’t know much about any of the Hufflepuffs truly, given how they liked to keep to themselves, sharing nothing but polite greetings and the occasional bits of chatter with the other Houses. She knew from Hermione that the Macmillans were pure-bloods, their House fairly prestigious, and Elara told her once she was distantly related to the family. Harriet’s limited interactions with Ernie led her to believe he was rather pompous, for a Hufflepuff, posh, and apparently Gryffindor enough to interrupt Professor Selwyn mid-lesson.

“Sorry, Professor, but given what happened just last week, could you tell us more about the Chamber of Secrets?”

Everyone stared at Ernie, including Professor Selwyn. Wayne Hopkins’ mouth opened with an audible pop! And Oliver Rivers knocked his inkwell off his desk, splattering Pansy’s bag—not that she noticed. “We’re here to discuss the history of magic, Mr. Macmillan. Not the 'fantasy.'”

“I know, sir—but I read about the Chamber in Hogwarts: A History, so doesn’t that make it history?”

Harriet had the sudden and inexplicable urge to laugh, one of those inappropriate giggles that rise up in one’s chest at the worst, most tense moments. Professor Selwyn was more nasty than intimidating, really, but the silence following Ernie’s question hung in the air, prickly and unpleasant, stretching on. Had Hermione asked a question like that, Harriet knew Professor Selwyn would’ve scoffed and mocked her for it—but not Ernie, a pure-blood from a good family. Professor Selwyn sniffed, lifted his nose, and began to speak.

“I’m sure you’ve all read the entry in Bagshot’s book by now, though much of that tripe can little be called history so much as an old woman’s gathered gossip. The Chamber of Secrets is reputed to be a clandestine area of the castle created and hidden by the greatest of the school’s founders, Salazar Slytherin.” He sniffed again, pushing his spectacles higher on his nose. “The legend states that Slytherin, before leaving Hogwarts, encapsulated a means of purging the school of the unworthy—.” His eyes snapped toward Hermione, a small smirk on his lips, and Harriet bristled. “And that his supposed heir would one day return to the school and unleash this purging magic upon us.”

“So is there any truth to it, Professor?” Ernie asked as scared murmurs rustled through the Hufflepuffs. Draco turned in his seat as if he meant to say something snide, but one glimpse of Harriet and Elara’s foreboding glowers had the prat straightening around again. “Is there a Chamber? Does it exist? Has it been opened?”

“You children need to learn the difference between fantasy and reality.” The professor turned to the board. “Now, as I was saying—.”

“But, sir—!”

“Three points from Hufflepuff, Macmillan,” Selwyn snapped, growing frustrated. “Now, if you don’t wish to learn, I don’t care, but I will be completing this lecture, even I must hold you all through dinner.” Threat given, he retrieved his wand, and with a muttered incantation, the words ‘Warlock Conventions’ sprawled across the blackboard. Harriet thought that would be the end of the conversation, but Professor Selwyn turned to them all with a mocking smirk and said, “It’s pointless to speculate if the Chamber has been opened again. If you’re so interested in the topic, why not go ask Professor Slytherin? I’m sure he’d love to have a long chat about the Chamber and his ancestor with any of you.”

Of course, no one in their right mind would do any such thing, and so the subject dropped and Selwyn began his winding monologue on a bunch of oddly named wizards who lived hundreds of years before any of them were born. As she started to take notes, Harriet felt something scratch her elbow, and she glanced down to see Hermione prodding her with a bit of parchment. Puzzled, Harriet took it—mindful of the professor—and unfolded the note.

He knows more than he’s letting on.

Harriet flattened the note and grabbed her quill, scratching out a reply. What do you mean?

Exactly what I wrote! He knows more than he’s telling us!

How d’you figure that?

Because he recited what’s written in Hogwarts: A History, but refused to give more information! By telling us to go to Slytherin, he’s essentially warning us away from the topic! She punctuated her lines with heavy ink splatters that smeared on Harriet’s fingers. He said ‘again.’ Again! As if the Chamber’s been opened before!

Even if he did know more, it’s not like he’d ever tell us. Hermione scowled at Harriet’s answer and shoved the parchment back without writing anything. Harriet sighed. Being a professor, though, he and the others must’ve discussed the Chamber after what happened to Mrs. Norris, and if anyone knows anything, it’d be Dumbledore.

Or Professor Slytherin.

Slytherin wouldn’t tell anyone anything. He won’t even teach us how to duel.

Hermione read Harriet’s reply—and Professor Selwyn’s head jerked in their direction, eyes narrowed. “Passing notes, Potter? I’ll take that—.”

He Summoned the parchment out of Hermione’s grip and it went sailing overhead—only to burst into flames, students gasping, the page burning to nothing just like all the notes Harriet had floated to Hermione during Charms earlier that very day. A muddled pile of ash and charred bits landed on the floor before Professor Selwyn, and he looked at Hermione, who sat with her wand extended, face pale but set in a determined expression. Selwyn scowled.

“You’re earned yourself a detention tomorrow evening, Granger. With Filch.”

“Yes, Professor Selwyn.”

Harriet and Elara stared at their friend with shared incredulous expressions as Professor Selwyn Vanished the mess on the floor and Hermione raised a brow, refusing to meet the eyes of anyone looking at her. “What was that about?” Elara asked in an undertone, and Harriet shook her head, returning to her notes once Professor Selwyn resumed his lecture.

Hermione had a point; the professor had said again, implying that the Chamber—legendary or not—had been opened before. When? Why? And by whom?

As the evening grew dark beyond the classroom’s windows, Harriet kept her eyes on her half-written notes and wondered what new dangers lurked at Hogwarts this year, and what it meant for her and her friends.

Chapter 69: blackbird

Chapter Text

lxix. blackbird

The excitement ebbed and flowed around him, eddying higher and higher like the morning sun and the brisk November wind. All Severus could think about was his bed, a dram of Dreamless Sleep, and the allure of a Saturday lie-in.

He'd liked Quidditch well enough as a boy and still enjoyed betting on the sport with Minerva, if only to raise the cat's hackles, but the veneer had long since worn for Severus, leaving him tired and irritable as he climbed the steps into the staffing section, wishing he could cast something to deaden the sound about the space, but he assumed the rest of the professors would take exception to that. He slid into a seat on the far row and leaned back, out of the sun, letting his eyes slide shut.

Perhaps a minute later, the smell of Earl Grey filled his nose.

Severus cracked open his eyes to spy a thermos of tea hovering before him. Minerva, having come up the stairs as well, stood with her wand in hand, smirking.

"I prefer Breakfast blend in the morning," Severus grumbled as he folded his fingers about the thermos and it stopped floating, weight settling in his hand.

"Good thing it's not all for you, then, Severus."

The Potions Master conjured himself a cup and poured hot tea into it regardless of his preferred flavor, sending the thermos back to McGonagall. "Have you come to watch your precious Gryffindors lose?"

"If you mean win, then yes, of course." She perched on the edge of the bench next to him, tugging her tartan cloak tighter about her shoulder. "Och, it's cold in the shade. It's a wonder you don't freeze to death."

"One can only hope. Go sit in the sun if it bothers you."

"I will, once Jordan graces us with his presence," Minerva replied, a weary sigh leaving her lips.

"He's by far the worst commentator you've ever allowed up here."

"Oh, I don't think so. Do you remember the game Black commentated in your school days?" She let out a sound that was still incredulous all these years later. "Now that was the worst commentary I've ever heard."

Severus' fingers tightened on the cup, and in a single motion, he downed the remnants of his scalding tea and grimaced. He dismissed the cup without taking out his wand. "No, I don't remember. I was in the hospital wing that weekend." Having a particularly stubborn pair of antlers—courtesy of the Marauders—removed. Perhaps it was for the best, as it did spare him having to listen to whatever inane shite Sirius Black's had said.

"Have you seen your new Seeker play yet, Severus?"

"No."

Minerva pursed her lips, eyes moving across the pitch to the far side of the stadium, all decked in silver and green. "For my Gryffindors' sakes, I hope she doesn't have James' talent."

The muscles in his jaw jumped as Severus grit his teeth, reminded now of two of his least favorite people, and it was not yet noon. "A troll taped to a broom would have more talent than James Potter ever did."

Minerva went to argue, a flush of anger in her cheeks, but Jordan finally arrived, and the bitter cat moved on—treading on Severus' feet as she went, much to his displeasure. He was cleaning the scuffs off his boots when he caught a glimpse of something pale in his peripheral vision, and forced himself to swallow a groan.

"Severus," Lucius greeted, hair riled in the breeze, spilling like threads of platinum over his cheek and brow. That the wizard managed to look stately even at this Merlin-forsaken hour irritated Severus to no end, but his face remained placid, genial—or what passed for genial with the Potions Master.

"Lucius," he replied. "I must admit, I didn't think to see you here this morning."

The Malfoy patriarch simpered, taking the seat Minerva had vacated, flicking imaginary lint from his robes before resting his walking stick across his knees. The snake head glinted in the sunlight. "I simply had to come and see the girl who usurped my son's position on the team for myself. If her performance is lackluster, I do trust you'll see the benefit in having her replaced?"

"I can make the recommendation." Not that it came down to Severus' decision in the end. He had no say over Quidditch placements and could only recommend a player for removal if their marks in Potions proved poor. Even if Potter proved a piss-poor player, Slytherin would probably let her stay on the team just to spite Lucius.

"Usually I would leave such a childish dispute to children, but Draco's letters have been incessant, and I can little stand his complaining. Narcissa has told the boy arguing with a witch is unseemly, but he…."

Severus turned a deaf ear to Lucius, wondering what fate decided to curse him with the man's presence today. Most of the seats in the lower stands had been filled, students keen and eager for the first game of the season to begin. Severus watched the pitch, catching movement at the gates as the teams were allowed out, and the volume in the stadium increased to something near riotous. The other Houses snickered, laughed, pointed; Potter was an incongruous addition to the hulking Slytherin team, her head barely reaching Bole's shoulder, who happened to be the shortest brute in the bunch. Even at the distance, the girl radiated nerves, face pale, and Flint bent to her ear, muttering something that did nothing to change her hunted expression.

"Lucius, what a surprise."

Slytherin stood at the end of the row, a smile plastered on his young, winsome face, Selwyn standing sullen at his elbow. Wordless, Severus rose and offered Slytherin his seat, but the wizard waved him off and sat on his other side, pushing Selwyn on to sit by Lucius. Malfoy stiffened, his drawling monologue interrupted, and inclined his regal head.

"Good afternoon…Professor."

From the corner of his eye, Severus saw Slytherin's lip curl. "How are things at the Ministry? I assume Minister Gaunt has been keeping you busy."

Lucius' fingers clasped his cane and released, the only outward sign of his distress aside from the lines about his eyes and the stiffness of his spine. "Naturally. The Ministry and the Minster are always busy working for the betterment of our society."

"You needn't feed me the party line, Malfoy. You know better than that."

Lucius swallowed. "Yes, of course, my—of course."

Inwardly sighing, Severus diverted his attention from the meaningless posturing happening around him. Hooch stood in the middle of the pitch now, bringing the two team captains together. As usual, Flint and Wood did their best to break one another's fingers while their teams looked on, prolonging the moment until a sharp look from Hooch broke them apart. The teams mounted their brooms, and Severus narrowed his eyes at Potter, waiting to see what she would do. If the jeering reached her ears, the girl gave no sign; she stared straight ahead, goggles in place, grip tight, face grim but determined.

Bull-headed, Severus thought. Should have been a bloody Gryffindor.

The whistle blew, the players kicked off—and the girl soared, quick and furious like spellfire in the sky, going higher and faster and farther than any of the others as the game began and the Snitch disappeared with a spark of gold. Spinnet—Gryffindor's Seeker—made to follow, but Potter was already gone, hurtling skyward—and then down again, breaking through the players, a divisive tactic even Severus recognized meant to split apart the Chasers. She flew reckless and hard—not graceful, not like a hawk on the prowl, but rather a scavenger, a black-feathered crow spiraling and swooping, pestering, her eyes kept keen for the sparkle that would end the game in their favor.

"Here we are, first Quidditch game of the season, both Houses ready to give it their all! For Slytherin, we have Flint, Pucey, Montague, Bletchley, Derrick, Bole, and Potter! For Gryffindor; Weasley, Weasley, Wood, Johnson, Bell, Spinnet, and—of course—Longbottom!" The part of the stands draped in crimson and gold hollered their approval. "The Slytherin team this year is riding the new Nimbus Two Thousand and One; marvelous broom, bit of an unfair advantage in my opinion, but what can you expect from their team—?"

"Jordan."

"All right, Professor, all right. Gryffindor in possession already with Longbottom leading the charge—beautiful shot there with a Bludger from Fred Weasley—or George, I can never—anyway, Longbottom has the Quaffle, now Johnson. Watch out, Angelina—excellent evasion! That girl can fly! Longbottom, Johnson, and Bell in formation, Longbottom in possession again. Bletchley doesn't have a hope of blocking this—."

It happened fast. Unseen from above, Potter dove, swift and unrelenting, shouting something at Longbottom, because he looked up and swerved out of her way—right into Flint. Potter was a small girl with the build of a Bowtruckle, but Flint had the stocky solidity of a troll, and Longbottom collided into him with an audible thud, almost as if he'd hit a brick wall. Unruffled, Flint snatched the Quaffle from Longbottom's stunned fingers and bolted in the opposite direction.

"Ooh, nasty tricked played there by Slytherin's new Seeker, second year Harriet Potter. Bad luck, Neville…."

Slytherin guffawed, watching the girl far more closely than Severus thought necessary. Fuck, I should have never helped her fight him. "My, I didn't think little Potter had it in her to fight dirty. Always full of surprises, that one. It seems your boy won't be playing Quidditch this year, Lucius."

Malfoy said nothing.

Severus laid his hand on his opposing wrist, his thumb idly running over the space between the edge of his hidden wand holster and the protruding bone, his eyes still following the game. The Vow had been silent for weeks, suffering only the occasional prickling or numbness. Severus found it curious, considering Quidditch was dangerous, no matter how one looked at it. The Vow reacted to intent and primal understanding; it didn't care about rules or Charms on brooms or watching professors. Severus himself tensed whenever the girl threw herself forward or dropped recklessly; the danger was controlled but indisputably there, and yet the Vow did nothing.

As Severus contemplated the issue, he theorized it had a direct connection to the girl's conception of danger, rather than his own. After all, when Quirrell grabbed Potter last term, Severus' wrist hadn't started to burn until she apparently woke in front of the Mirror of Erised. The magic of the Vow had been perplexing wizards and witches for centuries, and Severus doubted he'd live long enough to ever truly grasp its full implications.

"Hmm…it appears the Boy Who Lived is having difficulties."

Indeed, Longbottom had broken formation and flew in erratic circles about the pitch, trying to shake off a persistent Bludger. The Bludger chased the boy, and though the Weasley twins whacked it away several times, the ball flitted away from other prospective targets and came shooting at Longbottom again.

Severus grunted. "It's been tampered with."

No sooner had he spoken, the whistle blew and Hooch grounded the players, the stands erupting in confused shouts and discontent booing. Minerva stood for her place by Jordan, and seeing as Slytherin wasn't about to make himself useful, Severus rose as well, stretching his sore back. "I guess will see what has occurred."

Left with Slytherin, Lucius paled. Serves the git right.

He trailed the Head of Gryffindor down from the staffing section back onto the grounds and through the gates to the pitch itself. The wind lowed through the expanse and carried with it the shouting voices of the two teams, a mixture of green and red players taking advantage of Hooch's distraction to yell and throw accusations. Potter had enough sense to stand out of the way behind Montague; Wood grabbed hold of Flint's uniform, his face flushed, and the Weasley twins eyed Pucey as if contemplating how best to hit the thick-headed boy.

"—nothing by slimy, underhanded Slytherin cheaters—."

"—don't know what you're talking about, Wood—."

"—blatant tampering! It's bad enough you've taught your Seeker how to cheat, too—."

"—scared of short runt like Potter, are you? Pathetic—."

"Wood!" McGonagall interjected when the fool made to strike Flint. She hurried over, one hand braced on her hat, keeping it in place. "Mr. Wood, release him this instant, this is highly improper—."

Severus sneered. "Ten points from Gryffindor for improper conduct, Wood." Minerva bristled.

"Professor Snape, I do think we can be lenient, considering—."

Moving on, Severus ignored the witch's annoyed glower and strode over to Hooch, the wind catching and throwing his hair into his eyes, cloak billowing. The referee had the rogue Bludger pinned to the grass with magic, containing it, though the ball did its damnedest to break her spell. It thrashed and rolled, tearing at the sod in its attempts to go after Longbottom.

"Oh, it's been tampered with, all right," Hooch said before Severus could speak. "Stunned it twice, and the blasted thing won't do as it's supposed to. The other one seems just fine."

Frowning, Severus flicked his wrist, wand sliding down into his hand. He spoke a basic counter-curse, and when nothing occurred, tried another. A third yielded similar results, and a fourth—meant for Dark spells—did nothing at all. "Where did you keep these, Hooch? Your office?"

"Aye. No students have been in there, not unless I've been there, too."

"This isn't a student's doing. None of the dunderheads at this school could overpower the Charms on a Bludger." And, Severus supplied in his own head, none of them could use something creative enough to thwart me. Who, then? And why? If they meant to maim or kill the Idiot Who Lived, there were far simpler ways to go about it, and Severus doubted anyone with the skills capable of overriding the Bludger's magic would bother with rigging a bloody school Quidditch match. What a waste of time.

"Watch out!"

Hooch's spell wavered, and the Bludger rocketed from the ground, nearly taking Severus' head with it. "Fuck—."

"Severus—!"

He whirled about, wand raised, and snarled, "Expulso."

The Bludger exploded. The Gryffindors screamed as small bits pelted their heads. They turned wide, fearful eyes to their Potions Master with his wand still extended, and Severus grinned, the look only serving to terrify them further. Bloody cowards. He stuck it wand back in his sleeve. "Find a spare," he said, turning heel and marching off the field.

The game resumed soon enough. Hooch retrieved a new, acceptable Bludger from her locked office, and though the players took to the skies again without further mishap, Severus remained at the gate, standing in the tunnel's shadow with his shoulder leaning on the wall, listening to the intermittent groan of wood and formless cheering. Minerva stayed as well, hands together, knuckles white with controlled concern.

"You don't think it's like—last term?" she asked in an undertone, placing special emphasis on her words. Above, the students roared as Gryffindor managed to make a goal. "You don't think it's him again?"

"Doubtful, but who are we to guess his whims?" Severus muttered. Bitter, he clenched his teeth and thought of how easily that Bludger could have gone after a different student, how easily it could have broken the bones of a girl no bigger than a bird—. "Where is Albus?"

"At the Ministry. Gaunt has taken a special interest in recent events here at Hogwarts and has been calling Albus in to account more often than usual."

Silent, Severus thought about this—and about Cloyd Dogbane and a dead Death Eater on the floor of a tent, Slytherin hissing "Sssomeone seeks to play us!" and probing Lucius for intelligence on Gaunt's movements. The strange game played between Gaunt and Slytherin was not new; for a decade, they delighted in undermining one another, and Albus had long theorized Gaunt would eventually make a more blatant move against the Defense instructor. Was this the Minister's doing? Was he interfering at Hogwarts?

The crowd screeched, howled, feet bouncing on the stands as the two Seekers dove, and Potter rose first, fist held high with a glimmer of gold sparkling between her thin fingers. Slytherin House cheered. From his place in the shadows, Severus hardly noticed.


A/N: As part of the Slytherin team, I totally believe Harriet would learn how to play dirty—especially since that seems to be their default play style.

Chapter 70: madman muttering

Chapter Text

lxx. madman muttering

 

For once in her life, Harriet enjoyed receiving attention.

After being poisoned last year, Harriet spent the latter part of the term subjected to rumors and curious, watchful gazes, most everyone wanting to know just what had happened, and who had wanted to off a little first-year Slytherin. The eyes following her now held none of that sharp pity; her housemates looked at her with triumph, with something akin to appreciation, and Harriet felt proud.

“I honestly can’t believe you can fly that well,” Hermione remarked as she sipped her Butterbeer, fresh from Hogsmeade, smuggled in by an older student who knew a secret way out of the castle. Around them, Slytherins celebrated their win over Gryffindor with less restraint than they usually exhibited, and every so often one of them would wander over to their table, clap a hand on Harriet’s shoulder, and congratulate her. “It was unexpected.”

“Gee,” Harriet replied as she broke apart a Chocolate Frog. “Thanks, Hermione.” Elara snickered.

“You know I don’t mean it like that.” Hermione scowled, and Harriet grinned, offering her a slightly melted leg. “No, thank you—those are so morbid, it’s still kicking! Anyway, I thought there’d be a bigger learning curve in Quidditch. Obviously you’re talented, but you flew just as well as any of the others, and they’ve been playing for years or were raised with brooms in their childhood.”

“I don’t know, I think it’s easy.”

“Easy for you.”

“No! You’re just too—tentative. The broom can tell you’re nervous and it makes the broom nervous, too.”

Hermione groaned and lowered her head into her arms. “It’s Defense all over again.”

“What d’you mean?”

Hermione straightened, blowing stray curls out of her face as she jabbed a finger in Harriet’s direction. “She’s a prodigy, and she doesn’t even realize.”

“It’s not surprising,” Elara agreed, savoring her tea.

“Hey!” Harriet protested. “It’s not hard. You just—you take the broom, right? You, err, you sit on it and you—you just fly!” Hand motions accompanied her vague explanation, and Hermione’s face turned pink with her effort not to laugh. “You sit, and—don’t laugh, blimey. It’s not hard, I promise!”

“It would have to be simple for Potter to manage it.”

Biting back a groan, Harriet turned in her seat and scowled at Malfoy, the lone Slytherin in the bunch not celebrating their win. He wore a sullen expression, even if he did have one of the Butterbeers in hand and had been pleased enough earlier to see the Gryffindor team in low spirits. He strode over alone, Goyle and Crabbe both off having a laugh with one of the older Slytherins.

“Go away, Malfoy.”

“I have just as much right to be here as you, precious Potter.”

“Then go over there and be fat-headed and entitled, not here.”

“If it weren’t for the brooms my father bought the team, you’d be worthless,” Draco snapped, cheeks flushed with anger. “As worthless as Longbottom!”

“Would not,” Harriet retorted, unable to help herself. Arguing with Malfoy had little point, but she hated the prat’s accusation. It fed on her own niggling self-doubt. Maybe it was all the broom. Maybe she’d be rubbish on the slower brooms owned by the other teams—and what would happen if she didn’t play as well the next game? Or the next? How quickly would her House’s admiration turn to scorn?

Her stomach flipped in her middle, and she shoved her Butterbeer away.

“You’re not special, Potter.” Malfoy got in her face, and Harriet refused to back down, though she wished she was standing instead of sitting. Draco wasn’t overly tall, but the difference in height itched at her nerves. “Just you wait until father buys me my own broom. Next year, you won’t stand a chance.”

“I’m gonna write to your mum and tell her you’re being a berk again.”

“She’s my mother, Potter, just because you’re a rotten little orphan doesn’t mean—.”

Behind him, a seventh year most definitely not drinking Butterbeer stumbled toward their table and tripped over a chair—or his own two feet. He crashed into Malfoy, throwing the second-year forward…right into Harriet.

Wham! Their heads collided, and she fell out of her chair with the pointy-faced bully sprawled on top of her.

“Harriet!” Hermione exclaimed as she and Elara jumped to their feet, the latter having to step over the older boy sprawled on the floor. Malfoy rolled off Harriet, dazed and disheveled, holding his sore head, and Hermione helped Harriet sit up. Her glasses clattered to the floor, split at the bridge.

“You broke my glasses!” Harriet exclaimed, reaching for the pieces. Her face burned, and when she touched her nose, it twinged beneath her fingers, red dripping against her lip. “And my nose! You broke my glasses and my nose!”

To his credit, Malfoy paled when he saw the blood on Harriet’s hand, and his voice rose several octaves. “Wh—? Why didn’t you move your stupid ugly face, Potter!”

“Your head’s so fat with your ego, I couldn’t dodge it!”

“Ah, shite,” slurred the seventh year getting to his feet. Harriet couldn’t recall his name, and she couldn’t see him well enough at the moment to guess. “My fault, my fault. Here—lemme jush, lemme jush fix it real quick like—.”

“No!” Harriet squawked as the tall boy pulled out his wand and started waving it in her direction. She wasn’t about to let him try magic on her!

“Oi, Abelard!” said one of the boy’s friends, coming over to grab the boy’s arm. “Let off the second-years! You’ve banged up our Seeker!”

“C’mon, idiot, you’re pissed—,” said another.

Harriet used her chair to help herself stand, sniffling against the blood trickling faster from her throbbing nose. Tears stung in the corner of her eyes, but she’d had worse from Dudley and wasn’t about to cry. The other Slytherins offered to fix her up, but Harriet continued to shake her head. “I’m going to go to Madam Pomfrey.”

Hermione nodded. “We’ll come with—.”

“No,” Harriet protested, voice thick. “You heard what Slytherin said about curfew. I’ll go and get a pass from the infirmary.”

“If you’re sure….”

Harriet couldn’t say she was sure, but she wasn’t about to let one of the older, sloshed Slytherins have a go at healing her, and if she was quick, Slytherin himself would never have to know. She bundled her ruined sleeve up to her nose—lamenting the fact she’d have to owl Madam Malkin’s and get a replacement—and headed off out of the common room. She was almost through the opening when she heard a sharp smack, followed by, “Ow! Bloody hell, Granger, I didn’t mean to do it—!”

The portal closed, sealing the drunken laughter and Malfoy’s protests inside. Alone in the dungeons, Harriet picked up her feet and hurried forward with her head tipped back and her nose pinched closed, though she still felt the warm, sluggish trickle of blood moving along her cheeks and jaw. She crossed the entrance hall, footsteps echoing, chased by the soft crackling of torches dimmed for the night and snoring portraits. She could taste copper when she breathed in, her head woozy, face aching where Malfoy’s thick skull whacked the bones. Prat.

Kill….

Harriet came to a sudden halt. Dread welled in her middle.

Filthy blood…kill…kill….”

“No,” Harriet whispered, trembling, turning where she stood as the voice grew louder. Blood dripped from her sleeve and her chin, pattering on her shoes and floor. There was something terribly familiar about that heinous whispering—and she wasn’t imagining it. She wasn’t. Her bloodied fingers fumbled at the brace on her wrist until she grabbed her wand and held it out, heart thumping loud and incessant in her chest. There was nobody there. She stood in the middle of a long corridor, doors shut along its length, walls bare—and she was alone. “Show yourself!”

Her shout echoed into the distance. The voice disappeared with it, leaving the pale witch with nothing but her racing pulse and haggard breath. A minute passed.

Harriet didn’t think she wanted whoever that voice belonged to come forward—not really. Images of Quirrell and his grotesque, deformed head popped up in her thoughts like scenes from a horror film, and Harriet would do anything to never see something like that again. She didn’t know what to do. She was almost to the infirmary; returning to the dungeons would lead to questions about her un-healed face, and Harriet couldn’t very well go running to a professor in the dead of night, talking about invisible voices in her head, covered in blood and half-blind without her glasses. They’d think she was a nutter!

Maybe I am a nutter.

Scared, Harriet continued on, wand still clasped in sticky fingers, running until she slipped inside the hospital wing proper and breathed a sigh of relief. She found a bit of luck when she knocked on Madam Pomfrey’s office door and the medi-witch appeared, still awake, though she wore her long dressing gown and a distinctly weary expression. She glanced down at Harriet and jumped.

“Gracious Rowena—Miss Potter! You scared me half to death, girl! What have you gotten yourself into now?”

Harriet realized her running about had done little to help her broken nose, and blood ran freely down her front. “I—tripped?”

The older witch obviously didn’t believe her, but she simply tutted under her breath and ushered Harriet into the ward, helping her sit on the edge of the nearest bed. Madam Pomfrey raised the lights before turning to Harriet again. “All right, look this way, Miss Potter…yes, definitely broken. Now, hold still, lest you want a crooked nose. It’ll hurt for just a second…episkey!

Harriet flinched, but otherwise didn’t react as the medi-witch fixed her injury. Madam Pomfrey used her wand to siphon some of the blood from Harriet’s skin, then paused, frowning at how peaky the young witch looked and the obvious swelling darkening her eyes. “Wait here a minute, Potter.”

“Okay.”

Madam Pomfrey bustled off to her office again, and Harriet sat tensely on the bed, listening, both hoping she would and wouldn’t hear that voice again. There had been something…familiar to the sound, something Harriet couldn’t quite put her finger on, but had nonetheless recognized. It kept poking her in the back of the head, and if she could only wrestle down her panic for a moment, she knew she’d figure it out! Was their someone moving about the castle in an Invisibility Cloak like Harriet’s? But why could only she hear them? Was it the same person who wrote those words on the wall and hurt Mrs. Norris?

The doors to the ward parted, edging open to admit Professor Dumbledore. Puzzled, Harriet froze and watched her headmaster shuffle into the ward backward, his reason for doing so becoming apparent when Professor McGonagall followed him, a student levitating in the air between them. The student held their hands stiff before themselves, their whole body immobile, and even at the distance, Harriet could just make out the blur of crimson and gold at their neck.

Looking up as she entered, Professor McGonagall caught sight of the Slytherin witch and sputtered. “Miss Potter! What are you doing here?!”

Harriet thought it obvious what she was doing there, but she didn’t sass the professor, given the woman was now settling one of her own unmoving students onto a bed. “I—I tripped,” she stuttered, staring at the boy. He was small, smaller even than Harriet. A first-year? “Or—well, some bloke named Abelard tripped, and—well, my nose got broke.”

“Minerva,” Professor Dumbledore interjected. “If you could retrieve Poppy and inform her of the situation, it’d be much appreciated.”

Professor McGonagall did as he asked, and Harriet carefully placed her feet on the floor. She still felt lightheaded as she came to stand by Professor Dumbledore, and she had to blink black spots from her vision as she peered at the Gryffindor settled on the bed. The boy didn’t move, didn’t shift, didn’t even appear to breathe. “Is he…Petrified, Professor?”

“I’m afraid so, Harriet.”

The young witch swallowed, her heart once more striking an uncomfortable rhythm against her breastbone. Petrified. She’d heard the voice, and now a boy laid in the infirmary, stiff as stone. She should tell Professor Dumbledore, she knew, and as Harriet glanced up at the elderly man, her throat tightened. I should tell him what I heard…but what if he doesn’t believe me? she wondered. It sounds barking, even to me. What kind of invisible, whispering madman could I hear that a wizard like Professor Dumbledore couldn’t? What if—what if he thinks I’m a liar? What if he makes me go back to the Dursleys? What if…what if he thinks it’s me?

“Harriet?”

“Y-yes?”

The Headmaster studied her for a moment, then asked, “Could you lend me your assistance, my girl?”

He gestured at the object the boy clutched to his face—a camera, Harriet realized when she bent closer and squinted. An old Muggle camera, probably one of the few bits of Muggle tech that would actually work inside a magical place like Hogwarts. Harriet edged her stained fingers between the camera and the boy’s palms and shivered at the cold, clammy feel of his skin. She slowly edged the device from his frozen grip. “D’you think he got a picture of who did this to him, Professor?”

“That is my hope. Young Mr. Creevey is passionate about his photography, and it appears he chose the wrong night to indulge in sneaking out of his tower.” Dumbledore gently laid the camera lens-down on the bed so he could use his one hand to free the cover on the film compartment. It clicked open—and smoke spilled from the crevice, Harriet grimacing against the smell of melted plastic as Professor McGonagall returned with Madam Pomfrey and gasped aloud.

“Oh, the poor dear,” McGonagall whispered as she looked down at Creevey and touched the Petrified boy’s forehead, smoothing his mousy fringe. “Albus, it could have been so much worse—.”

Professor Dumbledore held up his hand. Harriet narrowed her eyes—and winced. What does she mean by that?

“Over here, Miss Potter,” Madam Pomfrey ordered as she set down an open jar and a glass vial. Harriet went, rounding the bed to stand before the fussing matron. “It’s too much. This can’t be allowed to go on, Albus. It’s attacking students—.”

“The Aurory, at the very least, needs to be notified—.”

“The Aurory received my petition, as did the Minister. I can only wait for their response, as you well know.” Dumbledore pointedly interrupted the witches again when they began to argue, and Madam Pomfrey went back to rubbing stinky bruise cream on Harriet’s face. The young witch thought the wizard sounded…bitter, or as bitter as Professor Dumbledore ever could sound.

“Does this have to do with the Chamber, Professors?”

“Don’t ask questions, Miss Potter. This is nothing for you to worry about.” Madam Pomfrey uncorked the vial, the motion rushed. “That’s a Blood Replenishing Potion. Merlin knows you’ve lost enough down the front of your shirt.”

Harriet drank the potion—and though she wanted to kick a fuss at being ignored like a child, she didn’t. Instead, she stored away the conversation so she could tell Hermione and Elara what she’d learned. Maybe Hermione was right. Maybe the professors did know more than they were letting on.

“Back to the dormitories with you, Miss Potter,” Professor McGonagall said, her tone brusque. She shared a final, lingering look with Professor Dumbledore, who nodded slightly. “Come along.”

Harriet went. Despite the presence of a mature witch at her side, she grew anxious in the cold, poorly lit corridors, sticky with blood and chilled to the bone, shirt clinging to her collarbones. Professor McGonagall set a brisk pace, and they had almost reached the entrance hall when Harriet swore she heard the voice again and stopped dead, her mind whirling in a thousand directions, wondering if someone was going to appear from nowhere, if they’d attack, if Harriet and the professor would be nothing more than rocks like that Gryffindor boy—.

Pain prickled through her neck just as Professor Slytherin stepped around the corner.

He paused upon seeing them standing there, and when he recognized Harriet, the wizard’s eyes hardened. “It appears Potter needs to be reminded of my curfew rule,” he hissed as he strode forward. Harriet shivered.

“Miss Potter was in need of an escort to the infirmary,” Professor McGonagall told him, her voice as cold as the look upon her face. “She may be missing her glasses, but I assume you can see the blood plainly enough, Professor Slytherin.”

He sucked air through his teeth and didn’t reply, flicking out the edge of his robes in dramatic fashion as he spun on his heels. “Very well. I’ve no time for this. Come, Potter.”

Being ordered about like a misbehaving dog was growing old for Harriet, but she nonetheless fell into step behind Professor Slytherin, and the wizard rushed her back into the dungeons, all but shunting her into the common room without going inside himself. The party had wound down in her absence, fewer Slytherins milling about the shared space, and so Harriet continued on into her room, finding Elara and Hermione waiting for her there. Hermione handed over her repaired glasses, and Harriet was so exhausted from Quidditch and the after-party, she wrote herself a note to speak with her friends about what happened in the morning. They got ready for bed.

It was several hours later, long after the last of the smuggled Firewhisky had been drained, the silver lanterns doused, and sleepy Slytherins folded themselves into their blankets, that Harriet woke from muddled nightmares and sat upright, gasping, the warm coils of her Horned Serpent wrapped about her bare legs. She remembered. She knew why the voice was familiar, why she thought she heard it in the hall when Professor Slytherin appeared. She knew.

“It’s a ruddy snake!”

Chapter 71: skulduggery

Chapter Text

lxxi. skulduggery

 

Midnight revelations, Harriet learned, rarely prove as crystal clear in the morning as they do in our dreams.

She told Hermione and Elara about the conversation shared between the professors in the infirmary, and she also informed them that the voice she heard was, as far as she could tell, a snake. They had difficulty proving her epiphany, however, because though Harriet swore to Merlin she heard a snake, they still had no idea how the blighted thing seemed to be invisible, and doubt grew in their uncertainty.

“Parseltongue doesn’t sound different from English to me,” Harriet explained as they huddled together in the library. Being a Sunday, there weren’t many other students about, but Madam Pince still haunted the place and they didn’t have an explanation for the kind of literature they’d accrued at their table, so the trio kept a low profile. Livi poked his nose out from her collar and Harriet gently prodded him back out of sight. “It doesn’t even feel different when I speak it.”

“That’s because Parseltongue is an innate, hereditary anomaly—a dominant phenotype in the magical allele.” Met with puzzled looks, Hermione sighed. “It’s magic DNA. It’s like—having red hair. To a redhead, it’s just hair. They couldn’t describe how it feels different on their head, now could they? Maybe that’s not the best example, but it’s magic like the Metamorphmagus gene in the Black family, or the inborn Occlumency of the Sangfort family—but Parseltongue is rarer, and cannot be taught. The only known Parselmouths in Europe were from the fens, and they married into the Peverell family, descended into the Slytherin family, and eventually dwindled to the Gaunts. It gets a bit muddled in the genealogy texts, but both the Minister, Marvolo Gaunt the second, and Professor Slytherin, claim to be Salazar Slytherin’s final living descendant. Both are Parselmouths.”

“…and then there’s me.”

“It’s odd,” Elara remarked, idly flipping through a text. “Because while most every family in magical Britain can somehow trace their lineage back to a Peverell, none of the Potters have ever been Parselmouths. You’re more closely related to the Blacks and would have had a better chance of being a Metamorphmagus. As far as I know, there’s never been a recorded example of a Muggle-born Parselmouth—or Metamorphmagus, for that matter.”

Elara and Hermione shared a significant look—and Harriet stiffened, catching the unspoken implication. “I swear, if one of you suggests my mum had an affair with Professor Slytherin’s dad or something, I’ll bloody hex you.”

“What if Professor Slytherin is your dad?” Elara smirked.

“I’m getting my wand!”

“Shh!”

The three witches paused to look about for Madam Pince, not realizing their voices had risen. “No one is suggesting any such thing, Harriet. We’re getting off-topic; you said Parseltongue doesn’t sound different from English. So, how do you know it’s a snake?”

Harriet finished glowering at Elara and turned her attention to Hermione. “Snakes have a bit of an accent to them—I don’t know how else to explain it. It’s like….” She grappled for an example, biting her lower lip. “It’s like Snape.”

“Professor Snape?”

“Over the summer, if we saw him really early in the morning and he was tired, he sounded a bit like a Manc when he was telling us off. He doesn’t usually sound like that, but you can tell, if you’re looking for it.”

Elara frowned, considering, and then nodded. “She’s right. I hadn’t realized it before, but he does sound somewhat Mancunian when he’s irritated.”

“That’s like Parseltongue. I can’t usually tell the difference unless I’m really looking for it, and—well—I wasn’t looking for it at first.”

“It still makes no sense,” Hermione said. “Either way we consider it, snake or wizard, how are they getting about the castle unseen? How are they Petrifying people? For what reason?”

“Livius can be invisible,” Elara pointed out.

“Yes, but last I checked, Horned Serpents can’t Petrify people.”

Harriet glanced at the lump snoozing on her chest and pulled her collar out, peeking at Livi. “Hey,” she hissed. “Can you Petrify people?

What isss Petrify?

Make them like stone.

Ssstupid. Ssstone isss not good for eating.”

Harriet smoothed her collar again and glanced at her friends, who watched the exchange with raised brows. “He says stone people would be gross, so I’m guessing that’s a no.”

“How very reassuring.”

Hermione slammed a thick tome closed. “I can’t find any mention of any invisible snakes aside from a few vague notations on Horned Serpents.” Hermione’s gaze dropped to Harriet’s shirt with a displeased grimace. “And they’re very rare. The Magical Menagerie is still offering a reward for Livius’ return.”

“Really? Maybe I’ll sell him back—because the joke’s on them, he does what he wants.”

Elara snorted and Harriet giggled, but Hermione’s frown intensified. “This isn’t funny,” she said. “I heard from a Gryffindor at breakfast that Colin Creevey is a Muggle-born. I’m a Muggle-born. This is directly related to the Chamber, and whoever opened the Chamber did so to hurt Muggle-borns!”

The younger witches sobered. “I apologize, Hermione. You’re right, it’s not funny—but the Chamber itself might be a rouse. Someone with a grudge against Muggle-borns—and Professor Slytherin, apparently—might be claiming they opened the Chamber to discredit his name and detract attention from themselves.”

“What if the Chamber has one of these in it?” Harriet said, spinning around her opened text to point out a picture of a serpentine woman who didn’t seem to appreciate being pointed at very much. Vipers and cobras adorned her skull in an intricate weave of scales and fangs, the woman’s golden eyes wide and furious, her mouth too wide and filled with far too many teeth. “A Gorgon? They Petrify people!”

“Gorgons are a Dark creature, and the only time one has ever been seen outside of Greece was in the fifteen-hundreds, when they brought one as part of a school tournament.”

“Wh—what type of bloody tournament is that?!”

Hermione ignored the question. “It’s true they Petrify people, but they have a notorious hatred for all wizards and witches alike—pure-blood, half-blood, or otherwise. It wouldn’t explain how it’s getting about, or why we haven’t seen a dozen other people get Petrified as well.”

“…a Gorgon in an Invisibility Cloak?”

“Honestly, Harriet.”

The bespectacled witch took back Most Macabre Monstrosities with a sigh and turned the page. The next entry depicted a large and ghastly looking creature not unlike an eel—a basilisk, the proclaimed “King of Serpents.” Harriet skimmed through the text, and though she noted some speculation on the serpent’s extreme longevity and hatred for poultry, nothing was noted about Petrification. They were monstrous in size, and Harriet thought someone would be dead if something as terrifying as a basilisk was loose in the school.

“The professors know something they aren’t telling us,” Hermione muttered with a mutinous glance toward the library’s entrance, making sure Pince wasn’t about. “I think they know where the Chamber is, and they know what’s been let out. It would make sense, it being Slytherin’s chamber, if a snake of some kind came slithering out of it.”

“It’s been a thousand years, Hermione. Snakes don’t live that long.”

“Perhaps he left a colony of some kind behind, and they’ve reproduced.”

“That’s possible.”

Hermione had a fervent look in her eyes as she leaned over the table, her voice lowered. “I don’t think it’s right they’re keeping information to themselves, especially when it pertains to Muggle-borns. I want to know what they know. I…I want—.” She licked her lips, visibly anxious, and whispered, “I want to spy on them.”

Elara was the first to break the answering silence. “No thanks, I’d like to live.”

Elara!”

“I’m serious. You say them, but you clearly mean Slytherin, and anyone willing to spy on the man must be cracked.”

“This is something I have to do.” Elara opened her mouth and Hermione cut her off. “You had to have me make that potion for you, regardless of legality, and you—.” She pointed at Harriet, who froze as if Stunned. “You had to hex Professor Slytherin to prove a point, so I assume you both understand when I say this is simply something I cannot drop or ignore. I’m going to pursue this, with or without you.”

“All right, all right,” Harriet placated, calming her friends down. Hermione was beginning to look like a furious, puffed up cat. “We’ll help—we will,” she added with a kick to Elara’s chair. The Black heir grimaced. “But I don’t see what we could do.”

“You have your Invisibility Cloak.”

“You mean the one Snape can see through with his funny eye?”

“That—that is a valid point, actually.” Hermione deflated, scowling at the books as if they’d betrayed her. “There has to be some way….”

She devolved into a muttering fit, and Elara glanced at Harriet, whispering, “This is mad, you know.”

“I know.”

“She wants us to eavesdrop on professors.”

“I know,” Harriet repeated, shrugging. “She’s right about them not telling us something. You can’t say you’re not curious, too—and this is Hermione. If she has a plan, it’d be brilliant.”

Elara grumbled something that sounded suspiciously like “Brilliantly stupid,” and Harriet kicked her chair again, bruising her own toes. It was about that time that Madam Pince came around, shooing lingering students out of the library, ordering them off to supper. The trio of Slytherin witches stacked their books together and hurried them back to their respective shelves, then wandered back into the school.

“If we can’t be invisible,” Hermione said, speaking slowly, gathering her thoughts. “Then we could, perhaps, alter our appearances.”

“Is there magic that does?”

“Oh, there’s plenty of minor and major glamors—but I hazard a guess that Professor Snape might be able to see through them. Most of the staff can at least detect them, and most are very complicated—. Anyway, any kind of disguise we wanted to use would have to be physical.” She caught her bottom lip between her teeth and nibbled at it, lost in thought. “The best solution I can envision is the Polyjuice Potion.”

Harriet didn’t know what a Polyjuice Potion was, but Elara did, because she looked askance at Hermione and asked, “Do you actually have the recipe for that?”

“Well, no. It’s in Moste Potente Potions, isn’t it? It’s kept in the Restricted Section, and only N.E.W.T students—or someone with a teacher’s note—can check it out.”

Elara sighed and glanced heavenward. “Do you honestly think you can brew the potion?”

Hermione bristled. “What kind of question is that?”

“Then I’ll get the book,” Elara said, ignoring Hermione’s hurt look. “I’m not doubting your ability, I’m asking you honestly. If you think you can brew it, then I will get the book.”

“How are you going to manage that?”

“You’ll see.”

Harriet just shook her head. She really didn’t like the sound of this spying stuff, but Hermione helped her all the time, and if this was something the other witch needed, then Harriet would do whatever she could for her. Even if it meant participating in some dodgy eavesdropping.

Journeying on toward the Great Hall, she realized the volume of voices grew louder and louder, loud enough to warrant a puzzled glance between the three friends.

“What d’you think’s going on?”

“…Perhaps someone else has been Petrified.”

Hermione stole a sharp breath. “Hurry, let’s go.”

As it turned out, no one had been Petrified; instead, the commotion arose from the presence of a new person seated at the High Table next to Professor Dumbledore.

“Is that—?”

“That’s Gilderoy Lockhart!” Hermione said, cheeks glowing pink. “Holy cricket, why is he here?”

Harriet didn’t know, but as they found their seats at the Slytherin table, she studied the blond wizard speaking rapidly to the Headmaster. Every so often he gave his hand an airy flip, and he used his blinding white smile to maximum effect. It seemed almost every girl in the hall was staring at the bloke, and when Professor Dumbledore rose from his chair, it took several minutes and a rather fierce reprimand from Snape to quiet everyone down. “Good evening! Before we partake in our excellent dinner this evening, I have an announcement to make. Please join me in welcoming Mr. Gilderoy Lockhart, who has been sent by our esteemed Minister for additional security while we investigate threats made against our students’ safety. Welcome, Gilderoy!”

Professor Dumbledore started clapping, followed less enthusiastically by the staff—but notably not the majority of the Slytherin staff. Professor Slytherin himself watched Dumbledore and the gaudy wizard in robin’s egg blue robes from the corner of his red eyes, his posture stiff and unwelcoming. Both Snape and Selwyn sat grim and upright like naughty children waiting for the other shoe to drop, and the other professors, though polite, brought their hands together and didn’t look at all relieved.

“Thank you, Headmaster!” Lockhart said, reaching out to clap a hand on the older man’s shoulder. “Nothing to fear now, I must say! The Minister himself chose me to deal with this Chamber nonsense, and you can be sure, with me on the watch, this will be sorted in a trice! I’ll be on patrol, and if any of you have anything suspicious to report—or maybe just want an autograph from yours truly—.” He tipped them all a wink, and Harriet saw a Hufflepuff seventh year fan herself, giggling. “Don’t be afraid to come find me.”

Harriet remembered then a bit of conversation between Dumbledore and McGonagall, talking about petitioning the Ministry for Aurors. The Minister sent…Lockhart? Lockhart wasn’t an Auror, was he?

The older girls tittered and whispered, boys looking at them like they’d gone out of their gourds. Harriet didn’t understand. The bloke was pretty, but he was also very…shiny, offensively glittery—and, after making her way through Gadding with Ghouls, Harriet was almost entirely certain Lockhart ripped off Muggle literature to write his books. It was made-up, fantasy stuff. She couldn’t be the only one who knew that—so why would the Minister send Lockhart when Professor Dumbledore asked the Ministry for Aurors?

They ate their dinner amid excited chatter, finished, and though they needed to be in their dorms soon, Harriet urged her two friends out to one of the outer courtyards first. In the cold, low light of the gloaming hour, Harriet pulled Livi out from under her shirt, and the serpent complained bitterly of the chill before he moved off—invisible—into the sparse woods abutting the courtyard for exercise and something to eat.

“He’s getting too big to be under your clothes,” Elara remarked after several minutes of silent contemplation, her arms crossed and her gaze speculative.

Harriet sighed. “Hagrid’s been encouraging me to make him hunt more and not just feed him off the table. You’d think he’d be getting less food, right? But he’s gotten bigger.”

“Perhaps it’s an intrinsic trigger of his magic,” Hermione said, coming out of her blush-fueled daze. “A survival mechanism encouraging growth to capture larger and more fulfilling prey.”

“Maybe.”

Hermione changed the subject. “That was…an interesting dinner. You did say Professor Dumbledore requested someone come from the Ministry?”

“Yeah, but I thought he wanted an Auror or someone better.”

Better? Mr. Lockhart is—! Is very qualified! And—!”

“Pretty?” Harriet guessed, smirking when Hermione’s face flamed again.

“Looks have nothing to do with it!” she barked. “Just look at all he’s done!”

Elara, still gazing into the distance, had a puzzled look upon her face and didn’t join in on Harriet’s teasing.

“Hermione, that stuff he writes is all fiction, y’know?”

“It couldn’t be. There—. Someone would have noticed, Harriet.”

Harriet shook her head and crossed the courtyard, hissing until Livi chose to come slithering back, unsuccessful in his hunt and peeved for having been made to rouse his lazy bones. “I noticed, didn’t I?”

Her comment gave Hermione something else to stew over besides wondering what information the professors meant to keep from the school and students. Harriet hid Livi away again, tugging her cloak about her shoulders, and they returned to their common room. The trio brought out their homework, pushing aside dark, anxious thoughts about possible monsters in the castle—and though she was comforted by the familiar glow of the silver lanterns and the lake’s deep murmurs, Harriet couldn’t quite forget the feel of Colin Creevey’s Petrified skin against her own.

Danger lurked somewhere in Hogwarts—danger that Harriet feared she and her friends might escape unscathed.


 

A/N: I highly doubt anyone knew that indirect eye contact with a Basilisk only Petrified a victim. There’d be no feasible way for wizards to test what would happen, and according to Newt Scamander in the Fantastic Beasts text, Basilisks hadn’t been seen in England for some 400 years. There wasn’t anything about Petrification in the Most Macabre Monstrosities entree.

Anyway, some other notes real quick: I've had a few reviewers comment about Set and why I don't include him more. No, I haven't forgotten him (I promise). He's just not a major character, honestly, and his significance doesn't get explored until later in the series. I'll work on including him more simply as a point of interest, but for the most part, if Harriet's around people, he's not there. Another note, I've had some requests for a summary of events, and I've decided I'll make sure to include one at the beginning of each new part/year. So, we won't see it for awhile, but I hope it will be helpful! Thank you all so much for your reads, time, and reviews!

Chapter 72: blithering idiot

Chapter Text

lxxii. blithering idiot

 

Two weeks passed the students of Hogwarts by, and in those weeks it wasn’t uncommon to hear Mr. Lockhart’s loud, officious voice careening through the corridors whenever they headed off to class. He seemed to pop up everywhere: outside on the grounds when they strolled to Herbology, telling everyone who’d listen about the herd of Centaurs he befriended in Germany; in the Transfiguration corridor, strutting about in a cloak with literal peacock feathers on the hem; trailing Professor Flitwick, who couldn’t walk fast enough to escape the man’s lengthy stories. Harriet saw him try to give Snape advice on potioneering and she thought the poor blighter was going to lose a limb.

Annoying or not, however, there were no new spooky messages on the walls, instances of hissing voices, or Petrifications while Lockhart bandied about, and so Harriet assumed he was either brighter than he let on or was making such a nuisance of himself the invisible not-a-Gorgon couldn’t keep on with their dastardly scheme. Sometimes the wizard trailed Longbottom, rambling about managing fame and expectations, trying to wrangle the Boy Who Lived into a book deal. “A seventy-thirty split in profits, of course, being my idea,” Harriet heard Lockhart say one day, bracing herself against the need to roll her eyes. Used to the attention, Neville formed an easy camaraderie with the wizard, and managed to divert his attention back toward his other doting fans or the Chamber itself.

Harriet had never been so glad Professor Dumbledore decided to keep the truth of Voldemort and her scar a secret whenever she saw the pair together.

Though nothing of note happened for a fortnight, Hermione was still determined to brew a Polyjuice Potion and learn what the professors knew. Where that sudden, intense distrust came from, Harriet couldn’t say—but she considered it possible Professor Quirrell’s betrayal last term had shaken Hermione more than any of them knew. Certainly, Harriet had been terrified, but she’d never trusted authority figures to the extent Hermione did; her grade school teachers never took her side against Dudley, always reprimanding her to quit telling lies when she said he hit her. Being confronted with stark evidence of a professor’s frankly evil personage probably unsettled Hermione greatly.

It was a Thursday, an hour or so before class let out, and the second year Slytherins had their weekly free period. Harriet hurried along, already late to what was supposed to be a clandestine meeting with her friends…in a loo. Every witch knew the toilets on the second floor were bloody atrocious, what with Moaning Myrtle in residence, the ghost of an old student who haunted the place and popped through the stalls while you were trying to do your business. Of course, Harriet never had that issue because the ghosts always avoided her—which she suspected had something to do with Set, who was also the reason she was running late.

Why he felt the need to knock everything off of Runcorn’s carrell like some prissy cat, Harriet would never know.

She hurried along, fidgeting with her robes until they laid flat, one sock shorter than the other, her hair more of a nightmare than usual after waking from an overlong afternoon nap. Harriet yawned as she hopped up the steps to the second floor—and paused, seeing Mr. Lockhart peeking into a broom cupboard. He didn’t seem to be up to anything nefarious; rather, he looked peaky and nervous as he peered into the cupboard and fiddled with his wand as if trying to buck up the courage to open the door fully.

Harriet came up next to him, and though she didn’t hear any suspicious snake voices, she pulled out her wand as well. “What’re you looking for?”

Mr. Lockhart jumped half a foot in the air and nearly whacked Harriet in the face when he whipped his wand about and dropped the bloody thing on her head. Rubbing her scalp, Harriet scowled at the wizard and bent down to pick it up.

“You gave me a fright there!” Lockhart said with a weak attempt at a laugh, one hand on his chest. His blond hair flopped over his brow like the wet down of a half-soaked duck, the hem of his gaudy robes crooked as if he’d tripped over them a time or two. He accepted his wand back from her and pointed it again at the ajar door. “I say—what, what are you doing out of class at this hour?”

“Free period,” Harriet replied, shrugging. She edged around him to see into the dark cupboard. “Is there something in there?” Harriet swore if Lockhart got her eaten by a cursed mop, she’d come back and haunt him.

“Ah—well, I’m on patrol—looking for ne’er-d0-wells, protecting everyone, as you like—and I heard a, uh, suspicious noise….”

Lockhart’s normally blinding smile flickered, and he looked very near passing out when Harriet—growing impatient—nudged the door open fully with her foot. A sudden buzzing filled the air, something black and glittering darting toward them, and Lockhart shrieked as Harriet flicked her wand. “Petrificus Totalus!”

The wizard’s shriek still echoed in the corridor as the two Doxies bounced off his head and fell, stiff as boards, to the floor below. Harriet gave Lockhart another harsh, disbelieving look, then bent to pluck the Doxies up and stuff them into a pocket. Livi had developed a taste for the gross things while at Grimmauld, so he’d appreciate the treat.

Meanwhile, Lockhart was quick to prevaricate, though the bloke sounded like he’d nearly had a heart attack, his voice warbling several octaves too high. “Thank you for the assistance—though I had it all under control, of course! Very dangerous, Doxies. Venomous, you know.”

They were not, in fact, venomous in the slightest, but Harriet said, “Uh-huh,” anyway. They stared at one another in awkward silence.

Harriet honestly couldn’t see why the others were crazy over the wizard. She didn’t understand. Was that what growing up did to you? The third year girls had attended a special class with Madam Pomfrey and had come back to the common room whispering about hormones and periods and changes—all things Harriet did not like the sound of in the slightest, but unfortunately she’d have to deal with it sooner rather than later. Was that what made Hermione, the smartest witch Harriet knew, act like such a numpty whenever Lockhart came strutting by?

Harriet huffed. “You should write fiction.”

“P-pardon?”

“Your books. You should write your own fiction, considering there’s not a lot of other wizarding fiction writers out there, and yours isn’t half bad. Then, you wouldn’t get sent by the Ministry to do these kinds of things and make a total hash of it.”

Lockhart paled, then goggled at Harriet like she’d shouted something vaguely obscene and highly offensive. He didn’t say anything in response, and so the bespectacled witch took the chance to scurry off, leaving the fancy wizard gobsmacked in the hallway. She made it to the loo without further incident, pushed in the door—and found Elara and Hermione inside, staring at a wall.

“Err—what are you doing?” She felt like she was asking that a lot today.

Hermione blinked and stirred. “You’re late,” she said, more from reflex than a need to chastise. “Myrtle was here a moment ago, complaining as she always does—and then she stopped mid-sentence, gasped, and flew through that wall there.”

“I told you it meant Harriet was almost here,” Elara commented.

“I always thought it a coincidence the ghosts never appeared around her, but now I’m not as certain. Maybe it has something to do with your curse scar? Ghosts are highly sensitive to magic and might be repelled by it.”

“Mmm,” Harriet replied. Hermione might not have noticed the evasion, but Elara did, her gaze sharpening as the shorter witch quickly cleared her throat and changed the subject. “Anyway, sorry I’m late. Got distracted out in the hall—so why d’you want us here?”

Shaking her head, Hermione returned her attention to the matter at hand. “I thought this would make an excellent place to begin brewing the Polyjuice; no one ever comes in here because of Myrtle.”

“Yeah? Well, what about Myrtle? Will she tattle on us?”

“I couldn’t say, honestly. According to Hogwarts: A History, the ghosts are under no obligation to report on the students to the staff unless they’re injured or a threat to others—but they’re also under no obligation to keep silent, either. I believe Myrtle’s just bored and lonely enough to not go reporting us to Professor Dumbledore.”

Harriet nodded along, though she had a queasy feeling in her stomach at the thought of brewing a potion in a ghost’s loo. It didn’t sound very sanitary to her.

“Did you manage to get the book, Elara?”

The taller witch inclined her head and reached into her robe pocket, revealing a book loosely bound in brown paper she quickly shed.

“That’s not from the library,” Hermione said slowly.

“It’s from a library. That library being my own.” Elara held the book out to Hermione, and Harriet could see the familiar crest on the bottom of the spine as the witch impatiently waved the tome about when Hermione failed to grasp it. “I had Kreacher send it to me from home. Mind, I’ll probably return for the hols and find out he’s tossed the whole library searching for it, but this is still much simpler than trying to bribe a teacher into signing a permission slip for the Restricted Section.”

Grumbling, Hermione took the book and cradled it gently in her hands. “Oh, gross.”

“Gross?” Harriet asked.

“It feels—.” Her nose scrunched, handing the text over. “Not pleasant.”

Indeed, when Harriet’s fingers brushed the cover, she was almost overcome with the sudden desire to hurl the book as far as she could. It felt as if she’d taken hold of something not quite solid, a half-frozen gelatinous thing that sent a sharp prickling alighting through her hand and danced in her skin like tiny little feet. It felt—familiar, but uncomfortable, like the stuffy dark of the cupboard at Privet Drive. Harriet did not like it and quickly shoved it back to her friend.

“It’s a text of Dark magic that’s sat in a Dark house for decades, Hermione. Of course it’s not pleasant.”

Shivering once, Hermione lowered herself to sit on the damp floor in front of the sinks and Elara and Harriet did the same—though Elara opted for perching on her bag, folding her hands together on her knees, curling her lip slightly. As Hermione parted the book and began looking through the pages, Harriet peered at the room itself. Everything was slightly off-color, drab with dust and age, the floor stained by years of water damage, cobwebs bearding the ceiling like fungus under a log. All the mirrors had long since been broken, the window itself obscured by limescale as thick as Harriet’s finger. It was a distinctly unsavory place, exactly where someone might find illegal potions brewing going on.

“Here.” Hermione spread the book open in her lap, running a single fingertip down a page crammed with tiny print and gruesome drawings. “This is it here. Hmm…” She turned the page, frowning. “…it’s a tad more complicated than I’d hoped, what with the leeches needing to be bled as to not contaminate it, and it’ll take twenty-one days for the lacewing flies to stew. The knotgrass also presents a problem, as it needs to be harvested under a full moon. Some of the rest will be difficult to procure.”

Elara’s brow rose, and she craned her neck to look at the book without scooting closer on the grubby floor. “Could we buy the flies? I don’t know if Slug and Jiggers would take the order, but there are other apothecaries.”

“No,” Hermione said, still reading. “The fee would be exorbitant, and I wouldn’t trust whoever filled the order to stew them properly. Besides, not many potions call for stewed lacewing flies; any potioneer with half a brain would know what we were up to.” She sunk her teeth into her lower lip as she carefully closed the book again, a small furrow appeared between her brows. “We should be able to start right away. I have my kit and spare cauldron, and the flies themselves are used in standard potion making. The second part of the brew will be a bit…difficult, but we’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.” She smiled, shaking out her bushy hair as she climbed back to her feet. “In the end, I hope all this is unnecessary. Mr. Lockhart should be able to catch whoever is causing this chaos, and we can get back to studying without worrying about being Petrified….”

She said the words, and yet Harriet knew Hermione didn’t feel them; they rang hollow, empty, and the other witch wouldn’t quite meet their eyes as she tucked Elara’s smuggled book into her satchel and brought out a collapsible cauldron so she could start on the flies. Elara took the opportunity to leave, muttering about Snape and making sure no one went looking for them and caught them out making mischief. Harriet helped Hermione begin prepping ingredients, working in companionable silence, and once they moved the cauldron into one of the stalls, she leaned against the partition and stared into the dark, bubbling water.

Hermione hoped all this wouldn’t be necessary, but it would be, because Gilderoy Lockhart was a fraud, and Harriet suspected the adults were well aware of that fact. Why, then? Why bring him? Why would the Minister send a blithering idiot to Hogwarts in their time of need?

Grim, Harriet didn’t think she would like the answer to those questions.

 

Chapter 73: dueling club

Chapter Text

lxxiii. dueling club

 

“A Dueling Club?” Elara muttered as Daphne Greengrass nodded her head. “He can’t be serious.”

They sat together in Transfiguration, a pile of glossy patterned buttons on the desk before Elara, several tired beetles fleeing the idle motions of Daphne’s absentminded wand. “It was officially put on the board this morning in the common room,” the blonde girl said. “It’s going to be held at the beginning of the month, and apparently Lockhart’s got an assistant helping him with actual demonstrations.”

Parkinson, seated in front of them, turned in her chair when McGonagall walked away and leaned her elbows on their table. “Are you talking about the Dueling Club?” she asked in an undertone. Again, Daphne nodded. “It’s so exciting! Who do you think is going to assist him?”

“Not Professor Slytherin,” Daphne said, poking at a beetle. “I heard from Morag MacDougal in Ravenclaw that she heard Mr. Lockhart talking with Professor Slytherin after their lesson on Tuesday, asking if he’d be up for supervising the club—and Slytherin apparently all but threw Mr. Lockhart out of his classroom.”

“Can you blame him? Anyone who has to assist the Gilderoy Lockhart is going to be humiliated.” Pansy sighed, and Daphne did the same. Elara just stared at the pair.

Not for the first time, Elara wondered if there was something wrong with her—because she felt none of the nervous, twitterpated energy the other girls did when discussing Lockhart. She knew Harriet didn’t either, but that was because Harriet was one of the youngest in their year, and far more interested in adventure stories, snakes, and curious bits of magic. Elara was aware of Lockhart in a way Harriet was not, but only in so far as to recognize him as a wizard, a dunce, and a source of constant, gibbering gossip.

It seemed almost every girl near enough to thirteen and above turned into a moon-faced fool whenever Lockhart came up in conversation, and it baffled Elara, who felt very much like the only person at a party who hadn’t sipped the spiked punch.

“Miss Parkinson,” Professor McGonagall snapped as she paced up the aisle again. “I’m sure you’re only discussing the best way to go about turning your beetles into buttons, but turn your attention back to your own desk now.”

Pansy grimaced, then wiped her face clean as she sat forward. “Yes, Professor McGonagall.”

The professor narrowed her eyes and pursed her lips in a thin line as if contemplating a point deduction, but she eventually moved on to the desk behind Elara, where Harriet had managed to turn her beetles in buttons about the size of dinner plates. She quickly tried to fix the problem with a Shrinking Charm. “I saw that, Miss Potter. You should be getting the spell right on the first try, not correcting it with another.”

“But what does it matter, professor?” Harriet complained. “So long as the buttons are the right size in the end?”

“Because I would be remiss in my teaching if my students had to supplement all their half-baked Transfiguration attempts with Charms, and in the future you will come across far more complex magic that cannot be hedged in such a fashion. Now—.” She flicked her wand, and the buttons turned back into regular-sized beetles. “—try again, Miss Potter, and concentrate.”

 

xXxXx

 

Classes continued as they always did, and December descended upon the castle with subtle morning frosts and thick storm clouds lingering just beyond the mountains. Soon everyone knew about the Dueling Club, and it was impossible for go anywhere without hearing someone whispering speculation on what they’d encounter. No one knew for certain what kind of talent Lockhart truly had for dueling since his books only held vague references to any actual battles between the wizard and the forces of darkness, but the more Lockhart toted his skills, the more Elara doubted he had any at all.

She was certain Professor Slytherin was going to hex him bloody any day now.

By the time the first meeting arrived on a cold, brisk evening at the end of the first week, Elara had grown tired of hearing about it, and only conceded to attending because Harriet—for all her disdain of Lockhart—was eager to learn more about dueling. She and Hermione dragged Elara out of the dungeons by the arm, joining the flood of students headed toward the Great Hall.

The room had been adjusted to suit the meeting’s needs. The House tables hemmed the walls, a long, narrow platform now occupying the middle of the hall, around which everyone pushed and jockeyed for the best viewing position. The watching portraits squawked in indignation as neighbors and other painted people squeezed into their frames, a woman beating a pushy knight over the head with her washing board after he nudged her into the tub of sudsy water. No adults had arrived yet.

The trio of Slytherin witches looked for good spots but found themselves shuffled toward the back with the other first and second-years. Harriet grumbled when she ended up stuck behind a sixth-year almost double her height.

“Here, Harriet, stand here….”

Hermione and the shorter witch switched places, and more students came trickling into the hall, jostling the others around. Elara turned to look deeper into the hall itself, and so she didn’t see who Harriet bumped into before she heard her let out a brief, pained hiss.

“Oh, hello, Luna and Ginny,” Hermione said to the pair of first-year girls, frowning at Harriet. Ginny followed Hermione’s look with a nervous smile.

“Hey,” she replied. “Sorry about that, Pot—Harriet.”

The bespectacled witch waved the apology away, though she had a bit of a pinched expression, scratching at her shoulder.

“How are you both doing?” Hermione asked. “Are your classes going well?”

They exchanged brief chatter—well, Hermione and Ginny did, while Luna hummed softly and Elara gave the girl a skeptical look. She was…odd. They were related through Elara’s mother, the McKinnons and Lovegoods being cousins, close enough that Elara sometimes wondered why she hadn’t been sent to them when she was an infant. She often ruminated on all the possible reasons she’d landed in a Muggle orphanage instead of with a magical relation. Uncle Cygnus never gave her a clear answer beyond thinking she had been dead.

Maybe they just didn’t want to house the madman’s daughter.

“Hello, hello!” Elara jerked herself out of her wandering thoughts as Mr. Lockhart came bounding up the steps onto the platform. She said bounding because that was exactly what he did; the foppish wizard lifted his knees high and affected a slightly breathless air, dressed in a high-collared duelist’s coat, a frilly pattern printed into the light fabric, his boots heeled and buckled along his narrow calves. He looked something like the Christian knights in St. Giles’ nursery stories, golden and boisterous and clean, chest thrown out, smile bright. The inadvertent comparison made Elara uneasy. “Can you all hear me? Good, excellent! I’m so glad you could attend this little Dueling Club of mine the Headmaster and the Ministry have allowed me to set up!”

By now, most of the student body had filtered into the hall, and though the few hundred students usually fit quite well in the space, the platform crowded the room’s middle and everyone jostled for better spots close to the front. Claustrophobia needled her, and Elara forced herself to stand up straight and stop wringing her gloves, breathing in a sharp, quick breath. Harriet glanced at her, curious.

A flicker of black in the corner of her eye turned Elara’s head. True, the majority of the crowd wore their dark school robes and so a bit of black cloth shouldn’t have held her attention, but no one could match the seething pillar that Snape resembled as he came gliding up the steps after Lockhart, still dressed in his teaching robes and wool coat. He stood there in stark contrast to Mr. Lockhart, looking very much like the celebrated author had dragged him out of his dungeons just for this event, and Snape had gone unwillingly.

Lockhart continued to prattle, and Elara heard him say, “And of course you know my assistant! Professor Snape has gallantly offered his services tonight, but never fear! I’ll leave your professor in one piece, I swear it! Thanks for being a good chap, Severus!”

Snape—the wretched misanthrope—fairly oozed discontent, his arms crossed, eyes glinting, though Lockhart either didn’t notice or didn’t care. Elara could think of a few things to call the wizard, and none of them were “good chap.”

“Can Professor Snape duel?” whispered a first-year Hufflepuff, turning her head toward her friend, who shrugged.

Expression grim, Ginny muttered, “He’d have to.”

“Why do you say that?” Hermione asked.

“Because he was suspected of—you know.”

“I know what?”

“That—err, never mind.”

Elara blinked, curious but unwilling to follow through with their conversation. Know what? Harriet, for her part, acted as if she hadn’t heard a word spoken, and was peering intently at Snape and Lockhart, craning her neck to see between the bodies of the taller students in front of her.

“Now! The first spell I’ll be showing you is an absolute necessity in a master duelist’s repertoire: the Disarming Charm. The incantation is expelliarmus. Everyone got that?”

A few of the older years scoffed, obviously knowing the spell already, while others repeated the word to various success under their breath. Snape continued to stand immobile at one end of the platform, jaw set, and Elara would have thought him Petrified if not for the impatient tapping of his index finger against his arm. Lockhart pranced—pranced, honestly, even Hermione with all her infatuated hero-worship was beginning to look chagrined—to his own side of the platform and spun about, yanking his wand out of the blue sash slung about his hips. Striking a pose, he pointed it at Professor Snape.

“Are you ready, Professor?”

Snape didn’t look ready, since he hadn’t shifted from his stiff, indolent stance with his arms crossed. He hadn’t even taken out his wand. He sneered, and in the answering hush, softly said, “Get on with it, Gilderoy.”

Mr. Lockhart faltered for a moment, an uneasy shift pulling at his arms and causing him to shuffle his feet. Snape did nothing. “Ah, all right, then. If you’re certain. Prepare yourself! Expelliarmus!”

He gave his wand a jaunty little jab and it expelled a burst of crimson light. The spell moved…not slowly, but Elara had anticipated something quicker than what she saw, something worthy of being a disarming Charm. It flew toward Snape at a steady clip—and, without ceremony, Professor Snape simply stepped to one side, like a vulture shuffling over on its branch, and the spell continued until it hit the Great Hall’s doors with a light smack. Lockhart blinked, dropping his pose. “I, uh—?”

Snape’s sneer morphed into a smirk, and the wizard finally uncrossed his arms, his black wand descending into his pale fingers when he flicked his wrist. From one second to the next, he stepped forward, lifted his hand, and snarled, “Expelliarmus!”

The red light streaked down the platform and Lockhart didn’t have time to blink before it struck him in the chest, throwing the wizard back and right off the edge of the platform into a group of watching witches. They shrieked and squealed, but they did manage to break Lockhart’s fall before he split his head like an egg on the stone floor. Dazed, winded, and disheveled, Mr. Lockhart stumbled to his feet with the help of his overeager audience, and his voice came out in a thready whine when he spoke.

“Yes, yes—thank you, Professor Snape! Of—of course, I knew what you meant to do, and I could have easily countered it, but it’s always good to give a demonstration.”

“Oh?” Snape lifted a brow. “Shall I demonstrate it again, then?”

Lockhart’s eyes widened, and he finally noticed the other wizard meant him sincere bodily harm, because he chortled a rather high-pitched laugh and shook his head. “No, no! That won’t be necessary, Severus. Ah—why don’t you all split into pairs and practice now? Yes, that’d be good….”

The students in the hall turned to their friends with excited grins, finally putting distance between themselves and the overcrowded edge of the platform. Malfoy oozed out of the crowd like the irritating pond scum he was and challenged Harriet to a duel, but the bespectacled witch merely rolled her eyes and turned away. Annoyed by the lack of response, Malfoy focused his attention on Longbottom—who was near enough with his Gryffindor friends—instead. Luna and Gina paired off, as did Crabbe and Goyle, Finnigan and Thomas, leaving Elara to face Hermione and Harriet with Ronald Weasley.

The redhead shrugged, then lifted his wand. Elara narrowed her eyes when she noticed the Spell-O-Tape wrapped about it in clumsy, uneven layers, the tip crooked, and a fission of alarm went through her when sparks dribbled from the wrong end. She’d seen his dismal work in Defense all term, of course, but she hadn’t seen his wand from this proximity before. It looked liable to burst into flames at any second. Is that unicorn hair poking out of the side?!

Elara didn’t have a chance to say anything, because Snape came swooping over and snatched Harriet back from Weasley by the scruff of her neck. Harriet balked and probably would have lost her balance if Snape hadn’t held her upright. “Put that worthless stick down before you blind someone, Weasley,” he snapped, shunting Harriet over to a single, first-year Hufflepuff, who paled when confronted with an irked Slytherin witch. “Have you even written to your mother yet about having that replaced, boy?”

He harangued Weasley for a bit, the boy’s ears going red, and Elara let her attention wander back to Hermione.

“Is everyone prepared?” Lockhart called from the platform, his hands on his hips and his attire returned to order, though a fresh bruise colored his cheek. “Excellent! Now, on the count of three, you will attempt to disarm your opponent! One, two—.”

Loud bangs and shouts drowned out the remainder of Lockhart’s count as students fired spells at one another. “Expelliarmus,” Hermione said with perfect pronunciation, and Elara’s wand slipped from her fingers. She fumbled for it while all around the Great Hall different hexes and jinxes bounced against the walls and floor, portraits fleeing, a paltry yellow haze spilling into the air, and Lockhart had to duck before a stray spell could clip his head.

“Stop—stop!” he cried.

Snape’s eyes flicked toward the other wizard and narrowed. Though Elara couldn’t hear it, she saw the man take in a visible, aggravated breath before shouting, “Finite Incantatem!” louder than she’d ever heard him speak before. The various bursts of light and sound died when Snape swept his wand around the hall, nullifying the active hexes and jinxes and banishing the ugly haze. His glare alone proved sufficient enough to part the Weasley twins, whose duel had quickly devolved into a wrestling match. Silence descended, uneasy eyes turned to the professor.

“Perhaps, Gilderoy,” Snape said as he slid his wand back into his sleeve. “It would be best if you selected a single pair for another demonstration instead of unleashing the ill-behaved horde upon one another.”

Lockhart cleared his throat and nodded along with what the Potions Master said. “Yes, of course—splendid idea. Took the words right out of my mouth! Let’s see here—ah, yes! Neville! Why don’t you and your partner come on up here and show us how it’s done?”

Longbottom shot Mr. Lockhart an easy, practiced grin, and replied, “Sure, sir,” before starting toward the steps. Draco, his partner, followed after the Boy Who Lived with his pointy nose in the air, though he looked less confident than he had earlier once he found himself on the platform facing his opponent. Neville, for all that he was a fake, exasperating twit, was still second in their year for Defense, lagging behind Harriet alone—who was currently on her knees apologizing profusely to the teary-eyed Hufflepuff she’d thrown off her feet with the Disarming Charm.

Stepping off the platform and out of the line of fire, Lockhart called out, “All right, gentlemen! On the count of three, you will attempt to disarm each other! Disarm only, now! Nothing else! One, two!”

Flipendo!” Malfoy yelled before the count came to an end, hoping to catch Longbottom unprepared, but Neville was quick to use a Shield Charm. His feet slid a few inches from the impact, and then he retaliated.

Locomotor Wibbly!

The Jelly-Legs Curse clipped Malfoy when he tried to dodge, and the blond collapsed onto his backside among loud cheers from the Gryffindors. Longbottom smirked, bowed, and the cheers became laughter. Growing red in the face, Malfoy canceled the curse on his lower half and scrambled upright, scowling something fierce as he thrust his wand toward the bowing boy’s back. “Serpensortia!

A collective gasp went through the students as a blur erupted from the tip of Malfoy’s wand, and that gasp morphed into spooked shrieks when the blur solidified into three feet of hooded snake, the creature landing on the platform as Longbottom whipped around, his eyes wide and frightened. The cobra hissed and coiled in upon itself. Neville didn’t move.

Scoffing, Snape yet again found his own wand and waded forward, shifting aside students so he could reach the platform’s edge. “Allow me, Longbottom—.”

“No, no! I have it!” Lockhart called, and Elara didn’t quite hear what spell he used, but she flinched like everyone else when the snake ascended several yards into the air, then came down with a loud thwap! The cobra writhed, body rolling—and it abruptly rose, hood wide, hissing with menace as it looked at Neville and bared curved fangs.

Eyes locked on it, Harriet stepped forward—and dread filled Elara’s heart.

Sometimes she pondered why Harriet had landed in Slytherin. The bespectacled witch had all the qualities upheld by the House of Serpents, certainly—but what Elara thought most people failed to understand was that everyone had all the qualities of every House to varying degrees, and the Sorting Hat sought that which would best define and complete its wearer during their years at Hogwarts. For all her cunning, her perseverance, pride, and those spots of gleaming ambition, Elara often couldn’t understand how Harriet didn’t wind up in Gryffindor when she could be so utterly, completely, and stupidly reckless.

Reckless as she was being right now.

Elara didn’t think; she pushed past Snape, grabbed a handful of Harriet’s robes, and yanked the shorter witch back while everyone else stared at the scene unfolding on the platform. A sound of protest escaped Harriet, and Elara slapped a gloved hand over her mouth, dragging her until she brushed the stone wall. “Don’t you dare!

The cobra darted toward Longbottom—and Snape lunged, snarling “Vipera Evanesca!

The Boy Who Lived shouted as he fell back, and the snake vanished in a whisper of smoke and ash.

Harriet pulled Elara’s hand away from her face and spun on her heels, real anger in her green eyes as she glowered at her friend. “What the hell, Elara!”

“I only stopped you from being an idiot,” Elara retorted, her own temper prickling in her tone as the volume rose in the hall and the so-called Dueling Club started to dissolve. Lockhart had no control now, and no one else wanted to get on the platform after watching Longbottom almost get bit by a venomous snake. “You need to think before you act sometimes, Harriet!”

“He could have died!

Snape—having witnessed Harriet’s lapse in judgment—set upon them immediately, bending at the waist to bring his furious face lower and speak for their benefit alone. “What part of your imbecilic little brain doesn’t understand the concept of keeping a secret?” he demanded of Harriet, baring crooked teeth. “Do you have any idea the kind of retribution that would have been unleashed upon yourself had you revealed that ability in the school’s current climate?”

Elara knew. Had Harriet exposed herself as a Parselmouth, the school would have turned on her in an instant. She couldn’t be certain what Professor Slytherin would do, but merely imaging his possible reactions made Elara queasy.

“I was—I just wanted to help!”

“He was in no danger and did not need your bloody help!” Snape spat. Both girls jumped when he swore. “You would have been ostracized—targeted by simpletons and those of superstitious minds, and Merlin only knows what would have occurred when—when, Potter, not if—the Ministry caught wind of this! They would have hauled you in for an inquiry, twelve-years-old or no! They would have turned your dorm upside down and found that wretched serpent of yours. They’d throw you in Azkaban, Potter, Azkaban!

By now, people had started filtering out of the Great Hall, but some paused and looked back as Snape’s voice rose in volume. The Potions Master noted their audience and forcibly calmed himself, seeming to count under his breath while Harriet’s face reddened and she swallowed the urge to cry. Guilt and rage and fear flickered across her scrunched features, and Elara reached out to touch her arm, wanting to comfort her—but Harriet jerked away.

“I didn’t! I didn’t mean to!”

Snape straightened to his full height and crossed his arms, not a single ounce of pity in his harsh expression. Hermione still lingered, but she didn’t approach, as she hadn’t seen what Harriet did and didn’t understand what was happening. Longbottom—shaken and sweaty, leaning on Ron’s shoulder—was still in the Great Hall as well, and he cast a suspicious look in their direction that Elara met with a foreboding scowl until he moved away.

“And have I not told you time and time again you must master your instincts, girl? Whether or not you meant it is immaterial. Does a disaster need to occur before it sinks in that you are not expected to act in these situations? That your responsibility is to yourself first? Have a care with your damn safety, Potter!”

Harriet stared at her shoes as she trembled and tried to hide the tears welling behind her lashes. Snape gave no mercy.

“Go back to the common room. Get out of my sight.”

Elara tried to grab Harriet’s hand again, but the other witch bolted before she could, disappearing into the dwindling throng without a backward glance. Snape turned his simmering attention to Elara and flicked his hand after the fleeing girl. “Go. Find her before she lands herself in more trouble than she already has.”

“You didn’t have to be so cruel,” Elara muttered in response. Snape’s lip curled.

“You’re just as thick-headed as she is, Black. You and your cohorts must keep your heads down and think. Given you stopped her before she could make such a monumental mistake, I assumed you cared more for the ungrateful brat’s well-being than my perceived cruelty. Maybe I’m wrong. Perhaps you can both find a nice cell in Azkaban near your father’s if you carry on with this negligent attitude.”

The Potions Master departed with those cutting words, his robe billowing in his passage, leaving Elara to stand enraged and frustrated with what few students remained. Lockhart sat on the platform’s edge fielding comments and questions from his fawning admirers, and the sight only served to further irritate Elara. Several of the nearest floating candles guttered and dribbled wax before going out. She clenched her jaw and tried to stop her fists from shaking.

Hateful git.

“Elara…?” came Hermione’s tentative question. “What was that all about? What happened?” She bit her lip. “Is Harriet all right?”

Letting the anger go, Elara breathed in, and the candles stopped burning themselves to nothing. “We should go back to the common room and find her,” she said. There was nothing else they could do, really. Everything Snape said was true, whether or not Elara or Harriet wanted to believe him. Hogwarts was not safe at the moment, especially not for a Parselmouth Slytherin in possession of an illegally obtained Horned Serpent, an inquisitive Muggle-born, or the Heiress of a Dark family with far too many dubious journals tucked inside her school bag. They needed to be careful. They needed to think. “Come on, I’ll explain on the way….”


A/N: I can’t remember exactly how the Dueling Club went and I haven’t got my books with me, but oh well xD I don’t like repeating canon scenes verbatim anyway. I know Snape’s a bit of bastard at the end, but he probably had a mini-heart attack when Harriet almost outed herself as a Parselmouth in front of the whole school. That would have been very, very bad.

Hope everyone stays healthy and safe out there!

Chapter 74: thief's honor

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

lxxiv. thief’s honor

 

In the wake of the Dueling Club’s first—and most likely last—meeting, Hermione had come to two conclusions.

One, Gilderoy Lockhart was not nearly as talented and successful as he presented himself, and the realization punctured Hermione’s budding infatuation like a lance through a balloon. Not that she’d ever admit to that infatuation, of course; it was embarrassing enough to think she’d found him so riveting and gallant when the wizard couldn’t defeat an opponent not holding their wand or Vanish a golem before it attacked a student. How absurd.

Secondly, Harriet Potter had a problem with impulse control.

She wasn’t thoughtless, no matter what Professor Snape said. No, if anything, Harriet was quite thoughtful; she always answered her letters in a timely manner, asked after people’s welfare, helped first-years who needed assistance with directions or homework, and lent a hand when Hermione cleaned up her texts in the library. What Harriet lacked was faith in authority—and Hermione didn’t mean the Ministry or the Headmaster. Subconsciously, the other girl simply had far too much difficulty understanding she didn’t need to always act, whether to help someone or protect or attack another, because she’d never had someone to depend on in her life. The thought of it wrenched Hermione’s heart.

If Elara hadn’t noticed her that evening, if Harriet had stepped up and commanded that cobra away from Longbottom—oh, Hermione could visualize the resulting chaos with ease, and it sank heavily in her middle like a stone. Soon enough, rumor would have twisted Harriet into some sort of terrible, bigoted monster, and witnesses would have sworn they saw her egging the snake on, urging it to attack Neville or even Lockhart. Azkaban hadn’t been an idle threat given by the Potions Master.

Hermione had several hypotheses on how Professor Slytherin would react if he discovered Harriet’s ability, and few had favorable conclusions. Elara once made the joking comment that Professor Slytherin and Harriet might be related, and naturally Hermione disagreed—but, in the privacy of her own thoughts, she did have to wonder if Lily Potter had been indiscreet with Slytherin’s father, Slytherin himself, or perhaps Minister Gaunt. Parselmouths didn’t appear out of nowhere—not in Britain, at any rate. There was a connection between Slytherin and Harriet, though the exact nature of that connection had yet to be revealed.

Harriet spent much of the weekend quiet and withdrawn, sitting with them at their favored table in the common room but contributing little to the conversation. Truly, Hermione wished she had the right words to comfort the other witch, that she was as empathetically competent as others and could inherently know what Harriet needed—but Hermione found herself far too distracted by thoughts of the Chamber and their maturing Polyjuice to give Harriet her full attention.

It never strayed far from her mind. There hadn’t been an attack for almost a month, but Hermione little doubted the perpetrator was still at large and simply biding their time. Harriet and Elara tried to understand her urgency—but they couldn’t, because they were of magical blood from magical families, and they didn’t feel the same sting of revolted eyes on her person, didn’t hear upper years like Accipto Lestrange and his cronies whisper, “Hopefully the Heir does a bit of House cleaning for us.” The first time Hermione heard the word Mudblood she’d thought it absurd sounding, and yet with each spat repetition, the word started to weigh heavier and heavier upon her, as if by the mere fault of birth, she carried with her all of magical society’s problems, and couldn’t wipe the stain off.

Mudblood.

Hermione shook herself and forced her mind back to the present. She, Elara, and Harriet stood cramped together in the stall in Myrtle’s loo, looking down at the softly simmering potion perched on the toilet—the clean, empty toilet Hermione purposefully disconnected from the pipes so Myrtle wouldn’t flood their brew. Harriet still looked queasy at the idea of drinking anything concocted in a loo, though Hermione assured her she came by every day during lunch and after dinner to make certain nothing fell in or disturbed it.

“We have a…bit of a problem,” Hermione said as she nibbled her lip and fussed with the ladle, making sure the wings didn’t clump and burn at the bottom.

“Is there something wrong with it?”

“Not at the moment, no.” She lowered the ladle, hooking the curved end on the cauldron’s lip to keep it in place. “Right now, everything is coming along perfectly. It’s the next step that will prove—difficult.”

Elara and Harriet grimaced in unison.

“We need bicorn horn and boomslang skin—male boomslang skin, I should say, as the text specifies the green coloration—.” Hermione breathed out, frustrated with her own urge to prattle. “Boomslangs aren’t rare, per se, but they aren’t exactly thick on the ground in the Scottish highlands.”

Harriet snorted.

“The skin has to be imported from Africa and isn’t readily available to the public. It has to be ordered through shop inventory catalogs, issued against a registered license to an apothecary, alchemist, researcher, Healer, or Potions Master. We could, potentially, attempt to attain some through the Muggle world—but we haven’t the contacts for that, honestly, and it could take—.”

“Months,” Elara finished for her, folding her arms against her middle, eyes downcast in thought. Harriet leaned on the stall’s partition, but Elara steadfastly refused to touch anything in the loo, even with her gloves on. “We’d also run into difficulties getting the skin here, since it’s not like Muggle post can be delivered to any of our homes, is it?”

“Exactly—and the bicorn horn is a restricted substance. Demand often outweighs supply because it’s needed in so many different potions, and the Ministry has issued several mandates against bicorn poaching—or so I saw in my research.”

“I don’t know what a bicorn is, but do you think Hagrid has one?” Harriet asked. “If he does, will he let us have a horn? We don’t—err—have to kill it for that, do we?”

“No, a bicorn sheds its horns, but only once a year, and only in the spring. Even if he has a bicorn, he won’t have kept the horns himself.”

The trio shared worried glances. “What d’you think we should do, Hermione?”

“Well…” the eldest witch hedged, uncertain how her idea would be received. “We’re in luck, because we have all the ingredients we need right here at Hogwarts. We simply need to—erm—borrow them from…Professor Snape’s private stores.”

Harriet turned green and Elara shut her eyes. She grimaced.

“Hermione, the wizard knows where Harriet and I live during the summer. He sleeps in the bedroom above mine. On the off-chance he didn’t have us expelled, he would make our lives very, very miserable if we were caught.”

“You won’t get caught,” Hermione asserted. “None of us will get caught—and I will do the stealing.”

Elara’s brow rose as she opened her eyes again. “Are you certain this is worth the risk? The chance we’ll find out anything worthwhile is already slight, and this complicates things, Hermione. A lot.”

“I will do it without you if I must. It’s important,” Hermione replied, squaring her shoulders. Harriet had yet to say anything, and Hermione knew by the look on her face that stealing from Professor Snape might prove more than she could stomach. “We won’t get caught,” she reasserted, speaking softer. “I promise you. But, you needn’t do anything you’re uncomfortable with, Harriet. I won’t ask that of you.”

Harriet gave a weak smile and fiddled with her spectacles, pushing them farther up her nose. “It’s okay, Hermione. I’ll do what you need.”

A wash of gratitude went through Hermione and she squeezed Harriet’s arm in thanks. “Now, we just need an idea of how to break into Snape’s stores. He keeps them in his office, warded—you remember, don’t you? We saw the room some weeks ago, and I specifically remember seeing bicorn horns in a wire basket by several other keratin-based appendages. The shape of them is quite distinctive”

“Err…‘keratin-based appendages?’”

“Hair, horns, scales, fingernails.”

“Oh, gross.”

Hermione dragged a hand through her errant curls and tucked the worst offenders back behind her ears. “Really, the problem we have is opening the portrait. Professor Snape didn’t use any magic when he pulled the portrait aside; I assume the wards are simply keyed to his touch. If we mean to get into his stores, we can’t simply try to break in at night or even while he’s busy in classes, not unless we can figure out what type of ward he’s laid on the portrait, and I doubt we’d be able to figure it out without extensive experimentation—the kind of experimentation that would be impossible to undertake without his noticing.”

“So…what you’re saying is, we need Snape to open the door first.”

Grim, Hermione nodded. She knew how ridiculous that sounded. “It’s the only way.”

“Bloody hell. We might as well just ask for the detentions now.”

A small, despondent part of Hermione agreed and thought she’d bitten off more than she could chew with this aspiration. Though she didn’t have the same experience with the wizard as Elara and Harriet, she recognized enough of Professor Snape’s character to understand he was not careless enough to leave his stores open, or his office unattended. Careless was perhaps the very last word Hermione would use in describing the Potions Master—right alongside forgivingkind, or merciful.

What do you expect us to do, then? Hex him?”

“Oh, nothing that drastic, Harriet. Really.”

Elara made a thoughtful noise, a furrow forming between her dark brows as Hermione watched her think. “I believe…I have an idea.”

Harriet perked up. “Yeah?”

“Yes.” She smiled the kind of narrow, secretive smile that both worried and filled Hermione with anticipation. “I think I fancy a bit of run….”

 

x X x X x

 

Three days later, the morning dawned cool and gray, thick mist crawling over the grounds from the lake’s shores to lay heavy and indolent against the grass. Bird calls echoed in the Forbidden Forest, the perennial, mundane avians drowned out by the louder and far more sinister Augurey cries. If one listened closely and turned their ear toward the dirt trail meandering near the tree line, the sound of three pairs of feet striking the wet earth could be heard, as could the short, asthmatic breathing of a witch very near passing out where she stood.

“We’re almost there,” Harriet muttered as the trio traveled along the final stretch, the cold air searing in their lungs, the main courtyard waiting just ahead. The shorter witch barely panted and had yet to break a sweat, while Hermione herself felt clammy and overheated despite the chill weather, and Elara had long since subsided into strangled wheezing. “I really don’t like this bloody idea.”

Hermione couldn’t say she much liked it either. Success pended on far too many variables—like Professor Snape’s disposition, placement of the items they intended to st—borrow, and whether or not he left the portrait open when he turned from it. Elara asserted the simplest plan of action would work best of all, and she wasn’t wrong, at least not entirely so, because they had already witnessed Snape opening the storage room before. That was how Hermione saw the ingredients in the first place. They needed to replicate the situation, which was why the trio now came stumbling up toward the castle far too early in the morning with Elara half-supported by Harriet and Hermione’s anxious hovering.

Professor Snape was in his office, they knew. They had checked—discreetly, or as discreetly as they could—for the past few mornings, and this was the first time they’d heard the rustle of cloth and scritch of a quill beyond the shut door. Elara tripped once they’d slipped over the entrance hall’s threshold, and Harriet—being shorter and already holding much of the other girl’s weight—went down in a tangle of cursing limbs.

Hermione almost cursed as well, jumping forward to drag a very pale and woozy Elara upright while Harriet jumped to her feet sporting a red mark on her chin and lopsided glasses. Footsteps echoed down the far corridor toward the main stair vault, someone undoubtedly coming down to see what all the noise was about, and so the three witches scrambled away from the entrance hall as fast as they could manage, plunging down into the dungeons once more.

Once they reached their destination, Harriet took the lead, sending Hermione one final, anxious look before she banged her knuckles against Snape’s door. She had to knock again before it was jerked open, and the Potions Master stood looming in all his dour glory, the heavy smell of mysterious brews seeping into the corridor from the open door.

“What—,” he began, voice gone quiet and cold like a knife slicing through the otherwise somber hush of the dungeons. His gaze landed on the fresh bruise forming across Harriet’s chin and narrowed. “Do you think you’re doing?”

“Err—.”

Elara, blue in the face, started to cough, and Hermione couldn’t say if she was doing so for theatrical effect or not. Snape instantly realized what had happened, of course. He hissed and grabbed the witch by her shoulder, jostling Harriet out of the way as he dragged Elara to the nearest desk and all but threw her into it. Unavoidable, but not ideal; they’d hoped she could sit at a desk farther into the room and farther from the portrait, but there was nothing they could do now. Hermione shrunk back, remaining as quiet as could while Elara gasped and Harriet, standing against Snape’s shelves, eased her weight from one nervous foot to the other.

The portrait had changed. Where the serpent charmer once played now hung a painting of a quiet library, a single bearded wizard dozing at a reading desk while books flickered by over his head and a candle guttered in the resulting breeze. Hermione didn’t have long to consider the change before Snape slammed the portrait open, ducked into the storeroom, and returned holding a vial and a shorter, opaque canister. He dropped both onto the desk next to Elara, and slowly Hermione edged toward the open storage room. She could barely think over the roar of blood in her ears.

“What did I tell you?” Professor Snape barked at Elara as he grabbed her hand and twisted it, studying the bluish tinge staining her nail beds. “I assumed I had used small enough words when I told you not to overexert yourself, Black! Did I overestimate your vocabulary, or just your own self-awareness?”

“Too cold,” Elara choked out. “It’s too cold. It made it—worse. Worse than normal.”

Hermione’s heart raced in her chest as she stepped into the storage room, torn between watching Professor Snape’s back and searching for the necessary ingredients. In a rush, she had a moment of doubt; what were they doing? This was so, so foolish. She was terrified of what was happening with this Heir of Slytherin nonsense—but Elara had induced her own asthma attack, for goodness’ sake! They knew help was only a few minutes away, but still! What if they hadn’t have gotten back to the castle in time? What if they were delayed? What if she’d really hurt herself?

Hermione’s hands shook as she found the basket of bicorn horns and quickly grabbed one.

Professor Snape had the orange potion vial pinched between his thumb and forefingers as he held it out to Elara, who hesitated, visibly trying not to glance over the wizard’s shoulder in Hermione’s direction. “Black—.”

They were running out of time. Oh, Hermione hadn’t considered how quickly everything would pass once they got inside the office, every second seeming to come faster than the one before as she scanned the shelves in search of his boomslang skin. The professor had very few labels, and if he had a system of organization, Hermione couldn’t decipher it. All her knowledge of potions seemed to ooze from her ears and she couldn’t recognize anything at all. The names of everything blurred in her head.

How does he find anything?!

The bicorn horn poked her ribs as Hermione stuck it inside her Muggle zip-up jacket. Elara and Snape bickered, but Elara’s voice was failing her, and the Potions Master was running low on patience. Hermione’s eyes flicked back and forth over the shelves, searching, panic building as she failed to find anything remotely snake-like in appearance. What if he didn’t have any? What if—?

Why doesn’t he keep the skins together?! That’s infuriating!

She jumped when the now empty potion vial came sailing past her, slotting itself neatly in by other used bottles and jars sitting in a grubby tub waiting to be cleaned. Oh no. Hermione swallowed, knowing Snape would turn at any second, would find her standing here half-frozen with nerves—.

“Professor!” Harriet stuttered as the wizard stepped back toward the open portrait.

Snape paused and flicked loose hair from his eyes. “What is it, Potter?”

“I, uh—. I, I feel a bit—dizzy!”

“What—?”

Before the question could fully form, Harriet’s legs went out from under her, and she fell hard into the shelf behind her, knocking over books and ghoulish canisters as she collapsed. Jars split and shattered on the stones, hideous smells escaping the broken glass. A loud—and surprising—yelp left Professor Snape, and he hurried to bend over the slumped witch while Hermione renewed her frantic search.

Her fingertips skated over something leathery—there!

Hermione yanked a folio from a shelf holding preserved specimens and found various cut and dried pieces of reptilian epidermis separated by wax dividers. There were spaces for labels on the pages, and yet Snape still didn’t write the name of the skins. Hermione knew she could figure out which was which—if given enough time, and just a touch of light, and—.

Before she could reconsider, Hermione shoved the whole folio inside her jacket and did up the zip, hoping the padding disguised the irregular edges pressing into the cloth. Hands shaking again, she darted out of the storage room—almost tripping in her haste—and latched onto Elara’s arm just as Professor Snape levered a disheveled Harriet upright once more.

“Merlin only knows what I did to be cursed with you three,” the professor snarled, his insult clipped and rather tame for the amount of frustration evident in his harsh, lined features. He vanished the ruined glass scattered about Harriet’s feet, then flicked his hand at the desk, summoning the opaque container he’d grabbed earlier.

“Sorry, sir—urgh!” Harriet complained as Professor Snape slapped a generous glob of smelly gel onto the witch’s bruised face.

“Rub that in,” he barked as he screwed the lid back into place and checked on Elara. His black eyes flickered over Hermione and narrowed, then moved to Harriet, who gave him an angry look as she smeared bruise cream off her chin. “Whatever foolishness you three intend to perpetuate at this hour stops now. You’re not to use the track for the rest of the year. That includes you, Potter.”

“What!”

“Ten points from Slytherin.”

“Wh—? Why? We’re not doin’ anything wrong! It was an accident!”

Hermione’s fingers clenched tighter on Elara’s arm, and the folio inside her jacket suddenly felt as if it weighed a hundred stone. She had never stolen anything aside from Harriet’s birthday present before—and that hardly counted. If anything, stealing from the Malfoys was a good deed, not a bad one.

“Once is an accident, twice is idiocy!” Professor Snape dismissed the bruise cream into the potions’ storage and slammed the portrait closed. Hermione swallowed. He rounded his desk and sank into his chair, scowling at the three witches in turn before coming back to Harriet. “Stay inside the castle.”

“What about Quidditch, sir?” Harriet retorted, nose in the air. Hermione and Elara elected to slowly edge toward the door. “And Herbology? Should we stay inside the castle then, too?”

“That’s another ten points, girl.”

“Harriet,” Hermione hissed when she opened her mouth to reply. “Let’s go.”

“Listen to your interfering friend, Potter, before you further aggravate me.” Professor Snape sneered and leaned upon his arm. “Get out of my office. All of you—and next time, faint in the Transfiguration corridor so you become Minerva’s problem, not mine.”

The three witches did as told, and they didn’t miss how loud the door was when it slammed shut at their backsides, the sound echoing deeper into the dungeons’ confines. “Why did you antagonize him?” Hermione demanded as she dropped Elara’s arm. “He’s going to be furious enough when he realizes he’s missing ingredients!”

“Because if he’s brassed off with me, then he won’t be thinking about what you were doing while we were in the office,” Harriet muttered in reply. “Ugh, I think I stepped in dead squid or something. That’s disgusting.”

They continued until they reached the entrance to the dorms, at which point Elara—breathing normally but still somewhat pale and sweaty—stopped and said, “I’m going to go lie down.”

“Oh, Elara, do you need anything? Are you all right? I know this was your plan, but—.”

The taller witch shook her head, forestalling Hermione’s well-meaning diatribe. She dragged a hand across her brow and swept back the few untidy strands stuck to her skin. “I understood perfectly well what I was doing, Hermione—and I won’t be in a rush to do it again, I assure you. I’m fine now. Go, hurry before Snape or Slytherin catches you loitering about.”

They parted ways, Hermione and Harriet leaving the dungeons back toward the entrance hall. Other students were up and about at this hour, but not many, mostly studious older years or Quidditch players like Harriet heading out to practice on the pitch, so the two Slytherin witches kept their heads down and hoped they wouldn’t be noticed by any professors. Harriet wished aloud for her Invisibility Cloak, and Hermione agreed that even if Professor Snape could see through it somehow, the other teachers couldn’t. Stewing lacewing flies wasn’t illegal, but embarking on the next part of the potion would be; the Cloak could prove invaluable for discretion.

Water dripped somewhere in the loo when they entered, echoing in the vacant confines, morning sunshine struggling to illuminate the grungy window set high on the far wall. Hermione locked the door, then went to their commandeered stall housing the simmering potion and the spare kit she’d hidden and Charmed behind the water tank.

“You did manage to get everything, didn’t you? If we have to go tell Elara we missed something, I think she might murder us in our beds.”

Hermione laughed the kind of breathless, incredulous laugh she’d heard people make after waiting and stressing over an important phone call or interview or meeting. The relief came in a burst, like fizzy water in her middle, and though apprehension and fear still tingled in her limbs, Hermione felt leagues better once they’d escaped Professor Snape’s vicinity. “I’m almost positive I did.”

Almost positive? What does that mean?”

With a guilty shrug, Hermione unzipped her Muggle jacket and brought out the horn and the hard folio. “Well, I might have taken a bit more than just the boomslang skin. I was running out of time, and the infuriating man doesn’t label anything! He’s hundreds of ingredients in there! Honestly, how does he remember it all? Anyway, I…panicked.”

“You panicked?” Harriet’s eyes grew as round as Galleons when Hermione opened the folio to display the carefully preserved sheets of snake and lizard skin. “Holy shite. If he figures out we took all that, Snape might really expel us.”

“It’s not as if I can return what we’re not using. I’m sure he’d find some way to trace it back to us, and at least now Professor Snape can’t be certain of what we’re brewing. If he discovered someone was making Polyjuice, he’d be more paranoid than usual. Ah—there!” Hermione let out another one of those relieved-beyond-words breaths as she extracted the glistening green boomslang skin from the folio and transferred it to the spare potions kit with the bicorn horn. They had everything now. The potion would be finished before they knew it.

Hermione stared into the murky water settled within cauldron’s belly. She considered again the sheer absurdity of what they would attempt in just a few short weeks—the sheer absurdity of what they’d already done, and Hermione felt…uncommonly blessed. She wasn’t one for religion really, having always ascribed more worth to science and academic study than to legends and theocracy, but as she stood in that stuffy loo lost in her own thoughts, she pondered the possibility of a heretofore unseen deity giving her a boon—because for all the fear and uncertainty currently burdening Hogwarts, Hermione had Harriet and Elara. She had friends who were willing to steal from terrifying men like Professor Snape and risk their own health simply for her state of mind.

She didn’t know what she’d done to deserve them. Bigotry plagued Salazar Slytherin’s House like a particularly persistent and nasty case of boils, but how bad could the wizard have been if the Sorting Hat imbued with a part of his personage looked into the heads of people like Elara and Harriet and decided they belonged there?

“Hermione?”

“Hmm?”

“We should probably return to the dungeons. Let’s find Elara and go get some breakfast.”

“Yes, of course.” Hermione closed the potions kit and Charmed it back into place behind the tank, hidden from view. She took Harriet’s hand in her own and, smiling, said, “Let’s go.”


A/N: Breaking News - Three tiny witches rob poor, unsuspecting Potions Master blind. More at eleven.

Notes:

Here's some fanart by LadyGranite : McDonald's (I'm so excited, I've never had fanart before, and I've been writing for years, aha).

So the story behind that is Harriet, Hermione, and Elara being the perfect golden ratio of personalities--like in that McDonald's alignment triangle!
Children in the backseat: "McDonald's! McDonald's!"
Hermione: "We have food at home."
Elara: *pulls into drive-thru, orders one black coffee, leaves*
Harriet: "McDonald's! McDonald's!"
See, it totally works.

Chapter 75: like the storm

Chapter Text

lxxv. like the storm

 

Even hours after the game ended, Harriet could still feel the gentle struggles of the Snitch’s golden wings fluttering against her palm.

Slytherin’s second Quidditch match passed with little ceremony. In comparison to the bigger issues circulating inside the school, Quidditch seemed a small thing—at least for Harriet and her friends. Perhaps others still felt the tension and the rivalry, but for Harriet, the match barely sparked any of that nervous, twitchy energy she’d experienced before her first game, and she hadn’t been anxious until she’d dragged her uniform on and found herself standing with her giant teammates on the pitch.

Really, the match hadn’t been much at all, finishing before it began. Barely five minutes in, Harriet spotted the Snitch hovering by one of Ravenclaw’s Beaters and snatched it up. The phantom touch of metal wings pressing into her skin reaffirmed the surreality of it all. She kept glancing at the hand, and her thumb rubbed against the side of her index finger where the feathers had left their red indents. The marks had long since faded, but Harriet swore they were still there.

“Longbottom looked particularly upset,” Hermione reported after Harriet returned from changing out of her uniform in the locker room. “Almost as upset as Malfoy. You would think Draco would be pleased his House’s team is performing so admirably, but I believe seeing you play only reminds him that he hasn’t an ounce of your skill and won’t have a chance of playing next year.”

Harriet snorted at the memory, her breath escaping in a plume of steam. They stood now on the covered bridge halfway between one of the courtyards and the Sundial Garden, the open ravine yawning wide below the bridge’s wooden slats, the struts groaning when the breeze rose and rushed by. It made for a curious choice of meeting places, but Harriet enjoyed the bracing air and the general solitude, especially after experiencing the noise down in the common room. Sunlight reflected off the distant lake, and Harriet squinted against the light, leaning her folded arms on the crooked rail.

“Are you all right, Elara?” Hermione asked in the sudden lull. “It’s a bit chilly out here. All this cold air isn’t good for—.”

“I’m fine,” Elara replied with a put upon sigh, her colorless eyes glinting below her dark lashes. The green and silver scarf wrapped about her neck muffled her voice. “Leave off, I’m not made of glass.”

Relentless, Hermione kept fussing over Elara, just as she had done without end since their successful potions ingredient caper. Snape had been furious all week, glaring at anyone and everyone with blatant suspicion welling in the bottomless black oubliettes of his eyes. “Are you sure? We can go back inside where it’s warmer if you want—.”

“Hermione, if you don’t stop asking if I’m all right, I will pick you up and throw you off this bridge. Don’t test me on this.”

Harriet snickered as Hermione huffed and Elara scowled at them both. “Don’t be silly. You couldn’t pick me up. I’m far heavier than you.”

“I’m several inches taller than you, Granger.”

Sizing the pair up, Harriet said, “You’re both heavy,” and earned a sharp swat on the arm and a pinch to the cheek. “Ow, ow, ow—my face!”

“Don’t be cheeky, then.”

“You’re cheeky enough for both of us—ow! I’m just having a laugh!”

Elara let go, and Harriet did laugh as she rubbed her tender skin and the other witch made threatening shooing motions. They continued on their way, the bridge complaining all the while, until they stepped off onto solid ground. Crooked gray stones towered above them, eclipsing the view of the forest as they painted long, stretched shadows across the grass. The first time Harriet visited this place last year, Hermione had delighted in telling her the Stone Circle—or the Sundial Garden—was thought to be the oldest place at Hogwarts, predating the castle itself, making it an area of very old, mysterious magic.

Harriet just thought it was a nice place to linger, barring any irate Potions Masters who might come by, shrieking at them to go back to the castle. She shivered, and it had nothing to do with the cold. If he ever figures out it was us, he’ll chuck all three of us into that ravine there and make it look like an accident.

“You know, Harriet,” Hermione commented as she perched on a large bit of rock protruding from the earth. Harriet sat next to her—then saw there wasn’t anywhere else nearby to sit, so she slid to the damp grass and gave up the spot to Elara. “I thought you enjoyed the party they threw after the last Quidditch match. Why were you so eager to get away this time?”

Shrugging, Harriet replied, “I liked it well enough before Malfoy broke my sodding nose. And, I dunno, the—the upper-years get loud. I can’t say I like that very much.” What Harriet didn’t say was that the pissed sixth and seventh years started sounding as loud and belligerent as her Aunt and Uncle, and though she knew the comparison was ridiculous, she still felt…uncomfortable around them. “I like Quidditch for the flying more than anything. It’s amazing!”

Hermione and Elara wore matching incredulous expressions as they looked down at Harriet.

“It’s like—everything else disappears once I’m in the air, I’m weightless and floating and—peaceful.” Sighing, Harriet turned her back, getting mud on her socks, and leaned on Hermione’s legs, nudging Elara’s feet over. She could see the lake better from here, a thin trickle of smoke rising where Hagrid’s hut sat just out of sight. “It was nice to fly, considering how stressed Potions had me this week. I wish the match had been longer.”

Hermione’s hand settled on Harriet’s head and gave an idle attempt at flattening the rogue cowlicks. “You needn’t worry so much. He won’t know it was us, Harriet. I left the folio with most of the samples in the staff room, so either another professor took it, or he found it and has to assume one of the other teachers borrowed from him without asking. Either way, someone’s going to be caught red-handed, or he’ll have to interrogate professors—and I can’t see Professor Snape wanting to bother with that, honestly.”

“Hmm,” Harriet acknowledged, fidgeting. It was a clever bit of misdirection on Hermione’s part, and it hadn’t even been difficult, considering she went to the staff room all the time to ask professors questions about lectures or homework assignments. Still, in her own thoughts, Harriet admitted stealing from Snape didn’t sit well with her. If it had been some other bloke, she probably wouldn’t have minded as much and certainly wouldn’t have dwelt on the issue. Undeniably, Snape was a git of the highest order—but he was a git who looked out for the Slytherins and had healed Elara twice. Taking his things seemed a shite way to repay the wizard.

A sudden, soft thump startled Harriet and she looked around, frowning at a familiar raven hopping by her knee, its leg extended to hold out the tied off twine. “Harriet Potter,” it croaked.

Seeing the bird, Hermione brightened—and almost kicked Harriet in the spine. “Oh! Were you expecting another letter from Nicolas Flamel?”

“Mhm.” Harriet freed the raven of its burden, and it clicked its beak as if expecting a reward—then squawked in dismay when Harriet showed it empty hands. The raven vanished in a puff of smoke, leaving Harriet to readjust her glasses and inspect her letter. She recognized Mr. Flamel’s sprawling copperplate right away.

 

Chère Harriet,

 

I hope this letter finds you safe, well, and warm in Poudlard’s frozen mountains. It is with no little amount of smugness that I tell you I am writing in the gardens, thoroughly enjoying the sunshine and the lingering late autumn blooms. My Perenelle tells me I should not be so pleased with myself, but I have always thought it healthy to inspire a spot of envy in others now and again. What is life if we do not enjoy what we have, non?

I have heard of the difficulties happening at the school, and again hope you and yours are staying safe and out of mischief. In your last letter, you asked if I knew anything of this Chambre des Secrets, and I cannot say I know more than you must at this point, petit oiseau. I am not an Englishman and did not attend Poudlard, but I do remember first hearing about this Chambre in the forties—the nineteen-forties. A student died, and the shock of the loss resonated even in France. I could not say what it is or what happened; I will not hazard a guess, for though I may know many things, there is much that I do not and cannot understand. Poudlard is old—older than me! Quite an accomplishment—and the witches and wizards alive during its creation were different creatures. You ask if I believe it possible Salazar Slytherin left a monster or curse within this Chambre of his? Oui. Do I think he left such a thing to kill Demoyennes? Non. A wise witch once said, “Magique is but an extension of your arm, and you cannot hold that what you cannot reach.” If you would indulge my rambling, understand that I say whatever Salazar Slytherin’s motivations, be they bigoted or not, he was said to be a very smart and calculating man; leaving behind something that he could not control, that lay outside his reach, something that could potentially destroy Poudlard, his true legacy? Non. I do not believe it.

On a lighter topic, the questions you pose on Birch’s Law are complicated ones. You will find that the theories they teach in your lessons become more malleable once you experience magic outside of the classroom for yourself. This Prof. Slytherin is—. How do you say? A different story? Dangereux, Harriet. Moyenne science teaches how certain, inarguable facts of nature cannot be changed, but for us, magique is not so fixed. It bends to emotion. It is chaotic. Like the storm—beautiful, oui, but often unpredictable, and we could study it for a million years and still find ourselves surprised. Modern spellcraft arose from a need to create fixed incantations with measurable, constant results, but when I was a boy, magique was a primal thing, and my professeurs taught it was a skill more of the heart than of the mind. What is possible for one wizard may not be possible for another. But I am rambling again. I have some lovely texts on the subject I will have to dig out of the library and send to you.

Be safe, and careful. Your Defense Master is more than he appears.

 

Jusqu'à la prochaine fois, petit oiseau,

Nicolas Flamel.

 

Well, then. “Hermione? What’s petit oi—? Ois—?” Harriet grumbled and spelled the word out one letter at a time. “What’s that mean?”

The bushy-haired witch had a funny look on her face, and when Harriet twisted in place to see her, the corners of her lips jumped, repressing a grin. “It means ‘little bird.’”

Harriet scowled, pink tinging her cheeks, and Hermione started laughing. Elara buried her own smile in her scarf.

“Yeah, yeah, very funny.” The bespectacled witch scanned through the letter again, then handed it off to her friends, Hermione and Elara putting their heads together to read it at the same time.

“Interesting. What did you write to him about?”

“I dunno specifically. I asked him a bunch of questions about Un Guide Sur la Connaissance des Ténèbres, you know that book you translated for me? And then I asked about the spell Professor Slytherin used, how he managed to get it to bounce when I couldn’t. I also asked about the Chamber, but I didn’t know he didn’t attend Hogwarts—or Poudlard. What does that even mean?”

“It’s what the French call Hogwarts.”

“Where d’you think Mr. Flamel went to school, then?”

“Oh, it’s well-known he went to the Académie de Magie Beauxbâtons. He’s undoubtedly the reason the school is purported as the richest magic school, as he’s its biggest patron.”

Harriet hummed in answer.

“It appears he knows something about Professor Slytherin but isn’t willing or can’t say more,” Elara pointed out, easing the parchment from Hermione’s hand before folding it and returning the letter to Harriet.

“It’s probably because of Dumbledore.”

“Dumbledore?”

“Yeah. He knows I write Mr. Flamel, so the Headmaster probably asked him not to mention something about Slytherin.” Harriet traced a finger over the creases pressed into the parchment, wondering what the alchemist meant by calling Professor Slytherin dangerous. She knew he was dangerous, abstractly at least, and she’d suffered from more than a few bruises at the end of his wand. She didn’t think that was what Mr. Flamel wanted to warn her against, however.

Master Flamel.”

Harriet blinked. “What?”

Master Flamel, Harriet, not Mister. That’s his proper title.”

“Well, he hasn’t corrected me in any of the letters he’s sent,” the younger witch replied, frustrated. Arguing semantics over a wizard’s title wasn’t important to Harriet, and she couldn’t help the niggling lump of disappointment from turning over in her middle. She’d hoped he would shed more light on the Chamber and whatever it contained. Harriet and the others already knew the Chamber had been opened before; Professor Selwyn had said as much in History of Magic, but Harriet hadn’t known someone died last time. Who had it been? How did it happen? Did they die because of the Petrification?

Footsteps echoed in the covered bridge and brought an end to their musings. The three witches waited, watching, and grimaced in triplicate when Neville Longbottom came tromping out into the open with Seamus and two older students Harriet didn’t know. “He’s worse than Malfoy,” she muttered, despising whatever miserable fates conspired to continually cross their paths. She could very happily go the rest of her life never without ever seeing the Boy Who Lived again.

It only took a few seconds for the Gryffindors to spot them, and they froze as if they’d discovered actual snakes on the lawn and not just three young Slytherin witches sitting on a rock. “What are you doing here?”

“What does it look like, Longbottom?” Harriet retorted, biting her tongue to keep her tone even. “We’re sitting here.”

The taller, dark-haired Gryffindor said something to his friend, and they guffawed, an unfriendly tilt taking over their grins as they faced the younger witches again. “You know them, Neville?”

Longbottom hesitated, then gave his shoulder a lazy jerk as if fully shrugging would take too much effort. “Sure. They’re in my year.”

“So you don’t know them,” said the other older student. He had a heavy dusting of freckles over his cheeks and nose. “I mean you can’t really know Slytherins, can you? Right, Finnigan?”

“Yeah,” Seamus agreed. He and Neville looked at one another, then at the ground.

“Oi.” The tallest Gryffindor approached, one hand on his hip, the other twirling his wand between his long fingers. “What are you little snakes up to, huh?”

Harriet eyed the wand and, though her hand itched for her own, she didn’t remove it from its brace. Snape’s warnings and reprimands bounced inside her thick skull, telling her it’d be worse if she reacted, because if that Gryffindor prat tried to hex her and she used a shield, it’d probably smack bloody Longbottom square in the face. It’d look like Harriet had attacked him, and she’d land herself in detention for a month—or worse.

“I think they’re collaborating, aren’t they, Rivers?” said the second Gryffindor, elbowing Longbottom as if looking for approval. “Are you out here waiting for your Heir to show himself?”

“What hogwash,” Hermione snapped. Harriet bit her lip and Elara kept her face perfectly blank, though Harriet noticed how tightly she held her hands. “Just because we’re Slytherins doesn’t mean we have anything to do with this Heir nonsense. I’m Muggle-born.”

“But you’re not lying up in Pomfrey’s ward like poor Creevey, snake,” the one named Rivers snapped. “Isn’t that convenient—and here you are, having a nice chin wag with Slytherin’s cheating little Seeker. What’d you do to the Snitch, Potter? D'you have to Jinx it because you can’t see with those nasty specs of yours? ”

The freckled Gryffindor took out his wand, giving it an arrogant twirl. “What’ve you got there? Relashio!” Purple light flickered over her, and suddenly the parchment in Harriet’s hand slipped through her numb fingers, falling to the grass. She tried to catch it, but another flick of the senior’s wand sent the letter flying right into the boy’s large fist. Harriet jumped after it.

“That’s mine!”

The freckled boy held the letter high, away from Harriet’s grasping hands, and she barely suppressed the urge to kick him in the shin. “Is it? Is it from your mummy, little girl? Huh?”

Heat prickled in her chest, in her neck, and though Harriet knew her face had gone quite pink, she didn’t back down. She wanted to hex him. She wanted—. “Give me my letter, or I’ll tell Professor Slytherin.”

“You wouldn’t, Potter,” Longbottom said, crossing his arms, though he shot an uneasy look at his older friends and didn’t sound at all sure of himself.

“I would—I will,” she asserted, making another jump for the letter, only for the freckled Gryffindor to push her back and hold it higher. “Stop it!”

Hermione got to her feet with Elara. “Give it here, Wattle!” she said, and Harriet wasn’t at all surprised she knew the prat’s surname. “Harriet’s letter is no one’s business but her own!”

Harriet grabbed Wattle’s sleeve, trying to yank his arm down, and he pushed her again, hard enough for Harriet to stumble.

“What’s going on ‘ere?”

The commotion hid the approach of thumping feet shuffling nearer from the forest, and the students looked up to see Hagrid—dressed in his hairy coat, balancing a crossbow on his shoulder with a dead rooster in his hand—standing off by one of the sundial’s crooked stones. The disapproving look on his lined face showed that he very clearly knew exactly what was going on, but that didn’t stop the Gryffindors from lying through their teeth.

“Oh, hey, Hagrid,” said Rivers, stashing his wand away in his pocket. “These Slytherins were acting suspicious, and given what’s been happening, we were just having a chat is all.”

“That’s a load of hippogriff dung and you know it, Rivers. Go on, give Harry her letter there and get yerselves back to the castle. Go on!”

Frowning, Wattle let the letter go, and Harriet managed to grab it before it could land in the mud. The Gryffindors shuffled off, Wattle and Rivers disappointed and put out, Longbottom and Finnigan clearly relieved. Harriet didn’t care if they were relieved; they stood by and did nothing, and would’ve continued to stand by and do nothing while the older boys pushed Harriet around and took her things. Harriet really hated them in that moment—them and Professor Snape, because she wanted nothing more than to curse them blue as they walked away, consequences be damned.

“All right there, Harry?” asked Hagrid.

“Yes,” she replied, because she wasn’t hurt, even if she was upset and felt tears burning the corners of her eyes. Harriet decided those tears were just as stupid as Wattle and Rivers and refused to let them fall, scrunching her nose until the sting abated. “I’m okay. Thanks, Hagrid.”

The half-giant nodded, shifting his crossbow, the bloody rooster swaying in his grip. “They don’t mean nothin’ by it, course. They’re good lads usually—but fear makes people do dumb things.”

Perhaps sensing Harriet’s urge to snap at the man, Hermione piped up with, “What happened to your rooster, Hagrid?” which spared Harriet from saying anything she might regret.

“Oh, er—nothin’, nothin’. At least, nothin’ for you lot to concern yerselves with.” Hagrid quickly tucked the rooster in one of his large pockets and wiped the bloody feathers from his fingers. “C’mon, you three, best be gettin’ back inside now. It’s a mite cold to be out here without yer coats.”

Harriet didn’t believe Hagrid really cared about them getting chilled, but she nonetheless allowed herself to be herded back across the covered bridge with her friends, Mr. Flamel’s letter still clasped in her small hands, her fingers worrying the edges until the crisp parchment felt soft and old.

She would never understand why people hated Slytherins. Some said it was because of the Dark Lord, because he went to Hogwarts and he was in the House of Serpents, but what did his Sorting have to do with anything? Harriet was a Slytherin, and she’d lost almost everything because of Voldemort! She hated him, hated that he’d taken her parents, hated that he’d tempted her in front of the Mirror of Erised, and hated that every bad thing that happened at Hogwarts got turned around on Slytherin House because the Dark Lord once slept in their bloody dorms.

The letter crinkled against her palms as her fingers squeezed together.

Something Mr. Flamel wrote stuck in her mind like a thorn she couldn’t quite pluck. Everyone claimed Salazar Slytherin left something in his Chamber capable of killing Muggle-borns, but Mr. Flamel didn’t think so; he didn’t believe the founder would endanger the school and his own legacy by potentially allowing a deadly curse or beast to be recklessly unleashed. Mr. Flamel was one of the smartest people Harriet had ever met, so she didn’t dismiss what he’d said—but if Salazar Slytherin hadn’t bequeathed his Heir a monster capable of Petrifying Muggle-borns, what did he leave behind? What was the point of his Chamber if not to eradicate the “unworthy”?

The castle waited ahead of them. Harriet stared toward the lights visible through the bridge’s crooked arches and wondered at the mystery—and danger—of it all.


A/N: I dislike the term “Non-Magique,” which is the canon French equivalent of “Muggle.” So I use the term “Moyenne” instead, from the French word for “average,” and “Demoyenne” is the equivalent for “Muggle-born.” You can always assume it’s the older version of “Non-Magique,” if you want.

Chapter 76: cleansing

Chapter Text

lxxvi. cleansing

Three days before term ended, first-year Aidan Shafiq came running over to Harriet and Elara in the common room and shoved a note with dreaded, spidery writing into Harriet's open hand.

You and Black are to report to my office directly after dinner.

- Prof. S. Snape

That was not good news at all. "Shite," Harriet whispered, color leaching from her face.

"What is it?"

She handed the parchment to Elara, who didn't pale as Harriet did, but certainly looked disconcerted by the summons.

"D'you think he knows?" Harriet whispered, eyes darting about the crowded common room. No one paid them any mind, and Harriet didn't think the older students chatting around the main hearth truly realized she and Elara were there. Discussions about the upcoming break were loud and numerous.

"I think if he knew," Elara began carefully, gathering their school books together. "He would have dragged us out of here by our ears in a high temper, don't you agree?"

"…probably." Harriet cleaned her quill and capped the inkwell. "Dinner's soon, isn't it?"

"Yes. Come on, let's find Hermione…."

After sorting their things away into their school bags, the two witches went in search of their friend, but they didn't manage to find her until they reached the Great Hall, and by that point, Hermione was deep in conversation with Malfoy. Given the look on her face, Harriet didn't think it was a nice conversation. She continued to argue with the prat throughout dinner, until it was time for Harriet and Elara to drag their unwilling feet back to the dungeons, walking the too familiar path to Snape's office.

The Potions Master hadn't been at dinner, and seeing the light peeking over the threshold, Harriet knew he had to be inside. Glum, she rapped her knuckles against the wood, and a moment later a spell opened the way, revealing Snape seated behind his desk, his attention on his marking. Harriet and Elara shuffled inside—and the door slammed shut. Harriet tried very hard not to look at the portrait hiding the storage cupboard.

"Sit," Snape said, and the two witches did as bid, taking the two straight-backed chairs by the desk. Harriet sniffed and picked up the lingering smell of food, so she guessed Snape had eaten his meal down here with his work. He continued writing, scribbling what was probably a vicious reprimand on some poor sod's essay, then he set the quill aside, favoring Harriet and Elara with a blank, hard look.

"I received the list of Slytherin students intending to stay during the Yule holiday. Neither of you wrote your names down."

Harriet glanced at Elara, puzzled, and said, "…Yes? Sir?"

"Had either of you thought to ask, I could have informed you that you will not be leaving the school for the holiday. You will need to add your names to the list."

Elara balked. "You can't tell me where to go. Sir." She added the last bit when Snape's glower landed on her, as the wizard didn't seem in a mood to be trifled with. The cold settled in without reservation in the dungeons, and Snape's fire smoldered low. Harriet thought she might start shivering soon. "I'm—."

"If the next word out of your mouth is emancipated, Black, I'll ensure you're on the train home and don't get a ticket back." Snape braced his hands on the desk's edge and stood, leaning forward, his eyes dark and grim as Harriet had ever seen them. "I cannot leave the castle during the break, and as the headmaster has seen fit to leave me in charge of your well-being while you're interred at Grimmauld Place, you will be spending Yule at Hogwarts, Potter. End of story."

There wasn't much to say after that. Neither Harriet nor Elara could change the wizard's mind, given it wasn't Snape's mind that needed to be changed, rather Dumbledore's, who Harriet didn't want to bother with something so trivial. Elara wore a peeved expression as they made their way to the dormitories once again, spooking two Hufflepuff first-years who'd wandered down the Slytherin corridor.

"I think that's the Hufflepuff I blasted at the Dueling Club," Harriet muttered, chagrined. "Are you gonna stay at Hogwarts for Yule, then? Or are you going home?"

"Yes," Elara said at last, a muscle in her jaw ticking. "I'm staying, that is. I don't much want to go home, or see Kreacher—but I did have a few things I wanted to research and look into."

"You don't have to stay just for me, y'know," Harriet told her, looking down at her shoes. "Last Christm—Yule wasn't so bad on my own." Really, it'd been awful, as Harriet had been stuck in detention almost every day and Elara and Hermione both knew that, but she didn't remind her.

"No, I'm staying. Snape just aggravates me."

"He aggravates everyone, that's his natural state of being."

They went to the dorms, then doubled back when they failed to find Hermione, though Harriet stopped to smuggle Livi out under her shirt. Elara tutted, but said nothing else. They went off in search of the library and took a wrong turn somewhere on the second level, where the halls sometimes liked to intermingle or pretend to be somewhere they're not, and they wandered past a familiar, faceless bust asking funny questions. "Here," Harriet said when she spotted a portrait containing a gaggle of geese. "I know the way from here."

They went around the long way, and they did find Hermione and the library eventually, the former at their favored table near the back, grumbling darkly into a thick book about Charms. A thin monograph tried creeping away from her, but Hermione smacked her palm down flat on the little booklet, and it whined.

"What were you arguing with Malfoy about?" Harriet asked.

"Never you mind," Hermione quipped—and realizing she'd snapped at the younger witch—she lowered the dusty book and grimaced. "I'm sorry, Harriet, I didn't mean that. He's—absolutely impossible, if you must know. I told him I'm going to be spending the hols with my parents, and he keeps telling me how terribly insulting it is to Lucius and Narcissa that I refuse their invitation to their Yule celebrations."

Elara rolled her eyes as she sunk into a chair. "Heaven forbid Lucius and Narcissa be insulted."

Hermione scowled, shutting the book hard enough for the binding to give a warning yelp. "You don't understand," she insisted. "My place at Hogwarts isn't as secure as yours or Harriet's! If they so chose, Mr. and Mrs. Malfoy could have me removed from school—or transfer me to a different family, who might not let me go to Hogwarts at all, or I might be expelled from the Wizarding community altogether—."

"All right," Elara said, placing a placating hand on Hermione's arm. "All right, I get it. That's not going to happen."

Hermione gave her a dubious look, and Harriet pretended she couldn't see the faint gleam of tears highlighted by the Charmed candles.

"Even the Malfoy family understands the importance of family, Hermione. They won't begrudge you your time with them."

A tense moment passed between the trio as Hermione sniffled and quickly dabbed her nose with a handkerchief found in her robe pocket. "I'm being silly, I know. I—I love my parents very much, you see, but…but sometimes I—." The handkerchief turned into a wadded up mess, balled between Hermione's nervous, fidgeting hands. "Last Christmas was…was difficult. They're very sensible people, my parents, and magic can so often be…."

"Insensible?" Harriet supplied.

"Exactly." Sighing, Hermione shoved the handkerchief away into her pocket once more. "They don't understand it, and it's not their fault—but it's all very frustrating. Oh, never mind. Don't listen to me. Tell me; where did you two head off to after dinner?"

Scowling, Elara crossed her arms and looked out the window, leaving Harriet to explain their meeting with the Potions Master. Hermione was sympathetic—and then got a curious, speculative glint in her eyes, and started tapping her chin with her index finger. Harriet knew that look, and she felt a mite nervous to ask what the older witch was thinking about.

"The potion," Hermione said, still tapping at her chin, a loose curl bobbing by her hand. In the distance, Harriet could hear Madam Pince moving about, shelving books and shooing students off to bed, and she knew they needed to get back to the dorms soon or risk Professor Slytherin's wrath. "This might be a blessing, really. The potion's going to mature near Chris—Yule. It would hold fine until we returned in the New Year, but its efficacy would go down, and there'd be a much higher risk of something happening to the cauldron or the potion being contaminated without one of us coming by to properly check." Hermione stared at Harriet as she spoke. "But if you lot are staying, you can finish it, Harriet."

"Me?" she sputtered. "I couldn't do that!"

"You're perfectly capable."

"I'd make a mess of it!"

"No, you wouldn't," Hermione asserted. "You're much better at Potions than you let yourself believe, Harriet. Besides, the most difficult aspects of the brewing process are over. You need only wait for it to mature, fold in the bicorn horn with the proper number of stirs, and then simmer."

Groaning, Harriet looked to Elara for assistance—but the other girl shook her head. "I'm not touching it."

"And if I bollocks it up?" She hadn't touched a potion nearly as complicated as Polyjuice before. Sometimes she diced ingredients for Hermione or checked the cauldron's temperature, but she never worked with the concoction itself. The bespectacled witch rubbed nervously at Livi's scales through her shirt. "What then?"

"Really, Harriet, the language—if you make a mistake, then so be it. I'm not infallible either, you know. This will be the perfect opportunity; without a lot of students about, the staff will be easier to watch and less on guard."

Elara nodded, obviously seeing the sense in Hermione's idea—but Harriet didn't nod, because it sounded terribly nerve-wracking to the poor girl, who had very little faith in her potion-brewing abilities, or her espionage skills. She wrinkled her nose, face scrunched, and as Hermione and Elara started picking up texts to return them to their proper place, Harriet left the pair there and headed back to the dormitory on her own. Her friends gave her far too much credibility. She just knew she was going to ruin it. Harriet wasn't nearly as talented as Hermione, and Polyjuice was devilishly tricky.

She had traversed only a single corridor when Livi stirred, dry scales rasping against her skin. Harriet paused to soothe the serpent—when a heinous, all too familiar hissing reached her ears.

"Time to kill…kill…mussst find them…kill them…."

A loud chime burst from Livius, and Harriet gasped, startled by the noise, throwing herself against the wall.

"Kill…kill…KILL…."

Oh, Merlin, Harriet thought, breathing hard. Merlin, it's here with me, it has to be here somewhere—. Her eyes darted all about, searching for something, anything, and yet nothing in the dark hall had changed at all. The torches continued to flicker, and the sole portrait on the wall opposite her kept on with his nap. Harriet had to find a professor—or Lockhart, or someone! But where to go? Where would they be? What was she to do?

Livi chimed again and hissed with menace, having slithered out of Harriet's collar to perch half his body on her shoulder. "I will bitesss it," the Horned Serpent declared. "It will not come near Misstresss, I will eatsss it—."

"Kill…kill the filthy onesss…."

Like a sudden ice bath, Harriet realized there was one Muggle-born witch near there, just one corridor over—one witch that the invisible, skulking monster might mean to kill that evening. Harriet hadn't the faintest idea where the ruddy thing was or where she could find a professor, but she knew exactly where Hermione and Elara were; in the library, defenseless, unable to hear that murderous crooning closing in.

She took off running, not caring that the hissing faded, that Livius coiled too tightly about her throat, or that she must look like a madman running through the hall. Her heart raced. She had her wand in her hand, and she didn't remember taking it out. Harriet didn't care about any of that; all she cared about was finding her friends and getting the hell away from there.

Harriet rounded the corner—and tripped. Something heavy and solid struck her shins, and the bespectacled witch toppled, barely managing to catch herself with her hands before she collided with the floor. Livi writhed but Harriet's reflexes spared him from impact, even if she did bloody her knees from the effort. Panting, Harriet rolled to see what she'd hit—and froze.

A ghost hovered in the corridor. Pearlescent and as gray as a winter morning, he drifted several inches from the stones below, and Set pooled around him in a vaporous black veil, a haunting halo of shadow and inky darkness in the encroaching hours of night. Harriet knew the ghost to be Nearly Headless Nick, though she hadn't any familiarity with him; she didn't know any of the undead residents of the castle, and this was the closest she'd ever been to one. Nick hung motionless in the air, staring straight ahead.

There was something behind him, something large, crumpled by the wall. Something shaped like a body….

Hands landed on Harriet's shoulders. Her heart leapt into her throat and she shrieked, terrified—only to look up into the black eyes of Professor Snape as he knelt by her, out of breath, his hair wind-blown as if he'd ran the width of the castle.

"Are you injured?" he demanded. "Are you hurt, Miss Potter?"

"Wh-what?!"

"Are you hurt, you imbecile?!"

Harriet gave her head a jerk to the side, certain she wouldn't be able to find her voice. Together, they turned to the gruesome sight before them, seeing the student sprawled upon the floor, the paralyzed Gryffindor ghost, and the glistening letters scrawled by an errant, irreverent hand upon the stone wall.

SLYTHERIN'S HEIR WILL CLEANSE THE DIRTY-BLOODED.

Harriet gulped.


A/N: Livius - "I'll eat it!"

*Basilisk appears, 50 feet long, big as a bus.*

Livius, narrowing eyes - "I'm still gonna eat it."

Chapter 77: burning day

Chapter Text

lxxvii. burning day

 

The boy was named Justin Finch-Fletchley, and when Snape rolled him to his back, exposing his face, Harriet knew he was Petrified before the wizard could say a word.

She couldn’t look away from him, even as she shook, still sitting on the cold floor with a sluggish trickle of blood dripping from her knee into her rumpled sock. Harriet could have been the one attacked—Harriet or Hermione or Elara, or any of the few students meandering about the library, since that was where Justin must have come from. She couldn’t understand how it had happened, and so quickly. It could have been me.

When McGonagall came upon them, she spotted Justin and gave a muffled shout—and then shouted again when she spied Harriet and the agitated serpent wriggling about her neck. “Miss Potter—!”

“Minerva, take Potter to the Headmaster,” Snape said, using his wand to levitate Justin into the air. The Potions Master looked ghastly in the dim light, pale with shock, right hand twitching. There was sweat on his brow.

“What?! Severus, there is a snake—!”

“Now is not the time or the place, woman! Quickly, before Slytherin comes strutting by, get her away from here!”

McGonagall didn’t appreciate being ordered about, but she urged Harriet to her feet, staying as far from the hissing snake as was possible in the hall’s confines. Snape’s mention of Slytherin spurred Harriet onward, though she did so in a daze, the image of Nearly Headless Nick and Finch-Fletchley burned in her mind. What in the world could Petrify someone who was already dead? And the writing on the wall—! Was that another threat against Professor Slytherin?

Livius continued to spit and threaten the invisible voice, and Harriet would’ve been very flattered at his chivalry if the snake didn’t threaten to bite and eat anyone and everything for every minor inconvenience he incurred. “Shut up, Livi,” Harriet whispered as she tried to wrestle him back into her shirt, but the others had been right when they said he was getting too large, and she had barely grown at all. Professor McGonagall continued to goggle at her, stunned into silence.

“He’s my familiar, Professor,” Harriet explained.

“Your familiar?”

“Yeah—I mean, yes, ma’am.” She succeeded in calming Livi enough for him to go invisible once more, earning a startled huff from the Transfiguration professor. “The Headmaster and Professor Snape know about him.”

“Oh, I’m sure they do, Miss Potter,” Professor McGonagall said, her brogue thick and agitated, and she uttered something else in an undertone, but Harriet didn’t quite hear it.

They hurried on, Harriet struggling to keep pace with her shorter legs and her knee stinging terribly by the time they reached the seventh floor and the entrance to Dumbledore’s office. McGonagall gave the password— “Gobbling gumdrops,” —and then shooed Harriet up the spiraling steps without her. “Stay in the office, Harriet, until Professor Dumbledore finds you,” the witch instructed, disappearing before Harriet could ask anything else. She realized the professor had called her by name, and though the thought warmed Harriet and told her Professor McGonagall didn’t believe she’d attacked Justin, little could displace the sudden chill sitting in her middle.

The office hadn’t changed a bit since she’d seen it at Hallowe’en, the door to the closet where Quirrell met his end still sealed tight, the mullioned windows giving a glimpse of the sunset’s final vestiges smeared on the horizon like a bloody fingerprint. Most of the headmasters and headmistresses snoozed in their frames, but a few watched curiously as the young witch came edging in the room, uncertain of herself.

“Professor Dumbledore?” Harriet said aloud—but no, Professor McGonagall mentioned the Headmaster would come to find her, probably after checking on Finch-Fletchley and Nick. Sighing, Harriet went to one of the comfortable winged chairs by the hearth and sank into it, glancing at the smoldering bits of ash and wood settling in the grate.

She worried about Hermione and Elara; just because the monster had already attacked this evening didn’t mean it wouldn’t attack again—and Elara and Hermione must have left the library by now. Were they back in the common room, safe with the others? Or were they still in the corridors? Harriet swallowed down her trepidation and prodded her knee, keeping her eyes fixed on the growing bruise and clotting scrape.

A clock chimed the hour.

There were a great many things in the Headmaster’s office Harriet hadn’t had the time or the wits to inspect before. Restless and in need of a distraction, she hopped to her feet and took the chance to investigate now, pacing along the wall with its wood shelves and shorter tables laden with strange devices. Harriet thought Professor Dumbledore might have more books than the library crammed into the shelves, several protected behind locked cabinet doors, and though she wondered what kind of texts a wizard like Dumbledore might collect and seal away, she didn’t touch the doors.

A set of stairs led to an upper platform, an area behind the professor’s large desk that held more portraits upon the curved wall, more shelves, and several shut doors. She considered going up those steps but didn’t, because Harriet decided those doors must lead to Professor Dumbledore’s quarters and it felt terribly rude for her to go poking her nose about where it didn’t belong.

Harriet’s eyes moved over the tables with their silver instruments and came to rest upon a familiar pile of glass.

She shivered when she stopped before the Mirror of Erised’s fragments. Professor Dumbledore had the largest pieces floating in the air, like a bizarre, string-less Muggle mobile, shifting ever so slightly when Harriet approached and her breath caught the edges. Looking into the shards, Harriet didn’t know what she expected to see—maybe nothing at all, given Quirrell had shattered the dodgy thing when he tried to kill her—but individual images moved within the fragments. She peered closer.

It took Harriet a moment to realize the mirror still worked—at least, after a fashion. Instead of displaying her single greatest desire, however, each chunk and sliver showed smaller wants and wishes, big, small, important, and petty alike. There Harriet saw herself having a lie-in, and there she saw her mum’s face, and here laid her favorite sweater with the top button fixed, and that bit over there showed all the Petrified victims back on their feet. Harriet didn’t know what to look at first, and the effect was disorientating.

She still hated that mirror.

Harriet wandered back to her seat, and by the time Dumbledore arrived, the young witch was crouched near the hearth, Livius coiled on the warmed bricks and irked with her for not letting him bite the owner of the voice they’d heard in the corridor.

“Good evening,” Professor Dumbledore said, smiling at her before his gaze lowered to the indignant snake. “Oh, dear. I thought we had an agreement about your familiar staying in the dorms, Harriet?”

Frick. Standing, Harriet fussed with her sleeves and tried to meet his gaze, but she couldn’t bring herself to look past the Headmaster’s crooked nose. “I’m—sorry, Headmaster. I’m always really careful, and it’s not all the time! But I—I just…feel safer when I have Livi.”

Professor Dumbledore sighed, and then simply nodded, looking tired in the dying fire’s dull red glow. “I understand. We will have to discuss this further at another time, but for now….”

He gestured her over to the desk and they left Livi behind, Harriet taking one of the smaller seats meant for guests and students, and Dumbledore sat next to her. The Headmaster’s heavy gaze once more fixed upon Harriet, and she fidgeted in her seat. Did the Headmaster think she had something to do with Finch-Fletchley? Did anyone else know she’d been there? How did the monster move about so quickly?

“Is Justin gonna be all right?”

“Yes, thankfully. Poor boy will be back on his feet as soon as the Restorative Draught can be brewed.”

“What about Nick? He got Petrified, too.”

Professor Dumbledore stroked his beard in thought. “Yes, Sir Nicholas should be all right as well. Professor Snape is convinced that by reducing a sample of the Draught to a gaseous state, he’ll be able to revive Gryffindor’s House ghost.”

The sudden image of Snape holding a spray bottle like the one Aunt Petunia used on her houseplants popped into Harriet’s head and she smothered the inappropriate urge to snort.

Something about the Headmaster’s demeanor bothered Harriet. All things considered, the elderly wizard seemed quite composed, a calmness about him she appreciated, but didn’t understand. Why wasn’t he asking about what happened, about what she saw in the corridor? Why wasn’t he—?

Frowning, Harriet studied Professor Dumbledore, and he studied her too, his expression more bemused than anything, his brow raised in question. “Headmaster….” She started, pausing to gather her thoughts. “You…you know what it is, don’t you, sir? The monster from the Chamber.”

“Do you know what it is, Harriet?”

“It’s a snake,” she said without hesitation, the line between her brows deepening. “I don’t know what kind and we can’t figure it out—but I can hear it.”

A grave expression overcame Dumbledore, and he moved to touch the back of Harriet’s hand. She hadn’t realized she’d started gripping the armrests so tightly. “You mustn’t go looking for it, Harriet. It is incredibly dangerous.”

“You know what it is,” she repeated. Irritation bubbled in her chest and prickled hot through her shoulder and neck. Looking in the wizard’s blue eyes made her miffed all of a sudden. “I don’t understand, Professor. If you know, then why—? People have gotten hurt, and everyone’s so frightened. Why—why isn’t the school closed? Why hasn’t anyone done anything? Why haven’t you done anything?!” Harriet took a breath and shook her head, realizing that she’d raised her voice considerably, and the portraits on the wall murmured with reproach. “I’m sorry, I don’t—I didn’t mean to yell, sir.”

“You’re well within your rights to be frustrated with me, Harriet, it’s quite all right.” He sighed and peered at the witch over his half-moon spectacles as if looking for something. After a moment, he gave his head a slight shake and looked away. “I fear that sometimes the easiest solutions are not all they appear.”

“What d’you mean?”

“I merely wish to explain that, were it my decision, I would close the school until the danger is corrected, but it isn’t my decision. A Headmaster may cancel classes if needs must, but I cannot shut Hogwarts without consent from the Board of Governors.”

“But then why doesn’t the Board of Governors close the school? Not that I want the school to close, it’s just—not safe.” Hermione’s not safe.

“Ah, Harriet. You cut to the heart of the matter, for though your question seems a simple one, it has a very complicated answer.” Dumbledore said nothing else, and instead contemplated his desk and his phoenix perched upon his gilded stand. Harriet thought the bird might be molting or—ill, perhaps—though she didn’t give it much thought now. She wanted Professor Dumbledore to explain, but Harriet sensed she’d stumbled upon a topic beyond her, like a weed with a root that went down, down, down into the earth, and no matter how hard she pulled, she’d never get to the end of it, and would only get a handful of slivers for her effort.

Hermione was right, though, she thought. The staff knows a lot more than they’re telling us. Why does the Board want Hogwarts open? Is someone trying to frame Professor Slytherin? Harriet flinched when Livi nudged her hand, then let her fingers slip over his horns and the smooth, dry scales of his snout, coming to linger on the gem set in his skull.

“I know you would like to know more, Harriet, but I fear it wouldn’t be safe to tell you. I would not burden you with knowledge beyond your control.”

Harriet just nodded.

“Why did you not come to me when you heard the voice? Or to Professor Snape, perhaps?”

“Well, I—. At first, I thought I’d imagined it, and then—then I was nervous, I guess. It took me a while to figure out it was a snake, and then I didn’t know what kind of snake it was.”

“I hope you feel able to tell us information like this in the future, my dear girl. Either myself or Professor Snape—or Professor McGonagall, who had a great many wonderful things to say about our reptilian friend here when we crossed paths in the hall.”

Harriet winced. “You got me in trouble,” she muttered to Livi, whose answering look plainly said he disagreed. The serpent continued to coil himself tightly in her lap, settling in like an irreverent cat who cared little for the fact that Harriet would have to get up eventually.

Just then, Fawkes gave a mournful cry, and when the bespectacled witch lifted her chin to look at him, the bird burst into flames.

Harriet jumped to her feet and Livi hit the floor with a thump. “Professor Dumbledore!”

The Headmaster sat in his chair still, smiling, and Harriet was sure he’d gone round the bend when he chuckled. “Well, it’s about time. He’s been looking dreadful for days now and I’ve been hoping he’d get on with it.”

“Wh—?”

“Fawkes is a phoenix, Harriet. It’s his Burning Day.”

“Yes, I know he’s a—! Oh,” she finished with a soft breath, the flames settling as swiftly as they’d ignited, Livi hissing furious words at Harriet’s feet. Harriet had read that phoenixes were reborn from their own ashes, but she hadn’t expected to see such a thing herself, or for it to be so—explosive. Or sudden. Or panic-inducing.

I thought I set him on fire accidentally like Uncle Vernon’s trousers. Holy Merlin.

Professor Dumbledore stood and shuffled around the desk, going to the golden stand now sporting nothing but a few wilted feathers and a pile of soot. “Witches and wizards in the east say it’s good luck to see a Burning Day,” he commented as he started to gently brush his fingertips through the ash. “They say it’s a miracle, and maybe they’re right. It certainly is very strange and wondrous magic.”

A bald baby chick emerged, chirping softly, wiggling its newborn wings as Professor Dumbledore smiled down at his familiar. As Harriet watched, she couldn’t help but think the Headmaster’s words described all kinds of magic, be it the kind that revived phoenixes from their fiery grave, or the kind that could Petrify the dead. It was all strange, wondrous—

And often terrifying.

 


A/N: It always annoyed me that the Board of Governors was only brought up in canon, what? Once? Twice? I personally find it interesting to have more checks and balances to the Headmaster’s power.

Harriet: “Professor, your bird is on fire.”

Dumbledore: “Good.”

Chapter 78: watchful eyes

Chapter Text

lxxviii. watchful eyes

 

“Hermione, you’re going to miss your train.”

“It’s fine,” the witch in question replied, waving an idle hand without taking her eyes off the cauldron. “I’ve plenty of time yet.”

“If by plenty of time you mean fifteen minutes, then yeah.”

Hermione gave the potion another stir, and Harriet huffed. As they stood clustered in the damp stall, the three Slytherin witches could hear the occasional voice passing in the corridor, followed by jogging footsteps or squealing familiars or thumping pieces of luggage. Harriet knew if Hermione managed to miss her train home, she and Elara would somehow catch the blame, and she wasn’t keen on spending the whole of the holiday chopping ingredients for Snape.

Elara would probably end up stabbing him with a paring knife.

“—Harriet.”

“Hmm?”

She turned her gaze to Hermione again and almost went cross-eyed looking at the small vial she held up to her nose. “Be careful,” Hermione said as Harriet took the vial, scrutinizing the insides. “That’s the only hair I managed to get off of Professor Sinistra.”

“This plan is barmy, I hope you know.”

“It’s not. It’s perfectly logical! Professor Sinistra doesn’t often leave the Astronomy Tower, thus lowering the prospective chances of you being caught—but she does leave sometimes, which means your—or her—presence won’t be suspicious. Elara will go to her office and keep the professor busy with questions just to ensure she doesn’t wander down to the staff room.”

“And how am I supposed to get information, Hermione? ‘Jolly good, let me freshen your cuppa, Slytherin—oh, by the way, what’s in your great-great-great grandda’s secret chamber there?’”

“Don’t be glib, Harriet. You’ll do no such thing.” Hermione gave the cauldron a final stir, then removed the ladle, returning it to the open kit. “No, professors gossip just as much as any student. I can’t even begin to tell you the things I’ve heard them half-say before they realize I’m in the room with another teacher—but that’s not the point. No, you’re just there to learn what they know, not interrogate them. That’d be an intolerable risk and—foolish.”

“But what if I don’t find anything out? What if I actually do manage to make the potion, but none of the professors are around or they just don’t mention the Chamber? What then?”

“That’s the only risk we should be taking, really.” Hermione took a deep breath, then exhaled. “The potion is a means to an end, Harriet—and if we can’t find out what we want to know safely, then there’s no point to it, is there? If you don’t learn anything new, so be it. We’ll find another way—find a spell, or another potion, or something. We’re clever enough and cunning enough not to get caught by being silly.”

“If you say so,” Harriet mumbled, blinking owlishly as she looked down into the Polyjuice Potion, still holding the vial with Professor Sinistra’s hair. It was a convoluted but bizarrely simple plan in her opinion, and if Harriet followed Hermione’s directions, she’d manage all right. She knew from experience adults became much more chatty when they didn’t know children were around, and while Harriet believed Slytherin would be more circumspect, the professor did have an arrogant streak in him that could work in their favor.

Harriet groaned and rubbed at her eyes, almost knocking off her glasses.

“Don’t touch your face, you’re in a loo, Harriet.”

“I didn’t put my hands in the toilet or something, Elara, for Merlin’s sake.”

“Still. It’s unsanitary.”

Harriet dropped her arms back to her side and resisted the urge to scowl. Hermione whipped out a large scroll from her bag and shoved it toward the shorter witch, who took it—and nearly dropped both it and the vial in the cauldron, surprised by the weight. “Those are all my notes on the Polyjuice. I copied and annotated all the directions from the book, noting all the proper colors and smells, what the potion should look like before adding the hair, etcetera.”

Gawking, Harriet realized it must have taken Hermione ages to put all this together, and she felt another prickle of worry and nerves go through her. Hermione was the one who’d put in all the work, and now she was handing off the nearly finished potion to Harriet, confident she wouldn’t make a total mess of things. The younger Slytherin swallowed.

“I’ll do my best. I promise.”

“I know you will.” Hermione exhaled, then fidgeted with her bag. If Harriet didn’t know better, she’d say the other girl was stalling and purposefully cutting her chances of making the train short. Why? Didn’t she want to see her mum and dad? “Well, we’d best hurry down to the entrance hall.”

Harriet secreted the notes and vial away into her robes’ pocket, moving Kevin up into her collar out of the way. “Wait, hang on, I’ve got this—.”

She yanked the Invisibility Cloak out, earning a bemused look from both of her friends as she hurried to explain. “Well, there’s a lot of people about, isn’t there? And they’ll be more suspicious after what happened to Finch-Fletchley, so I thought it might look odd if three girls came out of a loo no one ever goes into and—.”

“It’s a great idea,” Hermione rushed to assure her. “Does it cover all three of us?”

The Cloak did, in fact, cover all three witches, but not without a fair share of shuffling, toe-treading, and misplaced elbows. Elara had to hunch and Harriet wound up caught between the two with a mouthful of Hermione’s frizzy hair, and yet the trio managed to quietly slip from Myrtle’s loo into the corridor with no one the wiser. Good thing, too, because not a moment later, Professor Flitwick came bustling past, a pocketwatch balanced in his hand as he muttered under his breath.

“Let’s go this way—.”

They hurried along the hall, then took off the Cloak once out of sight of Flitwick and the loo. Harriet stuffed the Cloak back into her robes, and together they walked through the History of Magic corridor, avoiding the suit of armor prone to kicking students who crowded too close to it. A low, droning voice echoed from one of the abandoned classrooms, but Harriet paid it no mind; she knew from experience it was only a ghost named Cuthbert Binns, who had supposedly been a professor both before and after he died, until he finally got the sack. Of course, they couldn’t really sack a ghost, so the class got moved to a different end of the corridor, and Professor Binns went right on teaching, even if he didn’t have any students.

Professor Selwyn was at his desk, writing a letter, the quill whipping from side to side. They scuttled by his open door as quickly as they could. Shouldn’t he be down with the other teachers making sure no one gets left behind?

Hermione pulled back a dusty tapestry, and they went single-file through a dark and stuffy secret passage that somehow managed to drop them down a level without having any stairs. The trio came out onto the main floor, where the voices of their fellows echoed louder, and Harriet could hear Professor McGonagall scolding someone over the crackle of a Filibuster Firework.

“Merlin, who thought it was a good idea to set one of those off….”

It appeared most everyone was running late that morning, as students dashed about the entrance hall, accounting for their things, all while their professors urged them out the doors. Hermione, who had everything she needed already tucked into her satchel, yanked both Harriet and Elara into a hug. Elara stood there like she was unsure what to do with her hands, and Harriet squeezed both of them just because she could.

“You’re squishing my lungs, Harriet….”

“You both be safe,” Hermione said, voice quiet but fierce as she let go and stepped back. “Do your holiday assignments. And for goodness’ sake, don’t go chasing after any strange voices, and don’t antagonize Professor Snape.”

“Neither of us antagonizes him. I just breathe in his direction and the bloke has a fit.”

Hermione wasn’t convinced given her stern look, but she shook her head and dropped the topic. With a final wave, she turned and set off after the other students hurrying down the steps in their winter robes, white flecks whirling in the air and coming to land upon the entrance hall’s stone floor. A few snowflakes touched Harriet’s hair and melted.

“She’s safer out of the castle,” Elara muttered as they watched their friend go. Harriet nodded, sad to see Hermione leave, but pleased she’d have a chance to see her parents and escape the Chamber’s looming threat. She would be safer outside Hogwarts for now.

The holidays seemed unusually grim to Harriet, and she wasn’t looking forward to the weeks ahead. She had to finish the Polyjuice without messing up, and both she and Elara would have to avoid Snape and Slytherin and probably every other professor so their plans wouldn’t be bungled before they even began. She thought of what Professor Dumbledore had said when she’d yelled at him—and Harriet could hardly believe she’d done that. What had gotten into her?!—pondering the answers to all the questions she wanted to ask.

Something wasn’t right, and not because there was an invisible, Petrifying monster slithering about. The Board of Governors wouldn’t let the Headmaster close the school, and Minister Gaunt wouldn’t send a competent Auror to assist them, and someone kept writing those weird, incriminating messages on the walls. Slytherin’s Heir will cleanse the dirty-blooded. The only bloody Heir of Slytherin at Hogwarts was Professor Slytherin, so someone clearly had it out for the wizard.

Something just wasn’t right, and like Professor Dumbledore told her, sometimes the easiest solutions weren’t all they appeared.

Frowning, Harriet started to turn from the doors—and paused when she spotted Longbottom lurking outside the Great Hall. “Oh, bloody hell.”

Both the Boy Who Lived and several Weasleys lingered there, all still dressed in their school robes, watching the other students sprint outside for the carriages. Longbottom was glaring at Harriet and Elara, suspicion clear in his dumb face, and Harriet wanted nothing more than to swear at the git. “Doesn’t he have a bloody family to go home to?” she whispered. “He’s going to be watching us! As if having stupid Snape around wasn’t bad enough—.”

The wizard in question stood on the upper landing, deep in conversation with Professor Dumbledore—until Mr. Lockhart came gallivanting over, at which point both the Headmaster and Potions Master broke off their discussion with mirrored looks of aggravation. If Harriet hadn’t been so peeved about Longbottom, she would have laughed.

“Come on, let’s go to the common room. It should be quiet there.”

Shooting a final ugly look toward Longbottom, Harriet shuffled after Elara—who moved with far more poise and much better posture. “Why d’you walk so pretty?”

“Why don’t you pick up your feet?”

“I’m being serious!”

“So was I.” The bustle and cheer of the entrance hall faded behind them as the pair descended into the dungeons, their footsteps resounding in the enclosed space. Torchlight guided their way into the overwhelming dark. “If you’re swatted enough for slouching, it becomes a habit not to do so.”

“Oh,” Harriet said, voice quiet. A muscle worked in Elara’s jaw, and she refused to look in her direction.

“Besides, doesn’t Mrs. Malfoy harangue you about sitting up straight and dressing properly? You’re still writing letters to her, aren’t you?”

“Yeah. I didn’t think I was going to, but I dunno. Some of the stuff she says is bollocks, but she also tells me interesting bits here and there about everything.” Harriet glanced down at her too-big jumper under her robes and tried straightening both it and the buttoned shirt beneath it. “You don’t think I dress funny, do you?”

“No. I think you’re fine the way you are.” They came upon the hidden entrance to the common room and Elara gave the password. “Are you going to read Hermione’s notes?”

“Yeah, I better get started on it. I think this scroll weighs more than I—.”

Harriet came to a stop mid-sentence as she bumped into Elara’s back, who stood frozen not two feet past the hidden wall. Confused, Harriet peered around her—and flinched, because Professor Slytherin sat by the main hearth, his profile cast in shadow by the firelight, one leg crossed over the other and a goblet in his hand. As Harriet and Elara came inside, he turned, placed the goblet aside, and stood.

“Good—good morning, Professor Slytherin,” Harriet managed to say, both surprised and wary. What was he doing there? He only ever came to the common room when he wanted to chew out the whole of the House for something terrible happening.

“Good morning, Miss Potter, Miss Black,” the wizard replied. He smiled, but Harriet knew it was fake, his red eyes narrowed and cold as they inspected her and Elara. His robes rippled as he stepped forward, the fire at his back throwing his face deeper into shadow. Harriet could only see the vague glint of his teeth and startling eyes in the weak glow given by the silver lanterns. “My, my. Is this not the second Yule holiday you’ve remained at the school, Potter? Where are your relatives?”

Thinking about the Dursleys forced Harriet to stiffen her spine, though she almost fidgeted and looked away. She decided to feed him the same lie she gave Snape last year, because though he hadn’t looked convinced, it was technically true. “They work, Professor.”

“Hmm. And you, Black?”

“I’m emancipated and can spend the holidays as I please, sir.”

He continued to approach them until he stopped not two feet away, looking down his nose at both witches with something harsh and doubtful glittering behind his eyes. “As you are the only Slytherins remaining behind, I felt it prudent to remind you both of the curfew and my expectations.”

“Yes, professor.”

“Refrain from wandering and…mingling. You’d both be fools not to realize someone in this school seeks to sully my name—and thus your names as well, given all of Slytherin House shares in this uncalled for maligning. Stick to the common room unless your presence is necessitated elsewhere, and should I find either of you out after hours…. Well, let’s just say the consequences will be quite dire indeed.”

Harriet could only nod, and Elara looked grim.

Slytherin continued to study them for another minute, his hands loose at his sides, until he seemed satisfied. “Good. I remember assigning you an essay for the break; I expect an additional foot from both of you. It’s best to keep busy, lest idle minds turn to…mischief.” He cocked his head to one side, and over his shoulder hissed, “Watch them.

Yesss, Massster.

With that said, Slytherin swept by Harriet and Elara, disappearing into the corridor with barely a sound to note his departure. Harriet watched the serpent in the painted rowan roots curl itself around the wild tree, its sharp, beady eyes trained on hers even across the room. She didn’t inform Elara of what Professor Slytherin had said, because one didn’t need to be a Parselmouth to know it hadn’t been good.

Harriet took her friend by the hand, and they escaped into the dorms.

 


A/N: I know Draco and a bunch of other Slytherins stayed for the hols in the book—but that kinda goes against the headcanon I’ve established where most students head home for the Yule break. So, no Draco.

Chapter 79: changing skins

Chapter Text

lxxix. changing skins

 

Despite the worry and trepidation hanging around the castle like dark clouds in the air, Harriet couldn’t deny Hogwarts was beautiful at this time of the year.

Snow blanketed the grounds, and all around them, the highlands slumbered beneath the crisp white sheet and the trees swayed dark and solemn, the lake a solid, gleaming sheet of hoary ice. Icicles clung to the eaves, growing along the ramparts, and whenever one fell, it dissipated into a fuzzy swarm of magic and frost, fogging the windows and the unawares in dewy drafts. Hagrid dragged pine trees into the Great Hall and the professors decorated them with magic and delicate things, fairies hiding in the needles, their giggles seeming to follow Harriet wherever she went, fairy dust sprinkled on her shoulders and in her hair. A Yule Log burned in the Hall’s hearth, Charmed to remain until the hols came to an end.

She enjoyed herself more than she had the year prior, simply because Elara was there with her. They snuck back and forth from Myrtle’s loo with her Invisibility Cloak and hid in Harriet’s trunk to pore through Hermione’s exhaustive Polyjuice research. In direct contrast to Professor Slytherin’s orders, the Headmaster had Snape come drag them out of the dungeons if they spent too long down there alone, and so the pair of witches went exploring, enjoying the library, or avoiding the Defense teacher. They did homework in the Great Hall by the fire and oftentimes a professor would come sit with them to help or chat.

On Christmas Day—or, well, the day of the Solstice—Harriet woke to find a smattering of gifts left on the foot of her bed, an occurrence that would never cease to surprise the bespectacled girl. Elara had the same assorted collection of presents, though she was far less enthused when poked away by her dormmate only an hour or so past dawn.

“Harriet, I’m going to murder you.”

“Murder me after we open gifts, c’mon!”

They sat in their nightgowns with their coverlets pulled up around their shoulders to ward off the dungeons’ chill and started in on their presents. Harriet received the same thoughtful, if trivial, trinkets from the old families, including another packet of parchment with her family crest from the House of Black. From Elara personally, she unwrapped a pretty, deep violet quill that shimmered with silver threads when she brought it up to her eyes.

“It’s made from an Occamy’s feather,” the other witch explained as she prised open a Transfigured box. “It’s for letter writing. Oh—are these gloves, Harriet?”

“Yeah! I ordered them for you. They’re supposed to feel more…what’s the word? Tactile? And they’re water-repelling.”

“Thank you.” Elara pulled the black gloves on over her pale, slim hands.

“Hermione got me a kit for my broom, excellent.”

“Did Malfoy send you anything?”

“His family—or his mum did, at least. Chocolate Frogs.”

Harriet picked up one of her final gifts, a sizable, lumpy parcel wrapped in butcher paper and twine. She recognized the writing on the card, and hummed thoughtfully, wondering what it could be. “I got something from Mr. Flamel and his wife.”

“What is it?”

The paper tore, and heavy, cool fabric puddled in Harriet’s hands. “I think they’re robes.” They were black in color with fine, silver threads at edges and a silk, sage-colored lining.

“Go on, try them on.”

Unearthing herself from the blankets and strewn packaging, Harriet got to her feet and tried to find where the robes opened. Wizarding fashion could be funny in its design. “Why are they so big?”

“You’re putting them on wrong.”

“No, I’m not. Look—.” As soon as she stepped into the robes and pushed her skinny arms through the overly large sleeves, the fabric came alive and swaddled her, scaring a high-pitched yelp out of Harriet. The cloth drew itself snug about her frame, sleeves shortening and tightening, sash cinching tight as a silver brooch snapped shut on her shoulder, closing the front. The startled witch stood still, arms held out, and waited to see if the robes would move again.

On the other bed, Elara snorted, lowering the book given to her by Hermione. “It’s just a sizing Charm. Though, I haven’t seen one quite so…enthusiastic before.”

“Me neither.”

“Those are nice, though. Go look.”

Harriet went to the mirror on the wall and gazed at her reflection, taking in the image of her bedraggled hair coupled with the clean, straight lines of the robes. The collar came up around her neck, hiding most of her scar, and the skirt and hem fell in gentle, tapered waves around her legs. The lining rippled with magic, shimmering leaves seeming to drift in an unseen breeze against the silk. Harriet owned a few pairs of robes besides her school outfits, but none of this quality, and none quite so lovely.

She moved back to the bed and found the card again. “He says they’re spell-resistant. I wonder what that means, exactly.”

Elara quirked a brow—then picked up her wand from the end table, and aimed a Stinging Hex at Harriet’s side. Harriet jumped as the spell made contact, but the light fizzled out against the dense fabric. “Oh. Excellent. I wish I could wear these in Slytherin’s class.”

“It probably wouldn’t help.” Elara replaced her wand. “The spells coming back at you in Defense are your own, and undoubtedly more powerful than what a simple cloth enchantment can handle.”

They finished opening their gifts, then set about getting ready for the day, Harriet showering and donning her new robes once again after Elara tugged her wayward hair into a braid. They journeyed upstairs for breakfast—then scrapped that plan when they peeked inside and found the House and High Tables replaced with a single table down the hall’s middle, the only seats open left between Longbottom and Slytherin. Neither girl decided they had much of an appetite.

They escaped outside, and though it was bitterly cold in the breeze, it was much warmer in the open planter cloister by the greenhouses, the space filled to the brim with pots of all shapes and sizes and mostly dormant flora, gnomes snoozing in the dirt with crumpled leaves as their blankets. Snow heaped itself on the low walls below the arches and steam rose in ghostly sheets from the heated greenhouses below.

“Longbottom was watching us,” Elara commented as they sat on a stone bench and she smoothed her skirt. “I don’t think he heard a word Weasley was saying to him; he was staring at the doors, waiting for us to show up.”

Harriet grumbled under her breath. “Bloody Gryffindor.”

They played with the snow for a time, letting it melt in the little pots Charmed with heating spells, pouring the water out and using the Glacius Charm to freeze it into different shapes. Harriet made a passable—if a bit lop-sided and big-headed—bird, while Elara crafted a dog. “Look,” Harriet said, holding her tiny ice sculpture in the palm of her cold hand. “I’m going to name him Draco, because—.”

“Because it has a fat head?”

Harriet started to laugh.

The screech of an owl brought them to attention, and a miffed barn owl fluttered through an arch, clasping a tightly rolled newspaper in its talons. “Ah, the Prophet,” Elara muttered, patting her pockets. “Do you have any money on you, Harriet?”

“Let me see.” She had to unclasp the robes to reach her trousers’ pockets, and after checking there, she searched her jumper. “Oh. I have a Sickle, though that’s a bit much for a paper.”

Elara sighed and took the Sickle, tucking it into the little leather pouch on the owl’s leg so it would relinquish its delivery. “I’ll pay you back later.”

“It’s fine.”

The taller witch sat with her back to the cold, her shoulders stiff, and read the paper while Harriet tried to make an ice-snake to eat ice-Draco, and ended up with something that better resembled a hungry scarf. Elara made a sudden, thoughtful sound.

“What is it?”

“This.” She flipped the paper about, folding it to show the main article on the second page. Harriet adjusted her glasses and squinted against the paltry winter light, trying to read.

“‘Wizengamot questions Headmaster’s eff—efficacy during troubled times. Defense Instructor’s ability under scrutiny.’ Well, the bit about Dumbledore is awful. Do you think they’ll give Slytherin the sack?”

“Not hardly. But this could work to our advantage.”

“What? Explain.”

Elara gave the paper an impatient shake. “This. We could do it today, after lunch. It’s Christmas—the Solstice, and I doubt they’re serving pumpkin juice to the professors. You can leave this out, casually flipped to this page, and whoever sees it is bound to have a comment on it.”

“And what if they want to comment on it to me?” Harriet asked, keeping her voice low. “What would Professor Sinistra say?”

“Something about the stars aligning, whatever the fates will, etcetera.” Elara folded the paper and handed it to Harriet. “Well? Are you ready? Do you want to do it today?”

Harriet exhaled, wishing she could tell Elara she didn’t want to do this at all, because it sounded precisely like the kind of thing that would get her in heaps of trouble, but Harriet kept quiet. “Yes. I only need to fold in the bicorn horn, and we’d have to wait for it to simmer.”

Elara met her eyes, and then nodded. “Okay, then. After lunch.”

 

xXx

 

Harriet could hardly eat a thing by the time lunch finally did manage to roll around. Worrying about the Polyjuice made her stomach twist up in knots, and she felt as if everyone at the table was giving her funny looks. Longbottom glared at her and Elara, his eyes narrow and shifty, Snape scowled every time she accidentally turned in his direction, and even Luna Lovegood, the only Ravenclaw staying for the hols, shot her several puzzled, contemplative looks.

She wound up spilling hot cider down her front, which was how she found out her new robes were stain-resistant, too, which was a nice addition.

Elara just held her head in her hands.

They split up after the meal, and Harriet went alone to Myrtle’s loo, taking the long way, diving through at least one secret passage to make sure anyone—namely Longbottom—wouldn’t be able to follow if they tried. She found the Polyjuice just as she’d left it the day before, settling in its cauldron atop the toilet, Hermione’s magic still warding away the damp. Harriet rolled up her sleeves, opened the potions kit, and consulted Hermione’s notes again.

It was a nerve-wracking thing, brewing a potion one intended to consume. She’d made dozens of potions by now, but each of those had gone to Professor Snape, and Harriet always felt a certain safety in brewing when she knew the potion wouldn’t poison or kill someone if she made a mistake. A bit too much billywig? Not enough scarab beetle? No big deal. But now, as she used a flat stirring rod to carefully tuck and fold the potion around the sprinkled bicorn horn, cold sweat prickled the back of her neck.

What if she messed up? What if she bloody poisoned herself? Oh, Harriet remembered only too well how it felt to be poisoned after Quirrell spiked her tea. The thought of enduring that again made her ill.

Elara returned later, carrying a bundle under her arm, and found Harriet leaning on the partition next to the cooling cauldron. “It’s done, then?”

Harriet nodded.

“Excellent. Well done, Harriet,” Elara smiled—one of her rare, full smiles, and Harriet tried to return it, but she’d gone weak in the knees, her hands shaking. “Are you all right?”

“‘M fine.”

Hesitating, Elara touched her shoulder. “No, you’re not. Harriet, if you don’t wish to do this, then don’t. You shouldn’t allow anyone, especially Hermione and me, to pressure you into anything. The potion will keep if we bottle it up. You can give it to Hermione when she returns.”

“It’s fine,” Harriet sighed through her nose and rubbed her eyes, thankful Elara didn’t gripe about her touching her face. “I’m just—afraid I botched it. What’ll happen when I drink it?”

“I could drink it, if you want.”

“No,” she shook her head. “No, if anyone’s going to be laid up in hospital because I can’t brew worth a shite, it’ll be me.”

“A terribly Gryffindor sentiment. What are we going to do with you?” Elara pulled out the bundle she’d brought, and when Harriet took it in her hands, she realized it was a set of robes, a dark emerald pair for a witch, done with constellations and stars stitched into the panels.

“Are these—these are Professor Sinistra’s! I’ve seen her wear these before! How did you get these?”

“Laundry,” Elara said without pause, turning the robes over to show Harriet the book and flask she’d included. When Harriet continued to stare at her, the other witch frowned. “Where did you think I went for so long? They’re clean. I was bribing house-elves.”

“Bribing house—.”

“This—.” Elara tapped the book, ignoring Harriet’s sputtering. “Is the Quasar Quarterly.”

“An astronomy periodical? How did you get that?”

“Well, just because Hermione thinks astrology is rubbish and you hate the maths doesn’t mean I can’t like the subject.” She pinked in the cheeks and cleared her throat. “I would assume Professor Sinistra receives the same subscription. Just pretend to read it. Turn the pages every so often. And this—.” She touched the flask. “How many hours of Polyjuice did you brew?”

“Twelve,” Harriet recited. “Err, or less. Hermione said it’s meant to be twelve—but this is our first time brewing it, right? So it might not be as potent, and if it’s ‘contaminated’ at all, or watered down, it could be less. There should be at least six hours there.”

“And one mouthful is supposed to last an hour?”

“Or less. ‘A mouthful’ isn’t an exact measurement, is it? And different people have different sized bodies and stuff, and Snape always goes on about how the ‘internal composition of organs and blood impact potion viability’ and whatnot. So, I can bank on thirty minutes, then I have to drink again, just to make sure.” She extracted the flask from the robes. “Is this Professor Sinistra’s too?”

Smirking, Elara nodded.

“No! I wouldn’t have fancied her a lush.”

“I actually think she puts coffee in there, when she has to be up during the day. Her entire area of study is night-based, Harriet.”

“Oh, my mistake.” Sighing, Harriet put the flask, book, and robes up on the dry back of the toilet’s tank. “Might as well get this over with.”

She fished the vial out of her pocket and removed the professor’s single hair, letting it drop into the cauldron. For a second, nothing happened, and then the liquid morphed into a murky purple shot through with lighter bands of lavender and periwinkle.

“Put the robes on before you drink the potion.”

Harriet glanced at Elara, confused—and then realized what the other witch meant. “Right. Thanks.”

Elara stepped out of the stall, letting Harriet shut the door and shuck her own clothes and pull on Professor Sinistra’s, the excess cloth puddling around her smaller frame. Minding the sleeves, Harriet ladled Polyjuice into the flask, and once it was almost too full, she stopped, looking at the dubious goop like it might jump out of the flask and attack her. Sighing, Harriet muttered, “Cheers,” and drank.

The taste of dusty blueberries burst on her tongue and Harriet almost gagged, not because it was terribly unpleasant, but because it was unexpected and overwhelming. She held down her gorge and swallowed, having to do so several times as the thick, syrupy potion seemed to cling to her mouth and esophagus. “Ugh.”

The effects weren’t immediate; indeed, Harriet assumed she’d messed something up along the way, because all she felt was a slight queasiness in her middle. Then, the queasiness changed to a sharp, aching tightness, spreading from her middle to her chest, and Harriet squeezed her eyes shut, leaning on the partition. Her legs burned, pain shooting through her knees, and Harriet wanted to yell for Elara, tell her something was wrong, but all she could do was gasp and wheeze as the skin of her arms bubbled, darkened, and then—.

Then, it was over.

Breathing heavily, Harriet blinked, wondering what was wrong with her eyes—before she realized Professor Sinistra didn’t wear glasses, and she lifted a shaky, unfamiliar hand to remove them. The astronomy professor wasn’t a large woman by any means, but she was considerably larger than Harriet. The second-year Slytherin found herself too tall, her legs too long, rounded in unexpected ways with more weight in different areas. She touched her chest—until she realized she’d just groped her professor, no matter how inadvertent, and blushed from her cheeks to her toes.

“Merlin,” she wheezed in a strange, husky voice. She thanked every force in the bloody universe that Hermione hadn’t picked a male professor.

“Harriet?”

“I’m, um—.”

Elara repeated her name with more urgency, shaking the door. Harriet reached out and unlatched it.

They stared at one another, a spooked shadow passing through Elara’s colorless eyes as she found herself looking at one of her professors, sweaty and shivering in a loo, looking for all the world like they’d seen something ghastly. Harriet just couldn’t believe how tall Elara was, given she could meet her eyes without looking down. “It—.” Elara cleared her throat. “It worked.”

“At least I didn’t poison myself,” Harriet said—then winced, because while she had Professor Sinistra’s voice, she didn’t sound quite the same. How odd. “Err, I better not talk. Sinistra has more of a Scouse accent than I do. I sound weird.”

Elara nodded. “Okay. I’m going to go now and make sure Professor Sinistra stays in her office. Don’t forget your flask, the book, and the paper.”

“I won’t.”

“Okay. Meet you here before dinner?”

“Yes.”

The other Slytherin left, leaving Harriet to gather her scattered wits and ignore the mirrors, not wanting to glimpse herself in its depths. She’d never use Polyjuice again; the invasiveness of it had her on edge, and Harriet couldn’t convince herself the unsettled rock in her gut wasn’t from drinking liquefied lacewing flies and whatever other nonsense Hermione had tossed in the cauldron. She stole several deep, calming breaths and tried to stand like Professor Sinistra would, which necessitated a brief stint in front of the mirrors, the pinched scowl she wore like nothing she’d ever seen on the astronomy instructor.

For all her planning, Elara hadn’t given Harriet shoes, so she made do with resizing her own, happy the robes fell to her feet and concealed them. Eventually, she had no further reason to procrastinate and hang about, so Harriet schooled her expression and forced her anxiety back, thinking about all manner of unpleasant things, including each she’d lied to the Dursleys. She hadn’t been a guiltless child at times, and now she tried to channel that same nervous steel she’d forced into her spine whenever faced with a furious Uncle Vernon.

Water dripped below the sinks as Harriet counted to ten and opened her eyes—a stranger’s eyes. She could do this. For Hermione.

She gathered her periodical and her paper, tucked them under her arm, stepped out of the loo—

And almost collided with Neville Longbottom.

Shite.


A/N: Harriet: “I’m never drinking your funny toilet potions ever again, Hermione.”

Chapter 80: little lies

Chapter Text

lxxx. little lies

 

The Boy Who Lived stood not two feet from the door with his hand outstretched, looking as if he’d been reaching for the handle before it popped open.

Harriet gasped as they ran into one another. She went to quip a scathing remark—but the frightened, shocked look in Longbottom’s wide-eyes stilled her and returned a measure of clarity to Harriet’s anxious, startled thoughts.

He thinks I’m Professor Sinistra.

“Wh—what do you think you’re doing, Long—Mr. Longbottom?” Harriet demanded, hoping his own surprise helped cover the strange pitch of her voice. She tried to concentrate and thought back on every lecture she’d ever heard Professor Sinistra give—but all her classes happened in the middle of the night, and Harriet could rarely concentrate on her voice without dozing off. It always sounded soft and far away, like the witch was a hooting night owl who deigned to fly over and teach at the school.

“Professor Sinistra!” Neville exclaimed, gone pale in the face. “I was—I—uh, have you seen Potter by any chance?”

“Potter?” She wanted to kick Longbottom in the shins. Was he actually following her?! What a berk! “Potter from Slytherin?”

“Yes, ma’am. You see, I was worried about her going off on her own, given what’s been occurring lately. It’s not safe.”

Rubbish!

“Is that what you’re doing, trying to go into a girl’s loo—lavatory? Well?”

Longbottom gave her a funny look, though he had the grace to blush with embarrassment. “This is Moaning Myrtle’s place, isn’t it? I was told no one ever used it. I knew she came this way, and just, uh, wanted to make sure Pot—Harriet was okay.” His eyes narrowed, a small furrow appearing between his light brows. “What are you doing here, Professor?”

Does he honestly talk to all of his professors like this?

“That is none of your business, Longbottom. Err—ten points from Gryffindor! Yes!”

“What?! But that’s not—!”

“Get back to your dormitory, or I’ll make it twenty! Go on!”

He didn’t need to be told again, but Harriet did catch the second odd glance he threw at her over his shoulder as he retreated. He disappeared around the corner, and Harriet exhaled, her heart beating much too fast in her chest, her hands shaky where they clasped the book and newspaper to her chest. A laugh bubbled out of her mouth, and Harriet coughed, reminding herself to be serious.

She couldn’t remember how long it’d been since she first drank the potion—ten minutes? Fifteen? How long was she in the loo before she left? How long until she reached the staffroom? What if she suddenly turned back into herself? What then?

Puffing out her cheeks, Harriet stepped forward, thinking it better to move than to stand frozen in place like a numpty. She hurried, shoes creating a steady, firm series of clicks against the stones as she walked and tried to set a casual pace, though walking in someone else’s body proved difficult. She tripped twice, earning one muttered comment about being “drunk on the job” from a crotchety portrait of a wizard with an ear horn.

Set came alive at one point, whirling about her feet in the flickering torchlight, and he threw himself toward a convenient door. Harriet didn’t question him and did as indicated, cursing her clumsy limbs as she stepped inside the room and eased the door closed. Moments later, McGonagall rounded the far bend and hustled by. Harriet didn’t breathe until the witch was out of sight again.

Merlin!

The remainder of her trip to the staffroom proved uneventful, and Harriet felt profoundly lucky to find the room empty, embers sputtering in the wide hearth flanked by gargoyles, the antique tables barren with the chairs neatly tucked in. There were four tall, cushioned chairs facing the fire, their backs to the largest table probably used in staff meetings. Glancing about to make sure she was alone, Harriet set out the paper like Elara had suggested, tilting the chair as if someone had gotten up in a rush and forgotten it there. She went to the tea-station by the old wardrobe, made herself a cuppa, and quickly sunk into one of the wing chairs by the hearth, shielding herself from casual observation.

The carriage clock on the mantel chimed the hour. Harriet fumbled about in her pockets for the flask and took a measured sip. The taste of blueberries lingered as she opened the periodical on her lap and stared at the clock. Around her, the castle remained quiet and snowflakes stuck to the window’s glass.

An hour passed, an hour spent fretting and twiddling with the pages of Elara’s booklet, the tea cold as bones on the little table by Harriet’s seat. She drank from the flask twice more, once after thirty minutes had passed, and then again on the hour. The lower the potion inside dipped, the more anxious Harriet became, sweat prickling on her spine. What if Hermione and Elara were wrong? What if no one came around? What if Harriet just sat drinking tea as Professor Sinistra until her time ran out? What then?

A clatter at the door put an end to her inner woes, and a second later it popped open, propelled by magic instead of a hand, Professor Slytherin sauntering inside with Professor Snape looming at his heels.

“—with that blond half-wit gallivanting about, dogging my every move. I’ve cursed the fool thrice and think a fourth attempt will render what little brains he has irredeemable.”

Professor Slytherin spoke in a harsh, dark tone Harriet had only ever heard him once or twice, the same voice he used after she dared hex him and he chucked her into a desk. He slammed the door shut behind Snape with a wave of his hand.

“Lockhart is, in and of himself, harmless,” Snape drawled. “He doesn’t know half of what he’s looking at and spends much of his time locked in his office, doing Merlin knows what.”

He sounded odd to Harriet too, not at all like the Snape who’d spent part of the summer at Grimmauld Place. That Snape was always bitter and snappish and prone to sniping at them over dinner. His temper sparked with a word and fell just as quickly. This Snape was cold, laconic. He spoke with all the emotionless precision of a knife dicing potions ingredients, and Harriet didn’t like it at all.

“Being utterly useless and inconvenient.” The pair passed Harriet’s seat, their shadows moving on the floor. Slytherin paused. “This rag! Who left this here?”

Harriet almost jumped out of her skin when Slytherin jerked the paper off the table and threw it over her head, right into the fire. The pages curled and blackened in an instant.

Bloody Gaunt,” Slytherin quietly seethed. The pair of dark wizards continued to the seats against the wall by the window, a chessboard between them waiting to be played. It was harder for Harriet to hear their voices, but not impossible. “He never called a session with the Wizengamot, and half the stupid population knows that, but they choke down the Prophet’s tripe like gospel. He aims to start an inquiry that will remove both myself and the old man from the castle for at least a short period of time.”

“It is a proverbial show of strength.”

“There’s nothing proverbial about it.” Slytherin Summoned a bottle of wine from the rack by the tea-service, and his next words were given in undertone, so low Harriet almost missed them. “He means to ‘conquer the beast’ and thus further endear himself to the Board and undermine my authority. The Minister wishes for nothing more than to have a firm foothold here, one the Ministry has long been denied.”

“Of course. How goes your search for the Basilisk?”

Harriet almost spat her tea out and had to swallow several times to keep herself from coughing, tears burning in her lashes. The WHAT?!

“Unsuccessful,” Slytherin sneered, voice so cold Harriet thought Snape actually recoiled. Her Head of House poured himself a glass of dark wine and didn’t offer the Potions Master any. Snape appeared bored and indifferent, unruffled by the slight. “Wherever Gaunt’s agent has chosen to move it, I do not know, and it hasn’t answered my call. I’ve scoured the Chamber from top to bottom and found no trace of the perpetrator.”

By now, Harriet was silently wheezing in her chair, hands white-knuckled on the periodical in an attempt to hold onto something. Basilisk! How could it possibly be a Basilisk?! she wondered—no, demanded of her own thoughts. Merlin’s fricking beard! And he thinks it’s Gaunt—Minister bloody Gaunt!—responsible for all this?! He knows where the Chamber is! And Snape knows he knows and—.

Harriet continued to spiral, both wizards all but oblivious to her unobtrusive presence.

“I would suggest, again, that a second pair of eyes might help in—.”

“And I would suggest, again, Snape, for you to stop parroting the old man’s orders.” Slytherin’s eyes narrowed in such a way that Professor Snape bowed his head, the dark curtain of his oily hair falling forward. “As I’ve stated before, the knowledge of my ancestor’s Chamber is not pertinent, and I won’t allow outsiders to sully a thousand-year-long legacy for no reason. What help do you possibly think you’d be, anyway?”

Snape’s dark eyes flashed in her direction, then away, fixing on Slytherin.

“I know Aurora’s there, Severus. I haven’t said anything not already brought to her attention in staff meetings.” He scoffed and drank his wine.

Harriet’s head swam. She was so disoriented, she didn’t have a chance to panic about being brought to their attention. A Basilisk—a huge bloody Basilisk! How in the absolute hell was a fifty-foot serpent mucking about in the castle undetected? Snippets of the monster book she’d read in the library haunted Harriet, little passages about deadly venom and huge eel heads and a look that could kill. Holy shite! But how is it Petrifying people? The book mentioned nothing about that.

She glanced at the clock again—and jumped. Forty-five minutes had passed, lost somewhere between her own worrying, Slytherin’s griping, and Harriet’s private shock. The dark skin of her arms began to bubble, her hands looking like she’d thrust them into an active beehive. Harriet snatched the flask out of her pocket again and drank.

“Something the matter, Sinistra?”

Harriet didn’t spill—she didn’t—but it was a near thing, and she couldn’t stop herself from trembling when she turned her head far enough to see Snape staring at her. “Bit of a head cold,” she said, pitching her voice low. It came out rough and passably ill sounding.

“Hmm.”

Slytherin set his goblet aside. “Are Potter and Black minding themselves?” he asked Snape—and Harriet flinched. “I told them to stay in the dungeons.”

Snape looked at Harriet for a moment longer, face inscrutable, then faced Professor Slytherin again. “I’ve had no difficulty with the brats.”

“I asked them both why they remained for the break and received unsatisfactory replies.”

“The only type of reply they are fit to giving, I fear.” Snape traced the row of buttons on his sleeve with an idle hand, his fingers long and pale against the black cloth. “Black was recently emancipated, as I’m sure she told you. She chose to remain with Potter, whose relatives work overseas for much of the year.”

Slytherin grew bored of the conversation and returned to his wine, muttering scathing comments about Minister Gaunt again. He just lied to him, Harriet marveled. Snape just lied to Slytherin, right to his face without blinking an eye. How did he do that?

They continued to speak on inconsequential matters and didn’t bring up the Basilisk—a bloody Basilisk!—again, only mentioning things concerning the students, their grades and behavior, and the school itself. Harriet knew they’d start talking about something more consequential the moment she left, but she’d already learned more than she thought she would. A lot more.

A Basilisk. Professor Slytherin thought Minister Gaunt—the Minister for Magic himself—was behind the Chamber’s opening, behind his framing. Why? Headmaster Dumbledore told her he feared it wouldn’t be safe for Harriet to have this knowledge, and though Harriet despised being kept in the dark, she understood he had a reason; she’d blundered headfirst into a problem she hadn’t the slightest hope of solving, and it didn’t lessen her worries to know what the snake actually was. It made them so, so much worse.

She stood, wagering enough time had passed, and gathered her periodical. Slytherin kept talking to Snape about a promising new lesson plan he’d devised—and Merlin, wasn’t it weird to hear Slytherin talk as if he actually enjoyed teaching. The Potions Master’s cold eyes snapped to Harriet as she moved, like a snake seeing something small and edible stir in the brush, then returned to the Defense instructor.

Harriet had a hand on the door when Snape stiffened and looked at her again—but this time, his eyes lingered on her shoes.

Harriet’s shoes.

Snape opened his mouth as if to say something, and the Slytherin witch stepped into the corridor. She let the door come closed with a soft click—and then started running.

Chapter 81: misery loves company

Chapter Text

lxxxi. misery loves company

 

Severus hated the holidays.

He said the same thing every year, and every year the sentiment deepened; he despised the juvenility of it, the forced cheer, the interruption to his schedule. He cherished the brief, fleeting respite when the dunderheads first departed and quiet descended, as if the whole of Hogwarts held its breath—but then the stillness shattered; the castle mourned, his colleagues meddled, and Severus worried himself to distraction over Slytherin's plotting.

He hated the Yule time—and that had nothing to do with the fucking snake roaming loose in the school.

The Chamber of Secrets. The moment Severus saw the writing on the wall, he—and Dumbledore—both knew Gaunt was testing the waters, testing his own power and Slytherin's hold on the student body, probing for weakness. No one else could find the Chamber, not even Albus bloody Dumbledore himself, and so the only person capable of opening it was Slytherin—or Gaunt, or Voldemort, or Riddle. It was all the same wretched person in the end.

The situation cycled back to the events of summer, beginning with Gaunt sending out lackeys to find the Potter girl. The Minister knew something odd had occurred with Potter before the Mirror of Erised shattered, and he shouldn't know anything at all; they had a traitor in their midsts, one informed by the Minister on how to open the Chamber and move the Basilisk. It was curious that this informant knew to relocate it somewhere Slytherin couldn't find; the schisms between Slytherin's and Gaunt's minds made themselves apparent at the worst possible junctures.

"Black and Potter are up to something," Severus said as he leaned into the wall by the Headmaster's hearth. Night sunk fast over the highlands, lacing the stones with a harsh, biting chill that raked its claws against his bones. "Though it hardly needs saying."

"Oh?" Albus commented from behind his desk, having the audacity to pretend he didn't understand what Severus meant. "How so?"

The Potions Master thought it obvious; if Potter dumping hot cider down her front that afternoon like a twit hadn't been clue enough, then Black's stiff, blank expression confirmed his suspicions. Neither could lie to save their own skins.

"I didn't pursue them. I found my time better served keeping Slytherin preoccupied instead of chasing those idiots about like a madman herding spiteful cats."

Albus chuckled, blue eyes bright, and then sobered, turning his attention inward, following thoughts beyond Severus' knowledge. "She knows."

"Who knows what?"

"Harriet knows about the Basilisk—or, I should say, Harriet knows the creature set loose from the Chamber is a snake, not that it is a Basilisk."

Severus stared, and the cold at his back reached deeper, past his skin and bones and into his heart, a psychosomatic spasm curling his fingers in upon themselves. "How." It wasn't a question, and the Potions Master was sure he didn't want the answer. What if they'd…missed something? A curse laid by Quirrell? New curses were made every day, and who knew better what had occurred before the Mirror than the girl herself? Who else better equipped to speak the language of snakes and open the way in the Chamber?

What if she was being controlled? What if—?

"She can hear it," Dumbledore said, ignorant of Severus' building terror. "I imagine it scared the poor girl half to death the first time it spoke near her."

"Why didn't she come forward, then?"

"Why does any child hide information? Because she was uncertain and afraid. Her upbringing with Petunia and Vernon—." And here Severus saw a shadow of the man Voldemort still feared, no matter his diminished power and ability. For the Potions Master, thoughts of Tuney curdled hot and hateful, surging with the kind of terrible longing that swayed him toward the Dark Arts; a lust for violence, for retribution, for ten long years of his wrist burning in agony every time she and her dumb waste of a husband raised a hand to the girl. Dumbledore's anger was a different beast entirely; it was cool, quiet, and subtle. It existed in his eyes, in his voice—and it cut all the more deeply for its reservation. "—has taught Harriet caution when approaching adults with her concerns."

Stubborn, obstinate brat.

"It weighs heavy on my heart, Severus, the thought of him whispering madness in the child's ear. Should he learn of their shared ability, he'll seek to corrupt her. We can't let that happen. Harriet is good, and in the end, that goodness will be what saves her and those she loves from Tom Riddle."

Love. Severus almost rolled his eyes; Merlin spare him from Albus Dumbledore and his crackpot notions on love. Love did nothing but sow discontent in wayward, unsuspecting hearts. Severus had loved Lily—not as a sister, not romantically, but in the way one loves the constant and simple things in their life: a cool breeze on a summer day, a comfortable place to rest after a trying day, the shoulder upon which one cries and sheds their woes. Not that Severus ever cried, but Lily had always been the first one he'd see after rowing with his father. He could still remember the feel of her warm fingers sticking Muggle plasters over his cuts.

She was part of the building blocks he'd built his life upon. From the time that they were seven-years-old, it had been Severus and Lily, two constants sharing a single sphere through their formative years—and then she was gone, gone like summer days and cool breezes and comfortable places, plunging Severus into an undying winter of his own fucking making. Oh, he'd placed the blame on everyone else when it happened—on her, on Potter, Black, Pettigrew, Lupin, on that worthless dickhead Slughorn who couldn't spare a stringy half-blood an iota of attention, on Dumbledore and McGonagall and the blasted Dark Lord—when it always came down to two horrid syllables escaping his own bloody mouth.

In the end, love brought Severus nothing but servitude, and it was still the only part of him worth a shite.

The Headmaster poured himself a small hot toddy and offered one to Severus, but the Potions Master declined with a jerk of his head, not meeting his eyes.

"Are you sure, my boy? It is Christmas, after all."

"No. I imagine Slytherin is still awake and—slithering."

Dumbledore sipped his drink and pursed his lips, not quite holding back his smile. "Ah, perhaps there is something to the old adage of 'no rest for the wicked.'"

"Are you referring to me or to him?"

"Never you, Severus."

The Potions Master snorted and flicked his hair back from his eyes. "Of course, Headmaster," he drawled. "If you're interested, I do have a theory on what Potter and Black are up to."

"Oh dear."

"Indeed. I informed you of a theft from my private stores?"

"Yes, you did."

"I provided you a list of the possible potions one might intend to brew with those missing ingredients—among which was Polyjuice Potion." Severus' black eyes glinted in the firelight and he crossed his arms, gritting his teeth. "Earlier this afternoon, I noticed Sinistra acting oddly, and her shoes were quite similar to the pair for the girls' uniform, aside from their size. At dinner, she was dressed differently and didn't seem to have any memory of our meeting in the staff room. She mentioned having a, and I quote, 'lovely afternoon with Miss Black discussing various ephemerides and their impact upon transmutation Transfigurations.'"

Dumbledore covered his mouth with his hand, looking very close to laughter, which only served to further infuriate Severus. "Do you truly think our wayward trio capable of brewing Polyjuice Potion? They are only second-years, Severus."

"Black? Merlin, no. Potter and Granger?" Severus considered the idea again, just as he'd been doing all afternoon, ever since he glimpsed Sinistra's curious choice in footwear—ever since he first took note of the missing ingredients, really, and theorized Potter and her cohorts might have gotten into his stores somehow. He wasn't an idiot; the timing of their visit to his office and the theft were suspiciously close. If he had a shred of proof, he'd ruin their wretched little lives, but for now, he'd settle for making them miserable. If he didn't strangle all three first. "Potter and Granger could do it, especially if Granger coached the girl."

"If you're right, Severus, what do you believe Miss Potter learned?"

"Too much. Slytherin was particularly loquacious today. If it was, in fact, her masquerading as Sinistra, she does know it's a Basilisk now."

Dumbledore sighed. "Oh, Harriet," he murmured, shaking his head.

"You do realize I'm going to give her and Black detention for the remainder of break, correct?" Possibly into next year, doing some of the foulest ingredient prep imaginable.

"I think, under the circumstances, I will allow it." The Headmaster rubbed his brow, then returned his attention to his drink. "I've asked Minerva to give Mr. Longbottom detention as well."

Severus almost laughed. "What? The precious Boy Who Lived in detention? How scandalous."

"Like dear Harriet, Neville has become indelibly curious about the Chamber, but he is not as…well, let's say circumspect as Miss Potter and her friends."

"You mean he's a bloody, dunderhead Gryffindor who wouldn't know discretion if it kicked him in the face."

"That's not what I said, Severus."

"No, it's what you meant." He leaned off the wall and slunk over to one of the chairs in front of Dumbledore's desk. He Summoned the rum and a cup, pouring himself a mouthful and forgoing the tea. They drank in silence, the fire crackling in the grate, the winter winds buffeting the tower walls, and Severus finished his rum far too soon for his liking. Bloody Potter was going to be the death of him. "So…you don't suspect the girl is the one behind the Chamber's opening?"

"No. Harriet is a reticent child, but she knows her own mind. I fear we may be playing host to a far more insidious host."

Severus sunk into his seat, leaning into his hand, pale fingers splayed across his face. He studied the Headmaster, the minutiae of the older wizard's expressions and subtle movements, the steady whir of silver instruments interrupting his own introspection. "You think it's another one of his homunculi."

"Possibly."

"For fuck's sake, Albus!" Severus' empty glass flew and crashed into the hearth. Fawkes shrieked on his perch. "We're barely treading water as is, torn between Gaunt and Slytherin! We're well and truly buggered if he has another one! How is he making them if the Dark Lord isn't even alive?!"

"But he is alive, my boy. Simply not in a state conceivable to you or I. Did incident with Quirinus prove nothing to you? As for how he makes them, I cannot say."

"Not 'cannot.' You 'will not' say!"

"Fine. I will not say, for I do not know for sure, Severus. I have only my suspicions."

And a distinct lack of trust, the Potions Master sneered in his own thoughts, steepling his hands together. Morgana save them if another clone of Tom bloody Riddle reared its foul head.

Discussion turned to pettier and more inconsequential topics, and eventually McGonagall joined them, the Scottish witch worked into high dudgeon over the Weasley twins' latest atrocity, to which Severus gave his usual suggestion of expulsion. Minerva rounded on him, hat askew, and scowled.

"And what of your own students, Snape? Are they behaving?"

Severus shared a blank look with the Headmaster. If one can call potential larceny, lying, and identity theft behaving.

"As docile as lambs, Minerva. As docile as lambs."

xXx

Severus' feet moved without a sound upon the cold stones as he wandered into the castle's depths.

Curfew had long since passed, giving way to snoring portraits and lazy, tired ghosts, winter thick and chilling as it seeped into the halls and fought against the wavering warmth thrown by the guttering torches. Severus himself was little more than a taut, narrow shadow drifting against the wall, walking carefully, a faint blush in his face from that third glass of rum he knew he shouldn't have had. Bloody old goats.

He found no students out of bed, no familiars causing mischief, no Peeves, the light in Slytherin's office gone dark for the night, Filch passed out and snoring with Trelawney and a dozen bottles of sherry in the staff lounge on the sixth floor.

There was no snake, no Petrified children, no writing on the wall, which was all well and good, because some blighter kept killing all the fucking roosters, and Severus wasn't stupid enough to think he could surprise a Basilisk while half-pissed and survive.

He returned to his office like a knackered reptile creeping back to its den and collapsed in his chair, groaning at the frigid cold that had stolen into the room after the fire had died earlier in the evening. He couldn't be arsed with lighting it again, and so he only waved a hand at the candle on the desk, letting its paltry glow give the room color and shape.

Gifts cluttered part of the floor and the counter where he worked with smaller cauldrons or personal brews. It would shock most of the student population to know the dreaded Dungeon Bat did, in fact, receive presents for Yule—but always the same gifts, from the same people, thoughtless trinkets and items bought in bulk when the pure-blood families did their yearly shopping for tokens meant to be sent to acquaintances for posterity's sake. The heap consisted of the same standard potions manuals nabbed off the bargain rack at Flourish and Blotts, packages of quills, parchment, and cheap ink. Lucius and Narcissa always sent him the same bottle of Blishen's every year, despite the fact that he'd—mostly—given up drinking.

Except for when obstinate old Gryffindors badger you into it, idiot.

He'd end up binning most of the items without bothering to shuck the paper. Severus sneered at the familiar shapes and packages—and then his eyes caught on something not so familiar.

The old families used the same, ubiquitous wrapping paper, another staple of their seemingly infinite ability to channel the same, stupid trains of thought, but this gift had been folded together in what looked like standard parchment paper, sealed with far too much Spell-O-Tape. Severus flicked his wrist and let his wand fall into his hand, waving it at the innocuous package so it floated over and dropped onto his desk without a sound.

After two detection spells failed to find anything amiss, Severus stuck his wand back into his sleeve and tore the parchment open.

Something dry and fragile brushed his fingertips as it fell to the desk's top and the Potions Master found himself staring at a loose pile of shed snakeskin. From under the skin, he slid free a brief note.

 

Professor Snape,

Thanks for watching us this summer. Hermione told me Horned Serpent skin is rare, and I hope you find it useful.

- Harriet Potter & Elara Black

P.S., Elara said not to put her name on the card but I did anyway.

 

Severus sighed as he read the note again, folding the torn parchment in his fingers.

The brat really is going to be the death of me.


A/N: Snape chapters are always fun to write.

Chapter 82: in the heart of the earth

Chapter Text

lxxxii. in the heart of the earth

 

Harriet and Elara stood huddled in the shadow of Verna the Vexing, a rather foreboding statue guarding the corridor to the upper dungeons where the Hufflepuffs dwelt. They waited and watched students arrive in the entrance hall.

“Do you see him?” Elara whispered.

“No,” Harriet replied, but she could see very little in the dim lighting, a blizzard rallying itself out beyond the bounds of the lake, making the grounds and the steps leading into the castle darker than usual. Everyone coming inside had their cloaks wrapped tight and their hoods drawn high.

Elara sighed. “We might as well get it over with. We can’t hide forever.”

Harriet thought she’d love to hide forever and disagreed with Elara, because if she had to spend another minute in the dungeons prepping potions ingredients or cleaning the cupboard or sitting very quietly staring at the wall, she might just pickle herself in a large jar to get away. “You know he’s just waiting to swoop in like a—a vampire bat! Ready to suck the life and—and fun out of everything he can.”

“You’re being dramatic.”

“‘Course I’m being dramatic, but it doesn’t make it any less true.”

Elara pulled a face that Harriet chose to ignore, instead swiping her overlong fringe from her eyes as she peered into the higher hall. “I think…that’s her.”

“Do you see Snape?”

“Isn’t that him there, with Professor McGonagall?”

The back of that black cloak had to be Snape, because Professor Slytherin didn’t loom quite so much, and the pair of brawling Gryffindors he and McGonagall had cornered looked suitably cowed.

“Wait here.”

Elara stepped out from behind Verna the Vexing and darted forward, maneuvering through the cold, tired crowd with relative ease. Harriet saw Hermione jump when Elara’s hand suddenly grabbed her by the wrist, but she relented to the other witch’s insistent tugging, and they retreated from the entrance hall not a moment too soon. Snape turned from McGonagall and the Gryffindors, his dark eyes sweeping the area. He scowled.

“Harriet!” Hermione exclaimed, and they embraced, Harriet getting a face full of snow-dampened hair, Hermione wincing when she felt Livi’s coils hidden under her cloak. “What happened? Did you two finish our, erm, project? Was it successful? What did you learn—?”

“Not here,” Elara interjected, her gray eyes flicking from Snape to the other professors and ears who might be listening in. “Come on, let’s go to Myrtle’s.”

“Myrtle’s? But what about dinner—.”

Harriet let Elara explain why they’d be better off going hungry for the night if it meant avoiding the staff, because not only Snape had been keen on assigning detentions to students over the break. Ron Weasley actually swore at Professor Sprout when he got in trouble for throwing snowballs at her Giddy Gladiolas, and apparently got a letter sent home to his mum. Elara theorized the professors meant to keep them from wandering off and thus close at hand if anything went amiss, and Harriet was inclined to agree with her, especially after what she heard Slytherin say in the staffroom. Still, she wished the holidays hadn’t been so dreadfully boring.

They found the loo as it always was; cold, wet, poorly lit and smelling damp and musty. Harriet thought they spent far too much time in there, but finding a private place for conversation at Hogwarts could prove challenging. Using Harriet’s trunk had its limitations, what with Pansy always interfering and Elara’s hatred for tight, confined spaces. Longbottom was mucking about, sticking his nose in everyone else’s business, and that made things even more difficult. So, the trio tromped once more into Myrtle’s loo, for what Harriet hoped was the last time.

“Elara doesn’t even have detention anymore,” Harriet commented to the ongoing conversation, pouting as they stood together in the stall where their potion had once bubbled. “It’s not fair.”

“Yes, but tell her why that is.”

Harriet leaned on the stall wall. “It’s not my fault. Snape had us squeezing ink from squids, and he started telling me off for doing it wrong, and err—.”

Elara lifted a brow while Hermione looked between them, clearly confused over where this tangent was going.

“I squeezed the squid a bit too hard because the berk was frustrating me, and the eye popped, splattering on Elara and—well, you know how she gets. She sicked up all over Snape—.”

“And then this little monster started cackling like it was the most brilliant thing she’d ever seen, which is why you’re still in detention with Snape while I got reassigned to Professor McGonagall, whose an actual human being and only set me lines, not—squeezing squids.”

“His face was pretty funny, though.”

“I thought he was going to kill us both and hide the bodies in a cauldron.”

Baffled, Hermione shook her head and blinked, loose coils of hair bouncing around her shoulders. “But what about the Polyjuice? What happened?

“It worked,” Harriet rushed to assure her. A little bit too well. Turning back into herself had been both a relief and a right pain. “Everything went to plan and I wasn’t caught, but—um—Snape knows.”

“What? How could he possibly know if you weren’t caught?”

“He knows,” Elara asserted before Harriet could, her face grim. “He’s far too observant, and he keeps attempting to confuse or catch us at a lie. He doesn’t have proof, else we’d probably be expelled, but Snape never needs proof, does he?”

Harriet nodded, remembering when they’d escaped the troll and he’d snarled at them. I don’t need proof, Potter, and you’re a fool to suggest otherwise. She shivered. “That’s why we grabbed you straight off. We worried he’d trick a confession out of you.”

Rubbing the spot between her brows, Hermione kept her eyes on the sticky tiles as she thought. “But how could he know about the Polyjuice? Or, in this instance, guess about the Polyjuice? Because that’s just highly unlikely.”

“I think it was my shoes,” Harriet confessed, and all three witches looked down at the shoes in question—a pair of black, laced brogues with a solid, flat heel and a few scuffs on the side. “We didn’t have a pair of Professor Sinistra’s, and though the robes mostly covered them, he seemed to notice and look down as I was leaving. He probably would have followed me had he not been sitting with Slytherin.”

A pained look crossed Hermione’s face. “Of course. Those are clearly from the uniform.” Girls had two choices for shoes: the brogues with laces Elara and Harriet wore, or the single-strap Mary Janes Hermione had on. “Was it worth it? Did you learn anything?”

Nodding, Harriet quickly recited all she’d heard, speaking in a low undertone so her words wouldn’t bounce in the confined space. She couldn’t remember every word verbatim the way Hermione might have desired, but she recalled enough of the details. The more she spoke, the more Hermione’s expression twisted in shock, disgust—and finally, anger.

“But if Professor Slytherin’s known where the Chamber is all this time, then he knew there was a Basilisk in there before this other person came around and let it out! A Basilisk! That’s preposterous! It couldn’t possibly be a Basilisk! Someone would be—.” She winced, her voice high and strangled. Before she spoke again, Hermione took a breath and calmed herself. “We didn’t see much information on Basilisks when we were researching, but what we did read said absolutely nothing about Petrification. Basilisks are exceedingly dangerous and Dark; not to be cruel, but we have to wonder why no one has died. And why does he assume Minister Gaunt is behind this? None of this makes any sense at all.”

Hermione pressed her hands against her cheeks and chewed on her lip, as she was fond of doing when presented with a particularly daunting problem. No matter her friend’s tenacity, Harriet didn’t think she’d make any sense of this puzzle; somebody opened the bloody Chamber, not that it mattered, according to Slytherin. Apparently the founder’s Basilisk was no longer in residence.

“It might be best to let this go and just keep our heads down,” Elara muttered. Hermione shot her a look, and the taller witch returned it. “Harriet and I will make sure you’re never alone, and we’ll be careful not to wander.”

“Like any of that matters when there’s a Basilisk roving about—one that can apparently flout all laws of physics and—and magical physics and just vanish into thin air whenever it pleases!”

Her hands moved from her cheeks to cover the whole of her face, and Elara touched her shoulder, giving it an awkward rub.

Harriet tried to think of something clever or comforting to say, and as she turned over the words in her own head, she heard footsteps in the hall. Recalling how Longbottom had been seconds away from barging into the loo after she turned into Professor Sinistra, Harriet fumbled at her pockets and jerked out her Invisibility Cloak.

“Harriet?” Hermione questioned, looking up when she felt the Cloak’s odd, heavy cloth fall over her head. “What are you doing?”

“Someone’s coming—.”

The door came open and struck the inner wall with considerable force. The three witches settling under the Invisibility Cloak flinched, drawing closer together, their breath held. At first, Harriet thought it might be Snape; the Potions Master had a terrible penchant for throwing doors open, dramatic as could be, but she couldn’t imagine the wizard mad enough to go trouncing into a girls’ loo. A shadow pulled along the floor, no footsteps seeming to touch the damp tiles—and the first stall door slammed open.

A knot of fear twisted in Harriet’s middle as whoever had entered the loo continued to open each stall, pausing just long enough to ascertain it was empty before moving on to the next. When the door to their stall came open, Harriet felt the air ripple against the Cloak—and her throat tightened upon seeing Professor Slytherin standing there, his red eyes bright and ghastly in the lowlight, the hem of his robes gliding over the water like a snake’s scaled belly.

What on earth is he doing here? Why is Professor Slytherin checking a lavatory when everyone else is at dinner? Is he—some kind of pervert?

Two more stalls extended beyond the one currently occupied by the three witches, and Slytherin checked them both. Harriet didn’t dare move, and so she lost sight of the wizard for a minute, marveling at how he managed to walk without a sound, like he didn’t have feet. Slytherin came into view again as he went to the sinks, and he leaned against the middle one, pale hands braced on the porcelain. He looked at himself in the mirror, his young face blank, eerie in its passivity—and, all of a sudden, he stepped back.

Open.”

Livi stirred beneath Harriet’s shirt at the utterance of Parseltongue, and a faint shiver went through the floor under their feet, rattling the fixtures and toilets fixed to the walls and floors. Professor Slytherin stepped back again, and the sinks moved, the middle one rising upward, the others peeling to the side like a misshapen flower blooming, its petals unfurling to reveal its center—or, in this case, the opening of a huge pipe.

“What is he doing?” Hermione breathed in Harriet’s ear, but the younger girl didn’t have an answer for her. What was the professor doing? Slytherin watched the sinks until they stopped, settling in place with a jarring click, and then the wizard strode forward without an ounce of hesitation, stepped into the pipe, and vanished into its unknown depths. Hermione and Elara mirrored Harriet’s gasp.

Moving together, the trio moved to the pipe’s edge and looked inside, but they could nothing aside from the gray metal, corroded by years and years of water passing against it. “He said ‘open’ in Parseltongue,” Harriet told the other two, feeling on the edge of an epiphany she wasn’t sure she wanted to make. “What if—? It has to be the Chamber!

They stared into the bottomless dark and shared a nervous, awkward breath. It was the Chamber of Secrets. They were looking down at the entrance to Salazar Slytherin’s legendary Chamber—in a bloody girl’s loo.

The sudden shivering started again, and the sinks began to pull in upon themselves, closing the entrance behind the professor. Elara and Hermione shuffled back, and Harriet tried to as well, but she couldn’t move her feet. She swayed, caught unawares by the sudden loss of traction, and she had just enough time to see Set’s black, shadowy hands wrap about her ankles before he yanked her forward, and Harriet plunged down into the closing pipe.

Harriet!

Hermione’s shocked shriek disappeared in an instant, whipped away by the harsh clang! of Harriet smacking her head, her elbows and shins skidding on the bumpy rivets, rolling once, and then—

Crash!

She landed hard upon a solid, flat surface, the air leaving her lungs in a jagged, broken gust. Harriet heard her name again—distant now, so far she couldn’t rightly say if it was her name being called or just an echo of her own thoughts—and then the dreaded, decisive thump of the sinks coming back together, trapping Harriet below their depths.

Fuck!

The dark pressed in on all sides and she panted, scared and more than a little rattled by the fall. As far as she could tell, she knelt on a stone landing at the bottom of the pipe, a deep gutter carved into the flagstones where water could flow and trickle into what sounded like a culvert. Harriet stuck her hand over the open space and felt the cold emptiness press against her skin. Squinting, she thought the culvert—the very one she’d almost rolled right into—turned away, and plunged downward again in another drain.

Harriet patted the surface under her until she could find the pipe that had dumped her here, and she also found the Invisibility Cloak tangled about her legs. Livius loosened his coils from around her body, cursing the sudden, quick descent.

Are you hurt?” she asked him, keeping her voice low. How Professor Slytherin hadn’t come running, she hadn’t a clue. Hadn’t he heard her fall? If he hadn’t, should she risk lighting her wand? Would it be better to be found, to go on undetected? If this truly was the entrance to the Chamber, Harriet didn’t much like the idea of Slytherin knowing she’d stumbled inside.

After he finished cursing her name and her blatant disrespect, Livi calmed down enough to report no, he wasn’t hurt, Harriet’s arms having taken the brunt of the impact. “Can you tell me the way out?

We shall sssee.

She felt the serpent move about, hissing, and neither of them could get more than foot up the first pipe before sliding back down. Harriet tried telling it to open, or to make stairs or an exit, but the pipe and surrounding wall remained obstinately still. She was stuck.

There isss a tunnel over there.

A tunnel?

Blind in the dark, Harriet followed Livi’s voice and finally decided to risk lighting her wand. She pulled it from her brace, whispering, “Lumos Minima.”

The paltry glow illuminated the narrow brick platform she stood upon and part of the deep culvert, a wide, corroded pipe diving down into the sodden blackness of the earth. To Harriet, it looked as if someone had built the platform after the fact, as if the pipes had been put into place and the builder had cut into them specifically to form a landing place for anyone looking to enter the aforementioned tunnel. A rough stone snake encircled the rounded entrance, and the tunnel beyond swept away, curling out of sight.

Set formed on the craggy wall and pointed down into the tunnel’s depths.

“Like I’d follow you, you arsehole!” Harriet hissed. “It’s your fault I’m bloody stuck here!”

Unmoved, Set pointed again, and Harriet once more felt the strange, sticky weight on her feet that had dragged her down here in the first place. “Fine!

She had little choice in the matter, since she couldn’t figure out how to open the entrance behind her. Swallowing, Harriet pulled the Invisibility Cloak around her shoulders, told Livi to follow, and set off into the dark.

 

x X x

 

The passage rounded in upon itself like the coils of a huge, dozing serpent, the uneven floor slanted low with the occasional step cut into the stone. Harriet kept one hand on the inner wall, and sometimes her fingers pressed against odd runes and symbols carved deep into the bedrock. She could see striations in the earth, different minerals and stones compressed by thousands of years of time and shifting earth, thin lines of gemstones glittering when her wand passed by them.

Ahead, Harriet could hear a muffled, constant roaring, like white noise on the telly when Dudley passed out and the program went off air. The air grew thin and smelled of wet things, reeds and brine and algae. Twice Harriet stopped and considered going back, going and waiting by the entrance, because Elara and Hermione would find someone to rescue her eventually. She only moved on with Set’s encouragement, and because she kept imagining horrid scenarios in which no one ever came for her, and she died alone in the miserable dark.

That’s a cheery thought.

The roaring grew louder, as did the smell. The tunnel stopped curving inward—and Harriet stifled a curse when she stepped forward and found herself at the edge of a massive underground reservoir, a solid bridge of natural rock leaping over the black liquid, framed on either side by rushing waterfalls. Lights hung in the cavern overhead like bulbous green stars plucked from the sky, kept aloft by magic alone, shining on the water and the bridge—and the vault door on the other side of the cavern, the one Harriet could see Professor Slytherin disappearing through.

Nox,” she murmured, lowering her wand. “C’mon, Livi.

Harriet urged the serpent up onto her shoulders and pulled the Cloak into place before hurrying over the bridge. The water masked her footsteps, and so she ran to catch the wizard, worried he’d shut the door and strand her outside of it. Slytherin moved at a steady clip, his wand in his hand, his robes whispering over the flat, shined stone of the new solar’s interior. Harriet stepped over the door’s raised threshold after him.

More little spots of starlight waited in the chamber, shining upon a vast, brass contraption of concentric circles forming a loose sphere, a solid bar in the middle of the floor holding it above them. The rustic, untouched texture of the walls gave way to Transfigured blocks and pillars—and Harriet gulped when she tipped her chin back and saw the undulating waters of the lake’s belly rippling where there should have been a ceiling. What’s holding that up?! Magic?! What if it wears off?!

She didn’t have time to puzzle the mystery of it; Slytherin crossed the space without thought to the water overhead and stepped up to a second vault door, five metal snakes forming the head of a hydra splayed out from the center.

Open,” Professor Slytherin commanded, and the snakes obeyed, heads recoiling, the lock slamming back with a thunderous bang. The door rolled open, and Slytherin continued on his way with Harriet staying a few meters behind.

They entered another tunnel, long and dark, the professor not bothering to light his wand, and they stopped before yet another door. This opened just as the others had, revealing what Harriet could only think was the true Chamber of Secrets beyond it.

A vast chasm of open space, illuminated by faint, shimmering green light, the Chamber was larger than any Muggle cathedral but just as grand and self-assuming; a palpable film of disuse maligned by the scent of rot coated the air, but it still felt sacred there, a place for quiet awe and lowered voices. The columns rose up and up and up, right into the black, nacreous haze clinging to the ribbed arches, long, reflective pools lining the wide central aisle. Dark stone doors and corridors connected to the main hall, but Harriet couldn’t help but stare at the huge, bearded bust of Salazar Slytherin himself waiting at the Chamber’s other end.

Professor Slytherin kept walking, tapping his wand against his open hand as if lost in thought. Harriet kept pace—until her foot connected with a puddle, creating a loud, sudden splash that had the wizard whirling around and pointing his wand directly at her head.

Harriet froze, holding her breath, and Slytherin continued to hold his wand high. For one horrid second, it looked as if he could see her, but then his eerie red eyes roved away, taking in the rest of the Chamber, flitting from shadow to shadow in search of the noise’s cause. “Homenum revelio.”

The spell expanded outward from his wand and crossed over Harriet, but it didn’t settle. When nothing happened, Slytherin narrowed his eyes and finally—finally—lowered his wand, his eyes still searching as he turned his back. Harriet sucked in a discreet breath.

That was close.

The wizard walked, silent as ever, until he stood under the unblinking eyes of his ancestor, every line of his face cast in deep relief by that watery, aquamarine glow, a single coil of brown hair falling across his brow. Slytherin lifted his free hand toward Salazar’s face and snarled in Parseltongue. “I command you Salazar Slytherin, greatest of the Founders four, to bequeath your secrets unto me!

Stone grated on stone, and Harriet watched in horrified trepidation as Salazar’s mouth opened like one of those chintzy nutcracker dolls Aunt Petunia always left on the mantel at Christmas, revealing a narrow, blackened tunnel smaller than those they’d traversed to reach the Chamber. She waited as the dust settled and the shallow pool at the bust’s massive chin stopped rippling. She waited for a full minute, tense and afraid—and yet, nothing happened.

Slytherin scoffed, dropping his arm. “Miserable cretin.” He started casting spells then, putting his back to the statue, muttering and reading some kind of magic relay Harriet couldn’t decipher. He’s looking for the Basilisk again, isn’t he? the young witch thought as she observed the swift, steady motions of the professor’s hands, the magic prickling her skin, seeming to brush her cheeks like warm, curious fingertips. Harriet pulled away, spooked, and minded her feet as she put distance between herself and whatever spellcraft Slytherin was evoking.

Thank Merlin the Basilisk isn’t here! The witch had a soft spot for creepy, odd things, especially snakes—but she drew the line at fifty-foot long eldritch monsters capable of killing with a single look.

A tell-tale tug at her ankle dropped Harriet’s gaze, and Set pooled at the cloak’s hem, allowing one finger to poke out in the direction of an adjoining corridor. Harriet gave Professor Slytherin one last glance, then went where Set indicated, shivering at the biting cold nipping at her face and exposed legs. The corridor immediately twisted off into the dark, and Harriet scooted along until confident she was at out of sight, at which point she risked lighting her wand again so she could see Set.

“This is bloody mad,” she muttered, brushing a cobweb out of her hair. “But I’ve trusted you before. Don’t let me down.”

Livi twitched on her shoulder, angular head nudging the Cloak. “The air isss…ssstrange here.”

How so?

It is…enticccing.

Harriet understood what the snake meant, though she couldn’t put the sensation into words. Truly, it made her a touch leery, because anything capable of overpowering the dismal, chilling design of this place to give her that fluttery feeling in her middle couldn’t possibly be benign. It was like waking up on Christmas to find presents on the foot of her bed; it was a pleasant shock, settling into a warm, elated feeling bubbling in her veins. It made her want to stay and get lost in the veritable warren of passages and corridors and long, open cloisters looking down upon the reservoir’s black waters. Harriet didn’t trust the feeling at all.

At length, Set stopped before a wide, Gothic door, and the funny symbols chiseled into the petrified wood flickered like bleary, blinking eyes under his shadowy fingers. Then, the runes went dark. Wary, Harriet tapped the door handle with her wand and whispered, “Aberto.” The handle twisted on its own and forced the door to ease open.

She didn’t know what she expected. Another chamber perhaps, or another sprawling, mystical dungeon. Maybe more blasted tunnels seeming to lead ever downward into the heart of the earth—but when Harriet stepped over the threshold, she found herself in a plain, stuffy study. Dust and time had ravaged the grand, stately desk and the tall burrow of cabinets and shelves over the stone running the length of the room, but evidence of recent occupation persisted through the space. The brocaded chair behind the desk was new—or, at least, made within the last century. The wood stool by the counter was free of rot and damp, and the large, empty cauldron hanging by the rod above the barren hearth bore no spots of rust or charring.

“Is this Salazar Slytherin’s office?” Harriet asked aloud, voicing the thought to herself. Given the grandiose, if deteriorated, spectacle of the main Chamber itself, she would’ve anticipated something gaudier and more luxurious from the Founder, but his office bore little of that pretension. The rug on the floor had long been reduced to a thin, matted layer of rat-chewed fibers. The portraits on the wall were all empty, their backgrounds faded and gray. A single mirror hung on the wall behind the desk, framed by a pair of lank, crooked curtains.

Set spilled from her shadow in a rolling, stark pillar of black against the pitted stones, and he stretched up the desk to encircle the newer items that lay upon its surface. There were quills and inkwells, sheaves of parchment left in tidy piles, and several books—the largest of which Set shoved toward Harriet, and she jumped to catch it as the volume slid toward the floor.

It was heavy, heavy enough that Harriet needed to stoop and cradle the book in both arms to lever it back up onto the desk. The cover had a lock on it—something she’d never seen before, not even in the library—but it didn’t look very fancy. The ancient leather peeled and flaked in places, the parchment edges ragged, torn, and nibbled by moths. Seeing the lock and adjoining buckle were both undone, Harriet carefully pried the tome open and scrunched her nose at the funny letters written inside. It looked like English, but the kind of English the very old portraits in the castle shouted at misbehaving students, which meant Harriet couldn’t read a word of it.

An ink snake coiling about a block “S” was drawn on the first page, and the snake moved before Harriet’s eyes. Above it, she could just barely decipher the faded rendering of a castle’s silhouette done in charcoal.

This had to have belonged to the Founder!

Harriet closed the book, and her eyes caught upon another item nudged into view by Set’s persistent prodding. She picked up a journal—a new journal, the binding still strong, if a bit creased—and thumbed through the pages, recognizing the familiar handwriting, though not the words themselves. Harriet held Professor Slytherin’s notes, the lines written in some kind of code, all the letters jumbled or replaced by funny little runes and symbols. His careful script filled almost every page.

Harriet knew she should let it be; she should pretend she never saw the Chamber, let alone the notebook her cruel, sharp-eyed professor chose to hide within its depths. She needed to find the exit and she needed to leave those book there—and yet, Set continued to lap at their edges like slow ocean waves, and Harriet’s wand trembled ever so slightly in her uncertain hand. She licked her bottom lip—and in a fit of Gryffindor boldness, tossed Professor Slytherin’s notebook atop the Founder’s tome and pulled both into her arms.

“I’m going to regret this,” Harriet griped, letting the book’s weight settle against her ribs. Set fell about her invisible feet once more, circling like a pleased cat, and the witch only hoped she wasn’t going to get herself caught. She was horrified to realize she really didn’t know what Professor Slytherin would do if he discovered her down there. She wasn’t sure he wouldn’t kill her.

It was not a comforting realization.

“Now…how do I get out of here?”


A/N: I can’t see Slytherin going down the slip’n’slide of doom into the sewer. I just can’t.

I base the entrance of the Chamber off the idea that it wasn’t always located in a loo, and I just have a lot of thoughts on the place, because in canon, it’s pretty boring for a secret chamber, honestly xD. Basically, I had way too much fun with it and I hope you enjoy the new details and changes.

So I pondered about this for a while: could homenum revelio detect someone inside The Invisibility Cloak? In canon it could, but for CDT, I’m saying it can’t. It’s a part of Death’s cloak; magic cannot forcibly reveal it. Snape (and Mad Eye) can see through it, because the magic to do so is physically changing how they see and perceive things. The magic in their eyes is affecting them, not the world around them. In CDT, the Cloak resists and shrugs off the magic of Homenum Revelio.

Chapter 83: rowena's silver

Chapter Text

lxxxiii. rowena’s silver

 

Elara Black was afraid of many things.

It crept up on her, that prickling, engulfing numbness inspired by nascent terrors and smaller, unfortunate triggers. She was afraid of enclosed spaces and high places, loud noises and germs to a certain extent. The dark made her wary, and sometimes she woke in the dead of night remembering the Slytherin dorms rested below thousands of tonnes of earth and water and couldn’t get back to sleep. Strangers made her anxious—and so did familiar faces, because had it not been familiar faces who dragged her from her bed and ignored her screams as Father Phillips swung the branding iron closer?

Yes, Elara Black feared many things—but she swallowed the fear down, pushed it back, tempered anxiety with a hard, unyielding stare, and if her heart beat a tad faster than normal, that was no one’s business but her own.

Even so, Elara couldn’t stop the terrified cry from escaping when she watched Harriet fall into the gaping shadows opening beneath the loo’s floor.

“Harriet!” Hermione’s hand closed around Elara’s wrist and tugged. “Let go!”

“Watch out!”

The other witch’s grip increased—too tight, too tight!—and Elara panicked, throwing herself back and out of the way of the closing sinks, which had been Hermione’s intention all along. The sinks sealed again with a wet snap.

“Don’t grab me,” Elara said much too sharply, too hoarsely, but Hermione only spared her a momentary glance before turning her attention to the sinks—and the hidden tunnel below them. The entrance had shut, leaving behind no indication of its existence. “This isn’t good.”

“This is a nightmare! How did she even fall?! She was fine—!” Hermione hurried forward, putting her head in the middle sink, which confused Elara until she started shouting. “Harriet? Harriet, can you hear me?”

Her voice echoed in the drain, and neither witch could say if it actually reached their friend under their feet. The sound bounced in their ears, and when it disappeared, the loo seemed quieter than ever. The silence sat so heavy, Elara had difficulty believing the crushing weight on her chest wasn’t actually there.

Straightening, Hermione took a shaky breath, sinking her large front teeth into her lower lip. “Professor Slytherin’s down there with her,” she murmured, more to herself than to Elara. “She—if he’s down there as well, Harriet should be fine. Professor Slytherin would—well, he wouldn’t hurt her. She’s going to be fine.”

“Or she’s concussed,” Elara retorted, hands shaking. “Or worse. I don’t trust him in this slightest, and neither do you!”

“No! We—okay. We simply need to open the sinks, as Professor Slytherin did.”

“If you haven’t noticed, we’re short a Parselmouth!”

“But we just need to mimic it!” Hermione scrunched her nose in concentration, and then hissed in her best approximation of Parseltongue. Despite her panic, Elara could admit something of the glottal sibilance Hermione made matched the snake tongue’s hushed otherworldliness, but it wasn’t quite right. The sinks remained in place.

“I think there’s more of a rattle to it, and I don’t know if I can copy it. Parseltongue is magic, after all. There haven’t been many studies on it, given the rarity, but theoretically, humans should be physically incapable of the language, given we lack a glottis and a snake’s hissing isn’t made with their palate or compressions of air created by the tongue—.”

Elara began pacing. Hermione rambled as she was prone to do in stressful situations.

“And snakes don’t actually speak to one another, do they? Animals don’t have a true language. It’s more of a primitive system of innate warnings and bodily communication—.”

Elara kept pacing.

“Which would explain why magical creatures have higher intelligence, because the natural phenomenon of magic and successive breeding have changed their brains and morphology, and Parseltongue being a hereditary trait means magic has physically impacted a Parselmouth’s brain—but that doesn’t make sense, because anyone could consult a simple Punnett square and understand continuous breeding with non-Parselmouths would have long since wiped Parseltongue out—.”

Elara stopped and stared at the line of sinks. Her hands still shook, perspiration beading her palms.

“But it’s not as if Harriet hisses whenever she breathes, so I should be able to mimic the sound she makes, unless it’s impossible without an ingrained gene triggered by magic that really has nothing to do with the language whatsoever—.

“Move,” Elara interrupted, whipping out her wand.

“What?”

“Get out of the way.”

“Wait! What are you going to do—?”

Hermione finally shifted from the sink and Elara jerked her own arm, concentrating on the spell’s formation. “Bombarda!

A sudden, loud screech filled the lavatory—and the side of the stall behind them shattered like glass, wood splinters flying through the air as their ears rang. Both Elara and Hermione threw their arms over their heads, the latter yelping in surprise. Unlike the stall, the sink remained pristine and unmarked.

Elara almost swore. It appeared Slytherin—either the present professor or the Founder or one of his descendants—had Charmed the plumbing to be impervious.

“Ooh, what are you both up to?” A cool breeze preceded the sudden reemergence of Myrtle’s spectral self, the teenage ghost floating through the wall at their backs, swooping low to survey the wreckage. She gasped. “Vandalism! In my bathroom?! Don’t you have anything better to do than come pick on me?!”

Her voice, usually sharp and nasally, rose several pitches until it neared unbearable levels, and Hermione winced. “We’re terribly sorry, Myrtle,” she pleaded. “There was a, err, accident.”

“An accident?!” Myrtle wailed. “It wasn’t an accident! You did it on purpose! You’re going to be in so much trouble—!”

“What’s down the drain over there?” Elara demanded as she jabbed a finger toward the stubborn sink and glared at the ghost. The undead residents of Hogwarts were fascinating conversationalists for the most part, but only in short bursts, and while Hermione always theorized on the reasons why the ghosts avoided Harriet, Elara secretly enjoyed her friend’s odd spirit-repelling quirk. It saved them from having to endure Myrtle’s tantrums, and it spared Elara having to see the Fat Friar.

Myrtle paused mid-shout, and her pockmarked face went slack with thought. “I don’t know.”

“Why not? You spend tons of time in the plumbing.”

“I—.” Her eyes scrunched behind her thick spectacles. “I haven’t been down there, obviously.”

“Why not? Why not go look?”

“Why don’t you?!” Myrtle shot back. She rose higher in the air, looking equal parts frightened and confused, her head turning to the sinks and then away as if she couldn’t help doing so. “Just because I’m dead doesn’t mean you get to order me about! I know you all make fun of me behind my back! ‘Poor, ugly Myrtle. Poor, ugly—DEAD Myrtle!”

The ghost broke into hysterical—and, in Elara’s opinion, forced—sobs before plunging headlong into the nearest toilet, her shrieks echoing in the pipes.

“There are a lot of places in the castle warded against ghosts,” Hermione said in the aftermath. “Hogwarts: A History has a compiled list of areas, and it would certainly make sense for the entrance to the Chamber to be blocked as well.”

“Marvelous,” Elara replied through gritted teeth. She tried another spell on the sinks, attempting to transfigure their shape instead of simply blasting them out of the way, but they still resisted her efforts. Water began to rise from the toilet Myrtle had disappeared down, and it spilled over the rim, flooding the floor.

“We need to leave before Filch comes!”

“We need to help Harriet.”

Huffing, Hermione took her by the hand instead of the wrist this time and tugged Elara toward the door. “We can’t help if we’re dragged off to his office. He’d take one look in here and have a fit!”

Elara knew she was right. They left the loo but didn’t go far, only enough to create plausible deniability if Filch came stomping past.

“Honestly, I’ve only been back at school for an hour and Harriet’s already found herself in trouble and you tried to blow something up—!”

Remembering the Basilisk, Elara reversed Hermione’s hold upon her hand and set off at a quick dash, heart still racing in her chest, though her mind felt clearer than it had minutes prior. “We can’t stand out here alone.” Harriet had Professor Slytherin with her, and should the professor prove treacherous for whatever reason, then Harriet had Livius. Elara and Hermione had nothing but their wands, and if the Basilisk came upon them, they’d make for easy targets while the rest of the school sat comfortably in the Great Hall.

They returned to the school’s foyer in record time, and together Elara and Hermione slipped through the main doors into the brightly lit hall, hurrying to their table under the cover of laughing voices and chattering flatware. “What are we going to do?” Hermione hissed beneath her breath, accidentally stepping on the hem of Elara’s robes and nearly sending them both careening into the backs of a pair of Hufflepuffs. “Surely we can’t just—sit here?”

“We’ll wait until after dinner,” Elara told her, not at all knowing if that was the right response or if she had the right idea. What was one meant to do when their best friend fell into a secret tunnel under a loo? If Harriet managed to avoid alerting Professor Slytherin to her presence and they caused a scene, they might only make things worse. But what if she was hurt? What if she wasn’t? What if she was with Slytherin, and the professor cursed them into oblivion for exposing his ancestor’s legacy? “And then—we’ll go to Dumbledore.”

They’d spent enough time in Myrtle’s loo discussing all Harriet had overheard in the staffroom for dinner to be nearly over. Elara and Hermione hunched low in their seats and didn’t bother touching any of the desserts arrayed before them, choosing instead to wait and gnaw over their own worry. Professor Slytherin was, naturally, absent from the High Table, and Elara let out a grateful breath when she spied Snape deep in conversation with a professor she didn’t remember the name of. She twisted her hands together in her lap, and the empty plate before her jumped and shuddered on the table.

When Professor Dumbledore stood and dismissed them all, Hermione popped to her feet before Elara could, and they darted toward the front of the Great Hall, dodging around speculative classmates wondering where they were going. The Headmaster seemed to see them coming, for he paused in turning away with Professor McGonagall, the latter of which took one look at the pair and formed a tight line with her lips.

“Professor Dumbledore?” Hermione asked, her voice warbling with uncertainty, though Elara could see how hard she tried to keep it level. “May we speak with you a moment?”

His blue eyes skipped from Hermione to Elara, and when they failed to land upon a green-eyed, disheveled girl in the midst, something in the wizard’s attention sharpened. “Of course. Let’s step through here, shall we? We’ll finish our conversation another time, Minerva.”

He gestured for them to go before him, and together the trio walked through the side entrance typically utilized by staff, pausing inside the little antechamber squeezed between the Great Hall and the outer corridor. “Now,” Professor Dumbledore said, resting his arm against his middle. “Judging by your expressions, am I to guess Harriet has gotten herself into a spot of trouble?”

Hermione and Elara nodded, the former blurting out, “We were in the second-floor lavatory when Professor Slytherin came in—and he didn’t see us there, and he—well, he hissed in Parseltongue, and the sinks started to move and revealed a large pipe underneath and he jumped in and—.”

“Harriet fell,” Elara interjected, though a voice in the back of her mind commented it hadn’t looked as if Harriet fell; it looked as if she’d been shoved, no matter how impossible that was. “And the entrance closed again before we could get her out.”

“Is Harriet hurt?”

“We don’t know, Professor.”

The Headmaster led the way into the corridor, the two shorter witches rushing to match his swift, quiet stride. He avoided the main stairs and the crowd of sleepy, yet indelibly curious students that would be there, taking Elara and Hermione through a narrow, dark passage Elara hadn’t known was there in the first place. Cobwebs swaddled the ceiling, illuminated by the bright spell-light spilling from Professor Dumbledore’s wand, strung along like great globs of candy floss. Without warning, the passage merged again with the main corridor, leaving nothing behind them but a blank stretch of stone, and if Elara hadn’t walked down the skinny passage, she would have never guessed it to be there.

“Stay close, if you please,” Professor Dumbledore said, which caused both witches to stick to his heels like gormless chicks chasing a mother hen. They turned a corner, torches coming alive, starlight peeking through the shuttered windows holding bastion along the outer wall—and Elara crumpled under the weight of Harriet Potter as the girl came toppling out of a framed mirror.

“Harriet!”

The bespectacled witch rolled herself off of Elara and sat in a wet, messy heap on the stone floor, the smell of brine and old, damp rot radiating off her in waves. The Invisibility Cloak hung on her arm like a twisted wrapper. Aside from a few scrapes and a rather painful-looking raw spot on her shin from sliding down the pipe, she appeared unharmed—if a bit dazed. Livius wrapped himself about her shoulders, shaking his angular head as he eyed the newcomers with what Elara assumed was reptilian wariness.

“Oh,” Harriet said when she spotted the Headmaster arrayed in a pair of burnt sienna robes peering down at her. “Hullo, Professor.”

“Hello, Harriet,” Dumbledore replied. “It appears we were a bit premature in mounting your rescue.”

Harriet looked to her two friends as relief swept through her expression. “Thanks, Hermione and Elara.”

They muttered their own relief at having her back, and Elara’s heart finally slowed from its frantic, painful beat and seemed to crawl from her throat back into her chest where it belonged. Professor Dumbledore turned his attention to the mirror, a large, gilded piece with various spots of damage on the frame or the glass itself. “How extraordinary,” the Headmaster remarked as he swept his wand against the mirror’s surface, searching for something the three witches couldn’t see.

“I don’t know what happened,” Harriet said as Hermione helped both her and Elara back to their feet. “I was in the—Chamber, did Hermione and Elara tell you about that yet? Blimey, Professor, there has to be about a hundred tunnels down there!”

“And what has happened to Professor Slytherin?”

“I think he’s still inside? He was looking for the—erm, snake, and was brassed off when he couldn’t find it.” Harriet blinked, her green eyes flitting to the mirror. “There was a mirror like this one in what I think was an office, and I told it to open in Parseltongue. Next thing I knew, I ended up here.”

“That is what so extraordinary,” Professor Dumbledore replied with cheer. “Because this is a perfectly ordinary mirror.”

The three Slytherins blinked. “What do you mean, sir?” Hermione inquired, brow furrowed. “There must be a Translocation Charm of some sort upon it, shouldn’t there?”

“No. I can detect no magic of any kind upon it.” He gave the surface two solid taps with his wand, and when nothing occurred, Elara silently agreed it appeared mundane. “This, my dears, is a Moon Mirror. It is very old, and there are more than a dozen of them scattered throughout the castle. Neither I nor any of my predecessors have ever discovered their true purpose.”

“Why’re they called ‘Moon Mirrors’?”

“These aren’t made of glass, you see. Instead, their creator used the eggshells of an Occamy—a rare magical creature out of the east, whose eggs are comprised of solid silver. Early alchemists referred to silver as the ‘metal of the moon,’ and so the term extends to these lovely mirrors.” Professor Dumbledore returned his wand to his pocket and tugged on the end of his beard, lost in thought. “It is said Rowena Ravenclaw herself fixed them to the castle’s walls. Fascinating. If I were to guess, I would say the mirrors have pairs, with one being an exit and the other entrance. After you passed through the first mirror, Harriet, it seems the second sealed itself shut behind you. An effective way for Salazar Slytherin to journey about Hogwarts without exposing his secrets.”

Elara looked into the polished silver surface and stared at her own disgruntled reflection. It didn’t sit easy with her, the idea that any mirror in the school might actually be one of these Moon Mirrors and thus serve as an exit or entrance for people like Professor Slytherin to come slithering through. Magic was as vast as it was frightening, and though one could map out the school’s halls and corridors and classrooms, Hogwarts continued to prove itself truly unknowable, a place of infinite mystery and discovery.

In the distance, the clock tower began to chime the hour, and Professor Dumbledore stirred. “Ah, well. If you’re unharmed, Harriet, you three should return to the dorms.”

“Yes, Professor.”

The trio of witches walked away from the Headmaster then, Hermione fussing over Harriet’s scrapes, Elara’s hand fisted in a part of the Invisibility Cloak, letting the feel of the cold, slick fabric ground her. None of the three looked back at their professor, too preoccupied with thoughts of their beds and the perceived safety of their underground dormitory, and so neither Harriet, Elara, or Hermione saw the shadowy hand dip into the large pocket of Harriet’s robes and drop a thin, weathered volume on the floor.

Professor Dumbledore spotted the journal and picked it up. His wizened fingers leafed through the coded pages, spied the familiar, unwelcome copperplate—and his blue eyes rose to watch the three witches until they disappeared from sight. He closed the journal with a snap.

“Extraordinary indeed.”

Chapter 84: lost to the ages

Chapter Text

lxxxiv. lost to the ages

 

By the end of the week, Harriet was certain Madam Pince would murder all three of them before term let out.

After Hermione stopped fussing and regained her breath, Harriet brought out the tome she stole from Slytherin’s office and the bushy-haired witch went right back to fussing, going into absolute raptures about the treasure Harriet managed to nick from the bowels of the earth. Hermione informed her it was written in old Anglo-Saxon, and if they wanted a chance of reading what Salazar Slytherin himself had written on those crinkled pages, they’d have to translate it themselves.

Hence why Madam Pince was one step away from committing a triple homicide.

They arrived early every morning that week and waited for the elderly librarian to open the doors, taking over their favorite table in the back during lunch and break and before dinner, badgering Pince with questions about the materials they wanted and the sources they needed. Hermione had a terrible habit of gasping aloud when she made a discovery and hoarding far too many books, which irked Madam Pince, and Elara accidentally set off a Caterwauling Charm when she wandered too close to the Restricted Section. Twice. Harriet thought herself perfectly well-behaved—but then she got ink-covered fingerprints on a monogram more than seven-hundred years old about the Norman conquest and Madam Pince threatened to boil her alive. Twice.

In Harriet’s latest letter to Mr. Flamel, Harriet told him about finding a book written by the Founder and wanting to translate it, leaving out her dubious acquisition of the book in question, and the wizard wrote back that “you always have the most interesting questions and stories to tell, Harriet,” enclosing a primer he hoped would assist them in their quest. Hermione devoured the primer, of course, with help from Elara, who actually understood bits and pieces of Anglo-Saxon and could read the dated, cramped lettering better than anyone else. Harriet was relegated to scribing the chunks they managed to translate.

Harriet didn’t mention the other book, the journal she knew she took from the desk with Salazar Slytherin’s tome. She panicked when she first discovered its absence, but Harriet found nothing when she searched, so it either fell out of her pocket somehow or never left the Chamber in the first place. After a minute of thought, she decided that might be for the best. Harriet was only a second-year, after all, and she didn’t know all that much about magic; what if Professor Slytherin had a Tracking Charm on his journal? What if it was cursed? No, best the bloody thing not be in her possession when all was said and done.

“It’s not anything Salazar Slytherin would have thought important,” Hermione deduced on Friday, the three of them once more in the library hiding from Pince, who was determined to oust them early, being that it was the end of the week. They sat on the floor in the stacks devoted to Edwardian Wizarding history with a candle and Slytherin’s obnoxiously heavy book open between them. “Parchment back then would have been more difficult to procure as well as more expensive, so even what we would consider scribbles or scratch paper were kept and bound together. The Founder kept notes here. It’s not a diary, not really, but he did write down his thoughts on current events. He even mentions part of the east wing’s construction—oh, this is priceless, Harriet. To have a firsthand account of the castle’s creation—.”

“Does he waffle on for a full chapter about the plumbing? Because Hogwarts: A History already did that.”

Elara snorted.

Indignant, Hermione gave them both a stern look worthy of Professor McGonagall. “No, he doesn’t mention the plumbing, because there was no plumbing in those days. It was added on later—and from your description, Harriet, it seems as if someone purposefully disguised the Chamber’s entrance when the updates were started or converted old drains and drainage lines. He talks about the Chamber here in this bit, briefly.” She scrunched her nose and consulted the primer again, holding it closer to the candle. “Oh.”

“Oh?”

“I’m not entirely sure, but the context of the word would be odd otherwise…. You see this line here? Where he mentions the ‘neoðan’? That roughly translates to ‘the underneath,’ and if I’m not mistaken, that’s what the Founder called the Chamber. In hindsight, it makes perfect sense. Why would Slytherin himself call it the Chamber of Secrets? That’s too pedantic even for a bigoted egoist.”

A sudden clopping of shoes on the floor turned their heads as Madam Pince bore down upon the trio. “You three again! Out! Out of the library! It’s closing for the evening!”

“But it’s not even time for it to close!”

Out, I said! Go to dinner! Go!”

Sulking, Harriet and the others allowed themselves to be ushered back into the corridor, and—leery of being isolated in an area of the castle where the Basilisk had already attacked—they rushed to the Great Hall, taking their usual spots at the House table before many of their classmates arrived. For a little while, Harriet pushed thoughts of Slytherin’s book from her head and tucked into her supper, talking with the Beater Peregrine Derrick about the upcoming Quidditch match between Gryffindor and Hufflepuff and who he thought would win. Soon, however, dinner ended and the Slytherins returned to their dormitory, and Hermione asked if they could use Harriet’s trunk to keep researching. Elara grimaced, but the trio descended into the extra room inside the trunk, lit the lantern, and shut the lid.

Livi peered from his terrarium, displeased with the interruption to his nap, and two smaller heads peeked over the teacup’s rim.

“Harriet, is that another snake?”

“Yeah!” she chirped, bending at the waist to pick up Kevin and her newest acquisition. “He’s another Chr—Yule cracker golem. I got him at the feast.” She held the skinny red snake out toward Hermione, since Elara had already seen the tiny creature when they’d pulled the cracker and Harriet tucked him into her sleeve. “His name is Rick.”

“…Rick?”

“It’s short for Godric—because he’s red, like a Gryffindor.”

“Then what’s Kevin short for?”

“Kevin’s short for Kevin. Are you daft?”

Hermione opened her mouth as if to argue, then thought better of it and shook her head. She removed Slytherin’s book from her satchel and set it on the worktop, the spine creaking as she opened it to her marked place. “Never mind. Let’s go back to the part we were reading before Madam Pince interrupted….”

And so they did, Harriet returning Kevin and Rick before retrieving her quill and parchment as Hermione and Elara scratched their heads and picked apart Slytherin’s ancient lettering. Tired from dinner, Harriet’s eyes glazed over, and her attention drifted, tracing the old spots on the wall where posters or placards used to hang, the faded Potter crest emblazoned on the cupboard. Sometimes she wondered if her dad had used this space, and Harriet amused herself with imagining what he could have possibly stored down here. What had he been like? She knew James Potter had been a Chaser and Head Boy, so did that mean he was brainy? Popular? Was Harriet anything like him?

“He mentions Rowena Ravenclaw quite often,” Hermione muttered, squinting in the low light, bringing her face closer to the pages. “This section is almost incomprehensible. His handwriting is atrocious in places. Here he mentions something about a ‘nest,’ but is that the right word for it?” She flipped through Mr. Flamel’s primer, growing more frustrated. “I can’t decipher this nonsense!”

“It would make sense for Slytherin to talk about Ravenclaw, wouldn’t it?” Harriet asked, worried she might get snapped at if she interrupted Hermione now. “All the stories say the Founders were friends before they made Hogwarts, so that means Slytherin and Ravenclaw were friends, too. Why else would he have those mirrors down in the Chamber—or the Underneath, or whatever?”

“That doesn’t explain why the mirror only responded to Parseltongue,” Elara pointed out. “Ravenclaw wasn’t a Parselmouth.”

The unspoken question in her tone went unanswered. True, the Moon Mirror in Salazar’s study had only opened after Harriet had spoken to it in Parseltongue—and after Set had badgered and shadow-mimed her into inspecting the ruddy thing in the first place—but that didn’t mean it was the only way to get it to cooperate. If Ravenclaw made the mirror, then she knew it better than anyone else, and it was entirely possible for the Parseltongue password to be something like a failsafe just in case Rowena herself couldn’t get through or open the way. It reminded Harriet of how she’d adjusted the Charm on the trunk just enough to let Elara and Hermione open the extra room. Maybe that was the whole reason Slytherin had the Moon Mirror in the first place.

Lost in thought, Harriet made idle scratch marks on the edge of the parchment with her eagle feather quill, and when Elara and Hermione started to bicker over the exact connotation of this “nest,” Harriet took the opportunity to look over the book herself. Unlike Hermione, who dissected the thing page by page, Harriet marked her place and chose a random spot to flip to. Twice more she did this, until she spied a promising section complete with stray doodles and crossed out scribbles. Something about the image of the great Salazar Slytherin huffing and scrawling over his notebook like a teenager made Harriet want to laugh.

She made a right hash of the writing in trying to puzzle out a few of the disjointed sentences. ‘Fire, foe, cannot burn mine person, water cannot take mine lungs. What be I?’ Harriet nibbled on the end of the quill, picking through the stray lines here and there, finding other, similarly written phrases. A few struck her as being familiar. Are these…riddles? Odd.

On the corner of the page, smudged by the fingers of someone long dead, Slytherin had drawn something feathery encircled by coils or thorns, Harriet couldn’t tell which.

Above them, Harriet could hear the tired, impatient thump of feet moving into the dorm and the lavatory beyond, someone—probably Pansy—dropping their satchel with a particularly heavy bang. “C’mon, we have to be in bed before Prefect Farley comes by for her rounds.”

Elara and Hermione abandoned their squabble with some reluctance and followed Harriet up the steps and out of the trunk. Never one to miss an opportunity for being an irritating berk, Pansy sat up from where she’d flounced on her own bed and glared at the trio. “What are you up to down there, Potter?” she demanded.

Harriet considered giving a snippy reply, but she was tired and not inclined to humor Parkinson. “Studying,” she said as she closed the trunk. “Pince kicked us out of the library.”

“Why not study in the common room like a normal witch?”

Rolling her eyes, Harriet switched the latch on the trunk and opened it again, fishing out her nightgown from the small compartment. Elara disappeared into the washroom, and Hermione sat on the edge of her bed, brown eyes distant as she stared at the rug under her feet. Runcorn asked her about the quiz they were supposed to have in Astronomy later that night, but Hermione didn’t hear her, so Katherine scoffed and went to ask Daphne instead. Harriet changed, then went to brush her teeth, and when she came back, Hermione was still sitting on the bed, her brow furrowed, lips pursed.

“…Hermione?”

“Hmm?”

“Everything all right?”

“Oh. Yes, I’m fine.” She stood and smoothed the front of her skirt, though her face didn’t lose that speculative look that made Harriet a mite nervous. Nevertheless, Harriet went to her own bed, drew the curtains, and tucked herself in. She set her glasses on the end table—and made sure to set a timer with her wand, having forgotten to do that more times than she cared to remember. The sound of her dormmates moving about settled, and soon Prefect Farley checked they were all in bed. Really she only popped her head in, pausing her conversation with her own dormmate long enough to see all the curtains were closed. Farley shut the door again, and Pansy continued whispering with Millicent once the prefect moved on. Harriet listened to the indistinct rasp of their voices and, slowly, fell asleep.

 

xXx

 

Hours later, in the cold, unrelieved dark of the quiet dormitory, Harriet woke wide-eyed and gasping from a dreadful, slippery nightmare, the details quick to disperse and drain over the edges of her mind like spilled milk dripping off a counter’s edge. It left her feeling unsettled and nervous, and so she sat up, shivering against the chill, and brought the blanket up over her head.

“It’s just a dream,” she reminded herself in a low whisper, her breath warming the air trapped under the cover. “It’s not real.”

The familiar mantra helped calm her nerves, and Harriet pushed the blanket off, peering into the dark with her myopic vision. The timer on her wand had yet to go off, and the other witches were still fast asleep, so Harriet assumed she hadn’t dozed off for very long. With a grunt, she placed her glasses on her nose and nudged open the curtains, deciding it best to get up and read or study instead of trying to go back to sleep. All the other curtains remained closed—except for the ones around Hermione’s bed, which was perfectly made without a single wrinkle in the counterpane.

“Hermione?” she whispered, picking up her wand. When no answer came, Harriet padded into the lavatory, finding it empty but for the steady drip-drip of a loose faucet, so she returned to the main room. She happened to glance at her trunk and saw the latch undone.

What is she up to?

Frowning, Harriet eased the lid open—and squinted against the sudden, soft glow of lantern light emanating from below. She threw a leg over the trunk’s side and crept down the steps. “What are you doing?”

Hermione sat on the floor in the tiny room, Slytherin’s book propped open upon her lap, Mr. Flamel’s primer tucked under her knee. Livi had abandoned his terrarium, and Harriet knew Hermione was distracted because the older witch didn’t so much as blink when the Horner Serpent hung his head off the shelf to inspect her bushy hair. Letting out a little huff, Harriet came to Hermione’s side and tapped her on the shoulder. Hermione glanced up, her eyes filled with dreadful confusion, and again Harriet asked what she was doing down there.

“I couldn’t sleep,” she admitted. “I—. Slytherin made a comment I couldn’t get out of my head, even when I lied down and tried to shut my eyes. He goes on these long tangents about the ‘gyr-blódgeótend,’ you see—these parts where it looks as if he’d tried to stab the parchment with his quill. According to him, they were quite a problem in his youth, and he—and Godric and Helga—lost several members of their families to their ‘deceit of the cræft.’ He hated the gyr-blódgeótend. Despised them utterly and thought they should be wiped out. Do you know what it means? It translates to ‘dirty bloodshedder,’ and it’s the etymological origin of Mudblood.”

Harriet leaned on the wall and slid down until she could sit next to Hermione, wondering where this conversation was going. “Well, everyone knows he hated Muggle-borns. That’s the whole bloody legend behind the Chamber, isn’t it?”

“But that’s just it! In the comment I translated just before we went up for bed, Slytherin mentioned those ‘from Eargian’—‘Eargian’ being an early term for Muggles. He wrote about the tutelage of his Muggle-born students—and he didn’t hate them, Harriet, he didn’t. He hated the gyr-blódgeótend, the dirty bloodshedders—those witches and wizards, pure-blood or not, who betrayed their own kind to the Muggles that hated and feared magical beings. This was far before the Statute of Secrecy; the Wizarding world was common knowledge to everybody. To Slytherin, you were either with magic, or against it, and though he remained suspicious of Muggle-borns, he didn’t think them undeserving of their abilities. Mudblood doesn’t mean Muggle-born. It means traitor.”

They stayed silent as Hermione’s words sunk in, her hands tight upon the book’s weathered edges, and Harriet watched as the color leached from her small knuckles.

“I had to keep reading. I had to be sure of what I’d spotted—because this means everything we know about the Chamber and its legend is—is utter bollocks, Harriet! Rubbish! He didn’t leave the Basilisk behind to kill the Muggle-born population; he left it behind as a final line of defense in a Muggle incursion! So much history, all lost to shoddy translation and misinterpretation!”

She slammed the book shut, and Harriet saved it before it could suffer more mistreatment in the hands of the bushy-haired witch. Harriet had never seen Hermione so frustrated and upset before. “I don’t understand,” she said, hesitant.

“Neither do I,” Hermione retorted with a sniffle. “Professor Slytherin knows about this book. He’s read it! You know he has! And so he must know the truth, for years even! But he’s never said a thing! And people like him, and Professor Selwyn, and—and Voldemort, keep using Salazar Slytherin’s ideology as an excuse to harm and belittle Muggle-borns when that was never the Founder’s intention. I never understood why I came to Slytherin House. I argued with the Hat, but it insisted, and for almost two years I’ve questioned its decision every single day, every single time I had to put on the crest of an old, crusty bigot.” Hermione wrapped her arms around her legs and balanced her chin on her knee, scowling. “But he wasn’t a bigot. Merlin knows the man couldn’t have been perfect—honestly, who leaves a Basilisk in a school and thinks that’s a good idea? But he wouldn’t have spat on me because of my bloodline. He wouldn’t have denied me my place here. People like the Dark Lord appropriate everything the Founder stood for and just—twist it until we can’t recognize any of it anymore. Pride becomes fanaticism, ambition turns to greed, cunning an excuse for cold-blooded ruthlessness. This is what people think when they see us—just look at how the others behave around Slytherins after this Chamber nonsense! Like we’re a pack of murderers just waiting to happen. It’s not right.

Harriet struggled to think of something to say, but there was nothing at all that would make any of this any better.

Hermione shook her head. “No one will ever believe us. We could shout it from the top of the Astronomy Tower, and no one would ever listen. It changes everything, and yet it changes nothing, and that frustrates me so much.”

She unfolded one arm, and Harriet took her hand in her own, giving it a squeeze. She had a point; they couldn’t reveal their possession of Salazar Slytherin’s notes, not without dire consequences, and if they told a bunch of stuffy pure-bloods their idol wasn’t the gleaming pillar of staunch magical lineage, they’d be called liars. Snape always harped on Harriet about perception, and was this not yet another example of perception being tweaked to suit a particular frame of mind? Like when Dudley told stories about Harriet and all the neighbors thought her a nasty little hooligan without ever meeting her. Reality wouldn’t change their views.

“Some people don’t want to hear the truth, Hermione. Especially if it proves them wrong.”

“I know.”

“Slytherin’s been dead for hundreds of years, so it doesn’t matter what he thought anymore. Even if he was a bigot, it’s not his House anymore; it’s ours. You’re just as much of a Slytherin as Malfoy or Parkinson or any of those gits, and we’re not going to sit about and let those dodgy pure-bloods and near-sighted numpties give us a bad name, are we?”

Tension eased in Hermione’s expression, and she smiled, the fevered brightness dimming in her eyes. “Yes, you’re right.” Her fingers tightened once more before she let go and began to search her pockets for a handkerchief. “Thank you, Harriet.”

“You’re welcome.”

She found her sought handkerchief and though she managed to dry her tears, Hermione’s face stayed blotchy and rather miserable looking. “There’s more to that book than I think any of us expected,” she said, changing the subject with a brisk sigh. “Such as his apparent connection with Rowena Ravenclaw. I can’t put my finger on it, but something about that connection begs a more thorough inspection. I think it’s important.”

“As long as it doesn’t end with me brewing an illegal potion and wearing Professor Sinistra’s face,” Harriet joked, and the mood lightened at last.

“No, I don’t believe it will come to that.”

“Oh, bloody hell.”

“What is it?”

“I thought I’d suppressed all that. Now I remember and we’ve got Astronomy soon. How am I supposed to look her in the eye?” Harriet groaned.

Hermione laughed as she tucked away her handkerchief, and together they set Slytherin’s book and Mr. Flame’s primer on the shelf. “Just look at the top rim of your glasses.”

“Because being cross-eyed is so much better. Ugh. Drinking that had to be the worse idea you’ve ever had, Hermione.”

“Perhaps.” She smiled again, the motion sharper now, almost mischievous. They ascended the steps into their silent dormitory, and as Hermione walked away, she whispered. “But also very informative.”


A/N: I dabble a bit in trying to flesh-out the Founders’ characters. It’s always bothered me that Salazar (like most Slytherins) is just a two-dimensional villain in canon. The world during Hogwarts’ founding was a much, much different place, and it seems ridiculous to me that in a time of war, invasions, plagues, and population discrepancies, that Salazar would honestly give a shite about where magic users came from, so long as they were loyal. I’m inclined to believe he would have hated pure-bloods like the Malfoys more, who came over with William the Conquerer, and xenophobia was huggge. But, y’know, head-canon. /shrug.

Hermione: “Is that another snake?”

Harriet: “Yeah, isn’t he cute?”

Hermione: *mentally organizing an intervention* “…Mhm.”

Chapter 85: in search of answers

Chapter Text

lxxxv. in search of answers

 

On a Sunday midway through February, the majority of the school’s student body tromped out of the castle into the brisk weather and headed for the Quidditch Pitch.

Hermione and Elara didn’t want to go. Neither did several of the older Slytherins for whom the glamour of Quidditch had worn off, at least when their own team wasn’t playing. Harriet knew her friends didn’t much enjoy the game, not as she did, and so she didn’t needle them relentlessly about attending. “Just promise you’ll be careful and won’t leave the dorms,” she said. Hermione rolled her eyes and Elara gave a distracted nod.

“We’ll be fine, Harriet. We promise.”

And so the younger witch left her friends to follow the crowd into the castle’s corridors. Malfoy made a passing comment on Harriet being a loner, and Nott pointed out that Crabbe and Goyle had gone on ahead without him, and he yelped, running to catch up with the other two. Harriet shared a laugh with Nott and Zabini, though she couldn’t shake the feeling of being the odd one out, drifting toward the edges of the group. They were almost out of the entrance hall when she glimpsed a flash of crimson and paused, spotting Ginny Weasley standing in the middle of the passage, staring at the wall.

Frowning, Harriet broke off from the group and went to Ginny’s side. “Weasley?” she said. The girl’s eyes remained faceted on the blank stretch of stone in front of her—until Harriet gave her shoulder a light tap. Ginny blinked and looked around.

“…Potter?”

“All right, Weasley?”

“I…yeah, I’m fine.” She shook her head, then glanced past Harriet toward the entrance hall, then behind her. In the sunlight coming through the window, Harriet could see that Ginny’s face was paler than usual, her freckles stark, her blue eyes dark and distant. “Where did Luna go?”

“Luna? She’s probably headed to the pitch, Ginny. We can go check, if you want. It’s not a good idea to stand around alone these days, yeah?”

Weasley narrowed her eyes as if trying to figure whether or not Harriet was threatening her, and then the redhead shook herself again. “You’re right. I thought she was right here—but Luna’s a bit, erm, flighty?”

Harriet got the impression Ginny wanted to say “empty-headed,” and she forced herself to not point out that it hadn’t been Lovegood she found aimlessly standing in an empty corridor. They hurried to catch up with the rest of the school, jumping down the steps and cutting through the courtyard, meeting the tail end of the leaving students and falling into place. As they slowed to a walk, Harriet had to admit that while she didn’t know Ginny well, they’d become more friendly over the past few months, exchanging smiles or nods in the halls, sitting at the same table in the library when Hermione didn’t crowd the space with extra books. Weasley seemed…off, somehow, and Harriet couldn’t decide what was wrong.

It had been quiet at Hogwarts, for the most part. Many students had begun the inevitable shift toward normalcy, thinking the danger of “the Heir” had passed since no one had turned up Petrified since Justin and Nearly Headless Nick. Even Professor Slytherin had been marginally less acerbic, though he and the other teachers remained on edge, just like Harriet and her friends. Great big ruddy snakes didn’t just up and disappear, and Hermione asserted that whoever stole the Basilisk must have done so for a purpose and their purpose hadn’t been fulfilled. “There will be more attacks,” she had said just last week. “I imagine the Headmaster is determined to purge the school during the summer, so they have to complete whatever their plan is before the end of the school year. Anyone who thinks otherwise is—well, they’re an idiot.”

Oddly enough, the Slytherins remained the most vigilant despite how some of the older, nastier upper-years sneered about the Heir doing “good work,” and Neville Longbottom still hadn’t stopped bloody following Harriet around. Harriet had confronted him several times and Elara told the git off more than once, but he persisted and seemed to be there whenever she turned around, his eyes all scrunched and squinted, looking at Harriet like she’d killed a bloke. She didn’t have a clue what she’d done to earn his suspicions.

“How are things in Gryffindor Tower?” she asked Ginny, who shrugged.

“Better, I guess. It’s a bit quieter, what with everyone trying to prepare for the exams before the Ostara hols. Is it like that in Slytherin?”

“Not really? It’s never been loud. Snape would probably gut us if we were.”

“Oh.” Ginny’s brow furrowed as they came under the shadow of the Quidditch stands. “Hey, can you tell me what your common room looks like?”

Confused, Harriet replied, “Err, I guess? It’s got couches and armchairs, a few tables, a few hearths. It all looks a bit antique. Oh, and the windows. They looks out into the lake.”

“Ha, I knew it.” Harriet raised a brow and Ginny rushed to explain. “My brothers, Fred and George, you know them, right? They claim they’ve snuck into Slytherin common room before, but I always knew they were full of it. They said you lot have a big snake statue in the middle of the common room with an altar in front of it.”

Harriet snorted. “Oh, yeah, forgot to tell you about that. It’s ten feet tall and we sacrifice lost Hufflepuffs there on the weekends.”

They shared a laugh as they started up the steps into the stands, arriving at the higher level out of breath and chilled by the bracing wind. Harriet could already spot the Gryffindor and Hufflepuff teams down on the field meeting in the middle with Madam Hooch. She looked about, squinting through her smudged glasses, but didn’t see Luna Lovegood among the gathered spectators.

“She’s over there,” Ginny noted with a breath of relief, pointing out her Ravenclaw friend seated in a sea of crimson and gold scarfs. A fission of unease crawled down Harriet’s spine as she followed and realized she’d landed right in the midst of the Gryffindor upperclassmen. She recognized the sixth-years Rivers and Wattle, the two idiots who’d tried to steal her letter from Mr. Flamel and pushed her into the mud. They sneered at Harriet as Ginny took the empty space by Luna.

“I…should probably go, Ginny.”

“Huh?” the first-year asked, glancing at Harriet, then turning to the harsh, hateful glares being thrown at the bespectacled witch. “You can sit with us, if you’d like. Leave off, Elijah!”

Rivers—or Elijah as Ginny called him—had a nasty comment in reply, and Ginny’s reddening face quickly brought the Gryffindor prefect Percy Weasley over, who basically told them all off and finally let Harriet sit down. She tried concentrating on the game as it played out, feeling dreadfully out of place among the Gryffindors despite Ginny’s reassurance. Every time Neville scored and they cheered, Harriet got a strange, unfamiliar tightening in her middle that she couldn’t quite describe. She sat among people who adored and worshiped the Boy Who Lived while they despised Harriet—and the only things separating Longbottom and her were a lie and a hat’s split-second decision. In another life, it could have been her out there on the pitch wearing red and gold while people chanted her name.

It would be easy to say she was jealous, but she wasn’t. No, Harriet was…unsettled. One lie turned attention from her to Longbottom, and it changed the whole of the world, it seemed. One lie had changed history and turned Salazar Slytherin into the pure-blood fanatic messiah. She thought of all the things she’d ever been told and learned, and Harriet wondered what else was a lie, and what was the truth.

The game ended with Gryffindor victorious, and Harriet made a quick escape, saying goodbye to a distracted Ginny and Luna before tumbling down the steps and into the stream of disgruntled Slytherins already leaving the stands. Harriet paid little mind to the upset grumbling—Gryffindor’s win brought them closer to the fore, and if Slytherin lost against them in their own match, they’d lose the cup. As Seeker, she made all the right noises and remarks about crushing the dunderheaded House of Lions when the time came, but her heart wasn’t in it, and she was glad to escape back into the dorms.

“Bloody Gryffindors and their thick heads,” she muttered, dragging her scarf off from her neck, scratching at the prickling itch beginning to needle her neck. She shouldered open the door into the room she shared with seven other witches and asked, “Hermione, do you know where that cream Madam Pomfrey gave me for my scar is—?”

Her question trailed off unanswered as Harriet spotted no sign of the bushy-haired witch. Her hangings stood open, baring the tidy bed to view, while her carrel remained its usual explosion of strewn study supplies, scrolls and books and journals stacked high on its surface. Next to it was Harriet’s desk, and then Elara’s—and it was here Harriet spotted her other best friend slumped in her chair, using a thick book as a pillow.

“Hey—.” Harriet shook her shoulder until Elara sat up and flinched, wiping away a bit of drool on the back of her glove. “Where’s Hermione?”

“What? Is the game over already?”

“It’s been three hours.” Harriet couldn’t suppress the note of urgency squeezing her voice. “Where’s Hermione?”

Elara shook of the vestiges of sleep and turned to Hermione’s carrel, pausing upon seeing it vacant. “I—don’t know, apparently. I thought she was right here—.”

Harriet strode over to Hermione’s desk and searched the surface, scattering quills and loose parchment, snatching up the sheet left on top. “‘Went to the library. Had to check something,’” she read aloud, unease twisting in her heart. “‘Be back soon.’ When is soon? When did she leave?”

A pained, guilty expression crossed Elara’s face, and Harriet headed out of the room. “Harriet—.”

“She knows she’s not supposed to wander alone—!”

Swallowing, Harriet darted through the crowded common room without looking back, telling herself she was being paranoid, that she’d find Hermione already on her way back down to the dungeons. She didn’t give her eyes the chance to adjust to the dimmer, murky light of the corridor outside the common room’s entrance, and subsequently only made it a meter or so before colliding with a solid body.

“Potter!” Professor Slytherin gasped, clutching the spot on his chest Harriet had slammed her head against. “That is the second time you’ve ran into my person, careless wretch! What do you think you’re doing?!”

Dazed by the blow, Harriet stumbled—and then stumbled again when Elara crashed into her back and almost sent her careening into Slytherin again. “Professor! Hermione! We—we were just going to check on Hermione!”

“Granger? What about her?”

“She left the dormitory without telling anyone,” Elara said, wringing her hands. “We don’t know how long ago.”

“She did not attend that obnoxious sporting event?”

“No, sir.”

Professor Slytherin appeared to think their statements over, his eyes half-closed and narrowed. “Ah,” he finally uttered, at which point he seized both Harriet and Elara by their elbows and marched them down the hall in the opposite direction from which they’d intended to go.

“P-Professor!” Harriet argued, dragging her feet, but the wizard didn’t stop until they reached Snape’s office, and he kicked open the door, throwing them both inside. The Potions Master was not, fortunately, in residence.

“Stay here until you are called for,” Slytherin snapped. With an errant wave of his hand, the door slammed shut, leaving Elara and Harriet sealed inside.

“Arsehole,” Harriet whispered under her breath, hands balled into fists. The quiet pressed close, ghoulish things floating and drifting inside their jars, the cold sinking into her bones. “Why couldn’t he just let us go check on her?”

Elara sighed and sank onto the hard, straight-backed chair Snape left out for students. She rubbed her tired eyes.

Harriet paced, and as time trickled by, she paced more, faster, the dread in her belly growing until it became full-blown nausea. “What is he going to do? Just leave us in here? Did he even go look for Hermione?” She stopped and turned to Elara. “What was she reading before you fell asleep?”

“A bit of everything, really,” she muttered, silver eyes roving over the cramped shelves. “You know how she gets. I think she was researching the Basilisk.”

Harriet let out an irritated huff. She nosed about Snape’s shelves and books, trying to take her mind off her worry and their impromptu imprisonment, but Snape kept nothing there one wouldn’t see in the library. Well over an hour passed them by before the locked door opened again, revealing the blank, unfriendly countenance of Professor Snape. Harriet expected to be yelled at—or berated. She would have loved to hear another Snape lecture on bothersome-witches-doing-what-they-should-not-be-doing, but Snape said nothing, standing just beyond the room’s threshold with his arms crossed and his eyes hard.

“Follow me,” he said softly.

Harriet’s stomach flip-flopped and bile burned the back of her throat. “Professor?” she managed to say. “Is—where’s Hermione?”

“Just do as you’re told, Miss Potter. You as well, Black.”

He retreated into the hall and started walking, Harriet following close to his heels. It didn’t take long for her to realize where they were going, and Elara grabbed her by the hand, holding her back, fingers squeezing tight enough to bruise.

Voices grumbled and bled together inside the hospital wing, Harriet so worried and scared she almost didn’t recognize Draco’s mum and dad when she finally passed through the doors. She wondered why they were there—and then realized that they would be the ones called if Hermione was—.

Harriet yanked free of Elara, pushed past Snape, and darted forward—only stopping when Professor Slytherin caught her with a hand against the chest, pain hurtling through her so fast Harriet thought she might be sick. “Hermione!” she shouted.

“Miss Potter,” Madam Pomfrey chastened, stepping out from behind the bed’s curtain. “If you cannot control yourself, I will have to ask—.”

Harriet barely heard a word she said; instead, she fixed her gaze on the figure of her best friend lying still as death on the narrow hospital bed, her brown eyes wide and unseeing, one hand clenched in a fist against her middle, the other extended as if holding something up.

Petrified. Hermione was Petrified.

“Harriet.”

Professor Dumbledore had his hand on her shoulder, fingers squeezing, and the Headmaster cut such a hard, angry look at Professor Slytherin, the younger wizard sneered and retracted his own hand from her person. There were other people in the infirmary, too—a man and a woman dressed in wrinkled robes, as if they’d thrown them on in a hurry, standing in the partially open curtains around a separate bed. The man had his arm around the woman, and she sniffled into a handkerchief. Harriet realized someone else must have been attacked by the Basilisk, too.

“Miss Potter, Miss Black,” Madam Pomfrey said to gain their attention. She lifted a small, handheld mirror from Hermione’s bedside. “Miss Granger was holding when she was found. Does this mean anything to either of you?”

Frowning, Harriet shook her head, and Elara took her hand again. She squeezed her friend's fingers, wanting something to ground her, wanting to turn and run and close her eyes. Who cares about some stupid mirror! It’s just a bloody mirror!

“Is this how you run your school, Dumbledore?” Mr. Malfoy sneered, turning his back on Hermione and his wife as he approached the Headmaster. “Rest assured, the Minister will be hearing about the abysmal state of things at Hogwarts.”

“I’m certain he will, Lucius.”

Professor Slytherin made a sound more akin to a snarl than a scoff, and Mr. Malfoy had the good sense to back up, throat bobbing as he glanced in his direction.

“I think,” Professor Dumbledore said as he dropped his hand from Harriet, his voice breaking the harsh, stagnant silence. “It would be best if we take further discussion to my office. Let us give Misses Potter and Black a moment alone with their friend.”

The Headmaster ushered the Malfoys and Professors Slytherin and Snape away from the bed, and Narcissa stopped just long enough to touch Harriet’s arm, then Elara’s, before departing after her husband. Madam Pomfrey huffed and muttered under her breath, but she didn’t kick Harriet and Elara from the room, instead going about and fixing the curtains, hiding them from the view of the couple at the other bed. Harriet still didn’t know who the other victim was.

A horrid sense of powerlessness overwhelmed her, coupled with rage and something that tasted bitterly of defeat. “She promised she wouldn’t go off on her own,” Harriet whispered. “She promised. What was she thinking?”

“It’s not her fault, Harriet.”

“I know that! I do.” It was the Heir’s fault, or the Basilisk’s, or—Harriet’s, for going to that stupid Quidditch game when she hadn’t even paid attention to a bloody thing. Why did she go? Why didn’t she stay when she knew how much danger Hermione was in?

Elara looked the mirror over, tracing one finger along the brass frame. “I think this is Pansy’s,” she remarked. “Why would Hermione take this?”

Shrugging, Harriet wiped her face as tears stung and burned in the corner of her eyes. She refused to cry. She wouldn’t cry—not when she wanted to find whoever had let the Basilisk out and punch them right in the ruddy face, or wake Hermione up and shake her for being so stubborn.

Extending her arm, she touched the cold, stiff fingers of the hand Hermione held tight against her chest—and she felt something scratch her fingertips. “She’s holding something.”

Elara set the mirror down and came to Harriet’s side, furrowing her brow as Harriet carefully pinched the corner of what looked like a crumpled ball of parchment Hermione had clenched tightly in her hand. She gave it a tug, and with slow, patient speed, freed it from Hermione’s grasp without hurting the Petrified girl. Harriet straightened the rumpled sheet out as Elara asked, “What is it?”

It was a page from a book—a page Harriet recognized because they’d pored over this same page down in the depths of her trunk, squinting in the paltry lantern light as they read about Salazar Slytherin’s Chamber of Secrets in Hogwarts: A History. Hermione had drawn a hasty circle around a sentence of the text, but not in the section about the Chamber; rather, she’d highlighted a throwaway line about “Ravenclaw’s secret library.”

In the bottom margin, Hermione’s tidy script wrote out the words, “R.Claw’s Aerie.”

“Ravenclaw’s Aerie,” Harriet murmured aloud, hands smoothing the harsh crinkles in the thick parchment. “What is Ravenclaw’s Aerie?”

Elara shook her head.

The pair of witches stood in silent sentinel for far longer than they should have, and when Madam Pomfrey came to escort them out, they went with heavy hearts—and with a page torn from a library book folded in Harriet’s pocket.

 

A/N: Ostara - Pagan equivalent of Easter, celebrated around the vernal (spring) equinox. I.e., spring break.

Chapter 86: the horror welcomes her again

Chapter Text

lxxxvi. the horror welcomes her again

Hogwarts wasn't the same after Hermione and a Ravenclaw named Penelope Clearwater were found Petrified.

Of course, for Harriet and Elara, going through the motions in a world where their best friend had been turned to living stone by a monster was something like a waking nightmare, but the rest of the school wasn't unaffected, either. In the week following the attack, the staff suspended all privileges, meaning no Quidditch, no Hogsmeade for the older students, no wandering about the castle without a chaperon. Teachers marched them from class to class, from the Great Hall to their dorms, and no one could go to the library unless they made an appointment with Madam Pince. Defense turned into a study hall, since Professor Slytherin seemed about one step away from hexing them all bloody.

Harriet kept catching herself looking over her shoulder, waiting for Hermione to comment on this or that—but Hermione wasn't there. The endless stream of dialog that filled her days with information and details was flat and jagged, like an old scar she couldn't stop her fingers from scratching at. Ravenclaw's Aerie. Neither Harriet nor Elara could figure out what Hermione had meant by writing that, and they couldn't go to the library to research it. They pulled apart Hermione's notes at her carrel, but whatever brilliant leap of logic had sent the witch sprinting off out the dorms hadn't been written down. They were at a loss.

Harriet knew it had something to do with that "secret library" bit Hermione had circled in on the torn page. The problem was, Hogwarts: A History had even less written on the supposed library than it did on the Chamber, and Harriet knew even if it did have information, it'd all be rubbish, given how the passage on the Underneath—as Harriet began to refer to the Chamber in her head—held almost nothing but lies.

She'd tried asking Terry Boot and Anthony Goldstein about it, but while they thought they'd heard the term before, they had no knowledge attached to it.

"Talk to one of the sixth or seventh years," Terry told her. "They know quite a bit about the castle that we don't."

Speaking with an upper-year Ravenclaw proved impossible, as being marched about like tin soldiers from one point to the next with little intersection meant Harriet barely saw the upper-classmen outside of meals. She didn't dare approach anyone in public, where anyone could see or hear their conversation. What if the "Heir" overheard them? What if they attacked again?

Harriet's chance for answers came on Thursday, of all days. Professor Selwyn spent half a class period ranting about this or that nuisance, and then he ushered them out the door early, muttering about having better things to do than shepherd the likes of them around the bloody castle. He stomped on ahead of the group as the Hufflepuffs and Slytherins meandered down into the dungeons for their free period. Harriet hung back, gathering and sorting all the notes she'd been taking for Hermione, and was the last to exit the classroom. She walked quietly with Elara, absorbed in her own thoughts, and as they reached the ground floor, Harriet thought she saw a flicker of…turquoise.

In fact, after she paused to study the ajar door leading into the empty foyer adjoined to the entrance hall, she knew she'd the back of someone's gaudy blue robes disappearing inside. Familiar robes.

Inspiration struck.

"Harriet?" Elara asked.

"Go on ahead," she replied, and when the other girl gave her an incredulous look, Harriet patted the lumpy pocket of her robes. "I have my Cloak, and I'll be down in just a few minutes. I won't leave the Entrance Hall."

The class was moving farther off, so with a huff, Elara turned and hurried after them. Harriet waited for a second more to see if someone would note her absence, then crossed to the open door, poking her head inside. "…Mr. Lockhart?"

The wizard let out a strangled shriek, feathers firing from the end of his held wand. Harriet ducked behind the door in case he threw any other spells, then looked inside again, glaring.

"Oh," Lockhart said with a great, wheezing exhale. He slumped against the wall at his back like a boneless sack, sliding down its length, and Harriet noted the open bottle of Wizarding booze sitting at his hip. He reeked something fierce. "Oh, Merlin have mercy, it's only you."

Harriet stepped into the chamber and gave Lockhart a wary once over. Frankly, he looked like shite; his pretty hair resembled Snape's more and more these days, and he had the twitchy, wild-eyed stare of someone who'd gone without sleep for quite a few nights. His turquoise robes had a stain down the front as if he'd dribbled his morning tea.

He made for a pathetic sight.

Looking down at the bloke, Harriet balanced a hand on her hip and scoffed. "Aren't you supposed to be out looking for the Heir? Or doing anything useful? Not hiding in here getting—sloshed!"

Lockhart gaped at her and clutched the bottle closer, fumbling his wand. "It's not as if I volunteered for this!" he shrieked. "My poor hair! I'm going bald—bald, I tell you! People banging on the door at all hours of the day and night, demanding I do something—and what am I meant to do? What can I do that Albus Dumbledore can't?!" His face twisted as if he might start blubbering, and Harriet thought Lockhart had one of the ugliest crying faces she'd ever seen, and she included Dudley in that comparison.

"Stop your whinging," she snapped, though the slightest niggling of pity wormed its way into thoughts. The bloke was a liar and an idiot, and the Ministry had preyed on that. He hadn't meant anything malicious with his incompetence. "Answer me something; Hermione told me you were a Ravenclaw. Is that true?"

Lockhart sniffled, wiping his snotty nose on his sleeve. During the height of her inexplicable crush, Hermione used to natter on with facts about Lockhart, ranging from information about his books to the wizard himself, and the particular curiosity about him having been a Ravenclaw stuck out to Harriet because she'd marveled that such a numpty had come from the House of Eagles. "Yes, what of it?" He gave the bottle a forlorn nudge.

"Have you ever heard of Ravenclaw's Aerie?"

He sniffled again, fished a frilly, lilac handkerchief out of his robes, and blew his nose like a foghorn. "Of course. It's one of those silly little myths they use to share around the dorms, like Rowena's diadem, or Helga's cupboard, Godric's mythical armory, or Slytherin's Chamber—."

His voice began to rise toward a shriek again at the mention of the Chamber, and so Harriet made calming motions with her hands. Merlin forbid Snape came swooping by and hear the pissed wizard crying and wailing with Harriet in the room. "Okay, okay! It's fine, I don't want to know about that. I just want to know what the Aerie is."

"It's supposed to be a library or something. Some kind of great, private archive of Rowena Ravenclaw's, and she built Hogwarts as a place to share all the knowledge she gathered therein. Not that that makes any kind of sense." He took a deep, pulling swig from the bottle, his breath leaving a sticky, sweet smell in the air. Lockhart started to slur in earnest, swaying in his spot sprawled against the wall. "It used to be a game, y'know? A spot of hazin' in—in Ravenclaw, to get someone to climbing all the towers lookin' for it. Why're you asking about this, anyway? You're a very nosy little girl, aren't you?"

"Yeah, and?" Harriet glowered. For a Ravenclaw, his information sounded bizarrely backward. How would she have a library before Hogwarts was built? "My best friend's laid up in hospital and the only help the Ministry's sent is you. If you don't get eaten before all is said and done, you'd better rethink your life choices. You aren't nearly clever enough to be a con-artist."

Lockhart started breathing funny halfway through Harriet's sentence and she doubted he'd heard much of the rest of it. "E-eaten!"

Footsteps sounded out in the hall, coming down the marble steps, and Harriet told Lockhart in no uncertain terms he needed to shut his drunk gob as she eased the door almost shut and peeked through the crack.

"It's all just a formality of—of course," said an odd, short wizard in pinstriped robes and a lime-green bowler hat. "Just until the inquiry's over, you understand. Such terrible things going, and the Minister is worried—."

Harriet recognized Professor Slytherin's answering voice and almost recoiled. "If I wished to hear the Minister's opinion, I would ask for it myself."

Behind the pair walked Professor Dumbledore and another two wizards Harriet didn't know, both dressed in familiar maroon robes. She couldn't see Professor Dumbledore's face, but she heard his soft, grim tone when he addressed the plump wizard at the head of their procession. "I trust, Cornelius, that our Minister recalls a full session of the Wizengamot and unanimous voting by the Board of Governors is required to dismiss a Headmaster from the school midterm?"

"W-Well, it's the Board that's called for the inquiry, Albus. After what happened to Mr. Malfoy's ward…."

"Ah, Lucius' charms at work," Slytherin cut in, and Harriet shivered. The group of Ministry officials led by the wizard named Cornelius moved farther down the hall, approaching the towering doors barring entrance into the castle. "How very convenient for him and the Minister. And what of my removal, Fudge? How is Gaunt managing to spin that? I can't imagine the Board would be foolish enough to vote me out as well."

"It is just until the inquiry is solved, Professor Slytherin, I ensure you…."

The wizards kept moving, passing through the entrance into the speckled light of late afternoon, and Harriet eased the door open wider, stepping into the hall to better watch Professor Dumbledore's retreating back. The voices dwindled with distance, and the farther Dumbledore walked, the colder the school became—or, perhaps, the colder Harriet became. Soon she shook and shivered, unable to shed the frightening terror freezing her in place.

What have they done?

"Wazzit?" Mr. Lockhart asked, having crawled out of the extra room after Harriet. He had feathers in his limp hair. "What's happenin'?"

Harriet swallowed. "I think Headmaster Dumbledore has been removed from Hogwarts."

The answering moment of silence resounded in her ears louder than the rush of her breathing—and then Lockhart let out a hysterical, panicked laugh, and fainted dead away on the floor.

x X x

That evening, by the fireside in a house that remained empty more often than not, Albus Dumbledore sat reading a journal.

It was not a nice journal, not by any stretch of the imagination. Though the elderly wizard spent much of his time worrying about one thing or another, that journal in particular had been worrying him for weeks, ever since it fell from the pocket of a bespectacled, green-eyed student and came into his possession. Sometimes he marveled at the sheer serendipity Harriet Potter managed to wield, when years of effort on his, Minerva's, and Severus' parts had failed to yield the very thing he now held open in his hand: the thoughts and ruminations of Tom Slytherin, the man who was—and wasn't—Tom Riddle.

At his side, his wand hovered and moved of its own accord, drawing sharp streaks of light as it continued to decode Tom's evolving cipher. It was a clever bit of Charm work meshed with Arithmancy; at odd moments such as this, Albus mourned the brilliance of a boy who'd turned his purpose to evil as a man. He pondered if Tom Riddle had always been destined for this path, or if Albus—if all of them—had failed him in some way.

He grieved for the death of an innocence that might have never been, but only for an instant that passed as quickly as it came, because Albus and the world had suffered greatly at the end of Riddle's wand and he had no mercy in his heart for such a creature anymore.

The symbols and letters of Tom's journal continued to begrudgingly swap themselves around and change their shape. The night aged, and so did Albus Dumbledore, as with every page he turned, the lines in his face dragged themselves deeper and horror found its place behind his half-moon spectacles.

Dawn rose just as Albus finished the final line, and he turned to the window, barely able to see the light for the shadow that darkened his heart.

He remembered, then, Harriet in his office, raw, alien anger in her voice, "Why haven't you done anything?!" He remembered her confusion, as if she hadn't known what had come over her. He remembered the flicker of red overcoming her eyes, gone like a vapor, a morning mist caught and torn in the breeze.

Albus thought of the monstrous things Tom Riddle had done to his own soul, and contemplated what he might have done to another.

"Oh, my dear girl," he whispered. He gripped the journal hard enough for his wizened knuckles to turn white.

From his perch in the corner, Fawkes gave a lone, mournful cry.


A/N: The chapter title is from Emily Dickinson's "The Soul has Bandaged moments." It's a haunting piece, and when I read it, I think of Harriet's soul being despoiled by Voldemort's, the instability of it, the yearning to be free, and yet being dragged under its influence again. The final stanza is - "The Horror welcomes her, again, / These, are not brayed of Tongue," basically says the nightmare / struggle of it all is unspeakable. So that's my spot of poetry analysis for today.

Chapter 87: where eagles roost

Chapter Text

lxxxvii. where eagles roost

 

The voice had come again to haunt her cupboard door.

Harriet sat curled in a ball among the spiders and clouds of dust, hiding behind her own knees as she watched the slender, shimmering bar of light glowing against the dirty floor. A shadow crossed the light again and again as someone—something—paced on the other side.

“Aunt Petunia?” Harriet whispered.

The shadow never stopped its restless drifting. “Harrrrrriet,” the voice crooned, and claws skittered against the cupboard door. “Let me in, Harriet.”

Harriet hugged her knees closer.

Only for a moment, I promissse.” The claws tapped the thin wood. Tap, tap, tap. “I could tell you what you want to know. I could tell you what she found. I could tell you where the Aerie lies.”

Hesitating, Harriet peeked at the light through her lashes. How strange. The walls of her cupboard had never felt closer or more cramped before, nor the light so dim. Surely Aunt Petunia would be there soon to wake her up? But wait—.

“What do you know?” she asked.

A terrible, wrenching laugh crawled into Harriet’s ears and no matter how she tried to block it out, it continued to scrape and tear at her, and then the banging began. Heavy fists battered the cupboard door again and again, shaking it, bottles and jars tipping, shattering, spiders raining from the risers overhead—.

LET ME IN!” it howled. “LET ME IN, LETMEIN!

Harriet clasped onto the door’s tiny handle and held on for all she was worth, squeezing her eyes shut, willing it to stop, screaming with all her might, “NO!”

And then—.

And then Harriet woke in her comfortable bed, shrouded in the murky green light of the dormitory, drenched in sweat and shaking from head to foot. Someone had their hand on her shoulder, and she started, blinking at the figure leaning over her bed.

“Harriet,” Elara whispered, and Harriet let out a breath she hadn’t known she was holding, the sound of it breaking like a sob. The hand retreated then, leaving her cold and adrift. Harriet heard soft footsteps, the thump of a trunk lid opening. The figure returned, looming closer until the weight of warm, curling coils settled on the coverlet, and Livius hissed something tired and nonsensical in her ear as Harriet drew her arms around him.

The blanket shifted, drawing up to cover both girl and serpent, and the hand came again, cool against her clammy forehead, thumb brushing a fond, idle stroke against her forehead.

“Go back to sleep.”

Harriet might have murmured a response, but she had her eyes shut, and the heavy, tired lethargy dragged her under before she could give her nightmares another thought.

 

x X x

 

A persistent nudging against her cheek pulled Harriet into a foggy, reluctant awareness some hours later.

“Stop,” she grumbled, and a cold tongue flicked against her skin. “Livi.”

Missstresss hasss ssslumbered too long,” he said, one of his growing horns jabbing her jaw. “It isss time to wake.”

Grunting, Harriet pushed Livi’s snout away, but she did pull herself upright, fumbling at the nightstand for her glasses and wand. The dorm lacked the usual clamor and bustle that came with a bunch of girls getting ready for class. Harriet jerked her bed hangings open and stretched to see the clock.

It was twenty past ten on a Tuesday.

“Oh, fuck,” Harriet whispered, waiting for the sputtered gasp and chastisement that never came. She glanced at Hermione’s bed and found it waiting forlorn and empty. On the other side of her, however, the bed still held a sleeping lump. “Elara. Elara—.”

Harriet lobbed a pillow, and the other witch groaned when it landed on her head. “Knock it off.”

“Wake up! We’ve missed breakfast and Herbology. We’re going to miss Defense, too, if we don’t get up.”

Elara groaned again and rolled to her back, scowling at the ceiling. “What does it matter, with Lockhart substituting?”

“You say that now, but we’ll both hate life if Snape comes thundering down here to find out if we’ve died in our sleep.” Harriet dragged herself out from under the covers. “Besides, at least Lockhart’s pulled himself together enough to give us study hall.”

Elara muttered something that sounded like “Marginally,” and Harriet couldn’t disagree. The bloke showed up sober, which was something.

Together, they spent the next ten minutes rushing through their morning routines, throwing together their books and the homework they’d need for Transfiguration and Charms after lunch. Tucking her things—and Livi—into place, Harriet paused when she glanced at the bottom drawer of her desk, thoughts veering toward the book hidden therein. By unspoken agreement, the three of them knew not to take Salazar Slytherin’s tome out anywhere where it might be seen by Professor Slytherin—but Professor Slytherin wasn’t here now. Mulling the idea over, Harriet finally opened the drawer and squirreled the book away with her others, deciding she might as well get something useful done in Defense today.

They met up with their class as Professor Sprout escorted them back into the castle from the Greenhouses, and though the Herbology instructor scolded them for missing class, Harriet decided she went easy on them, considering the missing member of their trio. In the Defense classroom, Mr. Lockhart waited for the Slytherins, the Gryffindors already in their seats, the gaudy wizard back to swanning about and talking out of his arse—though he did have the good sense to shut up when Professor Sprout sent him a disappointed look.

Harriet dropped into her seat by the empty one reserved for Hermione. She fought to urge to stare at it.

She’ll be okay in just a few months, she told herself as she dragged out her Defense text—and then Salazar Slytherin’s book, glancing around to see the others already indulging in their own work or staring off into space. Already Lockhart had descended from his borrowed desk to pester the Boy Who Lived, and though Longbottom looked put out by the attention, the nattering Gryffindor girls fawned over the wizard and his self-important prattling.

“Idiots,” Harriet mumbled, rifling through the thick tome until she found the parchment she, Hermione, and Elara had been taking all their notes on. It was sacrilege to Hermione for anyone to annotate directly inside a book—especially an ancient, historic thing like Salazar’s journal—which made her decision to tear that page from Hogwarts: A History all the more shocking. Harriet knew with all her heart that Hermione meant for them to find it, that it was important. Her best friend could be overzealous or just plain barmy when it came to study, but Hermione was not stupid. Something dire sent her off sprinting for the library, and it had to be hidden somewhere in that tome resting on Harriet’s desk.

She turned the parchment round on its side, flattening the curling edge worn from too much handling, and squinted at a hasty line of Hermione’s tiny handwriting. “Aerie: noun,” it read. “A large nest of a bird of prey, especially an eagle, typically built high in a tree or on a cliff.”

Well, Harriet already knew that—.

Nest.

She prodded her spectacles back up her nose and scrutinized the word as it stirred a foggy memory from weeks ago. Elara sat at her own desk with her head down on her closed textbook, but Harriet could recall how she and Hermione had argued about a translation regarding the word. But what had it been, exactly?

“Potter, what are you doing?”

She glanced at Malfoy lounging in his seat. “Studying. You should try it sometime.”

“Why are you being so intense about it? He’s not even looking at this side of the room.”

“Leave me alone, Malfoy.”

“Fine.”

Harriet went back to reading, though she tried to look bored as the rest of the class, slouching enough to put off Malfoy’s curious glances. She flipped through several pages—and then stopped, because she couldn’t actually read the book, and her friends had been discussing the translation, which meant it was somewhere on the parchment. Harriet flipped the sheet over again, scanning the cramped lines for handwriting that wasn’t her own.

The nest awaits when thee march forth in search of knowledge and find thyself among the gander,” Hermione had written in a scrolling semi-crescent, fitting it in between the rest of the snippets she’d deciphered. “When you answer thus the faceless bust, step to yourself in the moon’s reflection.”

I can’t decipher this nonsense!” Hermione had despaired, and Harriet could see her predicament—because the Founder had been fond of riddles and puzzles, and Harriet had to wonder about that, because Rowena Ravenclaw had supposedly liked riddles, too. Her finger traced the word nest. What if her friends had chosen the wrong translation of the word from Anglo-Saxon to English? What if, instead of nest, Slytherin had meant…an aerie?

A nervous thrum of discovery went through Harriet, and she couldn’t stop herself from straightening her spine, reading and rereading the line.

The nest—Aerie—awaits when thee march forth in search of knowledge and find thyself among the gander.”

A ganderThat’s a—a goose, isn’t it? Was the Aerie outside on the grounds somewhere? That didn’t make any sense at all, did it? Bloody hell, this is literally sending me on a wild goose chase—.

In search of knowledge.”

If anyone wanted to know anything at all, if they “sought knowledge,” wouldn’t their first stop be the library? Twice now, Harriet had gone looking for the library and twice she’d come upon that peculiar, looping corridor, in which hung a portrait of a woman herding a gaggle of very rude geese. She’d been so busy trying to find the exit and continue on to library, Harriet had barely given that misshapen, faceless bust asking funny questions a thought.

No way, she thought, skin buzzing, expression stunned. There’s no way—.

And yet, in the twisted logic of a witch and wizard long dead, it had a certain clarity: an archive that could be found only if you sought knowledge, if you could answer a question—satisfy that need of being worthy. But why had no one discovered it before? Surely Harriet wasn’t the first to go lost searching for the library.

Step to yourself in the moon’s reflection.”

Well, that sounded like a mirror—and what had Professor Dumbledore told them? “Early alchemists referred to silver as the ‘metal of the moon.’

“That’s…barking,” Harriet whispered, voice reed-thin, her hands trembling. It’s a bloody Moon Mirror. It’s talking about a Moon Mirror!

As Harriet prepared herself to kick Elara awake and hiss her findings, a trickle of magic washed over the whole of the room, stilling the idle, ambient conversations—and scaring a muffled yelp out of Lockhart.

Instructors must escort students to their dormitories immediately,” echoed Professor McGonagall’s voice, seeming to emanate from the walls themselves. “All classes are canceled until further notice.”

“What’s going on?” Runcorn asked aloud, earning more than a few speculative murmurs. As one, eyes swiveled to Lockhart, who looked back at them like a spooked owl.

“I, uh, I—well, you have to get back to your dormitories, obviously! Gryffindors first, I think. You lot are quite lucky—and safe!—with me as your guide….”

Books and parchment shuffled about, chairs dragging on the stone floor. Harriet jumped to her feet and hurried to set her own things to rights, tugging on Elara’s sleeve to gain her attention.

“What is it?”

“I think—.” Harriet licked her lips and glanced about, but the other Slytherins paid them no mind. “I think I found something.”

“…Something?”

Nodding several times, Harriet tried to tell her about the Aerie, about the geese and the bust, but then she caught the watchful, askance look of Neville Longbottom and scowled. “Wait until we’re back in the dungeons. Nosy prat….”

Lockhart sauntered from the classroom, looking nothing like the plastered, sobbing wreck Harriet had half-dragged, half-kicked back into the spare room off the entrance hall last week. Harriet kept a close hold on her bag as they journeyed up to the tower rather than down to the entrance hall, and Zabini complained aloud about having to walk from the top of the school all the way back down to the sub-levels.

“Exercise builds character, Mr. Zabini!” Mr. Lockhart proclaimed. Zabini grumbled about the kind of character he thought Lockhart could use.

They climbed the stairwell and came upon an intersecting hall where Gryffindors of all year groups merged together. There was a great deal of noise and panic, no one seeming to move in the right direction, and Harriet found herself being trod on more than once.

“Look!”

“On the wall there, plain as day—!”

“Someone’s been taken!”

Merlin—!

“What are we going to do—?!”

“We need Professor Dumbledore—!”

Bracing herself, Harriet shoved and elbowed and squeezed her way through the older students until she could see the wall in question. New, glistening letters had been painted against the stones. “Her skeleton will lie in the chamber forever,” Harriet read aloud, voice lost to the shouting and crying around her. “Her who? There’s nothing in the bloody Chamber.”

That’s the point, isn’t it? The Heir’s been lying from the beginning.

“Get out of here, Slytherin!”

Someone shoved Harriet, and she would have fallen if not for days of Quidditch teaching her better footing. Harriet ducked back into the crowd before whoever had touched her could try it again. The Gryffindors turned on the class of poor, unfortunate Slytherin second-years who’d stumbled into their midst, and though the professors tried to control the situation, several of Harriet’s classmates wore terrified expressions.

She didn’t wait to see what would happen; she grasped Elara by the hand and ran for the stairs. The sound of their heels clattering on the stone steps echoed in the confined space, and Harriet’s loaded bag swung hard against her leg, leaving bruises.

“What are you doing?” Elara demanded.

“I think I know where it is,” Harriet panted as they passed another landing.

“What?”

“The Aerie! I think—that’s where the snake will be! Don’t you see? Hermione realized it! The Mirrors—the connections between Ravenclaw and Slytherin! Whoever opened the Chamber knew to hide the Basilisk in the Aerie! They know about the Moon Mirrors!”

“We’re not going there, are we?!”

“I have to see if—if I’m right. And then, we’ll need someone—Professor Snape, or McGonagall, or anyone! Hurry!”

By the time they reached the level the library was located on, Harriet’s heart was hammering in her chest, and Elara’s breathing had been reduced to a reluctant wheeze. They didn’t have time. If she could prove where the Basilisk was—if Harriet could find the Aerie, then maybe it wouldn’t be too late. She didn’t know who’d been taken. She hadn’t even known there’d been another attack—but she did know if someone died, Hogwarts would never be the same. Professor Dumbledore would never come back. It was entirely possible the school might close down—permanently.

Harriet shook those errant thoughts from her head and fixed in her mind the idea of a book. Knowledge, she told herself again and again, footsteps echoing, breathing ragged. Knowledge, I’m searching for knowledge. I’m in search of knowledge.

They turned a corner, and Harriet half-expected to see the library, for her idea to be wrong. Instead, they rounded the bend and came face to face with a familiar shepherd in her grassy field. The painted geese looked at Harriet and honked.

Red-faced and doubled over, Elara eyed the loud birds with disdain. “We’ve been here before,” she commented. “When we were looking for the library.”

“Yeah.” Harriet moved on, coming to a stop before the misshapen marble bust stationed about halfway down the visible corridor. It appeared as yet another innocuous piece of Hogwarts’ decor, no stranger than the suits of armor prone to moving or the portraits that followed students about gossiping. Whoever had sculpted the bust must have started the face, giving it the impression of a nose, the slight indents below the brow line, the sloping cheeks, but they hadn’t finished. Still, Harriet felt the thing was staring at her as she approached. A high, feminine voice spoke.

Have thee none, I am plenty. Those of means, need of me. Partake of me, and thou shalt perish. What am I?”

“It’s one of those stupid riddles!” Harriet said, reaching into her bag to jerk the parchment free of Salazar’s book. “Salazar Slytherin came up with these! I translated all of his bloody riddles and most of the answers, where is it…?”

“It’s nothing, Harriet.”

“It not n—.”

“The answer is nothing.”

Harriet blinked, and Elara gave her an impatient look. “Oh. Right, then.” She tucked the parchment away, then faced the bust and cleared her throat. “You are nothing.”

The bust didn’t reply. Instead, it moved and shifted backward, dissolving into the wall like a sugar cube melting in hot tea. The wall rippled again—and something else came forward. A large, rather plain mirror popped into existence where the bust and its plinth had been, leaving Harriet and Elara to gaze at their disheveled reflections.

Harriet swallowed, trying to rid the sudden dryness gripping her throat. “Open,” she told the Moon Mirror in Parseltongue. Just like the one in Salazar’s study, the mirror didn’t move or glisten or give any indication that it’d changed, but when Harriet brushed her fingertips against its surface, they slipped through like pebbles dipping into a still pond. She pulled back before it could yank her through.

This is it.

“We need to go find a professor,” Harriet said, and Elara nodded. Harriet turned—and almost walked into a wand. “W-what are you doing here, Longbottom? Weasley?!”

The Boy Who Lived and his constant companion stood in the corridor with them, and Harriet could only think that her own pounding heart and quick breathing had covered the sound of their approach. Longbottom had his wand trained on Harriet, and he looked nastier than she had ever seen the prat before.

“I knew it was you,” he spat.

“What are you on about?”

“I knew you were the Heir!” He jabbed her with the wand and Livi hissed, forcing Harriet back a step. “You’re always going about hissing and whispering and talking to yourself when your lackeys aren’t there! I knew it was you!”

“You prejudiced arsehole!” Harriet shouted. “Just because I’m in Slytherin—!”

He jabbed her again.

Stop it!”

Elara went for her wand, but Weasley had his own pointed at her, and both she and Harriet knew better than to test Weasley’s wretched wand. It might backfire on him. It might do nothing—or it might set them both on fire.

“This is it, isn’t it? It’s the Chamber! I knew if I followed you around enough you’d eventually lead me to it!”

“The Chamber’s not—.” Harriet stopped herself before she could say something stupid, like ‘the Chamber’s not here, it’s downstairs in a loo!’ “I’m not the Heir! I swear to Merlin, Longbottom, you’ve got to be the dumbest twat ever born. How could I be the Heir? I was in your bloody class not twenty minutes out when the Heir attacked again!”

His brow furrowed, but Longbottom didn’t let up. If anything, his grip on his wand only tightened. “That doesn’t matter. You could have had someone help you! Or cursed them!”

Harriet sneered and considered kicking the idiot in the bits and making a run for it, but if he jinxed her, or knocked her unconscious, whoever had been taken might die. “Stop mucking about, Longbottom. You have no proof—and we need to find a professor right now!”

His gaze flicked past her, then back to Harriet. Twice more he did this before something hardened his resolve. “Fine. Proof? I’ll get my proof!”

Harriet had been watching his wand hand; she didn’t see his other until Longbottom pressed it to her chest and pushed with considerable force. Harriet gasped—

And stumbled back into the waiting mirror.


A/N: Harriet: *talks to Livi about cake or crickets or his favorite place to nap.*

Neville: “That is some sinister plotting going on right there. Better attack.”

Chapter 88: the heir of slytherin

Chapter Text

lxxxviii. the heir of slytherin

From one step to the next, the cold rippled over Harriet like the first wind of winter, cutting through her robes and sweater, clinging and biting, and then—.

Nothing. Harriet gasped and gawked at a blank stone wall.

"No," she whispered, touching the wall, her fingertips scrabbling at the sharp grooves between the blocks. "No, no, no—Elara! Longbottom? Open! Open!"

The wall didn't budge.

Of course not, Harriet told herself in a stern, logical voice that sounded quite like Hermione. The Mirrors only go one way—and it's not as if I have a lot of experience with them. Merlin help me.

Gulping, she slowly—slowly—turned herself around.

The first thing Harriet noted were the books; it was impossible to not pause and take it all in, the towering cases, the gilded light falling through the mullioned windows, and the hundreds upon hundreds of volumes crowding the wood shelves. She appeared to be in an average Hogwarts corridor, except for those shelves and those books. She'd never seen anything like those out in Hogwarts' thoroughfares. Harriet took a few tentative steps forward, inspecting the corridor, peeking from one end to the other, seeing where the corners turned out of sight. The shelves crowded every available space but for where the windows were set and the occasional blank spot on the wall holding plaques of Ravenclaw's bronze eagle. There were no torches, only odd spheres of orange light suspended overhead—almost like the ones had seen in the Underneath.

Harriet peered out one of the windows, hoping for a clue as to her whereabouts, but the view was distorted, blurred and smudged, shapes in the distance oddly formed or just incomprehensible. The light coming through the fuzzy glass flickered and pooled like…candlelight. She shook her head and stepped away.

"Okay," Harriet whispered, urging Livi out from under her robes. "Can you help me find the exit? We need to get out of here!"

"Ssss…." The serpent curled and wended his way around Harriet's shoulders, lifting his head in the air. His violet tongue flitted several times and Harriet waited for his verdict, listening to the unsettling silence pervading the otherwise charming passage. "The air here isss…flat."

She agreed; every breath went down like a stale biscuit, and while Harriet didn't spot a single mote of dust on any surface and magic seemed to vibrate under her feet, a kind of static pall had come over her, prickling against her skin and her awareness. The air didn't move. The small click-clack of her footsteps didn't echo. Harriet snapped her fingers and the louder sound hung by her, fading far too soon.

Her shadow darkened and pooled as Set made his presence known, stretching toward the left turn in the passage.

"Is that where the exit is?" she asked, her trust in the shadowy creature a touch more dubious after the incident with the Underneath. He'd gotten her out and shown her Salazar Slytherin's book, but Harriet couldn't quite bring herself to forgive him for that split second of sheer and utter terror when she'd felt hands grab her ankles and yank her down into the dark.

An arm formed, and the hand with its too-long fingers pointed toward the left.

"…okay."

Harriet pulled her wand out from its brace and held it at the ready as she walked. She realized her bag hadn't made it through the Moon Mirror with her, most likely dropped when Longbottom pushed her and she lost her balance. She cursed the Prat Who Lived and prayed she didn't need Salazar's book at any point. She'd hex Longbottom bloody when she got out of there, damn the consequence.

What if I can't get out?

Harriet shook her head and refused the insidious thought purchase. No, there has to be an exit. It's a library, not a prison.

The corridor turned into another, and another. Harriet came across a flight of stone steps headed upward and took them at Set's prompting. She saw more books than she'd ever seen in her life—more than could have possibly been written in Ravenclaw's time a thousand years ago. Where did they all come from? Despite her rush, Harriet paused and eased one volume out of place, inspecting the pristine cover and odd binding. Foreign characters written with a quill filled the inside—maybe Mandarin, or Japanese, Harriet wasn't sure. The book next to it was in French, or what looked like French.

Harriet kept moving. The corridors looked similar enough to one another for her to think she'd started going in circles, so she took to checking books more and more, trying to make sense of their organization or find a clue about how to get out of there. How could this place be in Hogwarts? It was as big as the castle itself!

The layout shifted, an arch appearing between two towering shelves, and Harriet didn't pause to look at Set; she dashed through the new opening and inspected the room beyond. She stopped when she almost collided with the back of a brocaded chair, her free hand coming to rest on its scrolled edge as she looked around. More shelves resided here, as did several empty carrels and tables with the chairs kept tidy, tucked in and straightened. Harriet glanced at the domed ceiling and her breath caught, the spangled sky and its shifting constellations reflected in hues of blue and purple and bronze, tiny scrolls unwinding to show the names of various figures. An armillary sphere, a smaller version of the one in the Astronomy Tower, sat in the middle of the room, the stones of the floor radiating outward from its mount, the rings moving in slow, lazy circles.

Harriet spotted a hearth and ran to it, searching the carved mantle for a dish of forgotten Floo powder. Maybe, just maybe, she could escape that way.

A voice surprised her, and Harriet jerked back with an alarmed squeak. She'd neglected to notice the portrait hanging above the fireplace, and the woman and man inside of it looked at her.

The woman—dark-haired and arrayed in a navy blue gown, a tiara sparkling at her brow—spoke again, her language almost familiar but not quite. When Harriet failed to respond, the wizard—bearded and wearing drab robes, his gimlet eyes stern and inquisitive—barked something else. His piercing gaze landed on Livi. "Be you a Speaker then, maid?"

Gawking, Harriet nodded. "Yes, I'm—I'm a Parselmouth."

"You array yourself in the colors of mine House."

"I'm in Slytherin. Are you—?" She glanced between the pair, and for a moment almost forgot she might be in mortal peril. "Are you the Founders?"

The witch—Rowena Ravenclaw, it had to be!—spoke again, her words fast and urgent, her fair hands pressed tight together. Slytherin held his own hand up, stalling her words. "It is not safe here," he told Harriet. "Mine guardian has been released upon these halls, despoiled and wretched! Thou cannot linger, child!"

"I can't find the way out!" Harriet replied, panic creeping in. Oh, God—Merlin! He means the Basilisk. The Basilisk is here! Harriet had guessed as much, but having it confirmed only worsened her worry. "How do I get out?!"

"Dost thou know of the glass of silver?"

"The wh—? Yes, yes I know about the Moon Mirrors. I can't find one!"

Ravenclaw told Slytherin something, words tumbling in a rush, and then she looked at Harriet. She lifted her hand and pressed it to the fancy tiara on her head.

"Touch not the diadem," Slytherin ordered. "For it has been despoiled by craeft most malicious. Keep thine eyes averted, maid, and make for the higher solar! Rowena's own glass hangs therein. Go! Be off, now!"

He yelled and threw an arm toward an arch at the opposing end of the lounge, and though Harriet did as she was told and ran for it, she couldn't stop herself from looking back. Slytherin shouted, "Go!"

Harriet entered another corridor, wand out still, one hand on Livi to keep him steady. "If we see the Basilisk, whatever you do, Livi, don't look into its eyes!"

"I will bitesss—!"

"No, Livi! Don't look it in the eyes!"

Another corridor, another flight of stairs—another thousand books, all sitting silent upon their shelves, golden light in those strange windows illuminating their abandoned titles. Harriet searched for a door, an archway, anything that might lead to what Slytherin referred to as the "higher solar." What had the portrait meant by that? Why couldn't anyone put up any bloody signs?!

Harriet sprinted around a final turn in the corridor she journeyed through and came to a sudden, terrified stop. Her eyes closed—but no, no movement disturbed the eerie, pressing silence, nothing aside from her own breathing and thumping heart, sweat gathering on her cold skin, dripping along her spine. Hesitant, Harriet peeked at the floor toward her toes, and a single glimpse of the papery white material under her scuffed shoe sent her stomach swooping and flopping about like a pigeon crashing into a building.

The snake's shed skin unraveled like a rough, translucent ribbon splayed out on the otherwise immaculate floor. In a few places, it bunched upon itself and curled up the wall, stretching on and on and on, every visible foot of it increasing Harriet's fear until her vision blackened at the edges. She bent at the waist and picked up a loose piece; the scales had left impressions larger than Harriet's hand. At the head of the trail, where the corridor came to an end, waited a mirror. A Moon Mirror.

"Of course," Harriet breathed. "That's how it's been getting about." Professor Dumbledore had told them the Moon Mirrors could be found all over the castle, stating more than a dozen existed—but exactly how many more, he never specified. Harriet had firsthand experience with the exceptional intelligence of magical snakes; given time, she didn't doubt the Basilisk could figure out how the Mirrors were connected, and which took it from one place to the next.

But where did this particular Moon Mirror lead? To the exit, or to certain doom?

Harriet navigated over the skin, wincing whenever it crackled under her feet. Her hand left a damp smudge on the glass when she pressed it to the mirror and said, "Open."

Again, the brisk, needling sensation passed over her as Harriet shut her eyes and stepped forward. Once on the other side, she blinked and looked around, wand at the ready. Nothing stirred in the museum Harriet had entered; the bones of ancient creatures stood on raised platforms or hung from the rounded ceiling, little plaques set out to tell what was what. Harriet wandered through the hulking, prehistoric monsters, hardly daring to raise her head for fear of meeting the Basilisk's sudden gaze. A glimmer caught her attention, and Harriet hurried to yet another Moon Mirror, this one set in gold and lifted a good foot or so from the base of the wall. When Harriet told it to open, it remained stubbornly shut.

An exit, then, not an entrance. Harriet turned and hurried back the way she'd come, taking a right past what could have only been a Thunderbird's massive ancestor, running by an empty tank where nothing but desiccated sand remained, pausing by a towering quadruped with a long neck—a brontosaurus, she thought it was called. Another mirror waited beyond its platform, and she dodged around the fossil until she reached the glass, whispered in Parseltongue, and managed to slip through.

Again, Harriet stood in one of the book-crowded corridors, but something had changed. She knew it by the taste in the air, an inexplicable bitterness on her tongue that made Harriet think of old dirt left too long in the sun, and how it smelled when the rain finally returned. The farther she journey, the wider the corridor grew, until the outer wall curled away, a colonnade taking its place, each pillar carved to resemble a tree, the stone branches sprawling out over the enchanted ceiling. The area beyond the colonnade expanded, two or three shallow steps leading up to what Harriet decided must have been a vast atrium in its glory days, a thousand perches of various sizes reaching high toward the vaulted roof, the curved wall dominated with a dozen soaring windows looking out upon the strange, distorted view.

Pages fluttered. Someone turned the page of a book.

Harriet climbed the steps, weak knees knocking together, and as she edged out from behind a carved pillar to see the heart of the atrium itself, she spotted yet another Moon Mirror, this one freestanding in an iron frame, gleaming bright in the orange firelight from beyond the false windows. A familiar face waited there.

"…Luna?"

A book snapped shut. A figure stepped from behind the mirror.

"Not quite."

Livius began to chime.


A/N: Okay, so something that always bugged me in canon (there's a lot, but, y'know, w/e) was that the Basilisk moved around through the pipes. Okay, awesome, makes sense given where the Chamber is…but how did it get out to attack people? It's not like there are open drains big enough for that bad boy to come slithering out of.

Also, I'm not the world's great artist, but here's a link to an image of the trio!

CDT | hermione, harriet, & elara

Chapter 89: wit beyond measure

Chapter Text

lxxxix. wit beyond measure

 

Harriet stared into the blank, empty eyes of Luna Lovegood and nearly screamed.

She hung before the Moon Mirror like a puppet with slack strings, her feet flat on the floor, her shoulders sagging, blonde head lolling on its skinny neck. She wore the same tiara Harriet had seen in Rowena Ravenclaw’s portrait; the blue and white gems glinted like animal eyes in the night, all arrayed around the sweeping silver wings of the metal eagle, the band sitting snug above Luna’s slack brow.

Someone walked into view and, before she thought better of it, Harriet asked, “Professor Slytherin?”

But no, it wasn’t. It couldn’t be; the wizard before her rose a bit taller in height, his shoulders a touch broader, more grown than her Defense instructor, dressed in plain black robes. He was also paler, his hair like ink dripping and curling over his forehead and around his jaw and ears, his profile vaguely avian in appearance, the angles of it harsher and more pronounced than Professor Slytherin’s—though the stranger did have the same glaring, bright red eyes.

Those eyes focused on Harriet, his mouth curving into a grin too sharp and cold on his otherwise handsome face. He looked everything and yet nothing like Professor Slytherin.

“Intriguing,” the wizard said as he looked Harriet over, gaze lingering on Livi longer than the girl herself. He had a book in his hands, and he dropped it without a care, kicking the thing away. “Another Parselmouth? Whose illegitimate spawn are you? Gaunt or Slytherin’s?

Ignoring him, Harriet demanded, “What have you done to Luna?!”

No, too old to be one of theirs. Intriguing indeed,” he continued, ignoring her in turn. He took a step forward and Livius chimed again, a low hiss building in the serpent that sank down into Harriet’s bones. “A clever little witch, aren’t you? What is your name?”

Harriet said nothing.

Sneering, the wizard turned to Luna and grabbed her roughly by the chin, tilting the girl’s head back so he could stare into her vacuous eyes.

“What are you doing?! Get away from her!”

“Hmm. Harriet Potter.” He let go of Luna, disregarding her, and looked to Harriet. He smiled again.

“H-How—?” Had Luna told him her name? Did he just—did he read Luna’s mind?!

The wizard began to pace, slow and methodical, like a lion in its cage waiting for dinner to be served. Where he crossed the thicker bands of light passing through the windows, his outline seemed to glimmer or glint, like sunlight reflecting inside a crystal, sparking bright, colorful flares. The floor could be seen through his legs if he moved too quickly. “How are you liking the Aerie, Harriet? I’m surprised a student managed to find it, let alone have the ability to open the passage. Rowena’s archive has nothing on my ancestor’s Chamber, but it does have its own quaint charm.”

My ancestor.

“You’re the Heir,” Harriet stated.

Brava, girl. Of course, I’m the Heir. Perhaps you’re not so clever after all.” He circled Luna, never straying far, and Luna remained immobile just a hand’s breadth from his reach.

“What have you done to Luna? Let—let me take her,” Harriet tried to bargain, licking her dry lips, breath shuddering in and out of her lungs. Livi chimed. “Let me take her, and I won’t—won’t tell anyone about you. I’m a Slytherin. I think you’re—you’re doing great work!”

Liar,” the Heir hissed before he laughed. “I’m afraid Luna won’t be going anywhere. Not until I’m finished with her. She’s been a great help to me, even if her annoying friend proved a nuisance. Nothing an Imperius or two couldn’t handle.” He leaned forward to brush his forefinger against the tiara’s band. “Her soul belongs to me now, you see. Do you know what this is?”

“No, but—.”

“I thought not. Ignorant thing you are. It’s Rowena Ravenclaw’s lost Diadem—only, it’s not quite as lost as people believe, hmm? It’s an interesting trinket, one a curious, naive little first-year wouldn’t be able to resist putting on.” He circled behind Luna and framed his hands around the witch’s head. “Oh, she tried to resist, but when I kept whispering all the answers to every question her dense brain could imagine, Luna soon couldn’t bring herself to take it off. I’d waited so long. I was too weak to form myself like the others, but being trapped in the Diadem has its perks, you see, one of which is learning the stored knowledge of the Aerie itself—a place neither Slytherin nor Gaunt nor Albus Dumbledore himself knows anything about.”

Touch not the diadem, the Founder had said. For it has been despoiled by craeft most malicious. Harriet didn’t know where the Heir had come from, why he’d targeted Luna or how he’d come to be trapped in Rowena’s Diadem—but the more she watched him, the more it became apparent he had a connection to the thing. Was he killing Luna? Draining her? Harriet needed to get the Diadem off of the younger witch and get out of there!

“You’ve been framing Professor Slytherin all year. Why?” Harriet inquired in a bid for time. How was she supposed to get the Diadem off with the Heir hovering so close? Harriet regretted never learning a spell to yank hats off of a person’s head.

“A means to an end, I assure you. A mutual acquaintance assisted me in finding a new body—.” He drew a finger down his not quite corporeal chest. “And in exchange, I make a small spot of trouble for poor Professor Slytherin and Dumbledore.”

“Headmaster Dumbledore will stop you.”

The Heir snorted, pale nostrils flaring with suppressed rage. “Dumbledore can’t stop anything. He is an impotent old wretch, little girl, and the sooner you realize the new order of things, the better.” He tilted his head. “Though whether or not you survive our encounter depends on you.”

“Depends on what?”

“Whether or not you’re prepared to serve your new Lord.”

A shiver of dread went through Harriet, and her eyes widened. Oh, no. No, no, no…it can’t be. “…Lord?”

The Heir smiled—a slow, sickening stretch of red lips baring white teeth, his gums pale and his eyeteeth long like fangs. “You haven’t asked my name, little Harriet. How rude.”

Harriet swallowed and shook her head, as if denying him the question would change the reality of her situation.

“Oh, come now, don’t be coy. I said, ask me my name.”

He tore the words from Harriet against her will. “What’s your name?” She slapped her hand over her mouth, breathing hard.

Again, the Heir simpered and grinned, and when he raised his arm, Harriet saw Luna’s wand clasped in his long, delicate fingers. “Flagrate,” he incanted. The end of the wand lit up, and as he began to spell fiery letters in the air, he kept talking. “Tell me; your parents were killed by the greatest Dark wizard who ever lived, were they not? Our Luna here always found that an interesting, if often disregarded, fact of history. You were ‘overlooked.’” He stopped writing, the words ‘TOM MARVOLO RIDDLE’ suspended between him and Harriet. “Only, he never overlooks anything. Never. So tell me, Harriet Potter, how did you survive?”

He flexed his white hands and the letters moved at his command, the fiery light glaring in his red eyes, burning like embers right out of the pits of Hell, the words coming together before the letters fully settled—.

I AM LORD VOLDEMORT.

No, no—not again!

Relashio!” Harriet shouted, flinging the jinx toward Luna’s head, but the Heir—Riddle, Voldemort—was faster, a silent shield catching her spell with a slight flick of his arm and a flutter of black cloth.

Incarcerous.”

Protego!” Thin, gray cords whipped against Harriet’s own shield and dissipated. She lunged forward without hesitation. “Expelliarmus!

Again, Riddle simply swatted the spell aside. He laughed—a high, cold sound. “Child’s play!”

A streak of blue light soared toward Harriet, and the words Snape spoke so many months ago in the dark of the dungeons came back to her. “Dodge spells colored green, blue, indigo, or violet. They will be more difficult, or impossible, to counter.” So Harriet dodged; she flung herself to the side and scrambled behind a pillar, clutching Livius close as the serpent writhed and tried to get free. She was terrified Riddle would kill him. She was terrified he’d kill her.

“Hiding already, little Harriet? My, I didn’t think I was such a bad host. You haven’t even seen the best part!”

With her back pressed to the pillar, Harriet peered around the side, Livi still struggling. Riddle rounded on Luna, pushing her away, and he came to the Moon Mirror, touching its solid surface. Harriet fired a jinx at his back—but he saw it coming in the glass and deflected it with ease, the red light flying back at her with speed. Harriet ducked and heard the resulting crack! of the spell striking stone.

Hear me, Salazar’s chosen!” Riddle bellowed into the mirror. “Hear me and come, for I have opened the way!

He whipped back—and the glass began to ripple, curdling, something coming near. Harriet threw herself upright and ran for the corridor.

Offendimus!

The Tripping Jinx caught her by the ankles, and Harriet went down, smacking her chin, driving her teeth into her tongue.

“Where are you going, Harriet? Why, you’ve come all this way, and haven’t met my pet!”

She heard the Basilisk when it arrived: the thump of coils against the floor, the great, rattling inhale of lungs far, far larger than her own, its susserations joining in with Riddle’s amused chuckling. Harriet slammed her eyes shut and clung to the first pillar she found. Copper flooded her mouth, chin stinging, her hand so tight upon her wand she feared it might snap in two. Livi jerked, and then—.

No!” she cried at the Horned Serpent as he pulled from her body. Harriet opened her eyes on instinct, but her familiar had already gone invisible, and when she spied the looming shadow, the faint sheen of oily green scales, she squeezed her eyes shut again.

Massster callsss for usss,” the Basilisk hissed. “Massster needsss usss.”

A plaything for you,” Riddle told the creature, and Harriet didn’t need to see to know he gestured at her. “Have fun.

The Basilisk crooned in affirmation and dragged its weight nearer where Harriet trembled blind and horrified. “Wait!” she yelled. What could she do? What could she say? Could she turn the Basilisk against the Heir? She didn’t know enough bloody magic for this. “Wait! Your master is a fake! He’s a fake!

The Massster isss everything,” it answered, still moving. “The Massster isss with usss! Hungry, ssso hungry!

Its voice roiled in Harriet’s brain, hot and sticky and feverish, the edges of it curling in upon itself like milk left too long to boil in the pot. Something was wrong. It sounded ill, almost incomprehensible. “This isn’t your purpose! This isn’t what Salazar Slytherin would have wanted!

“Give it up, Potter,” Riddle called from his place by Luna’s side. “The beast’s mind rotted centuries ago! It only heeds my commands!”

The Basilisk loomed, its hissing thunderous, and as it reared overhead—.

Protego Tria!” Harriet cried, jabbing her wand upward. The magic pulled through her with visceral force as she summoned the strongest shield she knew, and the snake collided with it, driving the air from Harriet’s lungs. She skidded across the stones, rolling, and the snake came again, snarling. “Protego Tria!

The second blow proved almost too much for Harriet’s strength, throwing her far enough for her side to collide with another pillar. Something snapped and Harriet gasped at the resulting pain, the blackness inside her eyelids pulsing with red. She crumpled at the pillar’s base.

“Pathetic.”

Grunting, Harriet prepared herself to cast another shield, knowing the Basilisk surrounded her, its presence pressing closer and closer, the pillars groaning against the squeezing hold of its coils. I’m going to die here, Harriet realized. The thought wasn’t as terrifying as she would have expected. Harriet didn’t fear death so much as what would come after, what would happen to her friends, to her school, to Luna, and the Wizarding world. She hadn’t known it, but maybe Harriet had made her peace with death a long time ago, somewhere in the dark of a stuffy cupboard, hungry and tired and unloved, unwanted. Living was often a lot scarier than the thought of dying.

Something brushed her arm. “It will not touch the Missstresss!” Livi snarled. Next came a harsh, guttural rasp as he spat at the monster—and the Basilisk shrieked.

Stone crunched and ground against itself as the Basilisk writhed and a column fell, crashing into the floor, bits of rock pelting Harriet as she threw her arms over her head.

No!” Riddle shouted, but Harriet couldn’t spare a moment for his objection; the Basilisk’s tail whipped out and struck her side, flinging Harriet across the room once more. Sputtering for breath, she surged upright and risked a quick peek through her lashes.

Her glasses remained on, kept steady by a nifty Charm found by Hermione for Quidditch. The Basilisk did, in fact, surround her, having wound itself up in the colonnade to compensate for its length—every long, spiny foot of it twitching and twisting, the stones groaning, the floor shaking and jumping underfoot as it hissed and cried and sputtered half-formed curses. Harriet chanced a look at its horrid, eel-like head, her knees almost buckling at the sight of its teeth flashing like curved rapiers, but what caught her attention was the clear, viscous liquid popping and sizzling, dripping along the contours of its skull, joined by thin rivulets of pink blood.

Livi’s venom. He spat venom into its eyes!

Harriet sucked in a breath. “Livius!”

She ran, and either the Basilisk heard or felt or smelled her coming because it jerked its head about with an infuriated hiss and lunged for the Horned Serpent laying curled up and crumpled at the base of a chipped pillar. “Protego Serpens!

The monster bounced off the vaporous shield that formed over Livi, jostling more venom into the bloody ruin of its eyes. It shook itself, and Harriet felt it splatter against her skin, a fine, burning mist peppering her hands as she reached out for her familiar—.

“How dare you?! CRUCIO!

Recoiling, having forgotten Riddle in the heat of the moment, Harriet thrust her wand forward, gasping, “Protego!” yet again. The red blast streaked toward her with all the speed of a lightning bolt, but her shield did nothing to stop it. It sank right through the Charm without resistance, and Harriet didn’t have a chance to be confused about that before she was screaming, the world disappearing into a red-hot tangle of sheer, inexplicable agony that burst into existence faster than an exploding firecracker. It ended just as suddenly as it began, and Harriet came back to herself wheezing and sobbing, collapsed over Livi’s prone form.

Riddle’s laughter seemed to echo and resound from all corners of the atrium, burning worse than the venom pockmarking Harriet’s arms, or the trembling, searing ache in her joints, or the piercing throb of a bone broken somewhere in her left arm. “Did you like that, little girl?” Riddle crowed—and Harriet fired another worthless Disarming Charm at him. He deflected it into a window and shattered the glass. “Oh, I think you did enjoy it. Your worm blinded my Basilisk, so I think it’s only fair I return the favor!

He raised his wand again, and Harriet braced herself for the blow—for the pain or for death, every spell she’d ever learned seeming to leak out of her ears like meaningless goo, her wand just an ineffective stick clasped in numb, frozen fingers. She could hardly see Riddle through the haze of her tears, his body silhouetted against the brighter windows—but she saw that arm lift, and Harriet refused to close her eyes.

Crucio!

Protego Horribilis!

A silvery, paper-thin aegis flashed in front of Harriet, catching and absorbing the oncoming curse. Harriet breathed and turned her head, because she hadn’t been the one to speak that spell. No, it had been the idiot now standing at the entrance of the atrium gaping at the hulking serpent and the Heir of Slytherin himself.

It was Neville fucking Longbottom.


A/N: Someone asked if Luna was foreshadowed; she is, a bit. It’s subtle. Most of her “odd behavior” is just brushed off as Luna being Luna. Readers kept expecting it to be Ginny and the diary and thought she was under the influence of the Horcrux, when we know from Rikkety the house-elf’s behavior after she poisoned Harriet (CH 32) that Ginny is showing signs of having been Imperiused. It’s not the Diary; we’ve seen the Diary (CH 26). You can actually go back and find a clue pointing out where Luna must have gotten the Diadem and who gave it to her.

Would Livi’s venom kill the Basilisk? Maybe, given time. The Basilisk’s canonically “magic resistant,” and venomous snakes do have some resistance to venom when it’s introduced to their bloodstream. Given it’s a magic snake and incredibly deadly, I’d say it’d most likely survive.

Chapter 90: promises made

Chapter Text

xc. promises made

Severus knew something was wrong before the pain even began.

He put no credence in Divination; he thought it a vacuous discipline perpetrated by charlatans and conmen, by morons like Sybil Trelawney who sucked down too many hallucinogenics and made a living screwing up everyone else's lives. Prophecies weren't anything until madmen decided they were; the centaurs claimed the fate of the world was written in the stars, but that was shite, too. There was no greater destiny, no fate. Decisions and the lack thereof drove the universe, the chaos of freewill being far more terrifying than anything Trelawney could summon in her crystal ball. Even so, for all his disdain of Divination and its practitioners, a chilling portent of doom settled in Severus far before Minerva called for the students to return to their dormitories. It didn't surprise him.

What now? He snarled in his thoughts, flicking his wand to Vanish the contents of his students' cauldrons. "Pack your things," he told the group of Hufflepuff and Ravenclaw first-years. "Quickly."

They moved to comply, muttering and whispering among one another, wondering what was going on. For a moment, Severus' eyes snapped to the empty seat in the middle of the room where Lovegood usually sat, and again that inexplicable sensation of being wrong-footed came over him. Sneering, he flexed his right hand to ease the stiffness in his fingers and rubbed his knuckles.

He swept from the lower dungeons with the nattering students behind him trailing like nervous, irritating ducklings. Severus saw the Hufflepuffs off first, their common room not terribly far from the potions class, then embarked for Ravenclaw Tower, chiding the first-years to keep up. Flitwick waited outside the Tower's door, and he checked off names from a scroll of parchment as the children passed him one-by-one into the common room before.

Severus crossed his arms. "Miss Lovegood neglected to attend class," Severus informed the shorter wizard. "Miss Wilde stated Lovegood told her she wasn't feeling well and would be reporting to the hospital wing."

Filius waited for the last student to enter the Tower, then tapped his wand against the enchanted knocker, flaring the castle's wards. Severus felt them shift like he felt the cool, prickling numbness in his fingertips. "Miss Lovegood has gone missing, Severus," Flitwick said, expression grim. "We believe there's been another attack. There's writing on the wall in the sixth-floor corridor, and the perpetrator claims to have taken the poor girl. Minerva is meeting with her father, Xenophilius, in Albus' office as we speak."

Severus didn't envy McGonagall having to comfort the distraught man; he knew Lovegood by reputation, which painted him as a wizard one step above Trelawney in lucidity. Again, that prodding sense of doom had the audacity to knee him in the gut and Severus stirred, restless. "Fine. I need to count the Slytherins," he said, leaving without further comment. He didn't bother to mention Professor Slytherin's absence, given Severus would have been forced to act as Head of House with or without the wizard's presence. He held no illusions for his role; he acted as Slytherin's servant, putting in the bloody legwork so the bastard could go right on being a conniving monster. He took the stairs at a quick pace, robes billowing, and arrived back in the dungeons in record time.

The Slytherin common room remained at its usual demure decibel despite the students gathered with their heads bent in whispered speculation. That soft murmuring cut off as soon as Severus stepped through the entrance, all attention swiveling to the approaching Potions Master. "Prefects Derrick and Muldoon," he said. "Gather anyone in their rooms and bring them here."

The respective boy and girl broke off from the group and disappeared through the opposing corridors, inciting a slow dribble of latecomers until the pair returned and informed him that the dorms were empty. Severus counted heads, rattling down the Slytherin roster in his head—only to come to a screeching halt when he missed the whole second-year of the House.

"Where are the second-years?" he asked aloud. Gemma Farley replied, "Defense!" and Severus scowled.

Of course.

"You will remain here until I say otherwise," he told the students, spinning on his heels to march back into the castle proper. Whoever had the idea of employing Lockhart as a substitute this late in the term needed to be cursed—though he understood Minerva's reasoning for authorizing the decision. Defense Masters were hardly thick on the ground. Understanding didn't mean he accepted the outcome of the farce, however. The bumbling shouldn't be in charge of himself, let alone a group of teenagers armed with their wands.

He needed only approach the Defense lecture room to know the students had already moved on, the hall free of Lockhart's loud, aggravating vamping. Severus headed toward Gryffindor Tower in search of his wayward charges and heard the voices echo down the stairwell, the shouting and wailing, too many sounds mixed together for him to recognize any person in particular. The Potions Master palmed his wand as he came out into the upper thoroughfare and found the Slytherins in the middle of a red-faced Gryffindor mob, the macabre writing on the wall a garish and horrid addition to the unfolding confrontation. Sprout and Babbling were caught in the middle of it, trying to soothe the panic and chivvy everyone on their way, but neither had the temperament for dealing with a gang of scared morons.

Naturally, Lockhart's effete presence did nothing to help.

"For fuck's sake," Severus hissed, voice lost to the noise. He jabbed his wand against his throat and threw an Amplify Charm on himself. "Silence!" he boomed, and anyone who didn't have the sense to shut their mouth quickly did so after meeting his furious glower. "Return to your dormitories. Now. Anyone still standing here in the next thirty seconds will be having an exceedingly unpleasant conversation with our acting Headmistress."

Feet hurried and scampered away, though a few of the older and more obstinate Gryffindors lingered to glare at Severus. They, too, wandered off quickly enough, following their younger dormmates toward the rising stairs. Pomona and Babbling shepherded them along, though they did shoot grateful looks in his direction. Their gratitude rubbed the Potions Master the wrong way, and he refused to acknowledge them, turning his attention to the group of frightened Slytherins—and bloody Lockhart.

"Ah, well—there was no need to intervene, Severus, old chap! I had everything under control!"

"Did you?" Severus asked, his tone frigid. He didn't have time for this sodding ponce. "Do you have that under control as well, Gilderoy?" He jabbed a finger at the gruesome writing. "You are the resident Defense expert with Professor Slytherin's inquiry still pending, after all."

"I, uh, yes, of course, I…."

Severus' eyes flicked over the second-years, counting—and coming up two short. "Where are Potter and Black?" The children looked at one another, and he knew they hadn't yet realized the two brats had disappeared. When did they leave? What in the hell did they think they were doing? "You eleven are to go to the common room directly. No detours. Stay together. And you—." Severus had half the urge to curse Lockhart into compliance simply so he wouldn't bollocks anything else up. "I assume you can escort a group of children to the entrance hall without further difficulty."

"Yes, yes, I can do that, no problem—!"

"Then do so, and try not to lose any other students."

Severus headed off to a higher floor still, his mind whirling, the whole of his attention centered upon his right wrist and the white scar wrapped about it like spider silk. The stiffness there took on a new meaning. Merlin help Black and Potter if he found out they'd been overlooked in the dorms or if they'd felt peckish and gone to the kitchens unannounced. Flitwick specified that Lovegood had gone missing or had been abducted, not Potter, not Black. Where had the stupid girls gone?

The pervading numbness in his hand intensified as he passed through the entrance hidden by the snarling gargoyle, and when he at least reached the Headmaster's office, the first sparks of static began to eat at his flesh.

"Severus," Minerva said as he barged into the room unannounced, the door bashing against the inner wall. Xenophilius sat at one of the guest chairs, twisting a handkerchief round and round in his pale hands, his hair thin as corn silk and his red-rimmed eyes slightly crossed. "What is the meaning of this?"

"Potter and Black aren't accounted for," he reported, fisting his aching hand in the wide sleeve of his robes. "And your Gryffindors were in an unruly state last I saw of them."

"Unruly?"

"As unruly as they ever are—completely disrespectful and close-minded. It doesn't matter. Did you not hear what I said? Potter and Black are missing."

Minerva sighed, rubbing at the lines of exhaustion drawn across her furrowed brow. "Merlin preserve us. Where could they be?"

"That's what I would like to know."

"And what about my Luna?" Lovegood demanded, voice breaking as it rose. "What is being done to find this—Chamber? Why hasn't the Ministry sent anyone?!"

Severus and Minerva glanced at one another. Both Slytherin and Albus had postulated that Gaunt wouldn't step in to "assist" until someone died. If that death was pure-blood child, then all the better; those simpering sycophants with seats on the Wizengamot would sing Gaunt's praises if the Minister strolled into Hogwarts and felled the monstrous creature killing "magical" children. A few Petrifactions of boys and girls from mundane households meant nothing—as if Muggle-borns were any less deserving of their magic, as if they were less sympathetic in the eyes of the staid, insular council.

The Wizarding world would be looking at another ten years of the Gaunt administration come next election if Luna Lovegood died.

A yelp echoed behind Severus, rising up through the yet open door—and the youngest male Weasley found himself staring down the Potions Master's wand when he came careening into the office without invitation.

"Mr. Weasley!" McGonagall sputtered, torn between being aghast or simply outraged. "What on earth are you doing outside of your common room?!"

The boy paled. "Professors! He—you have to come! Neville, he, you know, he's been following Potter around, 'cos she's been acting suspicious, and then there was this mirror and Neville thought it might be the Chamber, but then he went and pushed her and, blimey, I don't know why he did that—and then Black hit him and they both fell through and I didn't know what else to do, because it closed up right after them—."

"Weasley, are we supposed to understand any of this drivel? Take a breath and spare us the melodrama."

The boy didn't have the wherewithal—or the wits—to scowl, and he kept rambling, his attention centered on McGonagall as the witch came around Albus' desk.

"Please, Professor, they might be trapped there! Luna and Neville and Potter and Black!"

"Trapped where, boy?"

"In the Chamber! Inside the mirror!"

The words sent a bolt of fear and fury down Severus' spine for all that he knew them to be a misled lie. According to Slytherin, the Chamber hadn't been touched since the Basilisk's release, and whoever was masquerading as the Heir wouldn't use it now as Slytherin was only one Floo call away and keen to subvert Gaunt's plans. Where were Potter, Black—and Longbottom—trapped, then? In the actual, empty Chamber? Slytherin would have their heads.

Severus' right hand quaked. Them being in the Chamber wouldn't explain the Vow's reaction.

"Show us where, Mr. Weasley."

The boy whipped about and ran down the stairs again with Severus right behind him. Minerva's stern voice followed as she tried to get Lovegood to stay behind, but the man cried, "She's my only daughter! My little girl! I won't sit by and do nothing!" and the witch knew she'd lost.

Clear of the gargoyle and already across the hall, Weasley bolted for the stairwell. He would have tripped over his own feet and tumbled onto his head if Severus hadn't caught him by the arm. Minerva and Lovegood kept pace, their footsteps echoing, joined by Lovegood's anxious muttering and Weasley's terrified panting. The boy led them down through the castle to the second-floor…and came to an abrupt halt in front of the library's locked doors. He backtracked and they came around the other way, again coming to the library's empty corridor.

"Mr. Weasley, if this some kind of prank—."

"I—I swear, Professors, it was here!" He spun in all directions, looking at the walls, the floor, and when he failed to spot whatever it was he sought, the boy launched into another jumbled explanation. "It was a corridor I've never seen before! I don't think Neville had come across it before either, but I don't know, we didn't stop to chat about it! We followed Potter here and she—well, there was this ugly statue there, and it asked her a riddle or something, and then it disappeared and there was a mirror and they went through it—."

"Where is it, Weasley?" Severus demanded, gritting his teeth. He flicked his wrist to drop his wand into his grasp—and had to transfer it to the other hand when his fingers seized and cramped, curling in upon his palm. The pain intensified like burning copper coils winding tighter and tighter, cutting into the skin, the tissues, the muscles, the bones. It made the whole of his arm ache.

Minerva spared him a curious glance, then looked away.

"I don't know! It was here! But…not here. Blimey, I know that sounds mental, but it's true!"

Severus swore aloud and the boy gawked. He attributed McGonagall's lack of reaction to her own worry, and Xenophilius slumped against the nearest wall, a man defeated.

Where is Albus when the old codger is actually needed?! Dumbledore wasn't there, and they didn't have time to bring him in. Severus didn't have time; the girl was in danger, mortal danger, given the Vow's growing alarm. It blotted out rational thought, a crushing lodestone seeming to pulverize and reconstitute the atoms of his digits only to repeat the process over and over again. In some distant depth of his mind, the Potions Master understood he might die today—that his death may, in fact, be imminent, as he'd never been one for optimism and their situation did not lend him any foolish hope.

He felt the ghost of Lily's hand over his own. The pain set in and dragged like a witch's nails clawing his flesh.

"If the worst should come to pass, will you keep her from danger?"

"I will."

Severus pushed himself into motion. McGonagall started. "Where are you going?" she called at his retreating back.

"Potter's dormitory."

"Severus, wait—."

She hurried after him with surprising speed and wrapped a hand about his forearm. "Get off of me—!"

The pressure of Apparition enfolded them, stealing Severus' breath, and they landed again with a heavy, awkward thump. Severus smacked his head against a four poster's rail while McGonagall slumped back on a closed trunk. "Och," she grunted, winded. "Albus warned me that wouldn't be pleasant with all the wards active if I needed to use it."

"Ah. I'd forgotten you could Apparate within the castle as acting Headmistress." Severus straightened and pushed his hair from his eyes, ignoring the throbbing knot forming on his skull. The second-year girls Slytherin dorms looked just as all the rest did, if tidier than he knew the section dedicated to their male counterparts of the House would be. Severus didn't know which bed belonged to which student and didn't bother to check; he twitched his wand with his left hand and said, "Accio Potter's hairbrush."

It was ironic, Severus decided, that he would have to use the same Locator Effigy he'd utilized earlier in the summer to find the girl yet again. Albus wouldn't like the use of such a dubious incantation on school grounds, but if Severus didn't do something, it wouldn't bloody matter what Albus liked to didn't like. Several students would be dead or injured or Petrified, the Board would confirm Dumbledore's dismissal, and Severus would be six feet under.

A thud sounded from one of the trunks and he strode over to it, pulling harder on the magic until the lid popped open with a clatter and the summoned brush smacked into his waiting palm. Severus ripped a chunk of hair from the bristles, tossed the brush aside, and turned to Minerva. Severus recognized the displeased gleam in her eyes; though not as versed in Dark magic as he, McGonagall was a master in her field and had enough experience with magic to recognize what spell he meant to use. Like Albus, she didn't like it—didn't like being associated with something that might tarnish her gleaming Gryffindor morals—but she gave no protest.

It always fell to him to do the dirty work.

"To my storeroom," Severus said, voice cold, hand extended. "Quickly."

She did as requested, the second spiraling journey through the castle more pressing and crippling than the first, and Severus felt his private wards crackle and tear at the edges as McGonagall used her temporary authority to gain entry into his locked office. Something shattered when they reappeared—a thrown arm or an elbow or a leg connecting with a jar—and Severus didn't bother to look for the mess, staggering upright instead and lurching like a drunkard to his shelves. He scattered vials and loose cartons, hunting for the tied bundle of evergreen he kept here—when, from one moment to the next, he started screaming.

It rose up like a terrible inferno, a swelling plume billowing, expanding, skin tearing from bone, veins filled with acid dripping and sizzling, and Severus would have done anything to be parted from it, would have chewed his arm off at the elbow if only to lose the flaming, crackling appendage being incinerated at the end of it—but no. No, nothing had changed but for Severus landing on his knees in a puddle of broken glass and potion debris, his hand raised up over his bowed head with his fist clenched tight. Minerva grabbed him by the shoulders, demanding to know what was wrong, what she could do—until she went silent as the grave.

Severus lifted his head. Minerva had her eyes fixed to his quaking hand, and in the low, diffused light of the storeroom, the pearlescent lines of the Vow's scarring stood out stark on his clammy skin.

"What have you done?" she whispered, both a question and a demand—and a quiet, despairing platitude. "Oh, Severus…."

She made as if to touch it, and Severus jerked away, snarling, bracing his other hand on a shelf to bring himself upright and to tower over the woman. "Either assist or get out!"

"Yer aff yer heid, Severus Snape, taking that tone with me!" McGonagall's square spectacles caught and burned in the weak light. Her accent thickened, and color blazed in her furious face. "You stubborn, eejit boy! What have you done—?!"

Severus couldn't take it. "I made a promise!" he yelled, and the words seemed to bounce and shatter upon the stone walls in the resulting silence, Severus' breathing hoarse, his nerves frayed by pain and the unspeakable fear of fucking dying at any given moment, though he'd never admit to it. He felt as raw and flayed open as he had the night he found that bloodied, squalling infant in her crib, her mother's body cooling on the bedroom floor. He made a promise. He would die for the privilege of seeing it fulfilled.

Severus shut his eyes and shoved the emotion down, Occluding until the cold, frozen waters consumed him and gave clarity to the spiraling madness. He needed to act. This wasn't a conversation to be had now. It wasn't one he meant to ever have. He needed to find the students.

"Move," he said, the word soft, dangerous. Minerva shifted, alarmed, and Severus went to the shelf behind her, shoving the jars aside to reveal the wrapped bundle of evergreen branches. With practiced efficiency, he stripped off a sprig and tied Potter's hair about it, threading it through the preserved needles, focusing on his intent. A slash to the outside of his palm and a generous smear of blood against the sprig finished the Effigy. "Take us back to the library. Now."

A third and final Apparition nearly turned Severus' stomach. The resulting crack! startled both Lovegood and Weasley, the latter pointing his snapped wand at Severus as if he could actually do anything with it. Sneering, Severus turned his back and spelled the Effigy into the air. It hung for several seconds without motion, and each of those seconds beat in his chest, hollow and static. The pain wended upward from his wrist again and Severus willed the Effigy to move, to find the way. It might not work. It might go nowhere at all—or it may fly toward the dungeons, or anywhere else the girl frequented in the castle. It might—.

The sprig twitched, and magic brushed Severus' thoughts, his gaze flicking to an angle in the wall he'd failed to notice before. It made for an odd flaw, a glimmer or sheen against the darker blocks, a thin skein projecting forward just enough to catch his attention. Given neither Minerva nor Lovegood appeared to see it, Severus guessed it was the Charm in his left eye detecting a chink in an otherwise perfect glamour.

The Effigy floated into the wall and disappeared.

Severus surged forward and whatever ancient magic shielded the branching passage from view splintered, two corridors overlaying one another for the briefest of instances—until he found himself standing by a portrait of a woman and several geese, a wall at his back, and a new hall opened before him.

Minerva and the others had vanished.

The Effigy warbled and shook, continuing until it dropped without warning, the spell broken, the tied bundle hitting the floor by Severus' boot. He paid it not mind, the bristle snapping under his tread, the smell of pine pungent in his nose. A bust sat upon a plinth midway down the passage, and as his shadow crossed the stone head, Severus swore it turned to look at him.

"Name me, and I shall disappear."

A riddle. Simple enough. "Silence."

Stone grated against stone, and Severus held himself ready, a curse on the tip of his tongue as the plinth receded and a mirror—the same Weasley had mentioned in his blathering—came forward. His reflection was paler than usual, gaunt and severe, a red flush creeping upward from his collar, caused by the steady, angry pulsing that knifed through his hand and the cold sweat sticking to his skin. He placed his hand on the glass and it remained stubbornly in place.

"Aberto."

He pushed, and nothing happened.

"Aparecium!"

Yet again, the mirror remained as it was, and Severus' arm shook under his weight, his knuckles stark. A ragged breath fogged the surface.

"RevelioSpeculum Aperio! Open, goddammit!" His fist collided with the glass, and the open slash on his palm that had been steadily leaking since the dungeons left a red smear. He struck it again—harder, splitting the skin upon his knuckles—and gave a wordless, ineffectual snarl as his Occlusion flickered and warped under the strain of his rage and self-hatred. "What in the fuck is the point of you?!" Severus screamed. He met his own stare in his reflection and didn't know to whom he spoke—himself, the mirror, Dumbledore, the castle, or the whole wretched society that used its people like pawns on a chessboard. "What is the point of it all when children are fucking dying in a miserable political gamble and you do nothing?! Tell me."

Blood ran and dripped on the floor, over his wrist, the wall, staining the white of Severus' cuff, leaving rusty trails on the glass.

"Open!"

He shouted and pressed and reached with everything in his being, a thousand years of magic opening its eyes to look back and—.

"OPEN!"

Suddenly, Severus' hand passed through the mirror.


A/N: Kind of a slow chapter, but the stuff that happens here is really important later on in the series.

Anyway, a couple of readers asked about creating a discord server for this story. Is that something people are interested in? I have to admit, I don't know how to go about doing something like that, aha.

Aerie Guardian: "Name me, and I shall disappear."

Snape: "Is it Potter whenever I do a Slytherin head-count?"

Guardian: "….."

Snape: "….."

Guardian: "Okay, I'll allow it."

Chapter 91: inferno

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

xci. inferno

Harriet blinked. She blinked again—and again, because she could do little else than stare in dumbfounded disbelief at Neville Longbottom standing there with his wand out and pointed toward the Heir of Slytherin.

I must have smacked my head if I'm seeing Longbottom of all people.

He was saying something to her, his lips moving. The words made little sense to Harriet, the syllables and sounds bouncing about in her fuzzy brain like bugs in a jar. "—move, Potter! Move!"

Nothing registered until Elara sprinted forward, her silver eyes wide, panicked, and locked on Harriet. Longbottom fired a bevy of jinxes and hexes at Riddle, each ricocheting off Riddle's shields—and Harriet reached out as if in a dream, snatching hold of Elara's hands, and yanked her out of the way of a returned curse.

This is real. This is happening. They're actually here. I need to—!

Harriet scooped Livi into her arms and scrambled from her knees to her feet. Elara shouted, "Oscausi!" and a blur of white light flew at the Heir, deflected again with a subtle twitch of his wand hand. The rocks it hit cracked along the edges.

"Someone's been practicing Dark magic! Such interesting friends you keep, little Harriet."

Running, Harriet and Elara dodged the Basilisk and Riddle's spellfire, diving behind Longbottom and his faltering shield. "Run!" Harriet yelled at the boy, grabbing a handful of his robes and yanking with all her trembling might. "Run, you idiot!"

"I'm not leaving Luna!"

The Basilisk was turning, tongue lashing, but Riddle hadn't taken a single step forward.

"We have to move!"

A column toppled as the Basilisk reared back, mouth open, fangs extended, forcing Neville into motion. Their footsteps echoed in the narrower corridor like hailstone on a window—but nothing could drown out Riddle's screamed command for the serpent to chase after them.

Neville tried to stop and face it, jerking against the hands holding him back. "Luna needs our help!"

"We can't help her if we're bloody eaten, you absolute twat! Run!"

They bowled around a corner and only Elara's painful grip under Harriet's arm kept her weak legs from giving out. Neville threw an Exploding Charm over his shoulder and nearly clipped them both in his hurry. Books burst into a messy shower of pages and tattered parchment, the sound and resulting shower confusing the Basilisk just long enough for the trio to dash to the Moon Mirror waiting at the corridor's end.

"Open!" Harriet hissed, terrified that it wouldn't, that it'd be another exit-mirror and they'd be pinned in a dead-end with sixty ruddy feet of enraged, blinded snake bearing down upon them—.

Elara pushed them through the glass, and Harriet landed in a crumpled heap, grunting when the stone made contact with her already bloodied chin. Panting, she rolled to her side and with a harsh, slashing motion, cried, "Finestra!"

The mirror shattered into pieces.

"Why would you do that?!" Neville yelped, making as if to grab at the shards before Elara pushed him back. "How are we supposed to get Luna?!"

Harriet didn't reply. She lowered her wand and allowed herself to take a breath, the air cutting into her lungs like a smothered sob. Her muscles continued to jump and seize, painful tremors making it almost impossible to hold herself steady. She cradled Livi close and brought his face nearer her own. He let out a low, plaintive hiss and opened an eye, the pupil widening with the effort. Blood speckled the gem set in his skull, and one of his horns had a large split along the side.

"You were brilliant, Livi," she whispered, stroking his snout. Carefully, she tucked him around her shoulders and under her sweater, warm and out of sight. "Just rest now. We'll get you f-fixed up soon, don't worry."

"Potter—."

Neville was cut off when Elara snapped, "Shut up! God help me if you open your mouth again, Longbottom, they won't find your body!"

"But—!"

"What happened to your face?" Harriet blurted. Neville sported the beginnings of a rather large and swollen black-eye, and Harriet hadn't seen any of Slytherin's curses make it through Neville's shield and connect.

"It broke my hand, that's what happened!" Elara retorted, proffering said hand for Harriet's inspection. One of her fingers had swelled up like Longbottom's lumpy face. "All because of his stupidly hard head!"

"That was your fault, Black—!"

"You imbecile—!"

"Stop it," Harriet demanded, and though her voice was reedy with pain and exhaustion, the pair fell silent. She surveyed the room they'd wound up in and recognized the museum of ancient fossils, a Thunderbird to their right, a golden frame at their backs where the Moon Mirror once hung. Harriet had tried this particular mirror before and had found it didn't open from this side; she knew exactly where the exit back to Riddle and the atrium was.

She must have taken too long in considering their options, because Longbottom shifted from foot to foot, uneasy. "Are you, uh, okay, Potter?"

"No, I'm not bloody okay! Idiot." Harriet took another breath, wincing. "How did you two wind up here? How did you find me without using the Mirrors?"

Scowling, Neville crossed his arms, his wand still clenched in his fist. "Black pushed me in."

"I did not. I struck you, and when you stumbled, you grabbed my arm and pulled me with you!"

"Whatever. I don't know what you mean about the mirrors, Potter. I think the corridors can move like they do in the rest of Hogwarts." He ran a frustrated hand through his hair. "What is this place? It can't be the Chamber—look at all these Ravenclaw emblems!"

Elara scoffed and spoke to Harriet. "This place reads intention, to an extent. Longbottom dashed off looking for Luna and the Aerie eventually brought us there. The Mirrors appear to be a form of shortcut—a means probably utilized by a moderator or librarian in the past."

Harriet just nodded, not at all fussed at the moment to try and understand the Aerie's inner workings. They had more pressing issues.

"We have to move," she told them, trying—and failing—to get upright once more. Elara ducked down and pulled Harriet's arm around her shoulders, helping the shorter witch stand. "We—the Basilisk knows how to get around. It can move through the Mirrors, and—we have to get the Diadem off Luna. I don't know how he's doing it, but he's—the Heir is draining her through it, or killing her, or—. Listen, we need to go this—."

Suddenly, Harriet could hear it again, the dark, slippery susurrations of the Basilisk's mad, ravenous chattering. "Kill the falssse Ssspeaker. Find them, KILL them…."

It was drawing nearer—there! The thump of coils upon the floor caused all three of them to jump as the monster entered the museum through another portal. Harriet let go of Elara and lunged for the aisle, leaping onto the towering brontosaurus' platform, dashing between its legs. Elara and Neville followed—and the Basilisk's answering hiss as it swiveled its mangled head in their direction sounded as loud and as vicious as any lion's roar. Harriet didn't give herself time to think; its weight struck the platform, jarring it, its shadow colder than it should be—and she hurled a hex at the fossil overhead.

Grabbing Neville and Elara by a wrist each, she jumped from the platform as the dinosaur came tumbling down, crashing and splintering, the Basilisk shrieking as it disappeared under a heaving pile of heavy bones. A cloud of dust exploded from the impact and the trio choked on the thick, gritty air, but Harriet could still see the outline of the last Moon Mirror stationed ahead. "We're almost there!"

She hissed at the glass, and again it allowed them passage, Harriet sucking in cold, clean air when she popped out the other side. She didn't hesitate to shatter the mirror like she had the last.

"Why are you doing that, Potter?! You're going to trap us here!"

She bared her teeth at Longbottom as she gripped her broken arm, holding it close to her side. "You weren't so worried about trapping anyone when you pushed me into this bloody place, were you? No, you were right chuffed then. Bigoted prat."

Red suffused Longbottom's sweaty face and blotted the purpling bruise. "You really want to have it out right now? Fine. I was wrong, okay? I was wrong! I'm an arsehole! Now, can you tell me where we are? Why did that freak look like Professor Slytherin? And how are we going to rescue Luna? Or are you planning to slither out of here without even trying—?"

Harriet kicked him in the shin and didn't care that it hurt her foot. Everything else already hurt, so what did it matter? "I don't know, Longbottom, for Merlin's sake! I didn't exactly plan for this, did I?"

"Harriet," Elara intoned, and the shorter witch grimaced, looking away from the Prat Who Lived before she gave in to the urge and kicked him again. "Do you have your Cloak?"

"No, it's in my bag, which I think is outside by that ugly statue."

Elara sighed and wiped her dusty face with her sleeve. Harriet's shoulders grew heavier with every passing second, dragging toward the floor, tears pricking at her eyes against her permission. She was so tired; Harriet had never wanted for a day to be over more than she did right at that moment, and the injustice of it pulled at her as if it had tangible weight. She couldn't leave Luna to die. She didn't know the way out. Her arm hurt—every nerve in her body throbbed, flayed open, and there was almost too much blood and grime on her glasses to see through.

They couldn't stay there. The mirror might be broken, but the Basilisk would find another way around.

"We'll distract him," Neville said, piecing together a patchwork plan of action. "Potter, you're fast—so Black and I will keep hexing him, and you'll get by and sneak over to Luna and take off the Diadem!"

"If you had a half a brain in your fat head you'd know we aren't going to get anywhere near the Diadem. He's not some dimwitted idiot who'll let three kids get one over him." The orange, blazing letters of the wizard's name remained fixed in Harriet's mind as if burnt onto her retinas. I am Lord Voldemort. Tom Marvolo Riddle. She scratched her neck, broken nails dull and uneven against the thicker skin of her scar. "We have to attack Luna."

"What?!"

"Don't be thick, Longbottom. We won't get anywhere attacking the Heir; we gotta get that crown thing off of Luna, and she's the one without a wand. If we knock her down, it should knock the Diadem off."

Harriet didn't know if it'd work. She didn't know if knocking the Diadem off would do anything at all, only that Riddle wouldn't leave Luna's side, and it was the only chance they had of defeating him. They couldn't stand here and waffle over ideas forever; Luna could be dying and the Basilisk would be drawing ever closer.

She looked at the wand clasped tight in her shaky hand. Some part of her didn't want to go back; it was cowardly, but Harriet thought it better to admit the fear than to let it fester. She was afraid. All she had was a smattering of spells all jumbled in her head, a broken arm, and an injured Horned Serpent. She was afraid of failing. Failure didn't mean she'd get a 'T' on an essay or detention; people would die—one of her best friends, the Boy Who Lived, Lovegood.

Harriet didn't know what to do.

Neville moved, charging on with that blind Gryffindor assurance could be almost admirable in the right situations—though, Harriet didn't think now was the best time for it. She and Elara exchanged one wary glance and set off after him. The light continued to gleam, steady as a well-stoked hearth, and they walked through intermittent bands of gold and shadow as the corridor widened again, and they returned to the barren atrium where the Heir of Slytherin lurked.

Harriet caught the barest glimpse of disbelief in the wizard's red eyes when Neville came strolling out from among the pillars. "Returned to die, have you?"

"We're not leaving without Luna! Let her go!"

Riddle laughed. "What pointless grandstanding? This is where sentiment gets you: nowhere at all. Stumbling right back into my hands—."

Neville made a noise as if to argue with the madman—but Harriet surged forward and threw her hex, following it with another, and another. Riddle's arm moved faster than her eyes could track, and the hex slammed into his nonverbal shield hard enough to drag his feet on the stones. Snarling, Riddle returned fire—that same, horrid red curse sailing far too close to her head—and Elara tried hitting Luna with a Jelly-Legs Curse, but she was too tentative and unsure. Riddle flicked a spell at the column she hid behind—and it suddenly lunged, sprouting crushing arms, and knocked Elara into the floor.

"Elara!" Harriet cried. "Bombarda!" The spell blasted the stone pillar into smithereens, small chips and broken bits falling on their heads.

"Enough!" Riddle hissed, and Harriet couldn't tell if he spoke in English or Parseltongue, the nuance of the difference lost to his rage. "Everte Statum!"

A sudden, overcoming wave of force threw Harriet and Neville flat on their backs with Elara. Harriet's vision swam.

"You think to best me? Mere children against the greatest wizard who ever lived?!" Riddle seethed. "You may have outmaneuvered the Basilisk—a stupid beast—but you will not make a mockery of me!"

Neville groaned and hexed him again. Harriet watched the spell hit Riddle's shield, red color washing over the transparent surface, and she saw how the shield tapered and thinned the nearer it got to the Heir's feet. Behind him stood Luna, and behind her, the Moon Mirror.

Memories of Defense class came swinging back like physical blows, Professor Slytherin's cold voice all too like the Heir of Slytherin's, and in the recollections she relived the fleeting apprehension and fear that had filled her when she'd faced her instructor and jinxed his legs. She remembered his rage. "Aim for his feet," Snape had told her and she had. Lying on the floor, Harriet realized she was going about this the wrong way; she kept slinging incantations head-on at the Heir like a Gryffindor bashing his skull against a wall, trying to chip away at the bricks. She had to be cleverer. She had to—.

Twisting, Harriet rolled onto her bad arm, grit her teeth, and swung her wand low, parallel with the floor. "Flipendo!"

The Heir acted on instinct, his shield rising again, angled toward Harriet—and she saw his eyes widen as the spell skirted the stones underfoot, caught a wide groove, and clipped upward beneath his Charm. It struck the mirror, bounced, and then—.

"No!"

Luna toppled—thrown hard—and when she hit the floor, the Diadem popped off her head and skittered away. For a second, the Heir stared, reaching, and then he vanished as if he'd never been. Luna's wand fell with a clatter.

Harriet let out a ragged breath, her ribs aching, head swimming, waiting for a curse or a hex or—something, something that never came. "Luna!" Neville shouted once he regained his feet, running to the girl's side, and so Harriet shoved away the woozy feeling threatening to knock her out cold and went to check on Elara. Her friend sat up and dabbed at a bloody spot on her brow, muttering darkly under her breath as she studied the sticky stain on her gloves.

"All right, Elara?"

"Fine, thank you. How is Lovegood?"

Shrugging, Harriet wobbled over to Longbottom next. He was trying to shake Luna awake, but she remained unresponsive. "She's cold," he commented, fretting and clearly unnerved. "But she's breathing, so she should be okay, right? Once we get her to Madam Pomfrey?"

Harriet glanced at the Diadem then, sitting so quiet and innocuous on its own, the light glittering in its pretty gems. She wondered if they should take it with them, if they should bring it just in case it was needed to make Luna better—but then she shook herself and looked away. No, it was obviously cursed, and they'd better leave it behind until she could find a professor and let them handle it.

Neville and Harriet stood and together got Luna balanced between the two of them, Livi hissing a tired, wounded protest as the witch's limp arm came to rest against his coils.

"It's okay, Livi. We're going to get out of here, somehow."

Starting, Longbottom gave her a long, measured look as they set off, Elara following a step behind. "…you're a Parselmouth."

"You didn't notice that earlier? How perceptive of you. What's your point?"

"You're not the Heir of Slytherin?"

"Of course not." Harriet scowled and took a breath, finding it harder and harder to get enough air. "And no, I'm not related to Professor Slytherin, either. I've been able to talk to snakes even before I knew there was such thing as magic."

"Wait…before you knew about magic? How's that possible? Were you raised by Muggles?"

Bloody hell, Harriet swore at herself. "Shut up and lift, Longbottom."

"Kill…Kill…KILL…."

"Fine, just stop hissing at me, Potter."

"I didn't—." Harriet's heart lurched in her chest. She almost dropped Luna in her haste to look back the way they'd come. The Diadem still rested at the foot of the Moon Mirror—and Harriet knew then that she'd made a mistake. She hadn't thought to shatter the glass as she had with the others, and the surface was rippling like an upset pond. "It's coming. Oh, shite—!"

Neville took one glance at the shifting mirror with the dark shape about to burst through and started running, dragging Luna and Harriet along with him. The Basilisk reappeared, its body slamming into the floor, shaking the whole of the Aerie around them as the blind serpent dove forward. It opened its maw, its fangs poised, dripping venom, and lunged.

Elara skittered to a halt. Face set, she slashed her wand through the air and shouted, "Ignis Monstrum!"

The spell started with a ripple of heat; Harriet felt it touch her face despite the distance between her and the other witch, a shimmer hovering at the wand's end, chased by a gout of red, glaring sparks. Flames spooled like threads of brilliant, glowing yarn, knitting together in a pattern faster and faster until a body swelled from the bubbling, writhing heat. It howled, that amorphous thing formed of fire and teeth and scouring claws, joined by another and another, the inferno building with astounding speed. The head of it seemed to open wide its yawning jaws—wider than the charging snake—and it swallowed the Basilisk whole, the snake disappearing in a flash of green scales and rasping screeches.

The fire didn't stop. It kept going—smoke rising, thickening, the whole of Harriet's vision disappearing in a confusing swirl of orange and black and gray, and through the howling she heard a different noise: a scream, distant and wretched, the wail of a dying thing giving its last breath. Set curled from Harriet's feet, stretching into the blaze, and she sensed a strange tug, followed by a sudden, intense silence.

What was that?

"Stop it, Black!" Neville yelled, the fire reflected in his wide eyes. "Put it out!"

Elara drew her arm back and tried to end the spell, but it kept going, resisting, impervious to several canceling spells. A curl of flame whipped back and Elara cried out, the fire grazing her hand. She dropped her wand and it vanished into the monstrous inferno—the inferno now coming straight toward them.

They ran. The smoke burned in Harriet's lungs, in her eyes. Luna's weight felt like a thousand tonne weight strangulating her neck, and no matter how fast they went, the fire seemed to get closer and closer. It whined, snapped, nipped at their heels, embers catching their shins, smoldering the edges of their robes. Sweat poured down Harriet's back, over her face, in her eyes. She shut them, unable to see anything at all through the haze, and just ran, forcing every bit of strength into her legs and pounding feet.

She collided with something solid and would have yelped if she'd had the breath for it. She made to reel back—when an arm came around Harriet's shoulders, a large hand with its fingers tangled in her hair turning her head, hiding her face from the blaze. The pounding in her ears sounded unnaturally loud.

"Aculei Ignis!" bellowed a deep, familiar voice.

The air whipped itself into a frenzy and Harriet clutched to Luna and the sturdy form in front of her, holding on for dear life. Higher and higher the wind coursed, and the stronger the wind grew, the louder the fire howled. It surrounded them, seeming to come from the walls or the floor, and Harriet waited for it to end, for the flames to sink their teeth in and cook them all alive, and yet—.

And yet, silence fell. The wind ceased as abruptly as it'd begun, and cold air touched the damp nape of Harriet's neck. She took a shuddering breath.

The last thing Harriet registered was the feel of rough black wool sliding against her cheek, and then nothing at all.


A/N: Harriet, CH 53 - "Hey don't do that spell, looks dangerous."

Elara, CH 91 - "…Whoops."

 

Notes:

So I made that discord! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

Chapter 92: a crown of thorns

Chapter Text

xcii. a crown of thorns

 

“Miss Black, I am telling you for the last time, change into the gown—.”

“No.”

“Don’t be difficult, young lady. You’re injured and need—.”

“I won’t.”

Somewhere in the haze of dreamless sleep, Harriet heard the voices arguing and blinked open her heavy eyelids, scrunching her nose against the light coming off a nearby lamp. The blankets had been tucked tight around her, her body strangely distant and heavy. She wondered what in the world Madam Pomfrey was doing in their dorm and why she wanted to dress Elara in a gown—and then recent events returned to her like bricks dropping into place. Thump, thump—thump! Harriet knew this bed, knew that ceiling and that blush of moonlight in the windows. She wasn’t in the dorm; she was in the hospital wing.

Harriet sat up and groaned when every muscle in her body protested the motion, her fingers bunching the blanket under her hands. The hushed argument cut itself short and Elara ducked around the partially drawn curtains hanging around the bed. She saw Harriet awake—if confused and more than a bit sore—and relief flooded her features. Elara jumped forward, and Harriet winced when the other witch yanked her into a crushing embrace and almost pulled her from the bed entirely.

“I think you’re breaking my bones, Elara.”

Good. You scared me half to death.”

Snorting, Harriet didn’t dare mention that if anyone had scared someone half to death, it was Elara when she’d cast that bloody fire spell. She pulled back and studied her friend, the soot painting her skin, the singe marks on her robes, the gauze swaddling her right hand. “Are you okay? Where’s—where’s Livi? And Luna? And—Longbottom, I guess—?”

Madam Pomfrey stepped up behind Elara and physically dragged them apart, her face promising dire consequences for anyone who resisted. “Miss Potter, you are meant to be resting—.”

“But what happened?”

“There’s time for that to be discussed later—.”

“But I want to know!”

“Miss Potter—.”

The curtain’s metal rings shrieked on the rod as they were jerked aside, the three witches jumping when Professor Snape appeared. Part of his lank hair seemed to have been burned off, given the shiny rest spot on the corresponding side of his jaw. “Black,” he snapped. “Get to your own bed.”

“I’m emancipated and don’t need to accept medical—.”

It was precisely the wrong thing to say to the wizard, given how Snape’s dark eyes glittered with suppressed rage and he bore his crooked teeth. “What is wrong with you, you stupid girl?”

“Professor Snape!” Madam Pomfrey sputtered.

“You are injured if you haven’t cared to notice, and being emancipated has no bearing on Madam Pomfrey’s duty to ensure proper treatment for you idiotic fools. While you stand in this infirmary, you are a ward of the school, Black, and will do as she tells you to. Do you understand me, or must I repeat myself using simpler words?”

Elara flushed a dark, furious red but chose not to say anything. Instead, she jerked herself back from Harriet’s bed and disappeared around the curtains, Madam Pomfrey following with a sharp, frustrated tsk—which left poor Harriet alone with an angry, soot-marked Potions Master.

“What in the hell were you and Black thinking?” he hissed.

“I didn’t—.”

“Exactly! You needn’t say anything farther, but you don’t think, Potter! You never do!”

Exasperated, Harriet readied herself to yell at Snape, to throw Longbottom under the proverbial bus for getting her into this mess in the first place—but she stopped herself and chewed the words, not entirely sure why she did so. She hated the jerk, didn’t she? She should do what Draco would do and sell the bastard out. “It wasn’t my fault,” Harriet told him. “What happened? Where is everyone?”

Snape ignored her questions. “So you didn’t decide to leave your class and escort and go off on your own while there was an unknown monster roaming the school?”

“It wasn’t unknown! I knew what it was!”

“That makes your behavior worse, Potter!”

The curtains rustled for the third time, and a wizened hand nudged them aside as Headmaster Dumbledore appeared next to Professor Snape. The Potions Master didn’t seem to notice or care, but Harriet almost jumped out of her bed in her rush to ask questions.

“Professor, you’re back! Can you tell me what happened? Is everyone okay? Is Luna all right? Where’s Livi—?”

“Potter, settle down—!”

“Come now, Severus. I think Harriet deserves to have her questions answered after the afternoon she’s had. She can bear your lectures another day.”

Snape glared at Professor Dumbledore and let out a soft, disgusted snort. Harriet, meanwhile, used the wizard’s distraction to roll free of Madam Pomfrey’s tightly tucked blankets and stand. The cold floor burned the bottom of her bare feet and she’d never been as aware of her short height as she was next to the two towering wizards. “Potter—.”

Professor Dumbledore gestured out into the wing proper before Professor Snape could protest in earnest, and Harriet dodged around the Potions Master to follow Dumbledore, wincing when his hand gave her shoulder a reassuring pat. Every joint and bone in her body throbbed. “Your familiar is in the estimable care of our gamekeeper. Hagrid tells me Livius is a bit bruised but will be right as rain after some rest.”

“Oh,” Harriet said, relieved. “And the others?”

He smiled, and led her across the infirmary to another partly open set of curtains. Curious, Harriet poked her head through and then stepped past the divider.

Luna lay on the bed fast asleep, her hair fluttering as she snored and the wizard sitting in the chair at her side spoke quietly with Neville Longbottom—whose face had, regrettably, been healed. Harriet had hoped he’d be forced to heal that the Muggle way. Neither of the two noticed her until the Headmaster cleared his throat, at which point the unfamiliar wizard turned his head, and the resemblance to Luna became apparent. He spotted Harriet—and jumped forward.

“Hey!” she yelped as the wizard snatched her into his skinny arms and squeezed the breath out of her. Every muscle in her body burned and complained, her hands tingling against her sides. Harriet didn’t hear what he said at first, so startled by his sudden movement and the loud thump of her heartbeat.

“—my only girl, you saved her. Oh, I’m so grateful! So grateful! There’s nothing I could ever do to thank you enough—!” he blubbered against her shoulder.

“Save—what? Who—?!”

“Xeno, let’s sit, shall we…?”

It took Professor Dumbledore’s insistent cajoling and Snape’s less than gentle yanking to pry Luna’s dad free, and all the while Harriet tried to make sense of his rambling. She caught a glimpse of Neville looking at her before his eyes darted away, focusing instead on Mr. Lovegood, and Harriet’s brow furrowed.

What did he tell them?

Mr. Lovegood finally returned to his chair, sniffling and red-eyed, and took Luna’s hand into his own. “Neville was just telling me about all your heroics,” the wizard said, his thumb fondly stroking Luna’s palm. “How the three of you dueled the Heir of Slytherin into submission and rescued my Luna!”

Harriet bit her tongue to stop her first reaction, though she thought Snape might have noticed the motion. Longbottom kept his eyes averted. “Did he really?”

“You must have been terribly frightened facing that monster and his creature! Thank Merlin you were there to help Mr. Longbottom!”

An incredulous huff escaped Harriet, and for a moment she considered whether or not she’d heard Mr. Lovegood correctly. HELP Longbottom? Help?! That lying arse! The urge to yell at the Prat Who Lived intensified and still Harriet swallowed the words, letting the furious air out of her sails because no matter how he lied or his own culpability in what happened, she had never been so bloody grateful in all her life as she was when he stopped Riddle from torturing and possibly blinding her. She never wanted to experience pain like that again, and so Harriet said nothing.

Elara, however, didn’t suffer the same compunction.

What?” came the furious snarl from behind them, and the other witch shoved by Professor Snape to stand with Harriet. Madam Pomfrey had managed to shove her into one of the hospital gowns, but Elara had pulled her ruined school robes on over the top of it, buttoning the collar around her neck. The sticky bandages on her right hand made it impossible to move her fingers, so she used her left to point at Neville. “There seems to be a lot of pertinent details missing from that story, Longbottom.”

Neville stiffened, his shoulders rising toward his ears.

“What about the part where you followed Harriet around for the better part of the year and didn’t stop when we told you to? Or when you pushed Harriet into the Moon Mirror after you and Weasley held us at wand-point? You purposefully shoved her into what you thought was the Chamber, where the deadly snake was!”

“I didn’t know any of that! She was—acting suspicious, is all. I got overzealous.”

“How entirely Gryffindor of you,” Snape seethed, brushing Elara back before she could do something foolish, like punch Longbottom again. Harriet grabbed Elara by the arm and held tight. “Rushing in without thought, without any regard to the safety of others—without consideration for what you’ve been told by wizards and witches far beyond your experience!”

“I only meant—!”

“You think we should be sympathetic to you, Longbottom, when all you’ve done is perpetuate unfounded rumors and harass your peers?” Snape smiled—and Harriet shivered at the unremitting hatred and cold, rigid ire glinting in the Potions Master’s eyes. He was angry, maybe angrier than she’d ever seen him, and the emotion thrashed just beneath the surface. “I believe I told you at the beginning of the year; if you were in my House, I’d see you on the train home this very night, and you’d never set foot in this school again.”

“And I believe I told you it wasn’t your prerogative to punish my students, Severus.”

Professor McGonagall had entered the hospital wing, her face set in a hard, unimpressed expression as she strolled into the wing trailed by a collection of wizards Harriet didn’t recognize at first glance. Professor Snape retreated a step and shifted, his arm fidgeting, and Harriet leaned closer to Elara to peer around the edge of his robes as the cloth came out to block the pair from view. There were four wizards with McGonagall, and after studying them, Harriet remembered the shorter, plump man with the green bowler hat as one of the blokes who took Headmaster Dumbledore from Hogwarts—and the tall, stately wizard behind him was Draco Malfoy’s dad.

“Well, well, Dumbledore,” Lucius Malfoy said as he approached the Headmaster, his cane held in one long-fingered hand. “Even when dismissed from your post, it seems impossible to pry you away from the school.”

For his part, Professor Dumbledore met Malfoy’s snide remark with a gentle smile. “Good evening, Lucius. I think you will find I haven’t been dismissed from my post after all. In fact, I had a very curious conversation with several Board members who’d felt their families and livelihood had been threatened. A terrible misunderstanding, I’m sure, but when they heard a child had been taken, they were quick to retract their stance on the inquiry and to ask me to return.”

A muscle jumped in Malfoy’s jaw before it settled. “How very serendipitous.”

“I would think so. Of course, seeing as my own inquiry was dismissed, I imagine we’ll also be seeing Professor Slytherin return as well. The precedence would ruin any case against him. Isn’t that right, Minister?”

The latter portion of his statement Dumbledore directed at one of the wizard’s Harriet didn’t know, and she had to shuffle closer to Snape to get a better look at the man. In the dim, low-light of the moon filtering through the ward’s windows, Harriet glimpsed a pair of red eyes in a pale face and stopped breathing.

It can’t be.

The wizard—the Minister—inclined his head, and Harriet didn’t realize she was trembling until Elara tugged her away from Snape and she let go of his robes. At first glance, the Minister for Magic mirrored Tom Riddle—and Professor Slytherin—but the more Harriet studied him, the more differences she spied. His hair was longer, his face narrower and more affected by age, and he was larger than either the professor or the man from the Diadem. He wore emerald green robes with gold buttons on the cuffs and a high collar that extenuated his square jaw.

“Yes, it seems the inquiries for you and…Slytherin had to be recalled before the Wizengamot could be called to session.” He smiled without sincerity and his eyes roved from Dumbledore to McGonagall, Snape, and then Luna’s dad. “Mr. Lovegood, I’m so pleased your daughter has been recovered. Truly a relief.”

Mr. Lovegood nodded, but he didn’t quite meet Minister Gaunt’s gaze, instead focusing on Luna and holding her hand tight.

“I must admit, I’m not here for congratulations, Dumbledore,” the Minister continued, flicking a stray strand of hair back from his brow. “While we at the Ministry were pleased to hear the problem has been…eliminated, I find the particulars of the solution used rather troubling. Especially as you weren’t the one who informed me of them.”

“Why does he look like Professor Slytherin?” Harriet whispered to Elara, and the other witch shrugged.

“I don’t know.”

Dumbledore cleared his throat. “I’d be interested in knowing who decided to pass information on to you, Minister, but alas! I know you will not say. What particulars might you want to know, Marvolo? I will do my best to clarify.”

Minister Gaunt stepped nearer and Harriet twitched, chills racking her spine as pain needled her neck and shoulder. The plump wizard gripped his bowler hat and nervously twisted it in his hands. “I want to know who cast the Fiendfyre,” Gaunt said, his eyes again flicking from face to face, settling longest on Professor Snape, knowing there were others behind him but not able to see who they were. “I want to know who used Dark magic to destroy a priceless relic of history. I assume you don’t need me to clarify the legality of Dark magic, Headmaster.”

Elara stiffened.

Professor Dumbledore frowned, the moonlight bright on his half-moon spectacles. “That priceless relic you mentioned attempted to kill several students and is responsible for harming many others.”

“Yes, very tragic.” It didn’t sound tragic. The Minister sounded as if he could barely muster the sympathy to spit the words. “Regardless, Fiendfyre is a regulated spell and I intend for whoever cast it to incur…repercussions.” He looked at soot-stained Professor Snape again with a victorious glint in his eyes. He thinks Snape cast it, Harriet thought. Oh, Merlin—what if he gets fired? Or—arrested?

What would happen if the truth came out? What would happen to Elara? And what would Professor Slytherin do when he learned she’d torched his ancestor’s serpent?

“It was me.”

Gaunt paused, then swiveled to Neville, who stood and met the Minister’s scrutiny without hesitation. “…You?”

“Yeah.” Neville swallowed, his throat bobbing up and down. “I’ve had training to do it, you know, as the Boy Who Lived.”

Harriet’s first inclination was to think Neville meant to take credit for what happened in the Aerie—but there was no glory to be gained in this. Both Harriet and Elara knew that spell in Elara’s journal was Dark, but neither could have expected the Ministry to find out about it. Longbottom was taking the blame. It would be easy to persecute a nameless girl from a presumably Dark family like Elara’s—but Neville was a different story. Being a golden Gryffindor had its benefits.

The Minister smiled again, and yet the way he grit his teeth was apparent. “Yes…the Boy Who Lived. Your celebrity notwithstanding—.”

“I was just doing what I’ve been trained to do—saving the day. I think the Wizengamot—and the Prophet—would agree I did the right thing, don’t you think, sir? My step-mum gets on with Miss Skeeter quite well.”

Elara scoffed under her breath. “What a manipulative prat.”

“If he keeps your arse out of Azkaban, I’ll sing his bloody praises. Shh.”

By now, the Minister had grown visibly frustrated, the forced serenity of his expression dwindling into a cruel, unpleasant glower. The plump wizard—Fudge, Harriet recollected—kept a steady, anxious motion with his hands, and the fourth, unnamed wizard in his maroon robes kept leaning back like he wanted to make a break for the door and run. Even Mr. Malfoy shifted with unease. “Fine. I expect suitable academic repercussions to be handed out by you, Albus, since you’ve decided to return.”

“Of course, Minister Gaunt. I think Neville would agree that being suspended for the remainder of term is an agreeable consequence for his transgression.”

By the look of him, Neville did not agree, and he opened his mouth to protest—but Professor Dumbledore leveled him a serious look, brow raised, blue eyes steady, and Longbottom deflated. Harriet knew he wasn’t being punished for the Fiendfyre; he was being punished for judging her, for following her around, for pushing her into the bloody Aerie in the first place. Gratitude swelled in Harriet’s chest.

“Yes, well. What of the Heir? Your daughter unleashed the beast upon the school, did she not, Mr. Lovegood?”

Luna’s dad balked and his already pale face lost what little color it had gained. “No! My Luna—she would never!”

“She’ll have to be taken in for questioning by the Ministry—.”

“It wasn’t Luna,” Harriet blurted out. Shite. Snape sighed and reluctantly stepped aside so she came into view. She wished he hadn’t when she found herself the subject of Minister Gaunt’s baleful attention. “It was—Tom Riddle.”

Minister Gaunt stared at Harriet for far longer than was appropriate. Recognition deepened the thin lines about his eyes and Harriet understood without a doubt that the Minister knew who she was. “…Tom Riddle, you say?”

“Y-yes, sir. That’s what he called himself.”

“And where is this Tom Riddle, hmm? I don’t see him here.” His red eyes met Harriet’s—and she felt frozen, as if her face had been exposed to a sudden, inexplicable blizzard, and the cold crept deeper into her flesh and bones, burning in its intensity—.

Professor Dumbledore extended his arm as if to fondly ruffle Harriet’s hair, but he used unexpected force in the motion, and his hand pushed Harriet’s head down, breaking her gaze from Gaunt’s. The cold feeling vanished.

“It was a cursed object left behind by Tom Riddle, who used to be a student here many years ago,” the Headmaster interjected. He kept his hand on Harriet’s head. “He once went by another name and innumerable witches and wizards have been led astray by his guile. Our dear Luna is simply another victim of his machinations.”

“And where is this cursed object?” Gaunt demanded. “You will turn it over to me—and the Ministry—immediately.”

“Gone, I’m afraid,” Dumbledore said with apparent cheer, smiling in the face of the Minister’s blatant resentment. “Destroyed in the fire.”

Gaunt’s hand flashed out and gripped the footboard of Luna’s bed, his knuckles white, a gold ring glinting on his finger. “How fortunate,” he breathed, his grip belying his quiet tone.

“Fortunate for our students, yes,” Dumbledore said with a sage nod. “One does have to wonder wear Luna came upon such an object.”

“I’m sure we’ll never—.”

“It was Professor Selwyn.”

Harriet and everyone else in the vicinity started when a quiet, groggy voice rose from the bed. Mr. Lovegood jumped to his feet when Luna opened her eyes—and she peered at Minister Gaunt with frank distrust.

“Pardon, Miss Lovegood?”

“It was Professor Selwyn,” she repeated with perfect clarity, pausing to beam at her father—and Harriet and Elara. “Hello.”

“Hi, Luna.”

“Miss Lovegood,” Minister Gaunt interrupted, both hands coming to grip the footboard now. “Accusing a Hogwarts professor of bestowing a Dark object upon a student is a slanderous offense—.”

“It’s not slander if it’s true. Daddy taught me that.” Luna sat up with some difficulty and Mr. Lovegood’s assistance. “Professor Selwyn gave me the Diadem in Diagon Alley. He knocked into me and pretended he didn’t know what I was talking about when I tried to give the box back.” Fretting with the stitching on the blanket, Luna glanced first at her father, then Professor Dumbledore. “I didn’t mean what I did, and I know I should have told you, Headmaster. It was nice having someone listen to me instead of telling me I’m wrong all the time, and whenever I tried to approach you, I found myself unable to do so. It was quite strange.”

Luna sounded oddly unaffected by her experience, and Harriet marveled at her strength. She herself didn’t feel nearly so composed, the tears and anger and fright still bubbling in her heart, outweighed only by her fatigue and general relief.

“Oh, dear. It seems it would be best if we brought Otho in for questioning. Severus, if you would go and fetch him with Auror Dawlish?”

Grim, Snape only nodded once at Dumbledore before sweeping away—which would have left Harriet and Elara fully exposed to Minister Gaunt’s scrutiny if the Headmaster hadn’t slid forward in his place, his hand dropping from Harriet’s head to her shoulder. Dawlish—the bloke in red—looked to the Minister for reassurance, and the wizard gave a short, displeased jerk of his head, indicating the Auror should follow Snape. He let go of the footboard, leaving behind a smoldering scorch mark in the shape of a hand. Harriet gawked.

“You two should be returned to your beds now,” the Headmaster said with false cheer, applying the slightest of pressure on Harriet’s shoulder to urge her into motion. “Poppy always tells me too much excitement is bad for a healing body.”

As they walked away, the low, forbidding sound of Minister Gaunt’s voice followed after them, chasing their heels like a snake after its tail had been stepped on. “This isn’t over, Dumbledore.”

Professor Dumbledore paused, his fingers tightening, then relaxing. “No, you’re quite right, Minister. This isn’t over. Minerva, could you please escort our guests to my office and out of the infirmary so our charges may rest?”

“Of course, Headmaster.”

Minister Gaunt, Fudge, and Mr. Malfoy marched off with Professor McGonagall, and Harriet went with the Headmaster, too tired and shocked by what she’d heard and seen to do much else. She’d never liked Professor Selwyn; he hated Muggle-borns, half-bloods, and she always suspected he didn’t much care for witches, either, the berk—and yet Harriet wouldn’t have expected him capable of harming a student on purpose. Did he really give Luna the Diadem? Did he know what it was? Who it was?

“Professor Dumbledore?” Harriet asked once settled in her own bed once more. Elara hugged her again, then disappeared beyond the curtains. They could all hear Madam Pomfrey’s impatient muttering and shuffling, the clink of potion bottles being moved and liquid being mixed.

“Yes, Harriet?”

“What’s going to happen to Professor Selwyn?”

Exhaling, Professor Dumbledore retrieved his wand and flicked it toward the lamp sitting on the nightstand, dimming its glow. “I’m not sure,” he confessed. Worry tangled in Harriet’s middle and she tried to ask another question, but he shook his head. “I have no more answers for you tonight, dear Harriet. You need your rest. It is no small thing, what you or the others endured this day.”

He left her soon afterward, and Harriet lay for some time staring at the ceiling, comforted by the lamp and its steady, golden shine. She fully intended to get answers from the Headmaster before the school year ended—but not tonight. Right now, all Harriet wanted was to fall asleep and to not dream of the terrible things she saw, to not hear Tom Riddle’s malicious taunting or the Basilisk’s heavy, poisoned breathing at her ear. She clutched the sheet close and willed herself to stop thinking about it.

Harriet woke only once from nightmares about endless, book-filled corridors. The dark figure seated at her bedside with a book in his hand said, “Go back to sleep, Potter,” and—miraculously enough—she did.


A/N: Adult - *opens mouth*

Elara - “I’m EMANCIPATED.”

Snape - *internal screaming*

Honestly though, imagine how that’s going to go over next year when certain *cough* people return.

Chapter 93: deeper waters

Chapter Text

xciii. deeper waters

Elara stared at the inside of the book without reading a single word.

Instead, her attention lingered overlong on the pink, shiny skin marring the fingers and knuckles of her right hand. The scars made the hand stiff and they ached still, too warm to the touch. Madam Pomfrey warned her it'd take time for the pain to ease and for the magic inherent in cursed wounds to dissipate. Elara flexed her fingers, curling them in and out of a fist, feeling the skin tug against itself.

She didn't hate the scars like she hated the others. These came from resistance, from fighting, from her own mistake; the others were products of weakness, at least in Elara's eyes. In the grand scheme of things, she guessed she should be happy about still being able to use the hand. They should all be thankful to be alive.

Elara pulled her gloves out of her pocket and tugged them on.

At the head of the classroom, Professor Flitwick paced the length of the desk as he chattered, his face gone a bit red from the endless monologue. After Professor Selwyn went missing, Flitwick and several other of the professors took on the burden of teaching History of Magic, and the Charms professor took to the task with gusto. He'd tossed whatever curriculum Selwyn left behind and instead filled their classes with discussions on the origins of Moon Mirrors or Ravenclaw's background. Currently, only Snape or Harriet could open the Aerie—not that anyone knew the truth as to why Harriet could—and Flitwick challenged his students to figure out the lost key Ravenclaw meant for people to use centuries ago.

I wonder how Snape managed to get through. He's not a Parselmouth. Elara sighed, smoothing the page of the spellbook on her desk, tracing a finger over the aged, macabre drawing. Ignis Monstrum. No matter how long Elara studied the page, she couldn't tear her eyes away from the flickering drawing of spindly animals spooling from the wizard's wand. She kept remembering the surge of emotion, physical heat mirroring the hot, curdling morass in her own heart, rage and fear and elation, all those feelings she usually encountered in spare, measured doses pouring from her as sparks had from her wand. She nearly killed them all with that spell, and Elara felt oddly…betrayed by the journal. It hadn't warned her of what would happen.

Some unexplainable part of her wanted to cast it again.

"The production of the Moon Mirrors suggests a previously unknown—and most likely now extinct—clutch of Occamies in the isles, or Rowena had an acquaintance in the Far East," Flitwick squeaked from the front of the room. "Now remember, children, this was in a time before the invention of the Floo Network, the advent of the I.C.W, and several historical sources lead us to believe Apparition hadn't yet been created. How extraordinary it would be for Rowena or any of the Founders to form bonds with witches or wizards half the world away!"

Elara glanced at the two empty seats next to her and slowly closed the book, tucking it away in her satchel. She instead turned her attention to taking notes, knowing her friends would want them once they were well.

A chair squeaked as Malfoy leaned closer to her. "I heard Granger's going to be woken up today."

Elara's eyes cut in his direction. "Who told you that?"

"Madam Pomfrey has to keep father informed as her guardian."

Elara almost scoffed at the thought of Lucius Malfoy being the guardian of any child, but Draco sat there in direct contention to the thought. Bigoted idiot he might be, but Malfoy clearly had a happy childhood and adored his parents, something Elara couldn't relate with. "Are you going to go see her?"

Draco blinked. "What are you on about?"

"I asked if you were going to go see her. Hermione."

Red crept into his pale cheeks and he sputtered, wide-eyed. "W-why would I do that?!"

"Quiet please, Mr. Malfoy, Miss Black," Professor Flitwick called.

"Sorry, Professor."

Elara returned to her notes and ignored Malfoy as well as she could, though he continued to shoot her infuriated glances and hissed at her to clarify her meaning. As if she would.

Eventually, Flitwick finished his lecture and dismissed the class, allowing the students to pack up their things and run out into the busy corridor. Elara hadn't noticed it before, but in the two weeks since the Heir's defeat and the "Chamber's" closure, the Slytherin students walked lighter, having shed a dark and constant pall of suspicion and unease. The weather outside grew warmer and the whole castle felt—brighter, for lack of a better word. Laughter came easier.

Outside the classroom, Elara found two people waiting for her.

"Hey, Elara!" Ginny called, waving her over. Luna, standing at Ginny's side, waved as well. She looked happy in a way she hadn't all year, her smile wide and pale eyes lucid, a whole chunk of garlic hanging from her neck by a woven bit of twine. Elara decided not to ask about that.

"Hello," she said when she reached the pair, feeling off-balance without Harriet or Hermione. "How are you doing, Luna?"

"Much better, thank you." She beamed. "We know you don't have anyone else, so we wanted to know if we could go with you to see Harriet and Hermione."

Elara hesitated, torn between being indignant that two first-years thought she was a loner and touched they'd thought of her at all. She decided to accept the gesture for what it was; Luna outside of the Diadem's control was quite blunt and Elara could appreciate the honesty. "Sure, that'd be great."

They walked together to the hospital wing, a route Elara had grown familiar with over the past weeks, and entered the ward to the sound of arguing voices. That, too, Elara had come to expect whenever she visited. Harriet proved a compliant patient for two or three days—but beyond that, she became a right terror, and Elara thought Madam Pomfrey probably considered strangling the witch on a regular basis. Either that or liberal use of Dreamless Sleep.

"Miss Potter," she said, exasperation plain in her voice. It drifted from behind the row of curtains drawn about the Petrified victims. "For last time, you're meant to be resting. Preferably in your bed, and not underfoot!"

"But I'm bored," Harriet complained. "Can I leave?"

"No. Not until you're fully healed—which would happen faster if you rested."

Elara came to a sudden stop and her heart stuttered, snippets of memories clouding her mind. She remembered the frantic burn in her lungs, the hollow pounding her feet on the stone floor as she ran at Longbottom's side and Harriet's screams grew ever louder. Elara would never tell her, but she'd cried for her Aunt Petunia. Having never known another mother, Harriet's pain-riddled mind must have latched onto the first person it could, like an animal instinct, and it hurt Elara in indefinable ways to think that in her most desperate hour, Harriet begged help from a woman more likely to turn a blind eye than intercede on her behalf.

Damage from the Cruciatus Curse didn't heal overnight. Dozens of curses could be used to inflict pain on a person and weren't considered unforgivable; only the Cruciatus Cruse excised a toll on both target and caster. Harriet might not feel the aches and creeping numbness in her nerves anymore, but Madam Pomfrey—and, by extension, Professor Dumbledore—thought it best she stay in the infirmary until the magic's residue fully disappeared.

"All right, Elara?" Luna asked, noticing her pause.

"Yes, I'm—."

The curtains rustled and Harriet darted into view. Elara didn't have time to brace herself, and they collapsed in a heap when Harriet launched herself at her.

"Miss Potter!"

After a thorough dressing down from the matron and getting all but dragged back to her bed by the ear, Harriet settled and sat cross-legged on the mattress in her hospital gown, giving the other witches room to sit too. "What's happening out in the school?" she asked, her eagerness for conversation obvious. "Have they found Selwyn yet? Or the Aerie?"

"Well," Ginny began, taking a breath. "It's not like they're telling us much of anything, is it? You know Dumbledore's back, 'course, and so's Slytherin." Her freckled face scrunched in a grimace. "Being a right tosser, that one. Hasn't given any of his classes any kind of break even though he's been gone for weeks and we're all terribly behind. If anyone so much as mutters the name 'Selwyn' around him he all but flies off the handle."

"I guess that means they haven't found him."

"Nah. There's been nothing in the Prophet, either."

Harriet hummed, a stubborn set to her jaw as her gaze roved away from her friends and landed instead on the nightstand holding the torn remnant of Chocolate Frog package. "And the Aerie?"

"Professor Flitwick and the Headmaster managed to find the corridor with Professor Snape's help," Luna piped up. "They know the trick to get there now, but they haven't figured out the Moon Mirror and asked the school at large to put our brains to work trying to figure it out. Apparently the mirrors don't stop Professor Snape anymore."

"What, really? Why not?"

"No one knows for sure. I think it's because he asked nicely."

Ginny snorted, then smothered the sound in her hand. "Yeah, who knows? No one else has figured it out. You might be right, Luna. Ron said Snape's reflection was so horrified of him, it ran away and let him walk right on through."

A strangled sound left Harriet and Elara didn't hide her smirk. Luna frowned. "That's mean, Ginny."

"Don't look at me, Ron said it."

They moved on to safer topics, and not a moment too soon; not five minutes had passed before the infirmary doors came open with a decisive bang and the black-clad git himself stood at the threshold with a cauldron floating along behind him. He caught sight of them all huddled on the single bed and glowered before moving on.

Madam Pomfrey came out from behind one of the hangings and sighed when she spotted the Potions Master. "There you are, Severus," she said, wiping off her hands on her apron. "The Draught is ready, I take it?"

"Apparently." He flicked his wand, summoning a blanket into his hand, which he then turned into a table and used as a place to set the large, fire-blackened cauldron. He produced a graduated beaker from his cloak pocket. "The cat first, then. To assure nothing is…amiss with the brew."

The thought of inadvertently poisoning Filch's cat put a smile on the man's face, and the four witches on the bed knew without a word shared between them that it'd be best to stay out of his way.

Snape and Pomfrey went about prepping the potion and patients respectively, and Elara fidgeted with her gloves as she watched, eager for Hermione to wake up again. The Draught wasn't drunk as she'd assumed it'd be; rather, Snape applied it directly to the soft, permeable tissue of the mouth, nostrils, or eyes, given whichever was available. Not ten seconds after applying a liberal dollop in Mrs. Norris' eye, the cat went limp, stirred—then rocketed up from the bed she'd been sequestered in and clawed up Snape's robes. The man cursed wildly, his hands full and occupied, and eventually Mrs. Norris reached his head.

"Poppy!" he roared.

"Hold still, Severus, for Merlin's sake, it's just a cat…."

Madam Pomfrey got the distraught cat off Snape with Luna's help, who held the disgruntled feline secure in her arms. She volunteered to see Mrs. Norris back into Filch's care, and once she skipped off with Ginny in tow, Snape moved on to the next patient. Both Harriet and Elara noticed the angry claw marks on his face and had the good sense to keep their mouths shut.

Colin Creevey received the next dose of potion and woke with far less drama than Mrs. Norris. Really, he appeared more enthused that he'd been attacked by a giant magical creature than scared, and Elara put it down to some strange Gryffindor impulse she didn't understand. Finch-Fletchley came next, the Hufflepuff confused and disoriented. The Gryffindor ghost got a healthy misting delivered by a Transfigured aerosol can—and immediately vanished through the nearest wall the second he spotted Harriet. Snape and Pomfrey exchanged befuddled glances. Clearwater cried when she woke, and Madam Pomfrey had to take her aside to calm the poor witch down. Finally, Snape came to Hermione's bedside, and Harriet and Elara hopped up to join him, earning a sharp reprimand to keep their hands to themselves.

He dribbled the remainder of the Draught into Hermione's parted lips. She seemed to exhale, sinking into the bedding, her eyelids fluttering—and then she sat up and knocked the beaker from Snape's hand before he could react. It shattered on the floor.

"Professor!" Hermione cried. "Professor, the Basilisk! The—the Aerie! That's where it is, where the Heir's taken it! I don't know where, but—!"

"Hermione!" Harriet said, grabbing her arm before she could whack Snape again. The Potions Master had a murderous look about him as he swept his wand over the floor to clean up the glass.

"I—what?" Hermione blinked again as she realized she and Snape weren't alone. "Where—? Oh, the infirmary? But what happened? I—."

"You were Petrified! You scared us half to death, you know!" Harriet clamored halfway onto the bed to hug Hermione, who hugged the other witch back, puzzled. Snape stepped back from the scene, rolling his eyes. "What were you thinking, going off like that on your own? We told you half a dozen times that we had to stick together."

"I—it was important," Hermione murmured, one arm still tucked around Harriet, the other rubbing her furrowed brow. "I realized…the Aerie. That's where it's being kept, the Basilisk. And I figured out no one had died because no one had looked the snake straight in the eyes. They saw it in reflections—in water, or mirrors, or glass. Not directly."

Ah, Elara thought. That would explain the compact she nicked from Pansy. At least she had that much sense.

"Penelope was with me in the library, and I heard an odd noise so we used a mirror to look about the corners. I remember of pair these horrid eyes—." She gasped. "We have to find the Aerie! That's where the Heir's keeping the Basilisk, I—!"

"Err, Hermione?"

"Yes?"

"We already found it."

"You what?"

"Already found the Aerie, the Basilisk's gone, the Heir's gone, all settled! You've got a lot to catch up on…."

Harriet jumped right into the story and Elara was content to sit back and listen to the verve Harriet told the events of the past few months with—until Snape caught her by the arm and Elara started. She'd forgotten he was there. Looking up at him, Elara paled.

"A moment of your time, Black," he said, leaving no room for argument. In fact, he didn't remove his hand from her person, leading her with a harsh, rather impersonal touch into Madam Pomfrey's deserted office. The sound of the latch closing set Elara's teeth on edge and her heart beat an uncomfortable rhythm against her sternum. The cleaned vials set in a rack on Pomfrey's desk rattled and didn't stop rattling until Snape let go and Elara took a step away, rubbing her arm.

It seemed an age the wizard said nothing at all, just looked down his long nose at her with his back to the door and Elara fought off the sudden rising panic in her chest. She could see the resemblance in him again to Father Phillips—the starkness of his black robes, the splash of white at his collar—and in the semi-darkness of the office illuminated by the dying fire, and she felt far too close to that place. It trembled in her memories, a nervous, terrible bundle of sick dread she couldn't stand to let touch her. She wanted out of the room. She wanted away from him.

"What do you want?" she demanded, not caring how rude the question was. Her voice shook.

She really missed her wand.

Snape tipped his head, black eyes hard and cold. "I want the book."

Elara paused. "What book?" What is he on aboutI haven't got any book of his.

"The book. Oh, don't take me for a simpering government fool, Miss Black. I know for a fact neither Potter or Longbottom cast Fiendfyre in the Aerie. Give me the book."

"I—I don't know what you're talking about."

"Yes, you do. I imagine you haven't let it be for weeks—months, even. It's a small distraction, but a distraction nonetheless. I fully assume you have it on your person right this moment."

He wasn't wrong. Elara stopped her hand from touching her satchel. Why hadn't she dropped it once she reached the infirmary? The weight dragged at her shoulder. Why hadn't she set it down? Why hadn't she noticed?

"Give me the book. I am not asking. I am telling you to hand it over—and don't you dare continue to play dumb with me, Black."

Slowly, Elara tucked her fingers under her satchel's flap and found the small, leather-bound book with unerring precision. She tugged it free and held it out in front of herself, trying to remember the last time she'd left it in her trunk, or in the dorm. When Snape snatched it from her hand, she almost lashed out, almost lunged for it, but that was ridiculous. It was just a stupid book and she had dozens and dozens more just like it at home. That didn't explain her outrage, however, that voice in the back of her head hissing how dare he, when Elara knew Snape was well within his rights to confiscate a primer of Dark magic from her. He could expel her. She should have been expelled for casting Fiendfyre in the first place.

She thought Snape would dismiss her, but he didn't. He flipped through the book, his pale fingers moving silently over the aged pages before he shut it and dropped it on Pomfrey's desk. Elara's eyes followed it and stared at the gilt snake on the emerald cover.

"Typical Black arrogance. You're in the deep end now, girl, and you have two choices. You can take the book with you. You can keep reading it, absorbing whatever malicious magic it has written on its pages, and I won't stop you. Take the book and know that, someday, you might lose control again. You might not. You might master the spells to no ill-effect, or you might hurt yourself—or Potter, or Granger. You might say something they cannot forgive, and you might find yourself alone. It will change you. The magic will take pieces of you and, if you're unlucky, you will look into the mirror one day and not recognize the person looking back. How else do you think the Dark Lord became the creature he is today?"

Snape loomed closer and Elara fidgeted, a lump forming in her throat. "You can take the book, or you can leave it here. You'll be tempted to delve deeper—it will never go away regardless of your choice, but it's simpler to ignore if you remind yourself of better things to hold onto—like your friends." He sneered at the sentiment. "In the end, it is your choice, Black. The consequences are yours to bear."

He swept by her without another word, the door opening and shutting in his passage, the air cold against Elara's sweaty nape. Snape's assumptions infuriated her; how could he assert such lies? It was just a stupid little spellbook. Yes, it had Dark magic in it—but it also had normal spells, too, and it was so old, Dark was a relative term, wasn't it? It wouldn't change her. She'd never hurt Harriet or Hermione!

But I almost did, didn't I? I didn't mean to, and yet—.

Elara picked up the spellbook and wanted to return it to her bag. The damage had been done; she knew at least half of the magic written therein and could do so much good if she could just master them. What did it matter? It was an heirloom, wasn't it? If she hadn't lost control of the Fiendfyre, if she could just learn to wield it and the other spells, if she could just practice—.

Out in the ward, she could hear Harriet laughing, Hermione scolding her for something. Luna and Ginny had returned. Colin and Justin and Penelope had come to hear about the things they'd missed, their voices mingling together. The office felt smaller and smaller with every passing second.

Inhaling, Elara jerked and tossed the book into the hearth where the slim leather volume fell into the guttering flames.

She turned and walked out without looking back.


A/N: I kind of equate Dark magic with addiction, like alcoholism; some people drink just fine and enjoy it, and yet it can ruin others' lives.

My favorite thing is that Lucius Malfoy fighting Arthur when Harriet was in Diagon Alley was just a red herring. Lucius Malfoy is a giant fish, confirmed. He catfished us. "My flounder will hear about this!"

Chapter 94: worthy

Chapter Text

xciv. worthy

The grass rustled and snapped under Harriet's shoes as she ran. The redolent smell of late spring blooms chased her down the slope, joined by the deeper scents of lake water, pine needles, and chimney smoke. Her robes flapped in the breeze, and stray hairs escaped the braid Elara had plaited for her that morning to curl and twist about her ears. She jumped the steps at the bottom of the hill and landed heavily on the path, but didn't pause to notice. Her destination waited ahead.

Hagrid's hut sat just as it always did—though the collection of fat magical birds jostling for position on the roof was new, and Harriet paused to ogle the strange, dodo-like things. They ogled her in return, and one let out a loud, aggrieved caterwaul that echoed into the trees. She heard humming coming from the garden and hurried through the gate.

Hagrid wasn't in his garden but instead at the window inside his hut. Judging by the smell wafting under Harriet's nose, he was baking something sweet and enjoying the warm weather. Harriet jumped onto a convenient stack of firewood and popped her head over the sill.

"Hi, Hagrid!"

"Harry!" the half-giant exclaimed after his initial surprise, holding a large, goopy tray of fudge he must have just retrieved from the oven. "What're doin' out there?"

"I came to visit, and to see how Livi's doing if that's all right."

"'Course! Come around to the door, ya daft Bowtruckle. Startled me something fierce, almost dropped me fudge…."

Harriet grinned and hopped down, running back through the garden gate and up the massive steps to the porch. Hagrid opened the door—and his boarhound came bounding out, bowling her over.

"Back, Fang! Let her up, ya dozy dog…."

Regaining her feet, Harriet scratched behind Fang's ears and let Hagrid usher her into the hut, settling her at the huge table with a mug of strong tea and a plate of warm fudge. She nibbled on a piece, careful not to get her teeth glued together by Hagrid's dubious cooking, and cleaned the drool from her glasses.

"Yer familiar is over here, doing much better now, if I don't say so myself. Had a good amount of bruising about his neck, poor thing, a few cracked bones that made it hard for him to get around." Hagrid popped the loose lid of a crate sitting near the hearth, and Harriet straightened in her seat to see the soft, pillowy lining inside. She snorted. Hagrid's gone and spoiled him rotten.

"Sss…" Livius hissed, rustling in his bed as the light fell over him. "The tall one isss here. Doesss he have food?"

"You're going to get fat."

A pause occurred, then the Horned Serpent raised himself up, swaying, his tonguing flicking as he spotted Harriet at the table. "Misstresss…."

"Oh, now isn't that precious," Hagrid cooed as Livi made his way out of the box and over to Harriet. She thought only Hagrid would see a second-year getting wrapped up in snake coils and think it precious. Livi looped his head about her shoulders and rested on her nape, hiding behind the short braid, content. "He missed ya something fierce, Harry. Goes invisible and causes all sorts of mischief when he gets bored. Clever fella knows how to open the doors when he sets his mind to it. Hooch almost had kittens when she found him out baskin' on the Quidditch pitch one mornin', but I calmed her down quick enough."

"Thank you for taking such good care of him, Hagrid." Reaching back, Harriet ran her fingers over Livi's snout, feeling the small bump of new scar tissue by his eyes and the larger crack in his horn. She needed to be more careful with him. Livi was her responsibility, and Harriet didn't know what she'd do if something happened to that snooty, scaly snake.

"No problem at all. He's kept me and Fang on our toes." Hagrid took a seat and cut himself a generous slab of fudge. Harriet hefted her mug of tea off the table and carefully sipped. "Y'know, if yer interested in learnin' more about Horned Serpents and the like, you should take Care o' Magical Creatures next term. Professor Grubbly-Plank can teach you lots about them."

"Really?"

"Yup. She knows her stuff."

They drank in companionable quiet for a moment, Livi's weight warm and reassuring on Harriet's shoulders, Hagrid munching away at his fudge. One of those strange dodo birds braved the window sill, eyeballing the platter of cooling sweets, and Fang huffed, startling it away.

"Heard you and yer friends are gettin' an award for special services to the school."

Harriet nodded even as she blushed, fiddling with her mug. "Yeah. It's just another trophy we get to polish when we're assigned bloody detention with Filch though, isn't it?"

The corners of Hagrid's dark eyes crinkled as he laughed. "You might have a point there. Ah, but yer parents would be right proud of you, Harry. I—." He stopped himself from saying something else and stuffed another bit of fudge into his mouth, chewing. "I—err—ye did a good thing. Tellin' everyone Riddle was responsible for the Chamber. It means—I mean, it prolly means a lot to some people."

"Are you okay, Hagrid?"

"Oh, I'm just fine, just fine."

Harriet gave the half-giant a funny look, knowing he'd purposefully disassembled, but she didn't press him for more. They chatted about the end of term, about Quidditch and Ravenclaw winning the House Cup for sure this year, about springtime and the magical creatures they both found so fascinating. Harriet enjoyed her tea, hid fudge in her pockets when Hagrid looked away, and when it came time to leave, she tucked an invisible Livi underneath her robes. To her chagrin, her ruddy familiar felt almost a stone heavier than he had last time she'd picked him up, and her robes had grown almost too small to properly cover the both of them. She complained about it all the way back up the hill—and swatted his nose away from her pockets before he ate the fudge and found his jaws glued shut.

Somebody idled at the bottom of the steps into the entrance hall, and Harriet glanced at them as they crossed paths. It took a moment to recognize the person, their features washed out by the blazing glow of the sun. She stopped. "Longbottom?"

"Potter."

He looked just as she'd seen him last in the hospital wing, if a bit sullen and much cleaner. He wore casual robes instead of his uniform, which made sense—given the prat was meant to be suspended.

"What're you doing here?"

Longbottom sniffed. "Had to take my final exams even if I am suspended, didn't I?"

"Oh. I guess."

He nodded as he crossed his arms, looking out toward the distant gates, the sun bright in both of their eyes. "The Headmaster asked me to tell you you're wanted in his office. Don't know why or how he even knew I'd run into you down here, but there it is."

Dumbledore wanted her? Harriet couldn't think of a reason why, but it was convenient. She just needed to grab something from her dormitory and drop Livi off. "Okay. Thanks, Longbottom."

He moved off, dropping the last step to the dirt path, and Harriet could see someone in maroon robes waiting beyond the gates for him—his dad, maybe? It was too far to tell. Harriet started up the steps and nearly reached the doors before she stopped.

"Longbottom."

"What is it, Potter?"

"I, um." She shifted from foot to foot and grimaced. "I just…thank you for what you did for Elara. That was almost decent of you."

Longbottom scoffed and ran a hand through his dirty blond hair. When he ruffled it like that, Harriet noticed his ears stuck out from his head a lot. It made him look a bit goofy instead of heroic and bold. "I didn't do it for you. You probably haven't noticed, but your friends are bloody scary. If I got her expelled, Black would probably stab me."

"No, she—." Harriet hesitated, remembering the wild, flinty look in Elara's face as she'd shouted at Longbottom, her hand broken, his face bruised. Then she went and killed a Basilisk with a single spell. "Well."

"Granger would upend a bookcase in the library on my head."

"No, she wouldn't," Harriet said without pause this time. "It'd hurt the books."

Longbottom guffawed and Harriet smirked despite herself. She didn't like Longbottom. She doubted she ever would; it had nothing to do with what occurred in the Aerie and everything to do with their different situations in life, with their families and childhood. In the vaguest of terms, Harriet understood she could not hold Lily and James Potter's fates against him, but the pettiness of the emotion scoured deep in her heart and she couldn't let it go.

"Whatever. See you next term, Potter."

"Bye, Longbottom."

They parted ways, the Boy Who Lived disappearing from sight once the great doors swung shut.

x X x

"You wanted to see me, Headmaster?"

Professor Dumbledore sat behind his desk in his office idly twirling a blue quill in his hand. He'd looked up as soon as Harriet passed through the door and smiled when she spoke, gesturing the young witch forward to take a seat. It wasn't an unusual arrangement; in fact, Harriet could clearly remember taking the same exact chair now as she did at the end of the previous school year. She'd heard the saying before that the more things changed, the more they stayed the same, and it made an odd—if morbid—kind of sense to her.

Still smiling, Professor Dumbledore set his quill aside and lifted the morning's copy of the Daily Prophet. Lockhart's glittery teeth beamed from the front page. "Have you had a chance to read today's issue?"

Wrinkling her nose, Harriet shook her head.

"It seems our friend Gilderoy had a change of heart and has switched professions. He states that his experience here at Hogwarts, and some encouragement from select students, has inspired him to pursue a life in literature instead of adventure. His first novel will be about a fictional girl and her adventures in the Chamber of Secrets."

Harriet almost snorted. "I don't know if he can do it without stealing from Tolkien again, but it's better than getting himself killed for being a numpty."

"As you say."

"Is that what you wanted to talk about, Professor?"

"No, Harriet. In fact, I fear the conversation we need to have is far more serious than that." A hush fell upon the wizard as he returned the paper to its spot on the desk and the watching portraits quieted their fake snores and whispering. "You have questions for me. I promised I would answer what I could at this time."

Harriet's mouth went dry and her mind blanked. Yes, she did have questions—dozens upon dozens, and they all blared to life in an instant like a cloud of dust escaping from under a rug. "Professor," she began, staring not at the Headmaster but at the window or at the spindly items on his shelves, trying to gather her muddled thoughts. "When I was in the Aerie and I—when I found the Heir, he looked…well, he looked like Professor Slytherin. Not perfectly alike, mind you, but it was—uncanny, really. Minister Gaunt looks something like him too, and when the Heir—." She swallowed, surprised by how difficult it was to speak about the man—or figment—that had tortured her. "He told me his name was Tom Marvolo Riddle. He said—he said he was Lord Voldemort."

A shudder ran through the spectating portraits and Professor Dumbledore's eyes didn't shine like they usually did. He nodded.

"Why do they look so alike, Professor?"

The Headmaster exhaled as he removed his spectacles, set them down, and went about gently cleaning the lenses with his overlong sleeve. The jeweled bauble hanging from the temple caught her eye as she waited for his response. "As usual, you've cut to the heart of a very complicated matter, Harriet. You have a talent for it, it seems, and though I will endeavor to answer to the best of my ability, I fear you will only leave with more questions today." He put his spectacles back on. "You are not the first to note the similarities between Minister Gaunt and Professor Slytherin, though you are uniquely situated to understand the significance.

"Magic is not something we will ever fully understand, Harriet. The Ministry has an entire department devoted to unraveling its many mysteries, and the witches and wizards who work within it spend decades searching for answers most never find. Magic is both wonderful and terrible at times. The things it can do to a person are horrific, and it is to my lasting shame you experienced some of those horrific things in the Aerie."

"It's not your fault, sir. You weren't here."

"No, I was not, and yet I feel the burden of my faults and weaknesses as any wizard does, dear girl. Age and hubris can wear on a person. I fashion myself a rather intelligent wizard, but for all my intelligence and years, I could not prevent my removal from Hogwarts, putting my charges in peril, and I could not discover the Basilisk's lair as you did, Harriet."

He smiled and she blushed, recognizing the praise.

"But we are getting off topic. Magic is mysterious—it baffles even the brightest of us, and there exists spells and enchantments that we may never fully fathom or comprehend. You asked about Tom Riddle, Professor Slytherin, Minister Gaunt, and their apparent similarities. They look alike, Harriet, because they are the same person."

Harriet froze, a horrid, terrified churning in her middle nearly bringing her lunch up for a second visit.

"And yet, they are not."

She swallowed, the back of her throat burning, her hands clamped too tight on the arms of her chair. "W—what does that mean? I don't understand, Professor."

"It's not an easy thing to understand. How is one to define being, Harriet? What makes a person a person?"

Realizing he meant for her to answer, Harriet tried to ignore her dumbfounded shock and scrap together a remark. "Well, I—stuff like, I don't know, a body? A heart, brain. Feelings?"

"And yet, all these things can be replicated. Feelings can be forced and fabricated. So can bodies. I believe you have several pet golems in your possession, yes?"

"Oh. Two, yes. Kevin and Rick." How does he even know that?

"And how do Kevin and Rick differ from your dear familiar?"

"They—." Harriet shut her mouth when she discovered the answer didn't come to her immediately. By all rights, the golems were alive; they bled, ate, shed their skins, had all the moving parts and functions of Livius, and yet they weren't real. They'd been brought to life by a clever bit of magic and Charmed clay, according to Hermione. They used golems in Transfiguration but not in Potions. What really made them different? "…Livi has a soul."

Professor Dumbledore nodded. "Yes. But what is a soul? No, I don't expect you to answer, dear girl; better theologians than either of us have been trying to solve that question for centuries to no avail. We could say a soul is, or isn't, what makes a person a person, and we could find ourselves lost in the hows and the whys long into the new term and still be no closer to revelation. They are, and are not, the same person, Harriet. Slytherin and Gaunt are, and are not, Lord Voldemort."

Harriet could do little else aside from gawk at the Headmaster. How in the world could Professor Slytherin be Lord Voldemort and yet—not him? It didn't make sense. How did it even happen? Who was he?

The world thought the Dark Lord dead, and yet Harriet knew better, didn't she? She'd met him. Faced him. The world thought him defeated, and yet—.

A memory itched in the back of her mind. She remembered in a cozy room above a tavern in the summertime, sitting in the middle of a bed listening to the mingling sound of Muggle London and Wizarding Quarter. Her fingertip traced the words "The best coups are silent," at the bottom of a book's page, pressed into the paper by a quill's firm strokes.

She recalled the humid heat of a greenhouse, a line of infant Mandrakes waiting to be repotted, and Anthony Goldstein leaning forward to whisper, "My great-aunt told me he's the reason that Dumbledore, you know—." He wagged his right arm.

She thought of the words written in Mr. Flamel's letter—, "Your Defense Master is more than he appears."

Harriet felt very young as this knowledge pressed upon her. It frightened her to consider the forces meant to keep her safe weren't as powerful or well-intention as they appeared. She was just a girl whose feet couldn't quite reach the floor when she sat down, a girl who'd spent much of her life living under a set of stairs and knew so little about the world. She stared at the professor's empty sleeve and wondered what he meant by faults and weaknesses. She wondered what he'd meant when he told Minister Gaunt, "You're quite right. This isn't over."

She wouldn't be young forever, and the repercussions for all the things she didn't understand couldn't be ignored indefinitely. Sometimes a storm on the horizon dissipates, but more often than not it arrives in its own good time.

Professor Dumbledore pushed back from his desk and stood. Harriet blinked and focused on the wizard. "I have something I wish to show you, if you would accompany me on a short journey."

"Of course, sir."

He led her out of his office and down the spiral steps into the corridor beyond. As he'd said, it wasn't a long journey; Professor Dumbledore stopped at a painting of a woman in a puffy Edwardian gown and gave the password. The portrait opened, and he ushered Harriet into a new room. The hall inside stretched quite far, lit along both walls by torches that burst to life at their entrance. Harriet wanted to say it was a display room of some sort, but storage felt a better description of the numerous boxes, crates, and odd things tidied into shelves and stacks along the peripheries. She gazed up at Professor Dumbledore in silent question.

"Over the decades, the Headmasters and Mistresses of Hogwarts have had the unfortunate habit of accruing many possessions they inevitably forget or leave behind to the school. I believe Muggles would call them hoarders." He walked forward, setting a brisk pace, and again Harriet followed. He brought her to an ancient end table upon which rested a dusty, overturned bell jar. Inside the bell jar floated a wooden cube smaller than Harriet's palm, and she got to measure that assessment when the Headmaster gave his wand an errant flick to dismiss the bell jar and levitated the cube into her waiting hand. On closer inspection, she spotted dozens and dozens of smooth, shiny flecks of glass set in orderly rows on the cube's flat faces. "I take it you've encountered the legend of Ravenclaw's Aerie prior to discovering it, yes?"

"Yeah—yes, sir."

The older wizard nodded. "To most, it seems a rather backward legend, the story of Rowena constructing Hogwarts as a place to share the knowledge she gathered in her Aerie when the Aerie was supposed to be within Hogwarts itself. The discrepancy has always fascinated me, even when I was a student myself, and when you recounted your adventures to me—well, I went to have another look at the oldest items stored in our collection here. I've been told possessions here could have belonged to the Founders themselves—and it seems that assumption is correct."

Harriet turned the cube in her hands. Part of the revealed face had been scorched, a blackened spot eating away at the corner like mold. Harriet brought it closer to her face, and on further inspection realized the flecks of glass looked like windows—.

"Is this—?" she breathed, shocked. "It can't be."

"Magic is infinite in its delights and deceptions, dear Harriet." The Headmaster plucked the cube—the Aerie—from her grasp and returned it to the table. He replaced the bell jar, and the Aerie once more began to float, suspended forever beneath the curved glass. Harriet could see a smudge of smoke on the surface.

He's right. I don't think anyone could ever really understand magic in its entirety.

"Professor," she said after a moment, interrupting the quiet.

"Yes?"

"I have something to give you."

She shuffled and reached into her robes, pulling out Salazar Slytherin's tome and the scroll they'd used to write the translation on. The Charm on her pockets keeping everything light gave way and she nearly dropped the book, but she managed to hold on and hand it over with a sheepish grin. "I found this in the Chamber," she said. "It belonged to Salazar Slytherin, and we—Hermione, Elara, and me—spent most of term translating it."

"That must have been a fascinating project."

Nodding, Harriet continued. Fascinating's one word for it. "It helped me find the Aerie, and it—. We didn't finish translating it until this weekend, and though we kept a copy of the translation, we decided it best to give the book back to you." She caught the Headmaster's gaze and frowned. "There's so much that's not…right, Professor. So much about history that people have misinterpreted and just bloody—sorry—lied about. Everyone's always told us that Salazar Slytherin hated Muggle-borns, but he didn't. The Dark L—Voldemort's built his whole following on the idea of Muggle-borns being lesser and hated, using the Founder as a scapegoat. Some people look at Slytherins like we're the prod—progeny of a hateful monster, and it's not true at all."

Professor Dumbledore sighed. "Few things are ever as they appear, Harriet."

"I know. It really upset Hermione when we found out, and I told her some people don't want to hear the truth."

"That was very wise of you."

"I don't think it was wise, Professor. Just—sad."

The Aerie revolved in slow increments and Harriet could see the charred spot again. It looked like such a little thing, as if someone had pressed a match to the surface, and not at all like the remnant of a howling, seething inferno fit for nightmares. When Harriet spoke, she couldn't bring herself to look at the Headmaster. "The legend about the Chamber said Slytherin left behind a curse to purge the school of the unworthy, and it wasn't true. They say he left the school because of a disagreement, because of hate, and that wasn't true, either."

Professor Dumbledore continued to gaze at Harriet even as she fidgeted.

"He and Rowena Ravenclaw were in love. That's why the Aerie or the Underneath—the Chamber—shared entrances or objects only usable to either Founder. They loved each other, but Ravenclaw's family betrothed her to someone else. Hermione tried to explain to me how it used to work in those days, but I didn't understand it all. When she married, Slytherin wrote—." Her voice lowered, a sadness not her own creeping into thoughts of a witch and wizard dead for a thousand years. "He wrote that he could not spend another day here, or he feared his heart would break entirely."

Harriet knew nothing of love like that, not romantic love, and it proved difficult to imagine. She thought of Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon, but any love there felt poisoned and wrong, maligned by furious, half-whispered fights in the sitting room when they'd thought Harriet couldn't hear them arguing about her or about money or about Dudley. Sometimes Uncle Vernon had made snide comments about her cooking. Sometimes Aunt Petunia had glared at the back of his fat, mustachioed head.

Slytherin wrote of Ravenclaw as one might write about something precious, like rare flowers found in bloom, or a new sunrise shedding light on a bleak world. He hadn't written a lot, but always it was—soft. Reverent. He'd called her 'my Rowena.'

Professor Dumbledore shifted and Harriet started as he pressed the tome back into her hands. "Professor?"

"I think," he said. "That Salazar Slytherin would have preferred this stay with a witch truly worthy of being his Heir rather than with me. Though, I do appreciate a copy of the translation. Thank you, Harriet."

Her fingers tightened on the book's binding as she brought it closer and hugged it to her chest. "Are you sure, sir?"

"I'm certain."

Dumbledore patted her shoulder and Harriet smiled, pleased with his comment. It shouldn't matter. She'd told Hermione once that it made no difference what Salazar Slytherin would have thought; Slytherin House belonged to them now, to the children who slept in emerald beds and studied under silver lanterns beneath the lake, they being the Founder's real legacy. However, holding something of his, imagining he'd want her to keep it, to know the truth of the wizard he'd been and reclaim that sense of blighted and tarnished Slytherin pride brought Harriet joy.

In that castle once lived a witch and a wizard who loved one another, even when that love was doomed to fail. He left behind a monster to protect her—her and her children and charges, and their children, those he couldn't look at without deep sorrow and regret but strove to shield all the same. Time had stolen the truth and twisted love into something terrible, made into a symbol of hatred and bigotry, but Harriet held the truth in her hands and she wouldn't let it be forgotten. Theirs was the House of ambition, and she swore they'd never fall into complacency. Slytherins were made to lead, not to follow, and she'd be damned if Tom Riddle—or any version of him—took that from them.

The bell rang. It echoed in the distance, and both Headmaster and student glanced up at the sound.

"I think it is time for you to return to your friends, Harriet. They'll worry where you've gone."

"You're right, sir." She tucked the book away, letting the weight disappear into her Charmed pocket, the outline of it still solid and real against her leg. Together, they left the room—and the Aerie—behind.


A/N: One more chapter for this part.

Chapter 95: a traitor's fate

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

xcv. a traitor’s fate

 

The crack of Apparition faded into the sullen, misty climes of the surrounding moor when the two wizards arrived at the property’s boundaries.

Severus’ hand twitched about the handle of his wand. It was the only outward sign of his unsettled state of mind, the only sign he couldn’t bring himself to still. It manifested as a rhythmic tightening and flexing of his fingers that most people never noticed. Albus knew of it, and maybe Minerva—though she might simply mistake it as his seething desire to strangle the little pustules they nurtured on a daily basis. The Dark Lord—and Slytherin—never noticed. For self-proclaimed geniuses, they had their heads so far up their own arses sometimes, they couldn’t see what was right in front of their eyes.

He inhaled a slow, measured breath through his nose. Strained light gave form to the night, two men by the path’s end, the gate beyond left unlatched, swinging free. Crickets resumed their chirping in the underbrush as the man next to Severus unfurled like the snake he was, the visible portion of his face blanched in the moonlight, his single eye as red as a garnet—red as blood. His wand moved in predictable ways, unraveling the wards with sharp, calculated motions, a whispered Revealing Charm showing a dim halo of yellow light lurking in the confines of the distant, rundown house.

Severus exhaled. His thoughts stilled and sunk in the dark, arctic tundra of his mind, the waters rising until everything but this moment ceased to exist.

Slytherin lowered his wand and his lips curled in the approximation of a smile. “At last. Go, dog, flush him out.”

Bowing his head, Severus launched into action, Disillusioning himself even as he slung one leg over the garden wall and landed in the adjoining field. His robes hissed against the overlong grass, but his boots moved without sound. If he pretended, if he shut out the sounds of the moor and the smell of encroaching summer, Severus could almost imagine himself at Hogwarts. He could place himself there, striding down a lone corridor at night, starlight in the windows, hunting errant students out after curfew—but he wasn’t at Hogwarts. Term had ended two days ago. He was in the County Durham, in the middle of bloody nowhere, and he wasn’t out for tardy students. No, this was a different kind of hunt entirely.

He avoided the front of the house, skirting another ward anchored to the crumbling well stretching toward a ruined shed against a far wall. He considered triggering it; Merlin knew Otho Selwyn would need the head-start, the fucking moron—and yet Severus avoided the ward and continued toward the rear of the building. Slytherin would kill him if he botched this assignment; he knew no mercy lingered in the wizard, not after learning one of his supposedly loyal lieutenants at the school had sought to subvert him in Gaunt’s favor. This was as much a test for Severus as it was a hunt for Selwyn. Should he fail….

A nebulous vein of panic touched his mind when he considered the notion, but it held no substance and disintegrated before it could even raise his pulse. The Muggle power lines leading to the conduit beneath the eaves hummed low and crackled where Selwyn’s next ward edged too near the electrical box. Severus spotted no lights on within the house itself and doubted Selwyn knew how to turn them on even if he had the desire to do so. Magic and Muggle technology did not mesh, and he supposed the sheer inundation of it and the remote location had served Selwyn well in avoiding Slytherin and his overzealous followers over the past weeks.

He couldn’t run forever, even if he managed to find a Portkey off the continent. Slytherin didn’t brand his Knights of Walpurgis, but the Dark Mark called to him all the same.

With a soft click, the lock on the back door disengaged and Severus eased it open, eyes narrowed under the lowered hem of his hood, his wand extended. He crossed the threshold, his murky shadow dragging over the wall, and he breathed, “Homenum Revelio.”

Yellow light bloomed pestilent in the dark, nasally breathing breaking into a snarl, and then—.

Reducto!

Red-light shimmered and crashed into the wall where Severus had stood a moment ago, the blast thickening the air with dust and debris as footsteps pounded the rotting floorboards. Severus jumped forward, his shield flaring into being, a milky-white barrier catching and repelling three other curses before collapsing in upon itself. Glass shattered, and Severus double-backed out the door again rather than following through the broken window. A figure bolted from the house. Severus knew Selwyn had tried to Disapparate—he must have—but any fool with an ounce of magical intuition could sense the tell-tale sting of Slytherin’s Anti-Disapparition Jinx hovering above his skin.

Incarcerous!” Severus snapped at Selwyn’s retreating back—but the man dodged the spell and returned one of his own, breaching the tree line. He neared the limits of Slytherin’s Jinx.

Severus didn’t run. Though ratty elms impeded his sight of Selwyn, he still flicked his wand in the rune of Ingwaz and incanted a spell of his own devising. “Incarcerous Herbivicus!

Magic rushed down through the soles of his feet and into the earth itself, churning the grass and dirt as it surged toward the trees. Silence hung, a held breath, until—the earth burst in the distance like a gasping diver breaking the surface, the twang of roots coming alive, and—finally—the heavy, damning thud of a body falling down echoed back to the Potions Master’s ears. A muffled curse floated on the breeze.

When Severus found him, Selwyn lay partly submerged in a pit of clay and mud, trussed in wet, creaking roots, smeared in mulch. “Half-blood scum!” Selwyn screamed when Severus came into view. Cracks spider-webbed his spectacles and saliva coated his bruised lip. “Spawn of a Muggle-loving whore! Your mother should have smothered you in your crib—!”

Severus waved his hand and the roots snapped around Selwyn’s mouth, sealing in the vitriol. “Accio,” he intoned, the former History professor’s wand wriggling free of the earth to fly to Severus’ open hand. Another spell cut the roots from their trees and kept Selwyn bound—bound, furious, and thrashing, trying to bite his way through the fibrous strands even as Severus squared his shoulders and levitated the wizard into the air.

Slytherin waited in the place he’d been left, leaning upon the garden wall, half-hidden in the dark shape of his cloak and the arching branches overhead. Severus dropped Selwyn on the ground at Slytherin’s feet and bowed, taking a step back. He wanted to leave; Slytherin didn’t require his aid in locating Selwyn or capturing him. His presence served no other purpose than stoking Slytherin’s vanity, than assuaging a self-aggrandizing need to debase his followers and put them in their place.

I’ve debased myself enough for this lifetime, Severus thought, though his expression remained stoic and calm. Slytherin stood.

“Ah, a marvelous offering, Severus. Thank you.” He flicked his hand and Selwyn landed hard on his knees. Bones popped and the roots did little to stifle the resulting screams. “Let’s make this quick.”

Another flick had the roots tearing free of Selwyn’s mouth. He yelped, his ragged breaths short and choppy, the bindings too tight to allow his lungs expansion. Suddenly, he spat at Slytherin, though the spit didn’t have a chance to land, dismissed by a swift, irritated Impervius Charm.

“Go on then,” Selwyn sneered. His pale hair came forward over his brow and fluttered with every breath. “Go on then, my Lord. Finish it.”

“I never did take you for a melodramatic traitor, Otho. My mistake.”

Selwyn laughed, cold and hysterical. “Better dead than to spend another day in that bloody school among the filthy curs and that blighted, half-blooded Headmaster!”

Slytherin’s red eyes gleamed with repressed malice, but Severus sensed it building, surging against his Occlumency like the tides of a deep, ugly abyss. Selwyn must have felt it too because he shivered, but he didn’t shut up.

“You’re nothing compared to Gaunt. Nothing! He’s going to change our world and you—! You’ve done nothing but break promises! Oath-breaker! You are no Lord of mine!”

Slytherin stepped forward and bared his teeth, freezing Selwyn in place. “Nothing?” he whispered. “You dare call me nothing, Selwyn? You kneel before the Dark Lord, boy—the Dark Lord, and I care not for what paltry political squabbles Gaunt chooses to embroil himself in. Every day I draw nearer to a victory only I, in my grand vision, can comprehend. It is too bad you won’t live to see it, Otho.” He stroked Selwyn’s head, heedless of the mud or perspiration, soothing the man’s lined brow. “The only thing awaiting you is a cold, empty grave. Severus.”

The Potions Master stiffened. Again his hands twitched behind his back, and oh how he longed to curse the pair and be away from here, to be anywhere but here with the weight of what must be done now coming to roost upon his shoulders. I should have known; he never likes getting his hands dirty. Forgive me, Albus.

Slytherin retreated, allowing Severus to take his place before a genuflecting Selwyn. It seemed a cruel, ironic fate to condemn a man to die in a pose of worship for what Slytherin considered to be a crime of blasphemy. Even more ironic for one traitor to execute another.

Selwyn just stared at him and spat again, though Severus didn’t stop the sputum from landing on his boots. His hand twitched about his wand as he leveled it at Selwyn’s head. “How long before you’re in my place, Snape? Huh?”

Never too soon and not long enough.

He knew what Slytherin desired, the spell he wished to see—that halo of green, a monster’s salvation, another nail in Severus’ coffin like the Sword of Damocles dropping another fucking inch toward his naked neck—. He summoned every memory he had of Selwyn and forced himself to relieve them, all those bitter, hateful conversations, every utterance of the word Mudblood in his presence. He embraced that hate, let it burn in his belly, in his eyes, and yet—.

Severus hesitated.

He’d agreed to this. He’d agreed when he fell on his knees before Dumbledore and said, “Protect her, protect them, I’ll do anything, anything!” He’d agreed when he took Lily’s hand in his own and let James Potter bind him to his word. What was another stain on his worthless soul? What was another crime, another body to bury—?

Steeling himself, Severus hissed, “Sectumsempra.”

A slash tore open Selwyn’s throat; the arterial spray hit Severus’ front and Slytherin’s, too, who sniffed and dismissed it with a lazy gesture. Selwyn sagged, and the roots loosened, losing energy until the body collapsed entirely. Severus looked away.

Tom Slytherin gave his wayward servant one final, spiteful glance before showing him his back. “Clean this mess up.”

Severus released a breath and the ache in his chest lessened, if only slightly. “Yes, my Lord.”

“Oh, and Severus?”

Slytherin turned and Severus waited, unwilling, but still he waited with every muscle tensed for what he knew would come. Red eyes watched him with unrivaled savagery.

“For your hesitation. Crucio.

 x X x

It was quite late now. Moths ensconced the street lamps lining the parkway and not a single curtain twitched in the dozens of windows facing the street when Severus arrived at Grimmauld Place. He made steady, if laborious, progress through the desolate park and then across the paved road, his shoulders hunched inward, his boots dragging on loose grit and gravel. The wards surrounding the dilapidated townhouse pulsed as he entered their borders, their presence malignant and dubious, centuries of Black ancestors curling their lips at the filthy half-blood now dirtying their neglected stoop.

The patter of raindrops followed him into the dark foyer. No, not raindrops—blood, perhaps? Or water, soaked into his cloak from his writhing on the wet grass. Severus doffed his hood and let the cloak drop from his arms without ceremony. He walked down the unlit hall below the leering elf heads and managed not to stagger for the entirety of the way, though he kept his right hand braced on the wall. He could see the Vow’s scar. He didn’t know why he could always find it, unerringly, even in the weakest of lighting, a line no bigger than a hair caught and coiled about his wrist and palm. It seemed such a tenuous thing—like a man’s word. Like a man’s life.

Severus slumped into a chair by the table once he reached the kitchen, his knees too weak to take him farther. Silence reverberated as the gongs of a bell do long after the noise disappears; the vibration of it quivered, taut, and made the sluggish, pulsating beat of his heart all the louder. He braced his forearms on the table and leaned over them, fixing his blank stare on the ancient grain of the wood, and his wet hair coiled about him like the limp bodies of dead snakes.

Blood stained his cuff—Selwyn’s blood. There was blood on his hands, always blood on his hands—.

“Professor?”

Severus forced himself to straighten despite the pain riddling his body. There, next to him, the girl stood dressed in an overlarge Muggle shirt and flannel trousers, a cup and saucer extended toward the Potions Master as the smell of chamomile and spice wafted off the curling steam. How long had he been here? How long had she—?

Severus numbly took the offering. Potter said nothing; her slippered feet shuffled against the dusty floor and carried her away through the door and up the basement stairs.

He held the cup in his hands. The warmth soothed his trembling fingers.

“…thank you, Miss Potter.”


END PART TWO


A/N: I always felt there was a reason Avada Kedavra wasn’t used prolifically in canon, except by Voldemort, who’s a powerful wizard. It’s my head-canon that it is—or should be—an incredibly difficult Dark spell to use, and one with lasting consequences upon the caster.

  That’s it for Part Two! Phew! Are you excited for Part Three? What do you think will happen? If you enjoyed the story, think about dropping it a favorite / kudos! It’s much appreciated!

 

Notes:

Remember, there’s a Discord server now where you can stay up to date on chapter releases! Here’s the link: CDT Discord.

Chapter 96: a mundane afternoon

Chapter Text

3. THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN

never wound a snake; kill it - h. tubman


xcvi. a mundane afternoon

Like many of the other youths who populated Diagon Alley on that unseasonably chilly summer day, Harriet Potter had her nose pressed to the glass of Quality Quidditch Supplies, ogling the broom on display.

"It's the fastest broom ever made," Draco Malfoy said, admiration clear in his voice, no trace of its usual smarmy undertone present. "Better than anything Nimbus Racing has in their lineup. Their concept model for the Number Two-Thousand-and-Two is years off yet. The whole Bulgaria national team has already put in for six Firebolts."

Harriet pulled far enough away from the glass to eye Draco, one brow raised. "Have you gone begging your daddy for one yet?"

"Shut up, Potter," Malfoy snapped, scowling even as he fidgeted, adding in an undertone, "He said no."

She laughed.

"You're just jealous you haven't got a father to ask for anything."

The insult stung, but it lacked bite. "Yeah, right. Being able to buy whatever I want without asking my mum or dad is so difficult."

Draco scowled and crossed his arms, his eyes locked on the glitzy, obscenely expensive broom. The tag read, "Price by request," and Harriet had actually gone and asked the manager. The total, had it been in pounds, was high enough to give Uncle Vernon a heart attack if he'd heard it.

Behind them came the familiar voice of Narcissa Malfoy cutting through the squealing and excitement. "Draco, Harriet, come away from there now. We're ready to depart."

With a grunt, Harriet peeled herself from the glass and Draco did the same. His mother waited at the back of the crowd with Elara and Hermione by her side, the trio having finally exited the stationery shop across the lane. Mrs. Malfoy looked as suave as ever, her cold blonde hair caught and twisted into a fashionable chignon on the back of her head, diamonds glittering on the lobes of her ears. Elara wore what she typically wore: a white, high-collared blouse with her House pin sparkling in the sparse sunlight, her black robes open to reveal the blouse and a long skirt falling past her knees. Hermione's wild hair had been tamed into a French plait not unlike the one on Harriet's head, though the humidity rose a halo of fine, frizzy curls around her face. She had a new, self-inking quill in her hands and was inspecting it with a pleased gleam in her eyes.

"Come along. We've an appointment at Twillfitt's next."

Harriet huffed but followed her minder all the same. From the corner of her eye, she saw Elara give her a knowing smirk, which only forced another huff. Shopping with Mrs. Malfoy took too long and proved almost mundane. She wouldn't let them wander off and made them get all those things Harriet usually forgot about until the last minute or just blatantly ignored—like socks and four bloody kinds of shampoo and bits of feminine things Harriet really didn't like to consider. She thought they'd never escape that flowery smelling shop.

"So, are you going to purchase a Firebolt?" Elara asked at length as they headed to the South End of the alley.

Harriet snorted. "No. Bloody thing costs more than a Muggle car. Besides, my Two-Thousand-One is perfectly fine."

"It's not your Two-Thousand-One, Potter," Malfoy put in, nose in the air. "It belongs to the team."

"Shut up, Malfoy."

"Mother! She told me to shut up!"

"Behave, children."

They clamored into Twillfitt and Tattings, finding a single, stocky witch in the establishment waiting behind her counter. She looked up when the door opened. "Narcissa, darling! Wonderful to see you, as always!"

"Patricia."

The two exchanged busses on the cheeks and polite society chatter, commenting on the newest fashion trends and which families had come to their properties in the city for the season and which were out of country and who had done such and such a thing. Harriet found all this thoroughly boring and plopped herself down on the nearest seat by the door, a wooden bench with some kind of inlaid Cushioning Charm. Elara and Hermione joined her—as did Draco, complaining until they budged over and gave him room to sit. He didn't stay long, because a minute later Mrs. Malfoy urged him back onto his feet and he disappeared into the backroom to have himself fitted for new robes.

"No wandering off, am I understood?" Mrs. Malfoy warned the trio of waiting witches, one pale eyebrow lifted. "We'll just be a moment."

They nodded and she vanished behind the heavy curtain with her son and the seamstress. Harriet slumped, legs kicked out in front of her, and released a third—and final—huff.

"Really, Harriet," Hermione chided as she crossed one leg over the other and gave her friend a consoling pat. "You act as if you're being tortured."

Having actually been tortured, Harriet didn't think much of Hermione's comparison but chose not to mention it. "I'm just bored. She won't let us go off anywhere interesting. Shopping's—boring."

"But necessary," Elara quipped. She picked up an abandoned Witch Weekly magazine and flipped through it. "Your trunk's half empty and your robes all improperly sized. As are mine. She's taking us to the Optomagitrist after this, too."

"The what?"

"Magical eye doctor, for new glasses."

"Oh. But—."

"Hermione, do you think these potions in here are actually viable?"

The abrupt change of subject put Harriet off and she sighed, looking out the window as the other two picked over the potions in the magazine. Given the dodgy weather and the fact that school had only let out a little over a week ago, Diagon Alley was relatively idle, a thin stream of witches and wizards going about their errands and business, meeting for lunch or wrangling small children. Harriet flicked aside the rather dowdy curtain to improve her vantage and watched people passing the shop. At one point, she thought she caught sight of Professor Slytherin but couldn't rightly tell; the wizard was a terror at close range, but looked unremarkable at a distance.

She'd thought on what Professor Dumbledore had told her about the Defense instructor and Voldemort for much of her summer vacation so far and had come to the conclusion the Headmaster hadn't exaggerated when he said she'd come away from the conversation with more questions than answers. Chief among those questions was why? If Professor Slytherin was connected to the Dark Lord—either directly or through whatever nebulous magical nonsense made him look like the monster—why was he allowed on at the school? She wondered if Professor Dumbledore had any say in the matter, or if the Board knew anything about Slytherin.

Merlin, she mused to herself, lips pressed in a line. Does anyone even care? They elected Gaunt as Minister and that bloke is just as terrifying. She had the very Hermione-like urge to go to the library and pull old periodicals and records to discover more about the Minister and Slytherin. Should she? It might prove dangerous to poke her nose blindly about in their business and after everything that had occurred last term, Harriet didn't want to go looking for trouble.

It frightened her that Albus Dumbledore, who was meant to be the greatest wizard of their age, couldn't handle or best everything. What did he mean when he said Slytherin was and wasn't the Dark Lord? What kind of magic was that? Harriet had never heard of such a thing, and true she may not yet be thirteen, but she had a firm grasp on the basics and the strange notion of clones—like those in Dudley's sci-fi programs—went against a lot of the magic theory she'd been taught. Besides, Gaunt and Slytherin weren't clones; they looked different, but not by much.

The ruffling of air in feathers brought her gaze up to the transom and the brown owl swooping overhead. Harriet expected the owl to drop off a letter for the witch—Patricia?—and so she yelped when a thick envelope whacked her in the face. The owl hooted, satisfied, and left through the transom once more.

"Who is that from, Harriet?" Hermione asked, and Harriet shrugged, turning the envelope over to examine the looping, exaggerated salutation. She snorted.

"Lockhart."

"Did you say Lockhart?!"

"Why on earth is that grinning buffoon writing to you?"

Harriet flicked open the thick, fancy parchment and skimmed the contents. "I suggested some stuff he could write about in his new books and the berk has been sending me post ever since he left the school, asking for more ideas. He's going to give me ten percent of his profits." She folded the letter back up and stuffed it in a pocket. "'Course, I also have to stay quiet about his past plagiarism."

Hermione's eyes boggled. "You're blackmailing Gilderoy Lockhart?!"

"What? No." Harriet paused. "Well, when you put it that way—a bit, maybe."

"Harriet!"

Behind her magazine, Elara stifled a small, unmistakable chuckle.

"Don't sit there and laugh! That's not at all funny."

"Coming from the witch who had us rob a man fully capable of cursing us into the next life." Elara flipped a page. "If I have another asthma attack in his presence, I think he'd let me suffocate."

"He wouldn't!"

They didn't mention the 'he' in question, as if collectively afraid they'd summon his dark, sneering form right out of a cupboard or from behind a rack of robes. The heavy curtain scratched against the metal rod as Draco reappeared, dodging his mother's fussing, and Mrs. Malfoy called to Harriet. "You're next."

"Do I have to?" she complained, slouching onto her feet.

"Yes, darling. I've seen the atrocious state of your wardrobe. Now do as you're told."

"I only showed you that under duress," Harriet grumbled. Nevertheless, she trudged after Mrs. Malfoy into the second room where the seamstress waited with pins ready and accepted her fate.

x X x

The sun made a valiant attempt to poke through the grim clouds but failed in the end, leaving the patio outside the restaurant more than a bit dismal. The staff had even set out fire-salamanders to give the tables heat, and Harriet watched the lizard lazing in its dish of gravel as she picked over her food. It spat out tiny flames as it snored.

Harriet didn't actually know the name of the restaurant, only that it was in a brick building on Empiric Alley and that Mrs. Malfoy apparently knew the proprietor, who kept stopping by the table to chat in French. Sighing, Harriet leaned back in her chair and studied the striped canopy overhead, fidgeting with the gold frames of her new, round glasses.

"I think they look nice," Hermione commented as she spread a bit of butter on her pumpernickel.

"Really?"

"Yes. They pair very well with your eyes."

Harriet hummed in appreciation and popped a large bite of pasta into her mouth. "'Hanks, Hermione."

Mrs. Malfoy shot her a look that clearly told her to not talk while chewing, her fork and knife moving across her plate on their own, cutting her food into tiny, manageable squares.

They'd almost finished their meal when Snape arrived. He oozed from an opposing alley and appeared on the main lane, dressed in the same thick, black robes he wore during the school year, and several of the better dressed toffs making their way to and from the Ministry startled, one witch dropping her parasol and gasping. Snape gave the lot a hard, indolent glare, then swept across the lane and marched straight to the restaurant Harriet and the others sat at with their food.

"Narcissa," he greeted with a sharp tilt of his head, glancing at the gathered teenagers. Well, teenagers and Harriet; she hated being the youngest of the bunch sometimes. He studied them, then the empty patio and the street, squinting at every potential witness to his presence. "I trust there were no…issues."

"None at all, Severus," she replied—glossing over Harriet's less than gracious complaining and Elara tripping Draco into a huge cauldron outside Potage's Cauldron Shop. "Did you finish your business at Slug and Jiggers?"

"Yes. The school's accounts are settled."

"We missed your company today. You could have come along for a robe shopping yourself—."

"Forward the bill to Dumbledore," Snape said, earning a miffed sniff for his interruption. He attention turned to Draco and the bored boy straightened, a nervous twitch shifting his pointy nose. "I trust, Draco, that you'll forgo relaying this little outing to your father?"

"Lucius is out of country for the week, Severus," Mrs. Malfoy told him with an errant flip of her hand. "He's been so terribly busy at the Ministry, you know."

"Indeed." Snape kept his eyes on Draco and Malfoy finally nodded, throat bobbing as he swallowed. Satisfied, Snape turned to address Harriet and Elara. "Say your farewells. We're departing."

"You won't stay for a quick bite, Severus?"

"No. I've potions that need tending."

"You always were a spoilsport."

Harriet was glad to hop to her feet and abandon her overly salted food, though it did mean leaving Hermione behind and returning to Grimmauld Place with Snape. "I'll write when I can," Hermione promised as they embraced. "I don't know when exactly. Hopefully we can come back to Diagon Alley together for our school supplies before the summer ends."

Hugging her all the tighter, Harriet finally released and said goodbye to the Malfoys as well, scowling at Draco when his mother had her back turned.

"Prat," she mouthed.

"Ugly," he returned, and Harriet scowled all the more at his smug expression. He was an unbearable jerk and she hoped he didn't make the Quidditch team this term.

The Malfoys departed and Snape set off without a word, expecting Elara and Harriet to keep pace as he led them toward the nearest Apparition point. Harriet couldn't help but stare at the profile of the man's face, the hawkish nose and pale complexion, remembering how he'd appeared just a few nights ago in the kitchen at Grimmauld Place. Though it'd been dark in the dreary space, Harriet had spotted him right off when she came downstairs for a glass of water—but Snape didn't see her. No, he remained at the table with his head bowed over his arms, his hair a black, oily curtain hiding his face from view.

His hands had been shaking.

Thrown by the oddity of the situation, Harriet brewed him a cuppa and the Potions Master only moved when she'd shoved the mug into his grasp. He'd looked…tired, and in pain. Harriet couldn't fathom why, and nor could she understand why the sight had distressed her.

"Potter!" Harriet blinked and realized Snape had his hand extended for her arm, already holding Elara in the other. "Any day now, girl."

Shaking her head, she gave the wizard her wrist and Snape's fingers tightened over her sleeve. They disappeared in a resounding crack!


A/N: Dumbledore: [receives shopping bill] "I am never going to financially recover from this."

I was going to include a recap of what's happened, but honestly what bit of it I wrote sounded bloody atrocious and doesn't scrape the surface of all the small things that are snowballing into bigger issues later on. So here's the abbreviated version: Y1 - Harriet runs away from the Dursleys, meets Sirius Black's daughter, Snape made an Unbreakable Vow to Lily Potter, Hermione's a ward of the Malfoys, and a possessed Quirrell accidentally kills himself with Harriet's wand. Y2 - Harriet lives at Grimmauld, Basilisk loose in the school, finds it in Ravenclaw's Aerie instead of the Chamber, Luna possessed by Diadem!Voldemort, Elara kills snake and destroys Diadem with Fiendfyre. There we go.

Chapter 97: his own demanding ghost

Chapter Text

xcvii. his own demanding ghost

In the middle of the sea at the end of the world, a man sat alone in a stone cell pressing ink into his skin.

He was a terribly thin man, more bone than flesh, waxen skin stretched taut to his skull, his black hair and beard both matted into thick, stringy clumps. An old torn cuff had been sacrificed to tie the mess back from his sunken eyes. There wasn't much in his cell: a pallet laid at his back, covered in a threadbare blanket that might have been white at some point, an empty food bowl waiting by the iron gate, and in his hand he held what remained of his spoon. Time and a bit of magic had whittled it down into a passable needle, the ink fashioned from sea salt and tar, preserved in a little hollow worn into the floor.

The man pressed the needle's crude tip into his skin again, flinching ever so slightly at the sting, pulling the needle free only to heal the skin with a pulse of raw magic. He panted softly and studied the effect, moving his arm into the watery, barely-there glow of distant sunlight drizzling through the window's thick grate. The glyphs were an exhausting endeavor, mere centimeters taking weeks to form—but it wasn't as if he had anything else to do.

The only thing Sirius Black had left was time.

He scoffed, muttering "Time served," to himself as he twitched the needle about and added yet another point to the symbol above his elbow. He'd been shite at Ancient Runes in school; that'd always been Remus' forte—oh, God, Remus, Remus, I'm so—but he remembered enough to get by.

His fingers traced the rougher skin above nyd on his heart, a rune pleading dire, dire need. It came first, of course; every other word etched into his worthless hide was simply an elaboration on that single plea.

Sirius returned the needle to the ink and tugged the pallet's edge over it all—not that anyone would bloody well care should he fashion a shiv; the only one he could use it on was himself after all, and Sirius wasn't such a bleeding heart Gryffindor that he'd never considered the idea—why not, after all, a fitting end for a dog, a failure, but no he couldn't, he couldn't—.

Shaking his head, Sirius dragged in a lungful of brine-flavored air and let it out.

Distantly, he felt the pressure emanating from that part of himself where he kept the worst bits hidden— "How could you do this without telling me? How could you? How—?!"—lessen like a balloon with a small puncture, a flimsy veil lifting enough for him to hear the world outside his own skull once more. He could hear the dull, repetitive thump of the waves hitting the island, the wind howling, and—the other prisoners.

"Ooh!" came the high, girlish shriek of his least favorite witch in the world. "Looks like the Dementors are moving off!"

"It's gotta be inspection time," grunted another, a voice for a face Sirius' had never seen and couldn't place—Rowle, he thought. Not Rabastan or Rodulphus; they were either dead or, more likely, in the other ward. It wasn't Wilkes, or the Carrows, the latter too far down the way for Sirius to hear unless the witch started screaming. Bellatrix Lestrange laughed, the sound garbled and deranged, like a dragon's claw scraping inside his head—.

"Shut the fuck up, you mad bint!" Sirius shouted.

"What's that? Still breathing, cousin?" Bellatrix laughed again, and Sirius softly cursed under his breath, wishing he could wrap his hands around her neck and squeeze. Silence—true, Merlin-blessed silence—came like rain in the desert here, rare and precious and almost always spoiled by the Death Eaters he lived down the hall from.

Sirius settled on the floor, angling himself so he could somewhat see down the corridor, past the black cell across from him, toward the stairs he'd been dragged up twelve years ago and hadn't laid eyes on since. If it weren't for the sound of the waves, the whole bloody sea could've dried up, and Sirius wouldn't have a clue. He didn't know anything outside of that cell, no bigger than a coat closet.

The Dementors had, indeed, pulled back, and now Sirius could hear the steady, echoing thump of hesitant feet coming up the steps, the sound barely audible under the Death Eaters' catcalling. "He will return for us!" someone screamed, and Bellatrix crowed in appreciation. "The Lord will come for his most faithful!"

Sirius slumped into the wall and scoffed. Like hell. Images flickered in his head—a house, a ruin, a familiar dark head, irate black eyes. "You fucking TRAITOR—!"

Ashes. A smoldering plot of land. "How could you—?!"

Grunting, Sirius ground his forehead against the stones and folded his arms across his chest, squeezing. He didn't need the Dementors to torture himself; somehow, that always made it worse. He concentrated on the corridor, the footsteps, the pounding of the waves. Water. Merlin, he couldn't rightly remember what it felt like. The windows of this godforsaken place were Charmed to never let anything more than air through, so even in the worst winter storms, the rain never graced his squalid little cell. The sun never came out. The wind never blew. Warmth never came.

A short, bumbling bloke came into view, trailed by two of the uniformed guards. Sirius almost snorted; the Ministry couldn't have picked a worse wizard to send careening into the depths of Azkaban. He was from the Ministry. Only an idiot could mistake him for anything other than a bureaucrat: pinstriped robes fell past his shaking knees, and on his head he wore the ugliest lime-green bowler hat Sirius had ever seen. Rubbing his chin, Sirius squinted and tried to remember where he'd seen the guy before. Didn't he run for Minister against Bagnold and Crouch? Doesn't look like he ever won, poor sod. What was his name again?

The wizard stopped at the first cell and started up a stuttering conversation with the inmate interred within, though Sirius couldn't hear what was being said. It seemed an age since the last Ministry inspection, and Sirius couldn't say why they felt the bloody need to check on them when nothing short of death would get them to open the doors. Maybe it kept everyone out in the world nice and happy, being reminded the Death Eaters and Dark wizards and murderers were still tucked away in this frigid fucking hell. Not that he disagreed, really. They deserved it. He deserved it.

Didn't he?

The wizard—Fudge, Sirius thought his name might be, he looked quite like that Hufflepuff prat Gabriel Fudge he went to school with once upon a time—passed from one Death Eater to the next and skittered away from dear old cousin Bellatrix when the mad witch spat and cackled at him. Sighing, Sirius shuffled closer to the gate as Fudge neared. The wizard stopped, the two bored guards behind him, and he peered down at Sirius as he fished a handkerchief out of his open cloak and dabbed at his clammy, sweat-drenched face.

"Sirius Black."

"Hello," Sirius acknowledged, voice rough and grating. Fudge looked around the cell while Sirius looked at him—and he nearly gasped aloud when he spotted the folded, wrinkled Daily Prophet stashed in the inner pocket of Fudge's cloak. "Can I have that?" he blurted, causing Fudge to freeze. Shite. Could have gone about that better. "The paper. I miss doing the crosswords, y'know?" Sirius could care bloody less about the crossword—well, it would give him a way to occupy his mind for at least a couple of minutes. No, what he wanted was just one glimpse of the world outside his cell. Just one chance to see—.

Fudge tossed a nervous glance toward one of the guards and the witch waved her hand in answer, allowing the pudgy wizard to tentatively poke the paper through the bars. Sirius had to stop himself from snatching it out of Fudge's hand. His own hand shook as it clutched the folded bundle tight. "…thank you," he whispered.

Uneasy, Fudge nodded and moved to the cell across the way, leaving Sirius to his paper. He flipped it upright and peered at the date.

July thirteenth, nineteen ninety-three.

His heart almost stopped from the shock of it. Ninety-three? No, that couldn't be right. Had it really been so long? Days in Azkaban seemed to stretch on interminably, but at the same time, it seemed only yesterday they'd locked him here. The Dementors kept everything…fresh, all the grief and remorse and terror sitting on the tip of his tongue like a bad taste. Fuck me, he thought, swallowing. The war ended twelve years ago. Twelve years, and it doesn't feel like it ever stopped. Twelve years since—.

Letting out a shuddering breath, he flipped the paper over and sought out an article. The first he found was a fluff piece about the summer migration of Golden Snidgets in Somerset. Bloody useless information, but Sirius devoured every word, moving on to a column about Gilderoy Lockhart, then the editorials. He saw mention of some problems at Hogwarts—and his mind spiraled, memories churning, thinking of a slumbering black-haired baby cradled to James' chest. Harriet. Harriet would be at Hogwarts for her third-year. She wasn't yet thirteen, he remembered. He wondered how she liked living with Lily's sister. He wondered—.

Fidgeting, he flipped the paper again to the front fold. The main read was for a lottery drawing at the Ministry—another fluff piece, really, a ploy for better government relations with the public. He remembered how Remus used to—. Sirius gnawed on his lip and shook his head like a wet dog. "No," he muttered, focusing on the type. Arthur Weasley had won the lotto, Sirius read as he grinned. He'd never met Arthur himself, but he'd known Molly by association through the Prewett twins, who'd been Gryffindor Prefects when he first came to Hogwarts. They were all good people. Better the Galleons go to them and not some bigoted pure-blood cunts who'd managed to dodge the post-war purge.

He finished the article, then glanced at the picture of Arthur and his entire family in Egypt. Egypt! Did the Egyptian Ministry have their own Azkaban somewhere out there in the scorching sands? Merlin, he'd trade anything to be there instead of here, but he assumed the Egyptian prisoners probably felt the same way about Azkaban. What's that Muggle phrase? The grass is always greener on the other side? Huffing a laugh, Sirius looked over the picture again, studying the smiling, freckled faces, the youngest son standing by his little sister with a rat on his shoulder—.

Sirius stared. "No," he whispered louder than he had before, shaking his head. It couldn't be—it was impossible, because no matter how much it looked like it, there was no—. No—. No—! "I'm seeing rubbish now."

He scrambled to his feet and almost tore the paper apart in his haste, rushing to the weak dint of light fluttering through the window, thrusting the picture closer. It didn't matter how he refuted it; there, on the Weasley boy's bony shoulder, sat a rat Sirius had seen more times than he could count over the years. There sat Peter Pettigrew—Peter Pettigrew and one missing finger.

Stumbling, Sirius' back hit the wall and his skull struck the stones hard. Muggle sirens peeled in the distance, loud and straining like a woman screaming. Screaming, like the women actually screaming, the ones too close, too close—. Rubble popped and skipped as it landed, dust in the air. Sewer pipes caught in the Blasting Charm's radius gurgled and frothed. His leg was broken. It was broken, and he had blood in his mouth, and on his hands, quivering, wand broken—.

Laughter. He laughed, not because it was funny, but because it was fucking tragic.

"No!" Sirius snarled at the paper, at himself. "It's not possible!"

"Going mad in there, cousin?"

"SHUT UP!"

"They only ever found a finger of him," the Auror sneered as looked down at Sirius. "Are you happy, Black?" No, Sirius didn't feel happy. He didn't feel anything at all; in fact, it seemed as if everything happened at a great distance from himself, and he had no choice but to stand to the side and watch—.

A finger.

A missing toe on a rat.

It made a sick, twisted kind of sense to Sirius, the kind of sense he knew Peter would have appreciated. He'd always been the soft one in their group, malleable, able to fit the cracks of their friendships—but he held no shape of his own, and looking back, Sirius had spent the years spotting all the little things he should have noticed before. Peter used to like getting in that last kick when they taunted Slytherins, especially that dickhead Snape who cozied up to Lily. He'd been a right nasty git when he got his back up; Sirius had come away from their spats with bruises and cuts more often than not, but not Peter. Peter never did anything until Snape was already on the ground.

If there was anyone Sirius could imagine living as a rat instead of a man, it was Peter.

He scanned the paper again, eyes flicking back and forth at a furious pace. "The Weasley family will be spending a month in Egypt, returning for the start of the new school year at Hogwarts, which five of the Weasley children currently attend."

"No, no, no..." he moaned, one hand gripping his hair, yanking it at the roots. Hogwarts. The children were returning to Hogwarts—.

Harriet.

Sirius had grown to tolerate the size of his cell—but now the walls pressed too close, his breaths coming in short, gasping pants. Peter was alive. He was alive, and headed back to Hogwarts in the hands of an oblivious boy, going to the place where his goddaughter attended school with other oblivious children. It's not safe, he told himself, fingers scrabbling at the stones, tearing his blunt nails. It's not safe, she's not safe! Peter killed twelve people just to escape. Soft, doughy, inconspicuous Peter slaughtered twelve human beings and cut off his finger to get away from his old school chum. What would he do if cornered in a school full of children? What would he do? Oh, God—Lily, James, forgive me. I've failed—.

The hollering in the corridors morphed into shrieks and screams; ice began to form again upon the walls, and it clawed at Sirius' bare ankles, steam issuing between his chapped lips. They were coming. The Dementors were returning, and with their encroaching presence rose the onslaught of his worst remembrances, the terror subsuming Sirius like a black, inexorable tide until he couldn't see, until he started to scream like all the rest.

"How could you have done this?" Remus cried. "How could you? She's dead, Marlene's dead! Elara's—."

An Auror stood outside the blackened grounds, the hem of his red robes eddying in the ash-filled breeze. "There were no survivors, Mr. Black."

"—dead!"

Broken wood littered the cobbled street and the splinters sliced his feet. A dark figure crouched in the obliterated bedroom, weeping, a bloodied infant in his arms. Black eyes found Sirius. "—you fucking TRAITOR!"

"Lily and James—!"

Keening, Sirius sank to his knees and pressed his face to the floor, reaching for his magic. He pulled it over himself, and it was only when his limbs shifted and changed that the frigid tide receded and he could breathe. Where there once stood a man in prison-garb now hunched a large, scrawny black dog. The dog snatched hold of the paper between his teeth and brought it over to the pallet, where he settled with a growl and a whimper. Silver eyes stared at the photograph printed on the front page. He continued to stare long into the night.

I'll stop him this time. I'll get out of here and stop him, I have to. He won't get Harriet—not this time, I swear on my life. Not this time, Peter.

He's at Hogwarts. He's at Hogwarts.


A/N: There's a whole host of fan-theories revolving around Sirius' tattoos—but, as far as we know, Sirius didn't have them in book-canon, as Harry never mentioned them. Some believe they were done to him as a form of identification, but I'm going with the theory he did them to himself, and in CDT, he created them to preserve his magic (except the one on his neck; which is clearly his prisoner number, just like the one Lucius got). So, anyway, I take some creative license with the tattoos and Azkaban in general.

Chapter title from the quote; "Each of us must suffer his own demanding ghost," The Aeneid, Book VI, by Virgil.

Sirius: "AWWW YEAH. Everyone excited for when I finally appear!"

Snape, grumbling: "I hate it here."

Chapter 98: for family

Chapter Text

xcviii. for family

Of all the things that frustrated Hermione Granger that summer, her utter lack of a relationship with Jamie Ingham bothered her the most.

She couldn't fathom his reticence. By all accounts, they should have been friends—or at least allies of a sort, living together as Muggle-borns in the Malfoy household. However, Jamie seemed to go out of his way to avoid Hermione. He always appeared to meals on time, ate quietly, attended his private lessons, then retreated to his rooms, refraining from visiting the manor's common areas. The older wizard put Hermione off whenever she tried to strike up a conversation and would only ever reply when asked a direct question by one of the Malfoys.

To say it frustrated her was an understatement.

"It seems to me he'd get lonely, don't you agree?" Hermione commented to Dobby as the elf bobbed about the sideboard, rubbing an oiled rag against the wood struts. "He doesn't ever write to his friends and he's intolerably antisocial. Now, I enjoy studying and reading more than most people I should think, but shouldn't he get—I don't know—bored? Even the best students need a reprieve here and there."

Dobby nodded along with everything she said and Hermione repressed a sigh.

She'd formed a friendship with the elf, a fondness forged in the inequality of their status and the mutual disregard they suffered. Well, in truth, Hermione didn't like to equate their living situations because she was treated far, far better than Dobby, who complained much less than she did. He didn't have much in common with Dipthy and Delby, the other two Malfoy elves, and Hermione was ashamed to admit her own surprise when she learned house-elves could have their own personalities and quirks. It seemed a terribly narrow-minded mistake on her part, and she'd devoted a better part of her holiday getting to know Dobby better.

He finished polishing the sideboard and moved to the coffee table on the other side of the lounge, Hermione following behind. "Dobby," she ventured, perching on the edge of a convenient armchair. "May I ask you a question?"

"Yes, Miss Herme-ninny?"

Hermione plucked at a loose thread falling from the chair's fabric as Dobby turned his protruding green eyes to her. She took a moment to put her thoughts together, having witnessed how touchy elves could be and how an errant statement could send them off into a tearful fit. "This is just a hypothetical question, mind you, but what do you think…about freedom? About being a free elf?"

Dobby stopped polishing and froze, his little body going stiff as a board.

"Or—or!" Hermione rushed on before he could punish himself for a perceived fault. "What do Dipthy and Delby think about free elves? What do house-elves, in general, think about it? Hypothetically, of course. No need for—erm—punishments or the like."

He kept cleaning, though he moved with more intent, one hand coming up to tug on his flapping ear. "Dipthy and Delby not be liking free elves, Miss Herme-ninny."

"Why not?"

"They say free elves aren't good elves! They not be serving their families right, not at all! So they get clothes. That's what Dipthy and Delby and most elves think."

"Why wouldn't they think freedom a good thing? Don't you wish to be able to do things for yourself?"

He heaved a small, exasperated sigh. "Miss Herme-ninny isn't understanding elves very much."

"Well, I really don't understand the point of clothes, Dobby. Is it ceremonial? Symbolic?"

"Clothes is for bad elves," Dobby whispered, tugging on his ear again, giving it a small twist. "Bad elves get clothes from master and go free. Bad elves, bad Dobby—."

"All right, all right. Enough of that," Hermione muttered, her mind working, the thread winding tighter and tighter around her finger until she let it go and began the process again. Neither Dipthy nor Delby cared much for Dobby and she had the impression Dobby wasn't fond of his fellows either, not that he'd ever say as much. Courtesy appeared ingrained in most of their mannerisms. Hermione knew the other Malfoy house-elves didn't like Dobby because he toed the line between servitude and outright insubordination; he went out of his way to make life incrementally more difficult for Mr. Malfoy, never finishing his tasks quite right, moving furniture just enough for the elder Malfoy to slam his toes into things at inopportune moments.

It would have been funny if Dobby didn't catch the backlash for his antics more often than not.

Hermione's first inclination toward house-elf servitude was fury and indignation; it came intolerably too close to slavery and was not something she condoned. However, after two summers of living in direct contact with Dobby, Dipthy, and Delby, she knew approaching the issue with that kind of Gryffindor outrage wouldn't help anyone, and most definitely not the poor elves. They needed to be heard, not have someone else tell them what they should think or feel or how they should behave.

Of course, Hermione had no intention of sitting on her hands and doing nothing at all. She despised inactivity.

The afternoon beyond the tall windows grew cooler in temperature but warmer in hue as it wore on, the summer coloration deepening as the sky faded from crisp blue to sullen orange, the white peacocks wandering out from beneath their shelter. Hermione gazed into the middle-distance and thought she heard Draco's laughter echoing from the Quidditch pitch. Crabbe and Goyle had come over today, giving her a much sought after reprieve from Draco's bored haranguing. He'd taken to asking her if she was Petrified whenever she sat too long reading. Surprisingly, Hermione didn't believe he meant to be malicious, just that his sense of humor bordered on the outright offensive, and the little prat didn't know how to talk to anyone outside of his snotty, pure-blooded circle. He kept on with his joke until Mrs. Malfoy overhead and put an end to it.

Quiet, shuffling footsteps passed the open lounge door and pulled Hermione from her thoughts. She sat up and looked to the hall in time to spot Jamie Ingham passing through on his way to his rooms. Jumping to her feet, Hermione rushed after him and didn't even pause to give Dobby her goodbyes, instead hurrying to catch the other Muggle-born. He glanced at her once and looked away, something like irritation swimming in his tired eyes. He groaned.

"Hi, Jamie!" Hermione chirped. "Beautiful afternoon, isn't it?"

Jamie kept walking.

"Are you busy this evening? I was hoping I could ask you some questions about upper-level Transfiguration," Hermione endeavored on, wishing she could get the wizard to speak with her, wondering why he wouldn't. "The tutor was well-pleased with the progress I've made, of course, but sometimes I find her lessons rather dull. What about you? Are you keeping up with your summer assignments? If you'd like, I can look over your work. I know I'm a few years younger, but I'm quite advanced in several subjects, I assure you—."

Suddenly, as they neared the door closing off Jamie's rooms, he whirled on her and Hermione took a step back, surprised. "Stop it," he hissed in a low, warning tone. "Just stop it."

"I—what?"

"Just bugger off already!"

"I…don't understand."

"Don't you get it, Granger? I don't want your help, and I'm not giving you mine. We're not here to make friends. Why can't you get that through your thick skull? We're in competition!" he seethed. "The Malfoys are the best pure-blood family, the best placement, the best way for a Muggle-born to get a leg up in the Ministry or whatever bloody field they want. Every Muggle-born would kill to be here and they'll be perfectly fucking happy to see you and I fail everything and get kicked out. Stop talking to me, stop trying to distract me! Do you understand now?!"

Paling, Hermione nodded and tried to swallow past the sudden lump in her throat.

"Good. Leave me alone."

Jamie stormed into his rooms and slammed the door in Hermione's face, the shock of it blowing back her hair. She stood still for a moment longer, trying to make sense of what had just happened—and then it came over her, the sudden pall of enraged mortification, her cheeks hot and her hands shaking, eyes glazed in tears. It reminded her too much of school before Hogwarts, back when she'd been an isolated little busy-body the other children relentlessly teased or ignored, and all her teachers despaired of her being too much.

Hermione missed Elara and Harriet something fierce as she whirled about and stomped back down the corridor, wiping her face on her bundled sleeve. Jealousy stung in her heart when she thought of how they got to spend the whole of the summer together, but the logical part of Hermione knew it wasn't their fault nor their intention to exclude her. They didn't have families and Harriet wouldn't have a home at all if not for Elara opening her house to her. They also had Professor Snape minding them, which undoubtedly meant a summer of rules and restrictions even Hermione didn't want to consider. She just wished she could see them.

"Just trying to be friendly," she muttered as she descended the stairs and each furious thump of her shoes on the marble steps echoed in the wider hall. "Just trying to be considerate, and what does he do? Spit in my face. Why do I even bother?"

What did Jamie—Ingham—mean about competition? Yes, Hermione knew her grades and good standing had brought her to and kept her at Malfoy Manor, but was Ingham so utterly insecure of his own prowess he couldn't spare an ounce of attention to anything beyond studying? Was his situation really so tenuous? Was hers?

She entered the main foyer, which in a Muggle home would have been attached to the front entrance, but here instead resided at the heart of the Manor with a hearth big enough for several fully grown men to stand inside, an Apparition point in the middle of the floor kept clear and marked with an inlaid insignia. Hermione loved the chandelier in here—not that she'd ever admit that to anyone. She loved the gentle, whimsical curls of white gold wrapped around glass ornaments and crystal pillars, the candles Ever-Burning and flickering, catching the wings of the faeries who resided in the holly wreaths bound to the wider arms. It was beautiful and yet whimsical, so unlike the Malfoys. Hermione stopped on the bottom step and looked up at it, sniffling.

The steady, confident click of heels approached from one of the outer corridors and Hermione jerked into motion, hopping off the step and rounding the newel post, ducking beneath the balustrade as Mrs. Malfoy neared. She didn't want to get into an argument with the witch, and seeing as crying had made her eyes puffy, Hermione knew Mrs. Malfoy wouldn't let her go without demanding what had happened. Jamie would get into trouble, and considering the other Muggle-born apparently already hated her, Hermione didn't want to fan the flames of his antagonism.

Crouched, she inched her way into the cloak closet and waited in the dark for Mrs. Malfoy to pass.

She didn't leave; no, the sound of her footsteps came to an abrupt halt when the fire banked in the hearth's belly suddenly rose, spitting green flames, and the dark shape of Mr. Malfoy came forward from the grate. The wards shifted to accommodate his entrance. Hermione watched from the ajar door as he stumbled to a knee and grunted. His cane fell to the floor by his feet with a clatter, the wand detaching from the top.

"Lucius!" Narcissa gasped, rushing over to her husband's side, reaching out to smooth back his rumpled hair. He lifted his face and, in doing so, revealed the livid bruise ringing his eye and the fresh blood smeared back into his hairline. Mrs. Malfoy's fingers grazed the injury. Hermione almost didn't hear her whisper, "Not again."

"It is nothing for you to worry about, Narcissa."

"Nothing for me to worry about?! What am I meant to do when my husband is returned to me day in and day out in such a manner?" She withdrew her wand and traced the tip against his cheekbone, knitting the open gash together. "Lucius, tell me what is happening. Tell me."

"He's displeased with what has occurred at Hogwarts," Mr. Malfoy murmured, eyes on the floor. His tongue worried at the inside of his cheek, and Hermione thought he must have bit it when struck. "Whatever plans he had failed. He goes into these silent ravings about Slytherin and the Potter girl and expresses his mood quite…indelicately when in private."

"The Potter girl? Whatever for?"

"How in Merlin's name should I know?" he grumbled, shooing her hand away from his bruises. He stood under his own power, one arm braced against his middle, every breath slow and measured.

"This can't keep happening. Circe's blessings, Lucius—."

He snapped at her, cold and short and exasperated. "Do you think I have any other choice in the matter?"

"What if you went to Slytherin? To Dumble—?"

"Gods' sake, don't finish that statement, Narcissa. If he detects even a whiff of dissension now, it would be the end. The end of me, you, Draco—." His voice hitched and lowered, parts of his dialog lilting too soft for Hermione to hear. "The family. He found Dogbane….There wasn't much left for the Dementors to Kiss in the end—."

Mrs. Malfoy covered her mouth, her eyes wide and anxious. Hermione's heart thumped too loud in her chest despite her best efforts to calm it. She hadn't heard a proper name, but who else could Mr. Malfoy be referring to if not Minister Gaunt? Who else would dare strike a Malfoy—the Lord of the whole snooty House—and not suffer repercussions? Why had the Minister mentioned Harriet? Oh, God, Hermione thought, desperate and confused. What does he want with her?

"Leave it," Mr. Malfoy huffed, jerking his head up and away from his wife's questing fingers. "I will tend to it, don't fuss. Where is Draco?"

Frowning, Mrs. Malfoy lowered her hands and brought them together. "Outside with Crabbe and Goyle's boys."

"And what of Ingham and the Granger girl?"

"I was on my way to check on them now, in fact. Both of them have been a bit too quiet this afternoon."

"Go on, then. This isn't a conversation for the foyer, dear."

She sniffed but did as he suggested, her heels snapping once more on their way up the stairs somewhere over Hermione's head. She waited for Mr. Malfoy to leave—but he remained in the foyer, eyes on his wife until she disappeared, at which point he let his shoulders slump and cursed aloud, his hand clutching his side. In her head, Hermione extrapolated a scenario: a fist whips out against Mr. Malfoy's face and, stunned, he falls, taken off guard by a following kick to the middle. She couldn't be certain of what had occurred, and yet the gruesome image held a sick integrity. What kind of rage drove a man to do something like that? What rage or—or madness?

And that madness seems directed at my best friend. Brilliant.

Hermione shivered.

Malfoy took a long, settling breath, chest rising under the dark gray cloth of his robes, then disengaged his cloak's clasp, shucking it from his arms. He took hold of it by the collar and started toward the cloak closet—the very one Hermione stood in.

Merlin! she shrieked in her head, scuttling backward into the fancy cloaks, robes, and shawls lining the wall. She had nowhere to go. Why is he even wearing a cloak?! It's the dead of summer! Hermione would never understand Wizarding fashion and would probably never understand anything ever again after Mr. Malfoy found her there. An Obliviation was assured after what she'd just heard and she doubted the wizard would be delicate about it. You're in for it now, Hermione—!

Malfoy neared, his stride uneven, pain and anger simmering in the cold, sweaty lines of his patrician face—and, all of a sudden, tiny hands grabbed the back of Hermione's jumper and yanked. She almost yelped aloud as she felt herself fall, the flutter of cloth moving against her face, and then—.

"Oof!" Landing on her back forced all the air out of her lungs, and Hermione stared at the kitchen ceiling, the smell of pastry jam and chimney smoke tickling her nose. Next to her, Dobby shuffled from foot to foot and straightened his smudged pillowcase.

"Miss Herme-ninny is needing to be more careful!" he squeaked before toddling off.

"Oh," Hermione breathed, sagging into the floor. The relief overcame her in a wave. "Thank you, Dobby."

x X x

Things, Hermione knew, were not as they seemed in the Wizarding world. She knew this because she could not return home to her mum and dad in the summer—because her best friend wore a scar around her neck like a necklace while Neville Longbottom strutted about like he was the king of the world, and because men of no relation wore a variation of the same face. She knew this because Harriet warned them Slytherin "Was, and wasn't, the Dark Lord," however that was possible. Something lurked below—an oozing, pus-filled wound beneath a clean, tidy plaster, and despite her youth, Hermione found herself looking more closely with every passing day.

The discrepancies existed in Mr. Malfoy's mounting frustration, in Mrs. Malfoy's nervous, surreptitious fidgeting, the hushed, worried meetings they had in the drawing room in the dead of night. They existed in Ingham's exhausted studying, in an ancient Founder's tome, in Headmaster Dumbledore's empty sleeve and Professor Snape's scarred eye. The Prophet said, "Everything's fine!", and yet the older Hermione grew, the more she learned, the more she saw, the more she came to understand nothing was fine. Not in the way that people wanted them to believe.

Her summer wore on, and all she had were more questions and no answers.

She almost felt…sorry for the Malfoys, sorry for their hidden plight, sorry for the son and wife's worry every evening when they sat down for dinner and Mr. Malfoy winced. Even so, that didn't stop her from slipping a pair of Draco's muddy Quidditch gloves onto Mr. Malfoy's seat, nor did it stop Mr. Malfoy from jerking those gloves out from under his bum and berating his son. He chucked the gloves aside—right into Dobby's waiting hands.

"Master has given Dobby clothes!"

A dish shattered. "What?!"

"Dobby is free! Dobby's a free elf! Ha!"

The elf did a jig right there on the dining room floor, then vanished with a pop! Mr. Malfoy raged, Mrs. Malfoy did her best to calm him down, and Draco stared, gobsmacked, at the spot where Dobby had disappeared.

Yes, Hermione might have felt a bit sorry for the Malfoys—but she wasn't that sorry.

She allowed herself a secret smile and sipped her tea.


A/N: I saw this question a lot after the last chapter, so I think we need a refresher. From the end of Chapter IX: Where Stars Dwell; "I think his punishment fitting," Cygnus said as he sank farther into the pillows and his tired gaze roved from Elara to the far wall, focusing on the empty portrait frame there. "He doesn't know about you, after all. He gets to sit in that prison every day, gets to wake up every morning on that dismal island, and gets to remember again that his only child is dead." Sirius believes Elara is dead.

Chapter 99: terrifying things

Chapter Text

xcvix. terrifying things

Muggle London mystified Harriet.

She spent much of the previous summer skirting the edges of it, bouncing between various magical niches all over the country, always seeming to come back to London despite never venturing into the heart of it. The Dursleys raised her in a Muggle environment for ten years, and yet everything Harriet knew about this world felt as second-hand as Dudley's cast-offs; Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon may have tried to scare the magic out of her, but they surely hadn't instilled any respect for mundane society in its place.

The buildings, the buzz of cars on the motorway, the people—it pressed close, heavy, and…strange. Harriet didn't fancy the tidiness of the streets, the straightness of the pillars and beams and steel protrusions holding every up off the ground. She much preferred the headiness of magic, that electric spark against her skin, the give of dry summer grass under her feet. Harriet spent her prior birthday lost in the woods searching for a hidden Wizarding village; she didn't wish to offend anyone, but she'd rather be back in the tent than out in the middle of bloody London.

She didn't know whose idea it was initially; the thought to get Harriet and Elara out of the house on her birthday got levied among the witches of her acquaintance—Mrs. Malfoy and Tonks and Andromeda and Professor McGonagall—during the week before the date, and then suddenly Professor Dumbledore suggested a day trip into Muggle London. Plans got twisted, minders swapped, and somehow Professor McGonagall was landed with supervising the pair of teenage witches at the end of July. Harriet and Elara both enjoyed spending time with McGonagall outside of the classroom, but that didn't mean the witch knew the first thing about navigating Muggle London.

"My father was a Muggle," she said, tone crisp as she surveyed a map of the Underground. "A Reverend. I know how to live like a Muggle. Though, I must admit, I never did see a point in venturing out of Caithness, and this was some decades ago…."

Harriet smothered a giggle with a cough and swore aloud when Elara stepped on her foot.

They made for an odd trio, all three muddling through the signs and maps and confusing station layouts. Harriet wondered what people saw when they looked at them. McGonagall wore a tartan blazer and skirt, Harriet in a pair of simple black trousers and a green blouse purchased for her by Narcissa, Elara wearing her skirt and shirt with the high, buttoned collar. McGonagall was considerably older, true, but witches didn't age like Muggles did and not a single thread of silver touched McGonagall's coal-black hair. They looked something alike; similar in coloration, McGonagall and Harriet both bespectacled, the professor and Elara both rather stern in their bearing. Did the Muggles think her their mother?

"Harriet," Elara called, dragging her attention back down to earth. She took her hand and pulled Harriet to the waiting train, the professor following in after them. McGonagall looked a bit peaky stuck in the cramped compartment, Muggles stuffed inside, crowding all the seats. She stumbled when they jerked into motion and caught herself on Harriet's shoulder.

"I beg your pardon, Miss Potter."

"S'alright, Professor."

The train kept on and they rode it all the way to Hertsmere, exiting at the proper station and climbing back up into the muggy light of day. Elara knew where to go and so walked in front of them, though Harriet didn't miss how she wrung her gloved hands together. It was a grim sort of way to cap off the morning, heading to a Wizarding cemetery, but Elara had asked if Harriet would mind, and seeing as they rarely had a chance to leave Grimmauld Place and Elara never asked for anything, Harriet had agreed. She could spend her whole birthday among a bunch of dead people and the day would still be loads better than her birthdays with the Dursleys.

The cemetery was pretty despite its age—or maybe because of it, the trees old and full-grown, their thick branches casting shade over the Charm-preserved markers and plinths, dew staining the stone walls of the mausoleums and tombs. The smell of flowers hung in the air, redolent and too sweet where the petals of forgotten bouquets had begun to wither and rot. McGonagall told her the old pure-blood families had been burying their dead there for generations—though not the Potters, who, with the exception of James and Lily, were laid to rest at Stinchcombe House. The older witch knew of the cemetery but had never been, hence their need to take the Tube instead of Apparating. Other visitors meandered about and they stopped to exchange words with a former student of the professor's, though Elara continued to the Black tomb on her own.

Harriet hung back with Professor McGonagall after her former pupil left, watching her friend come to a stop and stand before a grave and bow her head, though if she was praying, Harriet could not tell.

"Professor McGonagall?"

"Yes, Miss Potter?"

"D'you know Elara's Uncle Cygnus? Or, err, great-uncle?"

"Not directly, no. He was a few years below me at Hogwarts, and in Slytherin House, of course. I knew his older brother, Alphard, better."

"And you taught Elara's mum and…dad, right?"

"…Yes." Professor McGonagall stiffened, and Harriet didn't have to wonder why. She knew Elara's father was imprisoned, and while no one ever wanted to get into the why of it, Harriet understood he was meant to be incarcerated for the rest of his life. She couldn't imagine it pleasant for Professor McGonagall to think of the violent crimes committed by a boy she once mentored in her classroom. "Marlene was a vivacious girl. I—." The professor smiled, the expression sad. "I don't see much of her in Miss Black, I fear."

No, Harriet agreed, glancing toward her friend. She didn't appear out of place there, dressed in black relieved only by shades of dark gray or Slytherin green, her blank, colorless eyes fixed on the grave. She had all the cold, unmoving serenity of one of the statues—and the same hardness too, Harriet knew. The kind of rigidity that could summon Fiendfyre to cook a Basilisk with a single spell. 'Vivacious' did not apply to Elara Black, but Harriet had always been most fond of odd, outcast, and terrifying things.

"Miss McKinnon—Marlene—well, there was a fire during the height of the war. It caught the whole of the McKinnon family at their estate." Professor McGonagall lowered her gaze to her hands, lost in thought. "They never discovered the cause of the blaze, but violence was prevalent and senseless back then, You-Know-Who's cohorts causing mayhem wherever they went. Your mother was particularly devastated by Marlene's passing. They were good friends. Both Gryffindors of the same year."

Harriet smiled as she thought of their mums together at school. "Did they get into as much mischief as we do?"

"No, mischief was the forte of Mr. Potter and—his contemporaries." McGonagall huffed under her breath as Elara left the grave and returned to them. "Ready to depart, Miss Black?"

Elara nodded, withdrawn and contemplative, but she squeezed Harriet's hand all the same when she took it in her own.

"Excellent. I think we've had enough of the Muggle conveyances today, yes? If you'd hold onto me, thank you, I will Apparate us back to your home. One, two, three—."

With a crack, the trio vanished into thin air.

x X x

Harriet leaned her side against the counter's lip as she stirred the dough within the bowl.

Professor McGonagall sat at the table with a cup of tea. Elara had gone off somewhere upstairs, leaving Harriet to fill the remainder of the afternoon on her own, and she decided to bake a batch of chocolate biscuits. The professor perused the evening edition of the Prophet, the sound of turning pages accompanied by the click of the stirring spoon hitting the sides of the bowl and the occasional shuffle of muffled footsteps in the potions room. Perched above the icebox, the owls Cygnus and Percival watched Harriet stir, their heads swiveling each time her hand did. Livi had come down for a time, but the owls had been put out by his presence, so the Horned Serpent had slithered back to his lair under Harriet's bed.

"You could simply ask Rikkety to provide you with sweets from Hogwarts, Miss Potter. Merlin knows the house-elves grow bored during the summer without their usual activities."

"But then I'd be bored and it'd defeat the whole purpose, Professor."

"Ah, I see."

Harriet continued mixing and eyed the oven, not certain it was in the mood for any baking. She thought Kreacher might have turned it against her, as it sometimes belched black smoke if she touched it, or burnt anything she put on the hob. Harriet bent closer, eyes narrowed, and muttered, "You better behave, or I'll have Professor McGonagall turn you into a matchbox!"

The oven didn't reply, but the hearth chose that moment to sputter green flames, and after a moment, Professor Dumbledore stepped out over the grate and the fire died back down to sullen red embers. "Good afternoon, Minerva," he said to Professor McGonagall, dismissing the soot on his robes with a wave of his hand. He spotted Harriet and smiled. "And to you, Harriet. Happy birthday."

"Thanks, Headmaster."

"What brings you here, Albus?" Professor McGonagall asked. "I wasn't aware you'd be stopping by today."

"Apologies for not saying anything beforehand. Ah, thank you, Harriet. A spot of tea would be wonderful." Harriet set a new cup and saucer in front of the older wizard and nodded her head. "I hope to impose upon Miss Black's hospitality and peruse the Black library."

"Are you looking for anything specific, Professor?"

He sipped his tea and didn't reply immediately, though his blue eyes flashed over Harriet before settling on his colleague. "No, no specific title comes to mind. Rather, I need to peruse an area of study I've not spent much time considering, as I've come across a problem in some personal research of mine and must find a solution."

"D'you need help looking?"

"No, my dear girl, but thank you."

Harriet shrugged and kept on with the task at hand, though she noticed the confused, questioning look Professor McGonagall gave the Headmaster. From the potions room came a thump and a low, irritated grunt. Harriet frowned as she gazed at the shut, scorched door and put a spoonful of dough in her mouth—despite Professor McGonagall's immediate rebuff not to do that. Snape was hardly a happy, demonstrative bloke, but Harriet thought he'd been a tad…odd all summer. Odder. Like he'd woken up on the wrong side of the bed and the mood had stuck.

"Professor Dumbledore?" Harriet asked, setting the bowl and spoon aside. She approached the table and spoke quietly, lest Snape overhear and throw a fit. "Is Sn—Professor Snape okay?"

"Why do you ask?"

"Well, he's—y'know." She made a vague, encompassing gesture. "He's not the most sociable wizard, sir, but I think he seems a bit out of sorts lately."

The Headmaster tapped one wizened finger against his drink in thought, finally saying, "Professor Snape has had many tasks asked of him of late, Harriet. I'm sure he appreciates your concern." His mouth twitched. "Even if he would not admit as much to you."

Another thump came from the adjacent room—followed by a startling crash of glass hitting the floor and a loud, flagrant curse.

"Salazar's fucking sodomites!"

Professor McGonagall dropped her cup and slapped her hands over Harriet's ears. "Severus Snape!" she cried, aghast. "There are children in this house, young man!"

He replied something that sounded suspiciously like "Sod the children," and Harriet was promptly sent from the room.

Amused—and also annoyed at having to leave her biscuits behind—Harriet dragged herself up the stairs, continuing past her own room to Elara's. She knocked on the door and opened it, finding her friend lounging on her bed, reading, her silver eyes snapping to Harriet still slouched in the doorway.

"Snape's in a mood and Professor Dumbledore's here," Harriet reported. "He wants to look through the library for something he needs to research."

Elara groaned and shut the Transfiguration book, tossing it to the foot of the bed. "Snape is always in a mood. What's Dumbledore searching for?"

"Dunno, he didn't say. He made certain not to say, in fact."

The other witch sat up and frowned as she did so, shoving her feet back into her unlaced shoes. "Why does that not surprise me?"

"Because it's Dumbledore, of course—where are you going?"

Harriet stepped back as Elara passed her into the corridor and headed downstairs. "I left a book on Animagi in the library, sitting out," she explained. "I don't want the Headmaster to see it."

"Oh, shite."

"Exactly. I probably should have put it up earlier; I think McGonagall's already suspicious."

"Has she said anything to you?" If the Transfiguration teacher found out Elara was trying to become an Animagus, trouble would rain down on all their heads, Harriet and Hermione included. They came to the second-floor landing and Elara spared a glance downstairs before crossing to the library's door.

"It's more about the looks she—."

Harriet ran into Elara's back as the witch came to an abrupt stop on the room's threshold. A harsh gasp ripped through Elara and Harriet felt the sudden stiffness in her spine before she threw herself backward, the unexpected force hurling both witches to the floor with a bang. Shocked, Harriet caught a glimpse of a man—a man!—dressed like a priest, wielding some kind of brand, before a wild curl of raw magic lashed out and slammed the library door shut.

"OI!" Harriet shouted, one hand pushing Elara behind her, the other already holding her wand. "THERE'S A BLOKE UP HERE!"

A clatter could be heard downstairs, followed by the rapid pounding of feet, and only seconds later Professor Snape came barreling up the steps—which surprised Harriet. Had he really been able to hear her all the way in the potions room? She didn't have time to think about that more once she jabbed a finger at the door and Snape threw it open, his wand raised. She glimpsed the priest again—but then, the oddest thing happened. The man's gaze flicked to Snape and his face began to twist, his body doing the same, contorting into a new shape, a new person—.

The door slammed shut again and Harriet jumped.

What in the world?!

Professors Dumbledore and McGonagall arrived then, their wands drawn. "Are you well, Miss Potter? Miss Black?"

Harriet took a breath to answer and—from within the room—Snape incanted, "Riddikulus!"

Did—did Snape just bloody laugh?!

The professors lowered their wands, relieved, though Harriet didn't know why. Seeing her confusion, Professor Dumbledore gave her a small, supportive smile and offered his hand to help her up. "It appears to simply be a boggart, Harriet."

"A—what now?"

The door flung itself open for a final time, the hinges whinging at the abuse, and Professor Snape emerged with his wand already secreted away. There was no sign of the intruder behind him. "Honestly, Potter, doesn't Slytherin teach you anything? Or do you just not pay attention?" he quipped, making Harriet scowl. He had a rather nasty burn on his hand and sweat stuck fine, stray hairs to his brow. The potions room must have been miserably hot. "A boggart is a magical creature, an amortal parasite forming in dark, unused spaces of Wizarding homes. It feeds upon fear and manifests as its victim worst fear."

"That's awful," Harriet said, nose wrinkled. Why had nobody thought to tell her about those before? Merlin, she couldn't imagine rambling about the house and running into her worst fear without knowing what it was—which was exactly what had happened to Elara.

Her friend hadn't said a word, sitting frozen on the floor with her back to the wall, staring wide-eyed into the distance. She flinched when Harriet touched her arm—and the lamp on the wall overhead shattered, Harriet gasping when glass shards rained upon her head. Snape grabbed her wrist before she could do something stupid like stick her hand in the mess. Darkness fell over the landing and Elara bolted, running up the steps two at a time. A moment later, her bedroom door closed with an echoing crash.

Snape released Harriet's arm. "Reparo," he hissed, causing the glass to rise from Harriet's person, flowing back into shape. Her scalp prickled and stung.

Light flickered to life again as Professor McGonagall sighed, her mouth pursed in a firm, unhappy line. "We need to have a conversation about that poor girl, Albus."

"Yes, we do."

"What conversation?" Harriet asked, wanting to know what the professors had to say about her best friend. Stuff went a bit dodgy around Elara from time to time, true, but Harriet wouldn't standby and let them blame her for it. It was just a bloody lamp. Would Elara get into trouble? What if—what if they tried to take Harriet away from Grimmauld? Snape jabbed her in the shoulder. "Ow!"

"Downstairs, Potter. You're bleeding."

"Hang on—."

"Downstairs."

And so, Harriet was shuffled back to the kitchen against her will, complaining all the while. She looked back just once, thinking about the man with a white priest's collar and the glowing brand held in his hands. She remembered Elara's pale, terrified face—and felt as if her heart had landed somewhere by her feet.


A/N: Ten points to Slytherin if anyone can guess what Dumbledore wants to research.

Harriet - "Here, I found a picture of Snape."

Elara - "…This is a photograph of salt."

H - "That's what I said."

Chapter 100: a rising howl

Chapter Text

c. a rising howl

The pressure inside his head abated and, at last, Sirius took in a long, lingering breath, and opened his eyes.

It was time.

In the weeks that had passed since he'd first seen Peter Pettigrew's photograph, hunger had come to have a whole new definition for Sirius. Every day, three times a day, the guard would levitate a tray of food through a slot in the bars, and every day Sirius would wait for the guard to move on, then take the tray, close his eyes, and dump the food in the Vanishing chamber pot. The sustenance in Azkaban could hardly be called as such—but, Merlin! The first days bit the hardest, like a thousand furious bugs in his belly gnawing and pinching and crawling about, driving him mad despite his best efforts to ignore it. He sipped water and tried to savor every drop, concentrating on his plan.

Every day, Sirius stared at the bars of his cell and thought about all the feasts he'd attended in the past. He missed pumpkin juice the most, surprisingly; he missed the spice of it, the sudden, unexpected sweetness, the depth of flavor. Remus—oh God, Remus—had never been much of a fan, preferring a good cuppa, but James—James, I'll kill him for what he's done to you and—had loved it. All the best meals of his life were taken in the Great Hall, sitting among his friends—his brothers, his—.

The Dementors preyed on the memories, of course. Sometimes Sirius wondered if he'd only imagined the taste of pumpkin juice, if it had always tasted like ashes on his tongue, if anything would taste right ever again. Food had a joy all its own. The guards could probably serve beef wellington and chardonnay and it'd all taste like shite.

He felt the Dementors drift off, their effects lessening, and knew it was time to go.

Every month or so, the guards of Azkaban had to be refreshed with a new unit from the mainland. The Ministry kept the whole bloody rock locked down—no Apparition, no Floo, all Charms in brooms set to fail, physical approaches by sea blocked unless scheduled by specific owls. The DMLE provided the Aurors and guards who lived in the fortress on the far levels where the Dementors didn't patrol. Sirius knew so much about their rotations because James—I'm so sorry, James—had done a one-month stint during his trainee days at the Aurory and had come home to Lily—Lily, please—gray as a ghost. He'd told Sirius all about it. The guards tip-toed about the edges in the prison, skirting the Dark creatures, but they still suffered the effects.

Sirius started to laugh at the irony and swallowed the noise, shaking his head. Not now, idiot.

Changing the guards meant a shift in the wards. It meant a very small, very slight window of opportunity existed and he was not about to let that chance go. Sirius kept quiet, listening to every lingering drip of water, every tired, shifting body and Bellatrix's caterwauling, eating part of his last meal for the energy. Merlin forbid he pass out halfway through his own escape attempt. He shoved gritty porridge into his mouth and swallowed without thought, a nervous, anxious energy souring his gut and quickening his pulse. The evening cast deeper shadows than usual upon the stone and, when he breathed, Sirius could taste the static hum of a summer storm in the air.

His hands shook as he removed the Prophet from the inside of his scraggly robes one last time. He looked at the moving photo a final time, lip curling, his resolve solidifying until it rested like a magnet inside his sternum, tugging him inexorably onward. Sirius folded the paper again and tucked it away. I'm coming for you, Peter.

The rush of his body morphing overcame him, and Sirius took a moment to let the sensation settle, enjoying how the heightened canine instinct dulled the drag of human sorrow and grief. He padded over to the bars and nosed about, sniffing, then put one leg through the slim opening. Whatever wizard had formed the bars hadn't done so flippantly; the allotted space proved nearly too small for an emaciated dog to pass through. Sirius grunted and wriggled, finally jumping over the bottom strut to put himself through the middle of the gate, letting gravity drag his front half down, twisting his hips and legs to yank them out after. A final, fur-ripping wrench dropped him to the floor with a dry thud.

Sirius winced as he rose on unsteady limbs and shook himself, hardly daring to believe that after twelve long years, he was finally—finally—outside of his cell.

The urge to run pell-mell like a madman was a hard one to resist. Free. He had to tell himself more than once not yet, not yet, because managing to shimmy his way out of the cell didn't mean he couldn't be thrown right back inside. He wasn't free. He wouldn't be free even if he put a thousand miles between himself and the cell because free men didn't have to go on the lam. Sirius sighed, breathing deep enough to make his ribs ache.

He turned his gaze to the dismal corridor, glad again for his better, canine eyesight and senses allowing him to see ahead. The breathing of his fellow inmates became more evident, most of them asleep aside from the mad bint herself cackling away. Sirius set a steady pace, the pads of his paws silent on the salt-encrusted floor, his ears perked for the approach of any wandering guards. Someone stirred in one of the black cells he passed, muttering, "I'm fecking see shite, I am…."

The stairs wended downward at a tight, crooked angle, like something a kid might draw in thick crayons on cheap parchment. His front foot missed one of the last steps and he tripped, going down in a tangle of limbs. Grunting, Sirius heaved himself upright again and surveyed the new hall, cataloging the doorways, the branching corridors. There were symbols carved into the bedrock—symbols that had been there long before anyone decided the place would make a good prison for Britain's worst witches and wizards. The elements had left long, drooling stains around the symbols all too reminiscent of dried blood.

He couldn't remember which way to go. It'd been twelve bloody years since he'd arrived and the head wound he'd attained in Peter's blast hadn't done his memory any favors. Pacing, Sirius made a circuit of the intersection and—figuring nothing out—whined low in his throat. Fuck. Which way—which way? He needed to go down, yes, but the bloody prison had been designed like some kind of sick death trap, he remembered that much. Passages looping in upon themselves, long aisles leading nowhere at all, stairs dropping into dead ends.

Get it together, Padfoot, Sirius chastised himself, knowing the window for his escape inched closed as time passed. He breathed in—and chased the fading smell of clean linens and wand polish, running from the main section of the tower down along the corridors set aside for the guards' usage. He found stairs there and a manual, Charmed lift he pointedly avoided. He had to stop once, ducking low into an alcove utilized as a makeshift broom cupboard as one of the sole guards left on duty paced by, muttering under her breath.

Sirius' claws clicked on the stone as he hurried, pausing only to smell the briny air and listen for approaching feet or signs of alarm. He kept on until the sound of waves on the rocks increased in volume, the vibration tangible under his paws, salt thick on his breath. The narrow, grungy passage opened onto a quiet barracks, most of the beds stripped bare and waiting for new tenants and linens, though one or two beds and accompanying cupboards remained occupied, evidence of the few guards left on duty during rotation. Sirius spotted a pair of robes thrown on a chair and, after checking again to make sure no one was about, turned back into a human long enough to yank the robes on over his filthy prison garb before turning back.

Almost there. Almost—.

Further investigation revealed a kitchen, and attached to that kitchen was the prize Sirius sought: a small door and transom utilized for food deliveries and personal packages, a way for the guards to get things without compromising the prison's main gates and security. Another quick shift allowed him to throw the locks, his whole body trembling, and suddenly the door came open and Sirius took his first steps outside of Azkaban.

It was almost too much. The wind buffeting his body bit down like the maw of some great tundra wolf and the water broke upon the rocks like roaring thunder. No gulls flew in the black sky, no weeds crept along the foundation; nothing survived on that horrid fucking island except for the Dementors, who even now Sirius could sense swarming in the distance, waiting for their chance to return. The frigid spray cut across his fur and Sirius flinched, then turned his face toward the feeling, relishing the new sensation.

Voices carried in the wind—not too close, but near enough for Sirius to hop from the narrow, winding path and scramble among the rocks, searching for the docks. He found them on the southern exposure—and, sure enough, the guards lingered there still, making moves to enter the prison and resume their duties. Sirius turned his attention to the horizon, knowing that was the way he needed to swim, but not a single light could be seen at this distance. Pinpricks of water fell from the amassing clouds and static lifted his matted fur; the storm waited overhead, the eye of it settled on Azkaban, the water still as it could be, but it wouldn't remain that way for long.

Noise on the path jerked Sirius' head around, and he cursed as he ducked under the swinging glow of a Lumos Charm.

"What're you doing?" the second guard walking the path to the side entrance asked the first, his voice older, gruffer.

"Thought I saw something," answered the first, and the light roved over the jagged, wet stones, gleaming like saliva on black teeth. Sirius didn't dare move. He didn't dare breathe.

"A seal or somethin'?"

"There aren't any bloody seals on Azkaban, you idiot."

The second huffed with indignation and his body crossed the light. "Well, you can stand out here with your thumb up your frozen arse staring at the rocks if you want, but I'm going in before the Dementors return. Colder than Circe's cunt out here…."

The younger Auror scoffed as the first moved on, but he followed soon after, his lighted wand sweeping over the embankment as he went. Sirius' heart didn't stop pounding against his ribs until they'd traveled far enough for him to drag his body out of the crevice he'd wedged himself in and scramble down the slope, his paws aching, limbs shaking, the din of voices just around the bend a constant threat. He sent a prayer Merlin before chancing one final leap off the steep embankment into the pitiless waters below.

Rocks banged against his legs and had he been in human form, Sirius swore he would have shrieked louder than Bellatrix when the cold knifed into him. He gasped and panted, kicking his feet against the slow tide trying to throw him right back into the stone wall behind him. Lunging against the breaking waves, Sirius cursed and the sound came out as a strangled growl, his body too light to push through the surging water, but he kept throwing himself forward again and again until—.

He crested the waves, and instead of drawing him toward the island, the tide swirled and whisked him farther into the sea, bobbing about like a leaky dingy desperate to stay afloat. Sirius couldn't see a bloody thing. The coming storm tightened its hold, inciting faster ripples in the swell, the colorless lights of Azkaban fading into the fog as the Dementors returned to their posts. Sirius kept swimming. He kept kicking and struggling because he couldn't go back, and so he moved forward no matter where the tide might take him, whether it be to land or to frozen, watery grave.

Exhaustion pulled at him as time went on and his weak, emaciated limbs fought the cold water. He didn't sink—his fur granting him better buoyancy than his wet robes would—but he swallowed more than enough salt water to make himself sick. Sirius swam—and swam, and swam—hope draining, the mist sinking lower and lower upon his dimming vision—but there! There! He saw it now, Muggle electric lamps like tea lights in a row, beckoning, and Sirius thrust himself toward the lure of land.

His toes brushed the shore and he sank his claws into the yielding sand, gasping for breath as he hauled himself those final few meters onto the dry, gritty sand and prickly vegetation. Rolling onto his back, Sirius shifted, the ragged panting of a dog replaced by a deeper, human wheeze. Sirius stared at the clouds overhead and—like an omen—they pulled apart just enough to reveal spots of the night sky, the North Star gleaming like a single, watchful eye wreathed in a grey, tattered tapestry.

He allowed himself to take it all in—the air, the water on his feet, the grass pressing against his sweating neck—and Sirius Black started to laugh.

x X x

Before Sirius made for the beach, before he crossed the waters but after he managed to crawl free of his cage, a form moved unbeknown to him in the opposing, lightless cell and bore witness to his escape.

Two golden eyes watched the dog squeeze through the gate and narrowed when it pulled free. Sirius loped off on quiet paws and after a minute of contemplation, the figure in the dark cell growled, dry lips pulling back over yellowed teeth too sharp to belong to a normal man.

The prisoner sat back, thinking. He eyed his dinner gone cold on its tray—and shoved the food away.


A/N: No one guessed right. Not exactly, anyway. No points to Slytherin.

Chapter 100! That's exciting! Thank you to everyone who spends time reading this fic of mine!

Remember, there’s a Discord server now where you can stay up to date on chapter releases! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

Chapter 101: bitter boy

Chapter Text

ci. bitter boy

The steam spiraled in enchanted shapes as it rose from the cauldron's simmering brew. Those shapes danced with one another, swooping like sparrows in flight until they ascended to the vent's hood and disappeared. Severus watched the liquid seethe, the low, whispering flame eliciting a fine rim of bubbles gleaming red and glutinous in the torchlight. He'd always found the activity soothing; it was, perhaps, no coincidence for his affinity to be water or for his Occlumency shields to be formed of ice. In his youth, his mother Eileen would brew whenever her husband actually managed to find a job or—as was more common—went to the local, grotty pub. Severus would stand with her at the counter to watch, those fleeting moments steeped in quiet, the tension leaching from their shoulders, their spines.

Until Tobias came home.

He held onto those memories when the house shook with his father's drunken ire, when Eileen cried, when his own chest felt fit to bursting with crackling fury, like brambles twisting around and around his throat until he couldn't breathe through the nasty mess of it all. He wasn't that boy anymore, but occasionally he could feel him hovering in the back of his mind—an uncertain, anxious, angry specter cohabiting his body, a ghost of indents on a parchment left long after the ink's been vanished.

"What is the matter with you, Severus?"Minerva had demanded of him just a few days prior. "You're typically surly, but this is a new level, even for you."

I killed Otho. He didn't tell her, of course—only Albus knew, or was supposed to know, though the old cat sometimes threw a questioning look his way that made Severus feel as if she might understand more than she let on. Severus didn't want her to know. He didn't want her to judge him more than she already did.

He didn't like Selwyn; he'd hated the mewling, pedantic bigot and despised the years spent in close quarters with him, all the times they sat together at staff meetings or Quidditch games exchanging snide, forced quips. Therein resided the bur of his recent attitude. Years of mutual antipathy formed a connection, a familiarity, and that connection had not been purely formed as two Knights or Death Eaters. They'd patrolled together, complained about mutual students, exchanged lesson plans when the occasion necessitated it. Otho had been a cowardly, wretched Death Eater, but Professor Selwyn had been a colleague, no matter how reluctant, and Severus had been the one to turn his wand upon the man and slash his throat.

"How long before you're in my place, Snape?"

He'd kill again before all was said and done, he was sure of it. He still didn't like it.

What does it matter who did the deed in the end? he thought, the bitter edge of his own inner voice not lost on him. The bastard's dead.

Knuckles rapped on the door, too high and firm to be Black or Potter. "What do you want?"

The harridan herself stepped inside, lingering at the threshold to peer into the stuffy, poorly lit potions room. "I'm returning to the school for the evening."

"Fine," Snape replied, eyes still on the seething cauldron. "Do warn me if you decide to strangle Black for her impertinence. At least give me time to fashion an alibi before Albus blames me." She'd spent the last three days discussing things with the girl, the particulars not imparted to Severus, not that he wanted to bloody know. He didn't much care what the girl did so long as she stopped blowing up lamps over people's heads.

McGonagall's eyes narrowed and her nostrils flared. "You might try to have more compassion for her. It wouldn't kill you."

But it just might. He sneered, and had she been anyone else, he would have delivered a cutting remark about her sanity if she truly expected compassion from him—but he resisted, if only just. "I have a meeting with Albus in an hour."

"Miss Black hasn't had supper yet and I doubt Miss Potter has either."

"Bully for them."

She scowled. "See to it, Severus—and eat something yourself, you're not but skin and bones, boy."

The door slammed shut after the Scottish harpy departed and the Potions Master hurled a hex at it, satisfied by the dark, ugly scorch mark left behind. She's confused me for a bloody nursemaid, he grumbled, stowing his wand away back in his sleeve. His calm thoroughly ruined, Severus finished the batch of Fever Reducer for Pomfrey and threw a stasis spell over the second, more dubious brew left stewing for Slytherin. Stewing lowered the potency without ruining the potion; Severus skirted the line between competency and mastery with Slytherin, not wanting to hand anything to the wizard worth a damn, unable to botch anything without risking his usefulness. As with Selwyn, he had to dirty his hands on a regular basis to appease the Dark Lord, though it never got easier.

Severus dragged his robes back on and tramped through the kitchen, his mood darkening until each step echoed in the stairwell's narrow confines. He stopped short when he saw movement from the corner of his eye and came to stand at the rear window, glaring through the pitted glass at the back garden beyond.

"Stupid girl," he muttered, going for the door.

Potter meandered in the withered grass, circling the stone fountain and the single, crooked oak growing in the yard's middle. Muggle lights pierced the evening's misty gloom and provided enough illumination for Severus to see her holding one of her insipidly named golems in her hand, hunting for small insects to feed the creature. A glance overhead showed the clouds thickening, a stray raindrop striking his cheek. He stood on the porch and watched her, finding himself unwilling to intrude on the girl's quiet wandering. She looked pitiful.

He didn't envy Potter her summer so far; both she and Black spent much of their time shut in that miserable hovel, unable to go anywhere at all unless taken for some brief stint by an adult, and a loose group of circulating nannies did not make for a family. They were strangers who barely knew these children, providing only the barest of necessities when their schedules allowed, a simulacrum of care that didn't replace needed affection. With Minerva occupied by Black's issues, Potter had been left to her own devices, and Severus could see the boredom in her, the silent, unvoiced resentment starting to build in her slumped posture. She fed the crimson snake a cricket and faced the blackened, choked waters of the fountain, seeming to stare off into space until a noise Severus didn't hear turned her head to the trees and the gathered shadows. She whispered something.

Marvelous, she's going mad.

"Potter," he said aloud, causing the girl to jump and spin about. "Get inside."

"What? Why? It's not dark out yet!"

Severus bristled. "Because I said so, you insolent girl. Have you a problem with your hearing or is your skull too thick for words to get in?"

Suddenly fuming, Potter glowered and hesitated, the snake twisting around her clenched fist. Severus stepped off the porch.

"I said get inside. Do not make me repeat myself a third time."

She moved, if begrudgingly, her shoulders hiked up by her pink ears. Severus waited with the door held open, glancing about the garden despite knowing nothing could get through the wards, and he shot a dispassionate glance at the girl when she drew level with him. Potter met his glare and sucked in a breath to shout, "You don't have to be such a bastard about it!"

The girl should have given thanks to her quick, Seeker speed, because she was already bolting up the stairs by the time Severus slammed the door shut, and had she been a mite slower, he would have snagged the impudent monster by the ear and dragged her to the basement to clean cauldrons for the rest of the night. Either that, or he'd throw her into the Floo and leave her to Dumbledore. Nervy little bint! Rage curled in his chest like hot air in a balloon and Severus bellowed, "POTTER!" up the stairs, not giving a damn that he woke that fucking portrait on the landing it started its caterwauling. Naturally, she didn't return and he didn't have the time to hunt her down. "If you think you're bored now, girl, I'll have you writing lines until September!"

He stomped back into the kitchens and threw half the bloody canister of Floo Powder into the grate, the coals belching a whorl of green flame that licked over the mantel. Let them get their own supper. Let them starve for all he cared!

Severus exited the Floo in Hogsmeade instead of Dumbledore's office, using the distance to cool his writhing temper lest he do something foolish—like curse the wizard for saddling him with this task in the first place. Why not force Minerva to spend all her evenings in that horrid house? Why did it have to be his responsibility? Why not Dumbledore himself? It wasn't as if they had shuttle back and forth and bend over backward to please a psycho egomaniac like Slytherin. This burden should not be his.

He just wanted to shut himself away in the dungeons and be left alone, goddamn it. Severus was a hateful, despicable man with blood on his hands; why, in Morgana's name, did Dumbledore think him capable of protecting anyone?

The Vow's scarring itched and Severus clawed at his hand as he passed through the school's grounds, muttering darkly under his breath. He let the worst of the anger fizzle before Occluding, given it would intensify the emotion later and he didn't actually want to strangle Potter; maim, perhaps, but not strangle. Albus called out entry into the office and he came through the door, robes snapping as he threw himself into a chair like a sullen student called to task. Albus blinked.

"I thought you were coming by Floo, Severus?"

Gritting his teeth, he drawled, "I did, simply not…this one."

"I see. Is everything well at Grimmauld?"

"As well as ever in that moldering mausoleum with those disrespectful imps."

"Disrespectful?"

"You wanted me here for a reason, Headmaster?" Severus said, cutting the conversation before Dumbledore could delve into the issue and subvert his Occlumency. If he badgered on about it, Severus might start screaming. "If it's a school matter, I believe I've already submitted my lesson plans at the last staff meeting."

Albus allowed the change in topic. "Yes, you did, thank you. They appear quite similar to the ones you submitted last year, and the year before that. If I didn't know better, I would say you're submitting duplicates every term."

"Would I do that?" Severus asked with an expression that passed for innocent. The Headmaster shook his head, beard twitching, and shuffled the papers on his desk. "Tea, Severus?"

"No."

The Headmaster called a house-elf for his own cup and the Potions Master waited, slouching lower into his chair, turning over his thought like heavy stones one by one. "Tell me; how does Tom's quest for a History professor come?"

Severus snorted. "Abysmal, or so his ranting leads me to believe."

"Oh?"

"He's struggling to find a suitable candidate to propose to the Board. Favor can only get him so far; on paper, they have to be suitable for the position."

"And he cannot find such a person?"

"No." Severus ran his fingertips over the arm of his chair, tracing the design imprinted in the brocade. "As you know, before the Board saw fit for a change, Binns taught the class—and what a farce that was, Albus."

"So Minerva has told me many a time," the Headmaster chuckled, blowing the steam from his doctored tea. "Am I safe in assuming Tom is having difficulty in ascertaining loyalty in those few individuals who progressed to NEWT level in the subject?"

Severus grunted at the obvious conclusion.

"Hmm. Yes, I can see the trouble he would have. A person who's made a study of history would not want to repeat its many mistakes, which is the weakness Tom preys upon." Albus set the tea aside. "We are fortunate Otho saw fit to retire; anything that lessens Riddle's influence over our students is a victory worth noting."

"He didn't bloody retire, Dumbledore. I killed him."

Silence fell over the office, Severus refusing to move his gaze higher than the desk, the weight of a thousand years of magical leadership leering down upon him from the walls. Nothing showed on Severus' face, but self-loathing and indignation warred in his gut, a desire to both bow his head or snarl, to hide or scream, "This is what you've asked of me!"

"I apologize, Severus. I should not have made light of the situation."

"No, you should not have." His hands flexed on the chair's arms, then stilled, a silent sigh leaving his nose. "I would estimate that Slytherin won't be able to produce a candidate for the Board's approval in time, not without spending favors he'd rather keep close. He loses a lieutenant at the school, but it's a minor position and he'll seek to consolidate power in other places. His mind is infinitely more wily than Gaunt's or the Dark Lord's; he'll turn this into a benefit in some way, whether or not we see the immediate effect is another question."

Albus nodded, thinking, running an idle finger back and forth over his chin. "If Minister Gaunt continues to apply pressure to Tom's position at Hogwarts, his next recourse would be to seek personal power, a means to augment his own strength or reach."

"If he changes his mind and seeks a partnership with Gaunt to move against you—."

"He won't," the Headmaster stated, shaking his head. "Not at this junction. So long as we do not force his hand, Tom and the Minister will continue on at odds, and we must continue to undermine and subvert their influences where we can."

"And if Gaunt keeps seeking…allies like the Diadem?"

"That is a far more concerning question, one I fear I do not have an answer for presently, my boy." Dumbledore adjusted his spectacles and leaned into the soft cushioning of his chair. He disguised it well, but Severus detected the shadow of worry in the older wizard's blue eyes, a tension in the weathered lines of his face that had appeared when he lost his arm and hadn't dissipated since. It was a dangerous gamble, playing their enemies against one another without tipping their hand, and Severus had to concede the stalemate would not last forever. The idea of what they would do then kept him awake at night with terror.

"For now, I believe we should capitalize on the opportunity," Albus said, a small smile gracing his expression. "I have a few people of my own in mind for the position, and whether or not Tom holds the Board in his sway, I believe they will have to listen to me for once."

Severus arched a brow. "Anyone I know?"

Albus tipped his head upward, gaze on the ceiling. "Oh," he commented. "Maybe. We'll have to wait and see."

Fuck, Severus groaned in his head. The old codger's found someone I can't stand. Not that it was terribly difficult; Severus hated everyone.

Their conversation turned to less pressing issues, Severus reporting on Slytherin's stray comments in regards to different pupils and former pupils, both wizards puzzling at what nebulous, far-flung plans the Defense instructor might be concocting during the holiday. Dumbledore tried twice to ask about Potter, and twice Severus evaded the topic, wanting to handle the brat's discipline himself. He did have quite a few grungy cauldrons in need of scrubbing and needed to finish the usual foul and degrading ingredient preparation. If Potter wanted to be a rude little pustule, who was he to deny her the odious grunt work?

The Floo flared and Severus almost flinched at the sudden roar filtering through the grate, the sound of many raised voices competing for volume. "Albus!" came the familiar shout of Amelia Bones. Severus sunk deeper into his chair, out of sight, not at all fond of DMLE members. "Albus, quickly!"

The Headmaster leaped to his feet with surprising agility, coming to kneel on the rug before the hearth. "What has happened, Madam Bones?"

Severus spied the witch's floating countenance wreathed in green embers. Her expression was grim.

"Sirius Black has escaped Azkaban."


A/N: Harriet almost died.

Chapter 102: delinquent devilry

Chapter Text

cii. delinquent devilry

Elara was having a terrible day.

The last few days had followed a similar pattern and she blamed it fully on that goddamn Boggart in the library. She blamed it on herself too, on her lack of control. It had been years—years!—since she left St. Giles', since she'd last seen Father Phillips. Why, then, did the panic rise up and seize her in such a vise grip? She knew he couldn't get into her house, couldn't even see it, nor would he care to try. Elara was nothing to him, a particularly burdensome child in a sea of other faceless orphans—and if by some unholy miracle he did end up in Grimmauld Place, Elara was a witch! She had a wand, a very cantankerous house-elf, and worst come to worst, she could throw something cursed at him. Or one of Harriet's snakes…preferably the large, venomous one.

They wanted her to go to St. Mungo's and visit a mind healer—but, perhaps, Professors Dumbledore and McGonagall knew better than to press her when she said no. Nothing they could possibly say would change her mind. She was not broken. She didn't need a mind healer! Even if they threatened to move Harriet out of the house, Elara would not bend on this issue, not when she didn't know what would happen, or if they'd ever let her out.

Maybe Harriet would be better off without her around anyway.

"Miss Black."

Elara grit her teeth and didn't turn her head, concentrating instead on the tuning hammer in her hand and the finicky pins before her. She'd learned if she kept preoccupied McGonagall didn't badger her quite so much.

A sigh punctuated the quiet click of a cup meeting its saucer. Elara let the hammer bang against one of the taut strings, the magical tuner wailing, and when McGonagall let out a startled squawk, Elara smirked.

"Miss Black," she said, harder this time, and Elara let out a sigh of her own. She knew she was indelibly stubborn, but so was McGonagall, and the older witch wasn't restricted by having to be polite and respectful. "We had an agreement, did we not? You speak with me, or with someone of your choosing, instead of visiting Healer Sedgewick."

"I didn't agree to anything," Elara grumbled. "Ma'am."

"No, I guess you didn't. You're certainly making this difficult, child."

"I know."

"Do you understand we only wish the best for you?"

"Yes, professor."

A pause followed her answer, and Professor McGonagall sipped her tea, the small sounds of glassware managing to echo in the cluttered, dusty music room. The space around the piano had been cleared, though many of the other instruments remained cloaked in sheets or tucked into rotting crates. "Miss Black," she started again, endeavoring on. "The scarring—."

Another long wail escaped the tuner as Elara's hand jerked. "She shouldn't have told you!"

"Madam Pomfrey is required to disclose evidence of such injuries to the Headmaster and the school's Deputy," McGonagall retorted, voice sharp. "I won't have you blaming her for that. She's rightfully concerned. Usually, your Head of House would be informed as well, but we decided it wouldn't be…prudent for Professor Slytherin to be made aware of the situation."

Elara stifled the urge to argue. "And Snape," she hissed.

"I beg your pardon?"

"And Professor Snape. He knows."

"Professor Snape has not been made aware of any particulars. He is not the Head of Slytherin House." The witch paused. "For all that he takes on most of the responsibilities, though."

Elara relaxed—if only marginally. They might not have told Snape anything, but he had a keener eye than most, and Elara did not want that eye turned to her. He'd also seen her Boggart. She didn't want anyone to know anything about her life before that owl hopped off the garden wall and into her hands.

The occasional dull note accompanied her work, the leather of her glove squeaking against the tuning hammer, the piano's knobs old and quick to complain. McGonagall eventually rose to stand near Elara, watching with interest. "I've never seen a child tune a piano before. Professor Flitwick maintains the one the choir uses at Hogwarts and tells me it's a finicky job."

I'm not a child. "The magical tuner makes it much simpler than usual."

"I'm still suitably impressed, Miss Black. Where did you learn?"

Elara removed the hammer and leaned back to test a few keys, and though she felt McGonagall's attention on her, she didn't look at the older witch. "…It was my task," she admitted. "We all had common chores and one task we were responsible for."

McGonagall perched on the end of the piano bench. "And yours was tuning the piano?"

"Yes." She moved on to tuning the unisons, adjusting the rubber mutes. "There was a choir. I wasn't—I played, and the…the Matron used to take care of the piano, but she had arthritis and couldn't manage very well."

"Do you enjoy playing?"

Elara lifted one shoulder and let it drop, concentrating on finishing the tuning. She wriggled the rubber mutes free and removed the tuning hammer, dropping the magical tuner back on the shelf across the cluttered room, shutting the brass cover over the miffed horn. In truth, she didn't know the answer to the question.

"Would you care to play something now, Miss Black?"

Again, she shrugged, growing more suspicious as the professor avoided the topic she clearly wanted to discuss, but Elara decided she might as well play something. She'd tuned the piano as an excuse to ignore Professor McGonagall and couldn't think of a good reason to not test the instrument. Exhaling, she went to the bench and Professor McGonagall stood aside, letting her have her space. Elara considered what songs she knew well enough to play without sheet music and, after a minute of nervous hand wringing, started How Great Thou Art.

It sounded…off. A few pins needed readjustment still, and Elara missed a note or two as she tried to remember the song in its entirety. It was a jarring sound. She could play it better, she knew she could—but with McGonagall's shadow at her shoulder and the warbling song in her ears, Elara suddenly felt younger. She was five again, learning her scales, her legs not quite long enough to touch the piano's pedals. The music echoed in the church's empty sanctum and the Matron hummed along, adjusting Elara's hands with firm, impatient taps.

That was before the weird things began. Before the sisters started whispering behind their hands about devilry.

"They didn't like my magic," Elara heard herself whisper, her voice seeming to come from a mouth other than her own, her fingers still moving on the keys.

McGonagall folded her hands together. "We've found in that past that religious, Muggle-born families have the most difficulty accepting their child's abilities. You're not alone in that regard."

Elara let out a derisive sniff.

"Children in orphanages have an especially difficult time as enforcing the Statute of Secrecy can be all but impossible in those situations. It's been written into the bylaws since my own school days for magical students to be removed from group homes and placed with magical foster families."

"Like the MPA?"

Lips thinning, McGonagall's expression tightened. "No. Not like the MPA." She moved into Elara's eyesight as she tilted her head, the anger replaced by something more curious. "Is that what you wanted before Hogwarts? To be fostered into a family."

"No."

McGonagall's brow rose at her definitive statement. "Why not?"

Elara missed a note and her hand bounced across the keys, the song coming to a horrid, discordant end. "I don't want to talk about this, professor. There's no point."

"It's important to express your problems for your health. Things can seem much less pressing or impossible to handle once they're given voice." She made as if to touch Elara's shoulder and didn't, which Elara appreciated. "Harriet's life with her relatives wasn't proper. You know this."

"Yes."

"Do you think she should hide the things she went through? Wouldn't you want her to come to you if she felt overwhelmed?"

Elara stiffened and didn't answer, fidgeting.

"Come then, Miss Black. Can you play us another song?"

She did as requested, starting Abide With Me, which McGonagall commented had been one of her father's favorites. The music rose around them, still not quite right but preferable to their current conversation. Elara knew what the witch wanted her to say, what she wanted her to talk about—and a terrible, impetuous part of her wished to blurt it out, to let the words leak from her like poisoned bile being purged. The memories kicked inside her head, boots against a shut door, and the door kept shaking, kept wobbling—.

Her bedroom door creaked on the old hinges as it came open. The Matron stirred her from her bed, Father Phillips and three other priests waiting in the hall, and Elara didn't know what time it was, what was going on—.

"They hated my magic at St. Giles'," she reiterated, talking to her hands, to that pale sliver of flesh visible between her sleeves and gloves. "They said it was devilish and unnatural. And the more I tried—tried to not do it, the more it did happen."

Father Phillips had his hand tight on her arm, her tired questions going unasked, her bare feet scraping the floor.

"This isn't right," said the youngest priest, a man Elara didn't know. "The assessor—."

"The assessor is wrong."

"The more I apologized for it, the more they didn't believe me."

The cold of the cellar floor bit into her skin as they pounded down the stone steps and fear built in Elara's heart. Something shattered in the dark, spurring the priests faster.

"Father Phillips, the church won't allow the rite to be performed on a child—!"

"I won't abandon the girl to the demon simply because the monsignor won't see reason—."

The song continued off-key, as lopsided as crooked witch's hat. "They thought there was something—wrong with me. Something evil. Something that needed to be…removed."

The iron key twisted in the thick wooden door's lock, the door Elara had never been inside before, revealing the stone bunker beyond, cracks liming the blocking, candles bracketed to the walls. It must have been there since the war. There sat a lone, narrow bed inside, one with no mattress or linens, only a thin mat and restraints trailing from the metal posts like snake tongues—.

"And I—I just—."

Male voices raised, shouting, bellowing godly verses, not letting her rest or think or breathe—and Elara just wanted to go home, home to a place she'd never known. The longer she stayed, the more devilish things happened, that unseen force slamming the priests into the floor, the walls, groaning and shrieking and crackling like lightning—.

Abruptly, Elara yanked her hands from the keyboard and slammed the cover down. "I was exorcised." The admission came out blunt and rough, jagged as broken glass. She stared at the Black insignia inlaid on the top of the cover, concentrating on it as she gasped for breath and told herself she'd never go back there, would never have to pretend again, that she was blessed, not cursed, and Father Phillips could rot in Hell for all she cared—. "I don't want to talk about this anymore!"

The ancient violins displayed in the far cabinet moaned and whined, the chandelier shaking free fat cobwebs as it swung back and forth. Professor McGonagall was sitting next to her and Elara hadn't realized the witch had moved, her hand rubbing soft, slow circles between Elara's hunched shoulders. Water speckled her gloves. When did she start crying?

"There now, just breathe, Miss Black. You're at home, safe. Just breathe and calm yourself down…."

McGonagall continued rubbing her back and uttering low, comforting words until the objects in the room stopped jittering about and Elara's breathing evened.

"Look at me, Miss Black."

She did so, raising her stinging eyes to her professor's, McGonagall's expression stern but not without compassion. Her own eyes looked suspiciously pink, her cheeks flushed, and Elara wondered if McGonagall was angry—but no. She couldn't think of a reason why she would be. "They were wrong. They were wrong in what they said and in their treatment of you."

"I know, ma'am."

"There is not a single thing evil about you, young lady. You are a loyal friend, a good person, and a talented witch. You belong at Hogwarts. Do you understand?"

Elara nodded, lowering her head.

McGonagall removed her hand but didn't leave, the two of them remaining silent on the piano bench, the professor radiating furious tension as if she direly wished to yell at someone or something and couldn't. Elara just felt tired.

"It's getting late," McGonagall said, attention on the curtained window and the slip of darkening sky visible under the valance. "I need to return to the school. I'll return again in the morning, Miss Black."

"I don't want to discuss this again," Elara told the professor as she rose and straightened her robes. She injected as much sincerity as she could into her voice, dreading the next day already, wishing she hadn't said anything at all, that she'd kept her wits about her—.

"Then we'll discuss something else. The point is to make you comfortable and to unburden your mind, child, not make it worse."

Elara grimaced, a slight twitch in her brow and her cheek, hands clenched tight on her knees.

A warm weight settled on her arm, Professor McGonagall giving it a light squeeze. "Tomorrow, then. You should go off and find Miss Potter. Merlin knows what mischief she's gotten into with only Severus watching over her…."

"Okay."

"Promise me you'll go and stay with Harriet. I don't wish for either of you to be alone."

"I promise."

The professor left, and though she'd made a promise, Elara remained, shutting her eyes and listening to the footsteps fade. She leaned against the piano's cover, buried her face in her hands, and cried.

x X x

A half-hour or so passed, in which Elara gathered her composure and forced herself to play one of the only non-religious songs she knew, Für Elise, taught to her by an older girl at the Institute before the Matron caught her and punished them both. Anna, her name had been. The music helped calm Elara, and so she felt almost normal by the time someone bolted up the stairs outside the room's door and Snape's menacing yell of "POTTER!" chased after them.

She heard the wizard say something else, something equally menacing, and the portrait of her grandmother on the landing started screaming. Heaving a loud, irritated breath, Elara shoved the bench back and stood, letting the cover come closed on the keys a final time. The screaming intensified outside the door and didn't stop even after Elara told Walburga to shut her gob. Kreacher came hobbling from whatever dark corner he preferred and wailed over Elara's "mistreatment" of the portrait, the whole scene cumulating in a harsh telling off for both the house-elf and the painted hag on the wall. She dragged the drapes closed with a grunt, Walburga huffing in rage until out of sight.

"You'd better leave those curtains alone, Kreacher!" she snapped when he made to open them again.

He snatched his hands back. Sneering, Kreacher croaked, "Kreacher only meant to check the curtains, Mistress."

"Is that right?" Elara snarked, a headache building in her temples. "Go check some other curtains, then. Don't wake the portrait up in the middle of the night again, or Professor Snape will put your head on the wall with the others."

"Kreacher would never do such a thing…."

Elara went upstairs—ignoring the backbiting drifting after her—and sought Harriet. She needed only to follow the stilted susurrations of Parseltongue drifting under the girl's shut bedroom door, and though she almost walked in unannounced, Elara decided to knock.

"Bugger off!" Harriet shouted, voice high and reedy.

Well, then. Elara eased the door open and peered into the shadowed room, Harriet sitting in the middle of her unmade bed, Livius wrapping his thick coils around her scrawny torso. Red rimmed her green eyes.

"Are you all right?"

Harriet spotted her in the doorway and slumped. "Oh," she sniffled, wiping her nose on her sleeve. Elara cringed. "Yeah. Sorry, I thought you were Snape."

"Not to be dramatic, but if that's how you answer him knocking, I have to ask if you have a death wish."

A hiccup of laughter escaped the bespectacled witch and she twitched Livius' weight into a more comfortable position. The Horned Serpent had grown in Elara's estimation, dwarfing Harriet considerably. "I guess I do. I called him a bastard downstairs."

"I'm surprised he didn't curse your mouth shut. Can I sit?"

Nodding, Harriet kicked a rumpled jumper off the bed and Elara took its place. She almost crushed Kevin, who wriggled out of the way in the nick of time, diving beneath Harriet's folded knee.

"Well, he can go bugger himself, the arsehole," Harriet grumbled as she fished the green snake out, Rick making a mess of her already impossible hair, skinny body draped over an ear. "He came outside and started telling me off for minding my own business. I don't care what his issue is; where does he get off?"

Elara laid back and stretched, gazing at the ceiling, stifling a yawn. "He's not going to let that go unanswered."

"No, definitely not." Harriet prodded Rick off of her glasses. The defiant cast in her eyes dimmed and she dragged the quilt over her head, hiding her face from the single candle left burning on the nightstand. "How's meeting with McGonagall going?"

The initial response Elara wanted to blurt out was, 'Horrid,' but Professor McGonagall devoted a lot of time attempting to help her and Elara had no desire to belittle her efforts. Discussing the…therapy meetings with Harriet made her feel a tad queasy, however. "Fine, I guess. She…she wants to talk about how things were before. In the—the orphanage."

A scoff left the other witch and when Elara turned her head, confused, she explained. "Dumbledore tries to catch me out and asks about the Dursleys. One second, he'll be on about some kind of sweet or something he did in his own days at Hogwarts, and then he's asking about the cupboard, or my cousin, or how the teachers in primary treated me." Harriet blew air through her lips in a raspberry. "Then I start remembering things I didn't even know I knew, and it makes me feel like shite."

Elara folded her arms against her middle. "Well-meaning people are the worst, aren't they?"

"They are!"

They laughed, two weak chuckles that nonetheless relieved the looming cloud of depressing thoughts pressing upon them both. Professor McGonagall had compared Elara and Harriet's situations, but Elara hadn't equated them as equal in her head; the Dursleys denied Harriet basic human rights like food or hygiene or companionship, whereas the sisters gave Elara all of that. Against her will, Elara seemed to have decided that she deserved some of what happened to her at St. Giles', at least in part, whereas Harriet had been blameless. Innocent. Her family should have loved her as Elara did.

Elara admired the other witch's strength; Harriet was happy and unreserved as Elara could never be, outgoing and joyful. She rose above the terrible things that had happened to her—that kept happening to her, while Elara gasped and struggled like a diver being dragged down by a kelpie. Harriet had survived attempted murder as an infant—had been poisoned, kidnapped, attacked, tortured, and terrorized, and still, she beamed when Elara greeted her in the morning at the breakfast table, always quick with a joke, concerned for others' well-being and conscientious in her behavior. Even in calling Snape a bastard, there hadn't been any guile or bitterness in the statement. Just Harriet being Harriet.

Elara wished she could be as strong as her.

Their conversation veered into safer waters, commenting on nothing and everything. Harriet lamented the lack of a telly, though both witches admitted to never being able to watch much of it in their respective childhood homes. Elara speculated on Snape's reaction if they asked him to take them to see a film and Harriet laughed hard enough for her familiars to start mocking her with loud hissing.

Eventually, they dozed, though Elara couldn't recall drifting off, only the shuddering bang! that woke her. The candle still burned on the nightstand; only an hour or so had passed.

"Hmm?" Harriet said as she sat up from her tangled blankets, glasses askew. "What's that?"

The banging reverberated through the floor and followed itself into the house proper—waking Walburga again. "Someone's coming."

"Oh, fuck. It's probably Snape—."

The sudden appearance of a black, looming shape barreling to the bedroom at full speed scared Elara breathless and Harriet emitted a sudden yelp. It was, indeed, the Potions Master; he had his wand out, held in a tight, pale hand, his eyes wild and almost deranged as he searched every corner of the room. Walburga kept screaming like a ghoul downstairs.

"Up, up now!" Snape thundered.

"What the hell—!"

The wizard grabbed Harriet by the arm and dragged her out of the bed, Livius falling to the floor, Harriet tripping and landing on one knee, not that Snape noticed. He was too busy flicking his wand in silent incantations, sending Harriet's possessions spiraling haphazard into her trunk, slamming the lid shut.

"Black! Up!" He released Harriet long enough to take Elara's arm, the dry touch of his skin on her own startling. He pulled her to her feet with a hard tug. "Pack, now!"

"What's going on?"

"Pack!" Snape shouted, sending Elara skittering out the door and into her own room without another word. He followed but stayed in the corridor, holding Harriet by the upper-arm again, seeming ignorant to her attempts to pull away, her trunk shrunken and stuffed in his robe pocket. He kept scanning the hall and dark stairwell as if…as if expecting someone else to appear.

"Professor, what—?"

"Expecto Patronum!" A watery mist bled from his wand's tip and Snape barked a foul curse. He tried the incantation again, prompting the appearance of a peculiar specter, the vague outline of something four-legged and wispy, the mere suggestion of a shape. "Coming now with Potter and Black." The creature vanished through the nearest wall and its absence left Elara more frightened than before.

"Professor!" she demanded, wringing the life from a Slytherin scarf. His attention snapped to her like a hawk sighting prey, Harriet dangling from his ironclad grip, Livius tangled about his mistress and Snape's stiff arm. Distantly, Elara wondered if he should be worried about being bit. "What's happened?"

The look he gave her exuded more hatred and repugnance than Elara had ever seen a person express before. It poured from his black eyes in nothing short of a tidal wave, the kind of animosity and contempt that could drown villages or tear furrows in a man's soul. When he spoke, it came in a low, menacing sibilance like some hissing creature prying back the rocks barring passage into Hell.

"Your father has escaped from Azkaban. Grimmauld Place is compromised—we must leave, immediately, before he decides to show up for a family reunion."

Elara forgot how to breathe.


A/N: Sorry this chapter repeats the last one a bit, but I wanted to get the perspective of both Snape and Elara.

A lot of victims of neglect or abuse rationalize their punishments as their own fault. Conceptually, Elara probably understands things at St. Giles weren't right, but internally she probably felt as if she deserved to be punished or simply didn't understand—like Harriet with the Dursleys not truly conceptualizing a life outside of their hold.

Chapter 103: by the sea

Chapter Text

ciii. by the sea

 

By this point in her life, Harriet was no stranger to trouble and dire circumstances.

She’d lived through Professor Quirrell’s kidnapping. She’d escaped a wizard intruding into her tent. She’d even survived an encounter with a Basilisk—and yet, none of those happenings had the same fervor she encountered at this moment with Snape’s hand welding a bruise into the skin of her arm. His harried movements dragged Harriet and Elara both through the entirety Grimmauld Place and didn’t stop until they reached the kitchen.

“Your father has escaped from Azkaban.”

Harriet didn’t know much about Elara’s father. She knew he’d been imprisoned for all of Elara’s life and that he’d committed a crime violent enough to ensure a permanent life sentence. He was the Head of the Black family and Harriet had a nebulous understanding of what that meant, more so in what responsibilities it gave Elara as the family’s proxy. She’d always thought of him in the abstract—that he existed, or had existed, and was now beyond their reach and rightfully so.

Hearing Snape tell Elara her father had escaped prison was like having him turn to Harriet and say her dad had just popped out of his grave.

“Hogwarts, Headmaster’s Office!”

The Potions Master threw Harriet and Elara into the green fire headfirst, Harriet sucking in a mouthful of ash, choking, her cheek scraping the inside of the hearth. By pure luck did she manage to hold onto Livi as the Floo activated and the horrid, crushing pressure yanked them away. Harriet slammed her eyes shut and held her breath, waiting for it to end, the spiraling seeming to go on and on until—

She slowed and blinked, gasping at the sudden burst of fresh air smacking into her face. Harriet yelped as something hard knocked into her ankles and she fell with a thud.

When her ears stopped ringing and her head stopped spinning, Harriet heard retching, followed by a wet splat.

“Wonderful, Black.”

Snape’s drawl emanated from somewhere above and Harriet felt the hem of his robes brush her legs as he came out of the fire and stepped over them. She peeled her stinging cheek off the floor and grabbed her glasses, almost putting her hand in the puddle sick as she sat up. Cloth rustled and Professor Dumbledore appeared in her line of sight, the older wizard frowning at Snape as he waved his hand to vanish the mess and helped a nauseous Elara to her feet.

The exhaustion of traveling by magical means from London to the highlands settled on Harriet’s already tired shoulders and she slumped forward, shaking her head to rid herself of the sudden spots blooming in her vision.

“Potter!” Snape snapped, much to her irritation, and when Harriet glanced up, she found his arm extended toward her. For one mad second, she thought he meant to help her upright. “Get these off of me.”

Ssss….

Kevin bitesss!

Bitesss the rude one!

In the mad rush from the house, Snape had managed to snag hold of Kevin and Rick—who had, in turn, sank their tiny teeth into his flesh in several places, his wand still clenched tight in his fist. Harriet lurched forward to detangle them—all while Snape glared at the top of her head like he wanted to set her on fire and Livi made aggressive hissing noises at the wizard. Meanwhile, Professor Dumbledore settled Elara in one of his visitor chairs, pressing a cup of tea into her shaking grasp.

Let go, Kevin,” she told the green snake, coaxing him free. It was then that Harriet noticed a curious scar on Snape’s hand; it looped around his palm and part of his knuckles, disappearing into his sleeve. It couldn’t be wider than a hair, white in color, and almost shiny. She’d never spotted it from a distance before and thought it odd-looking. Snape seemed to realize where her attention had gone and hurried to pry Rick loose, shoving him into her hands before stepping away.

“Good evening, Harriet, Elara,” Professor Dumbledore said in greeting. “I apologize for having disturbed your night, but these are dire circumstances. Severus.”

Snape took a conjured handkerchief from the Headmaster without comment and wiped off his bloodied hand, making a shoddy job of it. Harriet sank into the seat next to Elara and tried not to fall asleep, though it was a near thing. Professor Dumbledore resumed his own seat behind the desk, though he appeared to carry on a silent conversation with Snape that mostly consisted of him giving Snape hard, disappointed glances while the other man sneered. Harriet thought he deserved a good telling off.

“Tonight, I was contacted by the Ministry and was informed that Sirius Black has escaped his cell in Azkaban sometime earlier this afternoon.” The headmaster paused to let the news sink in. Elara hadn’t regained her color after traveling through the Floo and Harriet worried she might be sick again. “A thorough search of the prison and the island itself have been completed. Further sweeps of the neighboring countryside have already begun.”

“I take it they found nothing, sir,” Elara remarked, voice dull.

“Not yet. The Aurory is hopeful he’ll be recaptured soon, however—.” His eyes flicked from Elara back to Harriet. “It was necessary to remove you from the house, given that Mr. Black is still recognized as the owner and would unimpeded by the wards.”

“How did he manage it? I thought no one has ever escaped before.”

“No one is certain at this time.”

Livi stirred on Harriet’s lap. “We are at the ssstone placcce,” he hissed, Kevin and Rick echoing his statement from her front pocket. “It isss too early to be at the ssstone placcce.”

There’s been an emergency,” Harriet murmured. She didn’t know why Professor Dumbledore or Snape thought it so imperative they had to leave the house in the middle of the bloody night with barely a moment’s notice. What had Sirius Black done? Was he really that dangerous? Did they think he would actually hurt his own daughter? If she had escaped from prison, she would’ve skipped town, not gone gallivanting through London, so why did they think he would stick around?

“I don’t mean to frighten you both—.”

“Perhaps they need to be frightened,” Snape interrupted, hovering somewhere behind Harriet’s chair. She wished he wouldn’t. “Better them frightened than foolhardy, Headmaster. Certain crimes should also be brought to light—.”

Tired as she was, Harriet didn’t see Elara pale further and shoot a panicked, pleading look in Dumbledore’s direction. The wizard pursed his lips.

“That’s enough, Severus.”

Snape subsided into a furious, ill-tempered silence, busying himself with removing Harriet and Elara’s trunks from his pocket, Charming them back into the proper size. He dropped them with loud bangs.

“Professor…” Harriet began, hesitating while she rubbed at her eyes. “I’m not sure I understand. I don’t—are we in danger? Is Sirius Black dangerous? Would he hurt Elara?”

Dumbledore considered his answer for a moment, studying his hand pressed flat on the desk’s surface, then Elara, who watched the headmaster with tentative resignation. “We cannot predict the goals or behavior of a wizard like Sirius Black, Harriet.” Snape snorted. “I can tell you we believe him to be a danger to a great many people and until he is returned to Azkaban, neither of you can reside at Grimmauld Place.”

“But where are we supposed to go, then?”

“That is the question now, dear girl.” Professor Dumbledore leaned into his chair, stroking his beard. Fawkes, on his perch, chirped and watched the proceedings. Harriet kept a hand over Kevin and Rick’s pocket lest the phoenix decided he wanted a snack. “I’ve spent the time Professor Snape used in retrieving you to consider a few options—.”

“Not the Malfoys,” Elara interjected, flushing at her own rudeness. “Sorry, sir. I won’t go to the Malfoys. I’m not entirely convinced they’d allow me to leave.”

“Color me surprised, Black. You have a measure of sense in that empty head of yours.”

Unruffled by the snide side comment, Dumbledore replied with, “No, Miss Black, not the Malfoys. We don’t wish for Harriet’s living situation to get back to the Ministry, after all. Would you be amenable to me asking Xenophilius Lovegood? I’m certain he would freely open his home to both of you after your daring rescue of his daughter, Miss Lovegood.”

No!” Snape strode closer and leaned over the man’s desk. “Have a care, Albus! Xenophilius Lovegood?! I wouldn’t trust that airhead to look after a crup!”

“Have you a suggestion then, Severus? I would enjoy hearing it.”

Given his lack of response, Harriet guessed Snape didn’t have a suggestion and it galled him to admit as much to the Headmaster. It didn’t last for long, and soon a pinched expression overcame his face, Snape muttering, “The Weasleys,” as he straightened. “Loathsome as the brood of redheaded Gryffindors are, the Burrow is defensible and well-protected. I also believe these two miscreants have formed a friendship with their daughter.”

“Ginny?” Harriet blurted. “How d’you know that?”

Snape turned his baleful gaze on her. “She’s one of your many pen pals.”

“Oi! How d’you know that?! Are you reading my letters?!”

“Don’t be daft! You write them at the kitchen table, you stupid girl—.”

Professor Dumbledore cleared his throat and Snape shut his mouth, the muscles in his jaw flexing. “As enlightening as this conversation it, I believe we have other issues to discuss.”

Scoffing, Snape moved off, coming to settle at the closest window like a great, unhappy owl, staring past his hooked nose toward the inky blankness of the grounds below. “The Weasleys, then?” he asked in a more reasonable tone. Though reasonable seemed an awfully bold word to apply to Snape at the moment. Harriet didn’t think she’d seen him this agitated before.

“A good idea, but not a plausible one for now. Arthur and Molly took their children out of country for a much needed holiday.”

“Then what will you do?”

“Spinner’s End, perhaps?”

“God no. Are you mad, Dumbledore? I cannot watch them all hours of the day and night, nor would it be proper.”

“Yes, you’re right….”

They exchanged a few names Harriet wasn’t familiar with while she dropped her gaze to her knees and rubbed at her eyes again, giving her scraped cheek a hard pinch to wake herself up. It seemed surreal, fleeing their house because a dangerous criminal had escaped prison and might pop by like an unfortunate aunt coming round for tea. Elara hadn’t said anything after rejecting the Malfoys, her posture rigid, her thoughts unknowable behind the flat surface of her eyes. Harriet reached over to give her forearm a nervous squeeze and still she didn’t react.

“Could we stay here at Hogwarts, sir?” Harriet asked. Despite everything happening, spending the rest of the summer at the school excited her. Hermione would be fuming with jealousy at the idea of them having unrestricted access to the library.

“That would be impossible, I fear. Hogwarts is a very large and very old building, and should one of you come into harm’s way, there wouldn’t be anyone about to assist. Most of the staff return home.”

“What if we stayed in the dormitory?”

“And there we have our second issue; Professor Slytherin has the unfortunate habit of spending more time than most at Hogwarts, even during the holidays, and he is a terribly nosy sort.”

Harriet scowled in frustration. Dumbledore smiled, though his attention was much farther away, the cogs of his impressive brain visibly churning. “I believe…” he stated after some contemplation, voicing his decision with careful thought. “I know of someone who would be happy to take you and Elara into their home.”

From the window, Snape turned his head and narrowed his eyes. “Who, Albus?”

“I will have to write a letter and wait for a response before I can be sure.” Dumbledore stood. “For now, I will show Harriet and Elara to a room for the rest of the night. I know you must both be tired.”

Snape grunted his assent, then whipped around and stalked away from the window back to the hearth. “I’m returning to Grimmauld.”

If Dumbledore wanted to argue, the Potions Master didn’t give him the chance; he threw a snatched handful of Floo Powder into the flames and disappeared in a whirl of green and black. Harriet stared at the spot of soot left behind and wanted to know how the wizard handled so many trips back and forth when it only took one to wipe her out. Maybe that was why Snape was so bloody crabby.

The Headmaster gently chivvied both witches out of their chairs and up the stairs, Charming their trunks to float along behind them. Harriet had never studied the doors leading off the Headmaster’s upper mezzanine before, having decided they led into his private rooms—and the professor proved that deduction correct when he unlocked the door and let them inside the corridor beyond. “The Headmaster or Headmistress, having to spend much of his or her time at the school, is allotted extra quarters for their family to use,” Dumbledore explained, the light at the end of his wand leading them through the quiet, slightly musty space. “The quarters haven’t seen much use during my tenure. Ah, here we are.”

He opened another door and inside waited two beds with walnut posts, the headboards positioned against the far wall, a large, half-circle window of stained glass situated between them. Above, an image of the celestial sphere had been painted on the ceiling and the stars had been Charmed a bold, glittering gold color. A fine, thin film of dust covered the surfaces, the small hearth clean and empty. It clearly hadn’t been used in a number of years.

Professor Dumbledore pointed out the attached washroom and left them to get situated, promising to return in the morning with news. By then, Harriet shook with fatigue and didn’t try questioning him further on what was happening and where they had to go. Elara still didn’t say a word as they changed into their night things and got ready for bed, slipping into the unused sheets of their beds, dimming the sole lantern left burning on the nightstand.

Harriet laid on her back and watched the constellations form on the ceiling, each spot glittering and gliding like real stars across the sky, Livius’ weight heavy on her legs, the blankets warm—if a bit stiff. It was a beautiful room, and a sudden, inexplicable melancholy struck when Harriet considered how long it had been empty. In the privacy of her own thoughts, she dared to wonder why Professor Dumbledore didn’t have a family of his own. She would have liked having a grandfather like him.

Harriet dozed, and when Elara tugged the sheets down and came to lie next to her, she didn’t open her eyes. She tucked her friend’s hand into her own and, together, they fell asleep.

 

x X x

 

Dawn had only just broken on the eastern horizon when Harriet, Elara, and Professor Dumbledore appeared on a quaint country road far from the soaring climes of the Scottish highlands.

The Headmaster had woken them quite early and still hadn’t told them where they were headed. “It’s a surprise,” he’d said over a quick breakfast of scones and jam. “Though we’d best be punctual. He doesn’t much care for lateness.” Harriet ate and Elara sipped an Anti-Nausea draft in preparation for the journey, neither saying much of anything until a house-elf cleared away their plates and the Headmaster said it was time to go. Harriet closed Livi and the other snakes away in his terrarium inside her trunk, and—together with Elara—took Professor Dumbledore’s arm and Disapparated from his office.

“Excellent,” the wizard said as he straightened his spangled hat and surveyed their surroundings. Green trees surrounded the dirt road, though Harriet could smell the sea and hear the sloshing waves over the warbling of summer birds. A crooked wooden sign stuck up from the brush at the road’s side, shaped like an arrow and pointed deeper into the sun-dappled trees. The face bore the word TREFHUD.

“Can you say where we are now, Professor?” Harriet inquired.

He nodded. “Certainly. We are in the Wizarding hamlet of Trefhud, a lovely stretch of land in Devonshire.”

“Trefhud?” They started walking, shoes kicking up small puffs of dust. Harriet looked to Elara and the other witch shrugged. “I haven’t heard of it before.”

“It isn’t terribly well-known, even in magical society. It was Charmed quite a long time ago and hidden from Muggles, much like Diagon Alley, hiding it from view and from their maps. See?”

As the trees thinned, revealing the rolling, wooded hills, Professor Dumbledore pointed to a distant, familiar shimmer like gossamer light rippling the air. Beyond the ripple, Muggle power lines suddenly veered away and circled away, staggering around the hillside. The road ahead split again, one fork leading downhill toward a little charming village situated on the glistening shoreline while the other climbed inland and disappeared into the thickening forest and rising hills. Dumbledore took the latter path and the young witches followed.

They stopped at an iron gate set in a wall of weathered red bricks, strange stones and baubles tied to the wisteria vine twisting around the gate’s high arch. Professor Dumbledore needed only push the gate in and it offered no resistance, but Harriet felt powerful magic come awake and stir like a drowsy guard dog deciding whether or not to give chase. They entered a tidy garden bearing standard English flora and a healthy mix of plants she’d seen in Professor Sprout’s greenhouses—and, beyond that, the gray face of a stone house loomed, the red tiles of the roof limned in the coming light of day. A pond bordered the garden and the woods, a large white egret balanced above the waters watching as they passed by.

Professor Dumbledore didn’t have a chance to knock before one of the front doors popped open and a wizard stepped out onto the porch. He was middling in height and age, silver threading his dark, curly hair and short beard, his face creased with easy laugh lines and crow’s feet. He wore fitted trousers and boots, his waistcoat open over a shirt with loose, billowing sleeves.

He raised a callused hand and waved. “Albus! Vous êtes en avance, eh?” The wizard looked to Harriet and smiled, his dark eyes dancing. “Hello, petit oiseau.”

Harriet gaped, because of all the people she expected to meet that morning, she would have never guessed Nicolas Flamel.


A/N: Bam! Who saw it coming? I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, I’ve never seen the second Fantastic Beasts movie (idk, the first just bored me and I can’t find the energy to see the second. Anyway) so my Nicolas Flamel is nothing like that one. He’s basically an OC. Also, for a quick recap: Harriet doesn’t know what Sirius did and she definitely doesn’t know about him being her godfather. Elara does.

Remember, there’s a Discord server now where you can join the community and stay up to date on chapter releases! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

Chapter 104: as the crow flies

Chapter Text

civ. as the crow flies

At first, Harriet could do nothing but gawk at the ancient wizard she'd been exchanging letters with for over a year. Then, she finally sputtered, "You—you're Nicolas Flamel!"

He laughed—a bright, pleased sound. "I am! It is nice to finally meet face to face, Harriet." Mr. Flamel took her hand between both of his, giving it a friendly squeeze. "And your amie, Miss Black. Comment allez-vous?"

"Um," Elara replied, just as surprised—and articulate—as Harriet. "Er, well—nice to meet you, Mr. Flamel."

"Ah, where are my manners? Come in, come in!"

Mr. Flamel stepped back. Harriet hesitated, but a small nudge from Professor Dumbledore propelled her forward over the threshold and into the house proper. Dark wood paneling appointed the foyer's walls, the tiles underfoot weathered and chipped but nonetheless charming. Far too many cloaks hung from a convenient chifforobe, boots cluttered on a bench, a woven basket on a stool stained green from old garden trimmings. More of those curious baubles hung from the iron chandelier and gleamed in the morning sunlight.

"Perenelle and I just sat down for tea. Will you be joining us, Albus?"

The Headmaster shook his head. "No, no. I'd best be off. My schedule doesn't appear to be getting any lighter these days, I fear."

"You work too hard, mon ami. One should make the most of their holidays."

"I'll be sure to take that under advisement, Nicolas." Professor Dumbledore turned to the two witches. "Try not to get into too much mischief during your stay."

Mr. Flamel grinned. "Mischief is what makes life worth living, Albus."

"Well, in acceptable doses, I suppose." Professor Dumbledore winked, or at least Harriet thought he did. "I'll see you both when school resumes. Feel free to write if you need anything."

Elara stopped the Headmaster before he could leave with a softly uttered, "Professor? Will you tell me…?"

Harriet didn't know what she meant, though she did realize Dumbledore seemed in a hurry despite his best attempts at subtlety. "I will send updates as they come, Miss Black. I promise."

"Thank you, sir."

Professor Dumbledore nodded to her, and then to Mr. Flamel. "Give my best to Perenelle, will you?"

"Bien sûr. Feel free to Apparate if you wish, Albus."

The Headmaster did just that, giving a few final words in salutation before turning on the spot and disappearing into thin air. An awkward moment followed in which Harriet glanced at Mr. Flamel, unsure of what to say, a bit flummoxed by this rather sudden turn of events. Yesterday afternoon they'd been at Grimmauld, Harriet bored out of her skull, and this morning they were standing in the home of a wizard who'd created a Philosopher's Stone—a wizard utterly unaffected by the awkward pause who now ushered them along the hall toward the smell of cooking food.

"Come, come. Have you eaten? We expected you both later, but Perenelle and I have always been early-risers. She makes the best tea, my lovely wife, better than the English! Or so I believe."

Mr. Flamel kept up his easy, affable chatter as he walked through his sprawling house and Harriet peeked into the open rooms they passed. It was cluttered—way more cluttered than Hogwarts or Grimmauld, strange and mystical items left sitting out for casual use like a kettle or a stray book. The rug in the hall looked older than her great-grandparents—and shimmied when Harriet stepped on it. Mr. Flamel told the rug off in a language other than English or French before moving on.

They came into a kitchen and Harriet inhaled the smell of toasted bread, tea, and the more bitter scent of coffee. A witch sat at a small table tucked in the room's corner under an oval window, a newspaper unfolded before her, and she looked up when they tromped into the room. Her blue eyes brightened and a smile quite like the one her husband wore quirked her lips. She stood to greet them.

"'Arriet! It is so nice to see you at last! And Miss Black. May I call you Elara? Pleased to meet you."

Mrs. Flamel had no compunction in pulling Harriet and Elara into an embrace, bussing their cheeks, her affection easy and profuse enough to leave both witches rather embarrassed and pink in the face. Mr. Flamel conjured two extra chairs and Harriet sat in one, fidgeting as Mrs. Flamel poured tea and placed fresh cups before them.

"Erm," Harriet began, searching for the right words. The tea smelled heavenly, though she couldn't say what it blend was. "Thank you for letting us stay with you."

"Oh, it iz not a problem," Mrs. Flamel said, patting Harriet's hand. "I am looking forward to having the company. I have been terribly lonely this summer."

Across the table, Mr. Flamel put down his tea and frowned. "Am I not enough company now?"

Humming a soft note, Mrs. Flamel shook her head. "Non! No, you are plenty of company, Nicolas." She paused, and then as aside to Harriet and Elara, added, "But after six hundred years, his stories start to get…redundant."

Mr. Flamel pouted.

Elara snorted into her cup.

x X x

Much of the first day passed in a blur, Mr. Flamel giving them a tour of the house and the property, keeping up a steady stream of conversation. Harriet found it surprising how easy it was to get along with the wizard; they'd exchanged many letters, but she'd never thought Mr. Flamel would want to meet her, let alone have both her and another teenage witch invading his home for an indefinite amount of time. She wondered what exactly Professor Dumbledore told him in his letter.

They had lunch and supper in the kitchen just the same as they'd had breakfast, Mrs. Flamel insisting they call her Perenelle before introducing them both to a French house-elf named Bigsby—who went into joyful hysterics each time Elara or Harriet attempted to thank him with an uncertain, "Merci."

The house was big, but the Flamels only had one proper guest room. "We do not have visitors very often," Mr. Flamel had explained when he showed them the room on the second floor. Harriet and Elara had to share the bed, but it was roomy enough for both of them and Elara didn't complain about Harriet's kicking habit. Perenelle plied them with far too many quilts and hot cocoa before they turned in for the night.

In the morning, fog crept about outside the window and shuttered the early light. Given she stood in a wizard's home, Harriet tugged her wand free of its brace and whispered, "Lumos," and sat down at the empty desk. Elara still snored into her pillow, having tossed and turned well past midnight. She had kept at it until Harriet threatened to go sleep in her trunk with the snakes.

She must be scared, Harriet thought, frowning as she set up her parchment and pulled out her Occamy quill. Fear preyed on Harriet a lot in the past, so she didn't blame Elara for being restless. She had nightmares all the time and had grown used to them—for the most part—but that didn't mean others should be inured to them too.

Lost in thought, she made a few idle marks on the parchment's corner, then started her letter to Hermione. She couldn't tell her where she and Elara were, not when Hermione lived with the Malfoys, but she could let her friend know they were safe from Elara's father. Harriet paused and picked her quill up.

Actually, she wondered. Would Hermione know about Sirius Black? Would she know he's escaped? Has the Prophet reported on it?

Huffing, Harriet used her wand to erase the beginning of the letter and began a new one. She wrote to Professor Dumbledore instead, apologizing for writing so soon, and asked what she was allowed to tell Hermione. Really, she wanted to tell Hermione everything and would the second they saw one another, but letters sent to her always had the risk of being intercepted by Draco or his mum or dad. Mr. Malfoy made a lot of trouble for Elara whenever he could and Harriet didn't want to inadvertently make her problems worse.

The quill scratched a quiet noise against the parchment. Harriet finished her short letter and folded it, sealing the edge with a spell. Now, how to send it? Usually, she asked Elara if she could borrow Cygnus or Percival—the latter only capable of making short jaunts around London and the closer boroughs—but Snape hadn't taken Cygnus from Grimmauld. Kreacher would take care of him, but that did leave them without an owl.

Harriet hopped to her feet and got dressed, dragging on a pair of trousers and a jumper that she was fairly certain belonged to Hermione, giving the snakes some of the preserved food she had stored in her trunk. Then, she grabbed her letter off the desk and left the room.

She decided to look in the kitchen first, but it wasn't quite daylight yet and when she found the room dark, Harriet guessed the Flamels weren't awake yet. She passed an open arch on the way—and stopped, hearing the gentle rustle of turning pages. Harriet peeked into the cluttered room and spotted Mr. Flamel, his back turned to the entrance, standing at a lectern or some kind of raised desk, a smattering of pages spread across its tilted surface. He hummed off-key as he read. He wore a brace like Harriet's on his wrist, his wand stuck inside.

"…Mr. Flamel?"

"Oui?" he said without looking, finishing whatever it was that held his attention. He turned his head after a moment and smiled. "Good morning, petit oiseau."

"G'morning." Harriet shuffled closer, not sure if she was allowed in the room or not. He hadn't told them to stay out of anywhere specific on their tour the day before. "Err, do you have an owl I could borrow? To send a letter to Professor Dumbledore?"

"Tired of us already?"

Harriet blinked. "What? Oh! No—not at all! I—I just want to write to Hermione and I don't know what I'm allowed to say about what's going on."

"Ah." Mr. Flamel leaned away from the desk and turned his back to it. "Your friend will know about Monsieur Black's escape. It was in the papers yesterday. I believe it reached the Demoyennes as well."

"The—the Muggles? Why would they know about it?"

Mr. Flamel opened his mouth and then shut it, his expression going a bit funny. Harriet had seen that look before; it was the look of someone who'd realized they'd probably said more than they should have and needed to stop lest they put their foot in it again. "We don't 'ave an owl, I fear."

"Oh?" Harriet puzzled how he managed to get anything done, then recalled the wizard used a raven. She'd gotten so used to the bird, she didn't even think about it anymore. Would he let her use it?

The wizard seemed to know what she was thinking. "I could lend 'im to you. Or—." He balanced a hand on his hip as he considered her. "We could go find your own."

"My own? My own raven?"

"Oui! My bird is not usual, you see?" Mr. Flamel stuck his hand in the pocket of his waistcoat and withdrew a small skull. Harriet had seen wizards and witches drag weirder things out of their pockets before, so she didn't so much as flinch when he held it up and she came closer to inspect it. The skull belonged to a bird of some kind—probably a raven, given their conversation. It was a bit yellow with age and had runes etched into the bone, darkened with black powder. Mr. Flamel took out his wand and gave the skull a sound tap. The raven who delivered his mail appeared in his outstretched hand.

Harriet gaped. "I love magic!" she exclaimed, much to Mr. Flamel's amusement. "But is it—is it Dark magic? If the bird isn't actually alive?"

"Non, non—well, peut être? Maybe?" He let out an uncertain chuckle. "I do not think it is something Albus would like for me to teach you, but it is not harmful, non. There are other spells like it, older. They have menace to them, meant to 'urt people, but this one—how do you say?" He tapped his mouth in thought. "You have heard of Odin, yes? The Norse god?"

"I think so."

He mumbled something in French, then flicked his wand. A book wiggled free of its dusty shelf and came sauntering over, landing in his free hand. He gave the other a slight shake, closing his fingers over the skull, and the raven blinked out of existence. "Here we are. Look."

Harriet did as bid, Mr. Flamel pointing to an illustration of a bearded man—wizard—in armor, a blackbird on each shoulder, his wand in hand, two dogs at his heels.

"Like most figures in the Demoyenne myths, Óðinn, or Wōden, was a magical being. A wizard much like your Merlin. You see here? His wand was Gungnir. I once spent a week in the fjords arguing with a man convinced it was the Bâton de la Mort—but, ah, that is a different story."

Harriet wrinkled her nose. What's a Bâton de la Mort?

"He is said to 'ave had two ravens, Huginn and Muninn, and in the stories, he would send them flying all over the world. They would come back to him and say all that they had seen in their travels."

"That sounds like a fancy way of saying they brought him letters."

Mr. Flamel grinned. "Exactement! The spell, it is very old and uncommon, but it is not meant to 'urt anyone. It comes from before Odin. Even older than me!"

Giggling, Harriet asked, "But what would I have to do? I don't know runes, Mr. Flamel. Is it difficult magic? Would I—I wouldn't have to kill a raven, would I?"

He shook his head. "No, that would be exactly not what to do. Come, we will go search outside and I will show you."

"Can I bring Livi? He gets crabby being cooped up."

"Oui. Go on."

Harriet hurried back to the bedroom and unearthed Livius from her trunk. Elara sat up when Harriet opened the door—but she was still asleep, given her eyes barely opened and she flopped over the moment her exhausted mind recognized the other witch. Harriet snorted and left again, wrapping Livi's heavy coils over her shoulders.

"Ssss…."

"You have to behave."

"Why?"

"Because we're guests here. We don't want to make trouble for our hosts."

The Horned Serpent lamented the stupidity of manners and Harriet ignored him. Mr. Flamel waited by the front door and, since she didn't have any wellies, he had her put on Perenelle's and then shrunk them down to fit her feet. They set off, heading not toward the road but the back of the property, toward the forest proper, where the trees grew taller and the mist hung in wet clumps. The ground became more of a mire the farther they traveled and Harriet realized this was why he'd given her the boots. The grass squelched underfoot.

Mr. Flamel asked Livius questions along the way—or, well, he asked Harriet questions to ask Livi, and she answered for him. He wanted to know all about what life as a magical snake was like. Harriet couldn't help but drawl a bit when she told him it was a life full of bossing about silly humans, sleeping on the nearest warm surface, and generally being a lazy pain in the arse. His laughter boomed in the loose trees.

When Livi slithered off her shoulders in a huff, she made sure to also tell Mr. Flamel how brave the serpent was, how he'd saved her life on several occasions. They were quiet for a while after that.

"What exactly are we looking for?"

"A dead raven," Mr. Flamel replied, short and to the point. He renewed the Warming Charms he'd placed on them and, as an afterthought, flicked one over Livi. The snake hissed in appreciation. "One that has died a natural death. That is very important. It cannot be, ah…rotten, either. We have our work cut out for us."

They picked through the underbrush, not fussed with being quiet, Mr. Flamel telling Harriet all about the time he visited Norway with Perenelle many years ago and studied the magical implementation of the Elder Futhark under a seiðkonur.

"She was the granddaughter of Nerida Vulchanova, who founded Durmstrang, oui? They had a terrible blood feud against the Munters—terrible. Oda—that was her name, I remember now, Oda—knew Harfang Munter murdered Nerida when she was Headmistress."

Harriet peeked under a bush, then looked to Mr. Flamel. "Why would he do that?"

"Hmm?"

"Why would anyone murder the Headmistress?"

"Je ne sais pas." He shrugged. "Why does anyone murder anyone? It is a position of authority among magical kind, you know? We 'ave different Ministries, different governments, but it is not like ze Demoyennes—the Muggles. Wizarding kind consider educators…what is the expression? They hold them above others. It is a position of power, educating. Teaching magic to a people who define themselves by its usage."

Harriet mulled his statement over as they kept walking and Mr. Flamel kept talking.

"Oda and her family knew 'Arfang—Harfang—had killed Nerida. And Harfang had the entirety of the Vulchanova family banned from Durmstrang. All her descendants, even to this day! It was written in the Durmstrang's statuts, in the very laws themselves, that House Vulchanova could not return. It is very hard to change those bylaws! So Oda became a seiðkonur. Oh, and Harfang was quick to poison the Institutes's image. Nerida had a vision for it. She admired Hogwarts very much and wished for something like it closer to home…."

Time passed. Their search turned up one rook, a magpie, a jackdaw—and a Hinkypunk who had a go at Harriet and only scampered when Livi burst out of a nearby blackthorn bush. Mr. Flamel inspected the birds and pronounced that the rook and the magpie had been killed by cats and were thus unusable. The jackdaw had been shot.

"Ç'est malheureux. The Demoyennes are not so far away and it must have been clipped by buckshot and kept flying—non, do not look, silly girl. I will bury it."

Mr. Flamel needed only two flicks of his wand to inter the bird and Harriet sighed, her feet sore from tromping about in unfamiliar boots. She didn't know how long they'd been out there, but the mist hadn't relented and the light hadn't grown brighter. They'd scoured acres of forests. Mr. Flamel patted her head.

"Hmm. Perhaps your Livius could give us his expertise? Yes, Monsieur Livius?"

The Horned Serpent preened—if a snake could preen. He just looked insufferably pleased with himself in Harriet's opinion, especially after having eaten two squirrels, a rabbit, not to mention a good attempt at snatching that squealing Hinkypunk.

"Can you find us a raven?" Harriet asked him, a brow quirked.

"I can find anything," Livius retorted. "Humansss are ssslow. I am a better hunter. Sss…."

Livi took over their search—getting sidetracked once or twice by small, scared creatures skittering about, though he did far better at composing himself than Kevin or Rick ever did. He managed to find a bird, a great black thing settled in the hollow of a tree where predators couldn't find it, up high off the ground. Mr. Flamel Charmed the roots into a rudimentary step ladder so he could inspect the creature.

"Is it actually a raven?" Harriet asked, not able to see the bird very well.

"Mmm, non, not exactly. It is a carrion crow, much bigger than a raven, but it will suit." Mr. Flamel conjured a cloth sack and, with another spell, popped the deceased bird inside of it.

A flicker of silver light stealing through copse startled Harriet, and it must have startled Mr. Flamel too, though the wizard made a good show of pretending it hadn't. A fish flitted about his head—a wispy, ethereal shape, shining bright as a moon. It spoke, and Mrs. Flamel's voice came out.

"Nicolas, you and 'Arriet will miss lunch if you don't quit your playing about! You 'ave already missed breakfast!"

The fish vanished in a whorl of spangled smoke. Mr. Flamel grumbled something in French and gave his wand a small flick, summoning a silvery, see-through creature of his own. It really was a beautiful spell, and Harriet felt like she'd seen it before. Hadn't Snape done it just the other day Grimmauld? But his hadn't been an animal, just a four-legged blob, a shiny imprint hovering in the air.

Harriet frowned.

"Ouais, Perenelle. We are coming." The creature—a lizard of some sort, a salamander—disappeared, scuttling off through the trees in the direction the fish had come from. "We had best take our new friend home else Perenelle will leave us to starve."

She knew he was making a joke, but seeing as Harriet had actually been denied food and starved for being late before, her answering smile was strained. Mr. Flamel led the way through the woods again, never losing his footing, seeming perfectly at ease. He hummed, something quiet and foreign and pretty to Harriet's ears.

They came out of the woods on the other side of the village. The path flanked the sea—and it, too, was pretty, just like most of what Harriet had seen so far in Trefhud. The waves crested and crashed on the beach, gray and white and blue, a wizard out fishing on a floating dock, his pointed hat three times the size of his wizened head. In the village itself, the magical folk greeted Mr. Flamel warmly and gave curious hellos to Harriet, the alchemist quick to make their excuses and hurry them along. Harriet didn't think it actually mattered if she was seen as long as no one went back to the Ministry and told them Harriet Potter was puttering around a seaside town in Devon.

Well, maybe she should keep a low profile. Maybe. There was no telling where Lucius Malfoy might pop up.

At last, they made it back to the house and found Elara and Perenelle in the kitchen, deep in conversation, waiting by a wooden serving bowl filled with cheesy pasta. Bigsby was cutting a fresh loaf of bread into slices. It smelled wonderful to Harriet after tromping over what felt like half the countryside. She didn't need to be told twice to dig in.

"Nicolas! The poor dear is famished!" Perenelle reached out to smooth Harriet's hair from her face. "Where did you go off so early?"

"Searching for materials."

"Materials?"

He wiped his mouth after chomping of a piece of bread. "Oui. Harriet wants a bird."

"A bird? Oh." Perenelle shot her an inquisitive look, smiling, then set her gaze on her husband. "You will be cleaning it, yes? You cannot 'ave her do that! It will give her nightmares."

Harriet was a mite peeved Mrs. Flamel thought her squeamish enough to get nightmares over something as trivial as ingredient prep. True, she hadn't considered that they'd have to get the skull out of the bloody bird after they found it, but Harriet had handled other animals in detentions with Snape or in Potions class. It was a necessary part of magic sometimes.

She'd seen far worse, but Perenelle didn't know that. Mr. Flamel didn't tell her everything. Harriet didn't tell Mr. Flamel everything.

The wizard held his hands up. "Oui, oui! Do not worry so. I will do it."

Elara nudged her foot under the table and Harriet settled for drinking her pumpkin juice.

Once lunch had been eaten, Harriet munching on far too much and Elara still saying far too little, Mr. Flamel kissed his wife's cheek and he and Harriet returned to the study she'd seen earlier that morning, passing through it to the potions lab on the other side. It resembled the one at Hogwarts in many ways, the walls comprised of rough stone, ingredients all sorted in tidy jars and bottles on long wooden racks, each slat labeled in the same, slanted script.

The resemblance ended there; there was no surly Snape marching about, and bizarre glass beakers and contraptions cluttered most of the counters. Harriet peered at the nearest instrument and watched how the candlelight glittered like a rainbow over the thick, clouded glass, green sand swirling within the wide, flat belly.

Mr. Flamel lit a fire in the hearth with a snap of his fingers and settled Harriet at a little round table stationed at its side. She yawned as she watched him dart about—settling the white cloth sack on the bench, tossing a bit of wood into the flames, tugging a slender volume from his crowded bookcase. For a six-hundred-year-old wizard, he sure had a lot of energy.

"Here we are!" He set the volume in front of Harriet. It didn't have a title imprinted on the front, just a smattering of peeling, silver gilt, so Harriet carefully opened the cover to the first page.

"What's this for?"

"I need you to research trois—three—runes in there. It is important for the spell."

Harriet forced herself to sit up straighter and nudged her glasses higher up her nose. "I can do that."

"Perfect." Mr. Flamel went to the bench and gathered the crow, moving out of Harriet's line of sight. "You need to look for raidho, jera, and laguz."

Harriet flipped through the old, withered pages, squinting at the tiny writing and drawn symbols. The fire crackled and she slumped, yawning, balancing her weight on her arm. A muted thump came from the worktable, metals instruments clicking against one another in a ceramic dish.

"What does it say for raidho?"

Blinking, Harriet turned another page. "It represents direction. A journey. It teaches balance. In Merk—Merkstave, it means stasis or even death. What's Merkstave?"

"It means reversed. When it is cast opposing its usual orientation."

"Oh."

"Jera, now."

Harriet had to peruse the pages again, rubbing her eyes. "Hmm. It means year. Has a whole bit here about harvests and waiting. Life-cycles. In Merkstave is can mean conflict or…regression, repetition."

"And now, laguz!"

Whatever laguz meant, Harriet didn't find out. She nodded off reading an interesting bit about perthro and how it was a mysterious thing that had come to represent witch-kind and their perceived capriciousness. The heat in the room, coupled with her large lunch and excessive morning exercise, put the witch right to sleep—until suddenly, Mr. Flamel returned to the table and Harriet startled awake. He set a perfectly cleaned crow skull on top of the book she'd snoozed upon. The wizard had finished preparing it already.

Harriet flushed. "I would have done it, sir," she mumbled. "You didn't have to."

"I know, petit oiseau." He gave the top of her head a fond pat and sat in the chair next to hers. He picked up the skull "Raidho. Jera. Laguz." He pointed at the runes in turn, each carefully carved with a small, sharp blade along the bird's crest. "Laguz means lake. It represents water, and water represents life."

"I thought—I read something about sowilo representing life? Something about fire?"

"Life-giving. A small difference, but a difference nonetheless, yes?" Mr. Flamel shrugged. "Now, take out your wand."

Harriet pulled her wand free of its brace and waited for instruction. The wizard set the skull before her again and smiled, the firelight sparkling in his dark eyes in an uncanny imitation of Professor Dumbledore. "Now, you use the spell avolareAvolare. Go ahead."

Nodding, Harriet pointed her wand at the skull—at the largest rune, raidho—and whispered, "Avolare!"

The skull remained on the book but a glossy, black-feathered bird appeared above it—a crow, not a raven like Mr. Flamel's. Its talons clicked on the table as it turned and eyed Harriet, its eye pale and milky but otherwise alert. The runes upon the skull under its feet had turned from coal black to red.

"Now what happens?"

"You send me a letter to test."

Curious to see what would happen, Harriet fished out the note she intended to send to Professor Dumbledore—still in her pocket, wrinkled by her running about—and gave it to the crow, its thick bill clamping shut over the parchment's edge. "Err, go to Mr. Flamel? Nicolas Flamel?"

Obviously, it didn't need to go far, and yet the bird blinked and hopped two steps to its right, dropping the letter into the wizard's outstretched hand. "Nicolas Flamel!" it cawed, startling Harriet with its volume.

"Merci."

The crow cawed again, pleased with itself, and vanished in a sooty puff. The runes upon its skull returned to their dark color.

"It is not actually alive, you see," Mr. Flamel explained as they both sat and gazed at the little white bone atop the book of runes. "It is a—how do you say? A fantôme? Or a…projection of ze bird. Like a memory. It is why it is important it had a full life, not one cut short."

Thoughtful, Harriet traced a fingertip along the beak, then reached a decision and tugged on the cord tucked under her jumper's collar. Puzzled, Mr. Flamel watched as she pulled out the long leather strip on which hung a single, small white spoon. "It was carved from Bavarian Erkling bone," she told the alchemist as she fidgeted with the knot, managing to get it undone. "It can detect poison. Elara got it for me after—."

Harriet didn't say anything else, but understanding flashed in Mr. Flamel's eyes. She hadn't told him about the poisoning, but she wagered Professor Dumbledore had.

"I understand. It is a good thing to have, and a good idea to have your new compagnon close as well."

He helped her feed one end of the leather strip through the skull's ocular sockets, then cinched the knot tight once more. Harriet looped the cord around her head once more and the bones jangled ever so slightly as they came to rest over her heart.

"No excuse not to write to me now, oui?" Mr. Flamel pointed at the macabre necklace. He adopted a stern, but teasing tone. "I will expect a letter every week, young lady!"

Embarrassed but pleased, Harriet beamed and nodded, hand closing over the crow's skull. Mr. Flamel smiled, the gesture close-lipped but warm, genuine. He touched her shoulder and gave it a squeeze.

"Good. Now, let us go see what mischief we can find for you and Elara to get into. We wouldn't want to disappoint Albus, after all."


A/N: Okay, so, I don't understand why Durmstrang is coded so heavily as Russian / Slavic in canon. It's in Norway or Sweden. Koldovstoretz is in Russia. I mean, it's just a giant missed opportunity that I think I've touched upon a bit more in this au-canon.

Harriet got a new pet and it's not a snake! I'm so proud of her.

Is the magic theory boring you? Let me know.

Chapter 105: moment of the yew-tree

Chapter Text

cv. moment of the yew-tree

Elara had never been to the sea before.

She'd seen it on the telly and had heard one of the parishioners chatter about her holiday to the Spanish coast, but she didn't have any personal experience with the ocean—and the first day Mr. and Mrs. Flamel took them to the shore, she didn't much like it. The sun was too bright, the sand got trapped in her socks and gloves and hair, and she was too hot in her long sleeves and skirt. She ended up with a headache, terribly sunburned, and stinking of aloe vera.

She grew fonder of it as the days passed. She would wake too early in the morning, anxious and irritable, and would walk from the Flamel house to the shore by the village. Once there, she'd sit on the rocks and watch the fishermen on the jetty pull cod and bass from the water, a merperson stopping by sometimes to barter with fish from deeper depths. Elara would wait for the first light of dawn to peek over the forested hills and whisper, "Amato animo abunati animagus," with the tip of her wand over her heart.

She'd roll the new wand between her fingers, testing the unfamiliar grain and handle. Ebony wood. Rougarou hair. Mrs. Malfoy had taken her to get the replacement early in the summer, and Elara had been surprised when Ollivander looked at her, at her scarred hand, and came back with a wand he claimed he hadn't made.

"It's from a wandmaker in America," he explained. "We wandmakers exchange a choice selection every few years as not every person of a region is perfectly suited for the elements located there. Normally I would send you off to Gregorovitch, but there's no need for that. This particular wand comes from Violetta Beauvais in America. Eleven and a quarter, quite rigid. Ebony, with one Rougarou hair. Go on, then, give it a wave…."

Her first wand had been blackthorn and dragon heartstring. "A bit temperamental, but good stock nonetheless," Mr. Ollivander told her the first time. "A wand meant for a warrior, no doubt in my mind."

He didn't say anything about the new wand. Elara had gone back home and looked it up in an old wandlore book she scrounged in the library. She realized why the wizard hadn't told her about it when she read Rougarou hair was drawn to Dark magic.

Elara spent early mornings on the shore and grew accustomed to the quiet, to the iron-gray curtain of fog that balked and tip-toed away once the sun came out. If she stayed too long, Perenelle sent a Patronus summoning her back, so Elara always left before the sun could clear the treetops proper. She'd walk into the house and hear the clatter of dishes being set out by Harriet, Mrs. Flamel cooking, Mr. Flamel sitting at the table with the Daily Prophet or a paper from aboard. She'd sit down without saying a word and let the scene enfold her.

It was…nice. Surreal in a way magic never had been for Elara. The sisters had talked about the devil and his cheap tricks a lot more often than they ever discussed anything familial, and so Elara wondered what would scandalize her old caretakers more, the wand waving or the group of heathens sitting down to a meal together like normal people?

They went to the village or the beach during the day more often than not, and Elara grew to love the afternoons by the sea. Sometimes it was just her and Harriet, and Elara would wear shorts and a t-shirt just like the other witch—or least she did once Perenelle fashioned a pair of bracers like Harriet's for both her wrists, covering the marks. They'd play in the water or lie on the beach with their feet buried in the sand, or they'd duel with Mr. Flamel on the dock and he'd send them sailing into the cool water more often than not. Harriet finally managed to trip him in and he came up sputtering, soaking wet, and shocked, much to Perenelle's amusement.

They'd return, count new freckles on their cheeks and arms, and help with chores about the house. In the evenings, they would sit in the den and eat sweets made for dessert, listening to the wireless or to Perenelle chattering on about Astronomy while Mr. Flamel smoked his pipe and read periodicals. With her day so full, Elara found it surprisingly easy to fall asleep at night—but always she woke too early.

Yes, she'd never been to the sea before, just as she'd never had a family before, and though Elara quickly became very fond of both, she knew it wouldn't—couldn't—last. Reality threatened and waited beyond the quiet, cloistered borders of Trefhud and time passed too fast that summer. Snape or Kreacher forwarded Cygnus a day or so after their arrival and though Elara sent him out each morning, he never returned with news. Sirius Black had not been caught. He was free, and he was out there. Waiting.

She wrote Professor McGonagall every day; sometimes just a quick note scribbled at the breakfast table, sometimes a longer letter. McGonagall wanted her to write down what she felt, which meant Elara spent a lot of time trying to figure that out. What did she feel? Anger, mostly. Inexplicable in its intention and arrival. Anger for her father, for Dumbledore and Snape, for McGonagall, herself, the Flamels, Harriet. It was irrational, that anger, but Elara carried it with her, bound tight in anxiety, nervousness, and dread.

"I'm afraid," she told the professor. "Not for myself. For Harriet. I'm afraid he'll come after her. I'm afraid of what will happen when she finds out the truth."

"Miss Potter is a kind and level-headed girl," McGonagall wrote back. "She will not blame you for your father's faults."

Elara wanted to tell Harriet the truth, wanted to tell Harriet Sirius Black was her godfather and he betrayed her parents—because it seemed everyone else already knew. Dumbledore knew. McGonagall and Snape knew. The Flamels knew—and Harriet wasn't as unfailingly kind as McGonagall assumed. She didn't have a cruel bone in her body, but Harriet had a distinct stubborn vindictive streak in her like a knife held to someone's back, no matter how slight. She'd never forget, and she might not forgive. The longer it took for Elara to come clean, the harder the reaction would hit.

I'm afraid he'll come after her.

Elara spent the days in the sunshine and for once in her life lived like a girl and not a strange, cursed burden. At night, she slept next to the witch she loved like a sister—and always she woke too early in the morning, dreams haunted by a stranger wearing a face too similar to her own.

Your father has escaped from Azkaban.

She would dress and walk to the shore before the sun rose and watch the men toil with the sea.

I'm afraid—.

She would sit on the rocks and memorize the feel of her new wand in her hands. Elara would turn it over and over, remembering Mr. Ollivander's haunted eyes, the way his fingers trembled ever so slightly when he let the wand go. She'd think about her father, about the life he threatened, and the anger would return.

She'd never hated a man as much as she hated Sirius Black.

x X x

Elara stared into her father's face and sneered.

The Prophet had taken to posting his original mugshot on the front page. He'd been young when he was arrested; tall, dark, and handsome, Elara imagined Sirius Black had never been denied anything in life—not until they put him in a prisoner's robes and dragged him in front of the camera, a sign held before him, an Auror on each arm. His gray eyes looked hollow and spiteful, and his mouth moved in a slight repetitive motion as if he was grinding his teeth.

They had the same jaw. The same brows and eyes and nose.

Elara took joy in tearing his image up and putting it in the compost bin.

"Elara? Come hold this for me, dear."

Brushing off her hands, Elara rose and returned to Mrs. Flamel and took the sack of soil from her, shifting it so the weight settled on her arm. They leaned over Perenelle's planter of Shrieking Violets, the blooms' screeches muted by a Silencing Charm. She could hear Harriet and Mr. Flamel inside Mr. Flamel's study, his voice carrying through the open window, occasionally accompanied by the pops or swoops of spellwork. Livius explored the garden somewhere, and though she hadn't mentioned anything, Elara got the impression the Horned Serpent unnerved Mrs. Flamel quite a bit.

Well, she thought as Mrs. Flamel gestured for her to pour out some of the soil. I guess I've become inured to his presence, but Livius is hardly the pet anyone would think a witch would have.

"Parfaite," Perenelle hummed as she settled the soil around her plants. "They will need the extra cover once autumn begins."

The mention of autumn sent a bolt of anxiety through her. Conceivably, the Ministry had to capture Sirius before school began, right? There were only so many places a convict could hide in Britain, so if they didn't find her father before September began, should they assume he left the country?

Please God, Elara prayed without realizing it. Please let him be caught or leave Britain. Please.

"Elara?"

Blinking, she looked up at Mrs. Flamel, who had her hands out waiting for her to give the half-empty sack over. She did so—almost dropping it—but Perenelle caught the lip of it and held on. "Oups! Careful of the flowers there, they bruise so easy."

Elara was always careful of plants and didn't know how she wound up as the one helping Perenelle in the gardens, but she knew to never touch anything green with her bare hands. The older witch knocked dirt from her gloves and, seeming to know Elara's mind had wandered, folded them up and stuck them in her apron pocket. "That is enough gardening for today. Let us go see what those two are up to."

They headed inside. Perenelle popped open the study's door and Elara heard Harriet incant, "Confundo!" A pale pink spell flicked through the air and collided with a crooked wooden dummy. The dummy creaked but didn't otherwise move.

"Non, non," Mr. Flamel said, shaking his head. "Your wrist needs to twist. Twist et flick. Like so: confundo!"

His spell didn't fizzle quite like Harriet's had and it hit the dummy with a lighter touch, encompassing its dented head with a wispy cloud instead of smacking into it. Harriet frowned and wrinkled her nose.

"Nicolas, what are you teaching her?" Perenelle said with a frown of her own.

"It is a good spell to know!"

"She is only thirteen."

He spun his wand through his fingers, the motion idle like a stage magician spinning a coin. "Elle devrait savoir se défendre."

Perenelle huffed as she came into the room proper, skirt swishing by her knees, and she took Harriet's face in her hands. Harriet complained and Perenelle let go, taking her hand instead to reposition her wrist. "Try again, but like this."

She did so, rounding the twist more with motion from the wrist. "Confundo!"

Pink mist warbled over the dummy's head and it shuddered.

"Better!" Mr. Flamel cheered. "Almost there!"

Mrs. Flamel huffed again as she eyed her husband. "You had best teach Elara as well."

"Oui, okay."

"And then we will go somewhere. Take our minds off things for a bit."

If the wizard had any questions about what she meant, he didn't mention them. "Okay, yes. Elara! Come, come. Show me what you can do…."

x X x

After an early supper, the Flamels, Harriet, and Elara found themselves in Cumbria, walking on a barren country road among the rising gray plinths and tipsy dolmens littering the summer plain beneath Elva hill. The shadows stretched long as the evening settled. The last dregs of sunlight glittered opalesque in the old wards dotting the vicinity, and as it grew darker still, small lights began to appear in the tall grass. They danced among the thin trees and disappeared when Elara concentrated on them. Soon enough they heard voices, music, laughter, and above their path swayed a purple banner with golden letters.

WELCOME TO THE NIGHT MARKET.

The letters swiveled and swirled, changing languages and alphabets. Elara almost tripped trying to watch it, but she had her gloved hand in Perenelle's and the older witch caught her. Both she and Harriet grumbled about being too old to hold hands, but it seemed from one step to the next they stumbled into a large crowd of magical people and beings, and Elara admitted to herself having Perenelle there made her feel more secure. Harriet was a different story.

"I've been here before," she grumbled, giving her arm a tug. "I'm not going to get lost."

"Comment? What do you mean?" Mr. Flamel asked, brow raised. "The Night Market is not a place for young witches to go about on their own."

"Well, no one told me that."

Mr. Flamel shook his head and Elara saw something like concern in his dark eyes, if only for an instant. "Ah. You know the rules then, yes? Be careful what you barter. The fée can be tricky beings…."

They wandered from stall to stall and Elara marveled at the things for sale, some of it legal, some it…not. A wizard sweating in a parka had a cage full of Erklings dressed like house-elves. One Erkling pilfered his pockets as the wizard stood too close, arguing with a bloke in maroon robes—an Auror, most likely. Perenelle bought them Marvelous Macarons, sweet biscuits sandwiching a Charmed ganache that made their breath glow like an aurora. Mr. Flamel paid by winning two games of noughts and crosses.

Perenelle finally let them off on their own so long as they stayed within sight of a large, scraggly oak in the market's middle, its limbs decorated with charms and long, flapping pennants. The Flamels went to barter with a vampire for a jar of Wallachian dirt. Harriet stopped to chat with a Centaur bearing vibrant, forest-green hair. For the moment, Elara was alone.

She didn't wander from the tree as she walked. She could have reached out and brushed her fingertips against the rough, peeling bark as she observed the people around her. Elara didn't believe Sirius Black would show his face here—she needed only to glance back in the direction of the Auror to know the Ministry kept just enough presence here to ward off an escaped convict. No, she didn't think her father would prove a problem, but her scarce years in the Wizarding world had already convinced Elara it wasn't always a safe place to be, especially on ones own, so she kept Harriet and the Flamels in sight and stayed by the oak tree.

"You, girl."

A witch stood in Elara's path, dressed in dark tailored robes with a hem that came to a point down by her boots. With her slick, ink-black hair and severe, hawkish features, the woman could have passed for a distant cousin of Snape's if not for her wide, golden eyes. The sudden brunt of her attention unnerved Elara and she forced herself not to step back from her.

"…hello," she greeted, her tone flat and suspicious.

The witch canted her head to the side. "You're an enterprising sort, are you not?" she asked, sharp and commanding like a schoolmistress calling her to task. "Well?"

"…sometimes."

The woman flicked her hands—Elara staring at the long, black nails tipping her fingers—and a pelt appeared from nowhere. "A Shifter's coat. Interested?"

"No." Given Elara didn't wish to see the inside of Azkaban, she had no desire to own a Shifter's coat.

A subtle, indifferent motion dismissed the pelt and replaced it with a small cloth doll, its eyes comprised of frazzled red stitches. "A poppet for the little girl?"

The witch sounded snide when she held the cursed object out and Elara leaned back, scowling. "No. I'm not an idiot."

Laughing, the witch dismissed the poppet—and it disintegrated into a pile of gray ash. Distracted by the ash catching the wind, Elara didn't see the witch's other hand until it grabbed hold of her wrist and squeezed.

She gasped and pulled, fear spiraling through her. The charms hanging from the tree shook, leaves flying, and the candles on the nearest stall guttering one by one. The witch's eyes burned, her fingers pressing cold, searing magic into Elara's skin until—

Elara pushed back.

The tingling sensation alighted over her covered palms and the witch released her wrist. For a moment, Elara thought she saw a new mark on the woman's hand, a raw spot glistening in what little moonlight shone through the oak's leaves—and then, like the pelt and poppet, it disappeared. The witch stepped back.

"Hmm." She tilted her head, face lost to the shadows, and her fingers continued to rub against one another as if memorizing the feel. "Unexpected."

Harriet's voice sounded in the distance. "Elara?" she called as she peered around the accrued people. "Where'd you go?"

Elara startled when the witch pressed something into her hand. She peered at the smooth obsidian pebble—an small, unremarkable stone, if not for the forked rune cut into its face. It felt heavy to the touch but not magical. "Come see me when you're older, girl."

"What—?" Elara jerked her gaze away from the stone—and the witch was gone.

"There you are." Harriet bumped into her arm, carrying a box of teak dowels. Elara couldn't fathom where she'd gotten those, or why. The bespectacled girl looked at the stone still in Elara's grasp. "D'you find something?"

Elara closed her fingers around it. "I…don't know."

She should have dropped the rock. She should have tossed it away from her, but she didn't; Elara tucked it into her pocket, and later, when she laid in bed about to fall asleep, she turned it over again and again, flipping the rune around and around.

She kept it—because that ice-cold feeling in her hands had been familiar, and Elara had to wonder why that was.


A/N: I'm not overly fond of giving characters "special" wands unless it serves a greater purpose, but the canon lore behind the Rougarou and its symbolism were too choice for me to overlook. Elara chapters are so hard to write, I swear. I don't know why.

Chapter title from T.S. Eliot's Little Gidding. "The moment of the rose and the moment of the yew-tree / Are of equal duration." Meaning life and death have equal worth and presence in a person's life.

Witch: "Aha! Let me curse you—."

Elara: [whips out UNO Reverse card]

Chapter 106: cursed twice-over

Chapter Text

cvi. cursed twice-over

The snickering coming from the next aisle could mean nothing good.

Exhaling, Remus Lupin set down the history textbook before he could shelve it and straightened from his kneeling position by the open box. His joints popped as he stood, having spent too long on his knees stocking inventory, and so he took a moment to stretch out the stiffness in his limbs.

He was a tall man, thin and a bit slouched, the shirt and trousers under his apron both rather threadbare while gray flecked his brown hair like new snow on a wheat field. The most distinct feature of the man wasn't his green eyes or his height or his patchy clothes; rather, it was the prominent red scars slashed across his face, the largest crossing his cheek and the bridge of his nose. His hand came up to scratch the tail of the scar—then dropped limp by his side.

He was young despite his weathered state—but Remus didn't feel young. He felt quite a bit like an old flannel too often used and wrung out, left out to dry in the sun until stiff and malformed. He didn't much want to go and deal with those snickers. He'd much rather be in his flat, dowdy and dubious as it was, preferably with a good book and a hot cuppa, but he would settle for his own bed and quiet evening's rest. He didn't want to go into the next aisle, and yet he heard the tearing pages and knew he couldn't pretend otherwise. He couldn't take the cut to his paycheck for damaged inventory.

Brushing off his hands, Remus paced around the corner and found four Muggle youths in patterned jumpers and torn jeans egging on the fifth member of their group, an older boy with a book braced between his two hands. Pages littered the carpet about his scuffed trainers. The group caught sight of Remus when he approached and he got the impression they would have kept on with their vandalism if they hadn't seen his scarred face. His visage frightened Muggles, whether they wanted to admit it or not.

"Can I help you, gentlemen?"

The younger boys looked to the eldest, who had the good sense to toss the book in his grip onto the nearest stack without damaging it further. "Nah, mate. We were just on our way, weren't we?"

Heads nodded in agreement.

"Mmm," Remus hummed, his smile tight-lipped and more of a grimace than anything else. "You wouldn't happen to know what happened to these books, would you?"

The leader shrugged and sneered. "Strange, innit?"

"Strange indeed. Do you need help finding the door?"

They did not, in fact, need help finding the door, though Remus watched their retreating backs until they were back on the street, disappearing into the evening crowd. He picked up the damaged books and glanced at the pages on the floor. It seemed an ill portent that he opened the first volume to the section titled, "Gray Wolf, Canis lupus."

Remus' fingers tightened, wrinkling the page.

He looked around to see if anyone was about, then tugged his wand from his trouser pocket and whispered, "Reparo," mending the book, replacing it on the shelf. A long sigh left him as he finished fixing the others and reorganized them. Another simple spell could have managed the lot but taking his time gave his mind something to focus on.

Working among Muggles proved more challenging than most wizards or witches would assume; Remus had been flitting about London from job to job for years and still struggled to consciously not use magic in their presence. That was why Muggle-borns usually decided on one life or the other, at least in his opinion. Magic became part of a person's life as essential as breathing or walking or talking, and the constant need to remember not to use it in the presence of certain people became grating.

He could find work easier in the Muggle world than in the Wizarding one, given his…affliction, but without GCSE marks or A levels, Remus could never qualify for anything well-paying or permanent. He'd been dismissed for sudden absences around the full moon more than once and couldn't work anywhere more technologically savvy than a pub. He assumed it was better than being chased from the village with pitchforks, though.

Remus finished up his shift and returned his apron and name tag to his locker in the backroom, exiting through the rear door into the tidy alleyway behind the store. He left Waterstones, walking toward Tottenham Court Road and Charing Cross beyond, savoring the summer warmth after spending the afternoon stuck in the artificial chill. He walked all the way to the Leaky Cauldron, pausing to chat with Myrl Cork, a Ravenclaw alum a few years his senior, and Tom, the bartender.

"Heard there's been a Black sighting out near Aylesbury," Tom said.

Myrl put down her pint. "Aye? When?"

"Sometime yesterday apparently. Calvin Hopkirk says he saw him clear as day, nicking robes from his clothesline."

"Calvin Hopkirk is full of shite and always has been."

"Mafalda went out to check herself and send someone definitely tripped the wards."

"That doesn't mean it was Sirius Black, though. Probably Calvin's daft neighbor or the bloody wind, for Merlin's sake…."

Remus excused himself and exited into the Alley proper through the moving wall. He took half a dozen steps before he had to stop again, his breath seizing in his lungs, something cold and painful dragging along his spine. The Ministry had plastered the whole of the English Wizarding quarter with wanted posters; this one was no different from the others, if perhaps positioned a bit higher, illuminated by a convenient lamp. It shouldn't have caught him off guard each time he passed it. Remus stared into the convict's hard, unflinching gray eyes and tried to breathe.

"Marly's pregnant!" A hand grasped his and squeezed. "D'you know what this means?! We're going to be par—!"

Jerking his gaze away, Remus forced his body to shuffle onward. His feet led him through the busy lane until he reached Knockturn, at which point he ducked into the looming warren and meandered until he reached the grubby outer estate bordering the quarter's outer edge. His flat resided above a dowdy pub that didn't actually have a name; Remus assumed it amassed there one night like bio-luminescent fungus attracting drunks moths and no one with any official power had thought to clear it out yet. The volume in the evenings could get rowdy, so the rent for the flat above came at an irresistible discount. Still, Remus wished they weren't quite so loud.

At the top of the steps, he caught sight of something leaning against his door—a copy of the evening Prophet. He bent on instinct to pick it up—then stopped, hand recoiling as if burnt, and straightened once more. Remus unlocked his door, disabled the wards, and stepped over the paper, leaving it on the mat to most likely be nicked by someone passing by. He didn't care.

His flat didn't reflect Remus' person very well; it didn't have a bookcase, a nice desk, or even a comfortable reading chair. It did have a decent enough kitchen, however, and Remus relaxed for the first time in hours when he took out his wand and freely started prepping himself a cup of tea. The tin rattled with the last few dregs of stale honeybush and he rubbed his scarred face, plopping onto a crooked chair by the little table. Remus told himself to get up and go buy some more but he didn't move from his spot. Instead, he leaned back in the chair and shut his eyes. Already thuds and voices echoed from the pub below and Remus listened to the noise, not bothering with a Silencing Charm. It never worked well or for very long.

Just as the first whispers of sleep started to tug at him, a knock came sounded on the door.

Remus frowned. He didn't live in the kind of place where one expected friendly visitors; typically it was the landlord—a rough gentleman from Koldovstoretz, and if a salesman popped by, he would more than likely be selling something dubious, like freshly harvested fingers or other anatomical…ingredients.

It could be the Ministry, Remus considered as he stood, wand in hand, and crossed to the door. He imagined someone, somewhere, would read the news and recall that tall, ragged boy who used to be best mates with that man. Really, Remus had expected them before now—but people had touchy memories, and despite his menacing visage, Remus was as forgettable as they came.

Taking a breath, he twisted the knob and cracked the door ajar. He nearly jumped from his shoes when he peeked out and found a familiar face watching him.

"H-Headmaster!" Remus sputtered in surprise.

"Good evening, Remus. It's a pleasure to see you again."

"W-what can I do for you, sir?"

"Hopefully an old wizard can beg your hospitality for a minute. This isn't a conversation to be had on the threshold."

"Yes, I'm terribly sorry. Where are my manners? Come in, come in."

Albus Dumbledore smiled, the corners of his blue eyes crinkling further, and came inside. He wore plain, russet-colored robes—a very understated choice for the wizard in Remus' opinion. Why was he there? When was the last time Remus had seen him—?

He choked, then swallowed and cleared his throat. He remembered now. The last time he'd laid eyes on the Headmaster, they'd been standing by a grave in Godric's Hollow on a crisp November morning in 1981 and the older wizard had kept his hand on Remus' arm to stop him from shaking into pieces. Professor McGonagall and Hagrid had been present, the latter weeping into an over-sized handkerchief. Snape of all people had been in attendance—well, Remus thought he had. There'd been so many funerals that year. So many.

He shook himself. "Would you care for something to drink, sir?

"Tea would be lovely, thank you."

Remus started toward the kitchen, then stopped. "Oh. I—I'm afraid I don't have any tea at the moment."

"Not a problem! I never go anywhere without my own." Dumbledore's wand appeared in his hand and he gave it a swish, conjuring up a porcelain pot and a kettle that hopped itself onto the hob, settling like a hen over her chicks. "Have a seat, Remus."

He sat, and Dumbledore did as well. As the older wizard returned his wand to his robes, Remus realized he'd been using his left hand and that the sleeve of his right appeared…empty. It fluttered with his movements, the arm inside clearly not in residence. What in the world? An accident, perhaps? He couldn't imagine the kind of accident that could take a man like Dumbledore unawares, but if he'd lost his arm, it had to have been a magical incident. An alchemical project gone wrong? A curse?

"I take it you've seen the news about Mr. Black?"

Remus realized he hadn't stopped staring at the sleeve and forced himself to look away. "…yes. Bit hard to miss."

"Of course. I must apologize for broaching the subject; I imagine it's difficult to discuss your old friend."

"Friend is a strong word, isn't it, professor? We just knew each other in school, that's all."

Headmaster Dumbledore pursed his lips and Remus shut his eyes, ashamed. The water came to a boil and Dumbledore served them each a cup of tea. Merlin, how it burned to lie like that, but it'd become all too common for Remus in the time that had passed since 81', the worst year of his life. Each time he came across an acquaintance he knew in school, they would ask, "Weren't you friends with Sirius Black?" and he would say, "No, you're mistaken." Or they would question, "Do you know whatever happened to Lily and James? Did they stay together? Did they leave the country?" And Remus would say, "No, I believe they died." They didn't ask as often as the years passed, and yet Remus still lied. I didn't know him. I didn't know him. We weren't friends. The Potters died.

He lived with the lies every day. He woke up and shouldered them like an old, hideous pair of robes, his own personal hairshirt, and pretended those years of friendship, war, and tragedy hadn't come to define his daily routine. Nobody really cared what had happened to the Potters. Anyone who thought of Hallowe'en in 1981 remembered only Voldemort and his defeat at the hands of the Longbottom boy. They didn't think of James or of Lily, and if anyone cared to consider Peter, they only shook their heads and muttered, "Poor Pettigrew. Such a tragedy."

They didn't think about those twelve Muggles lost in the blink of an eye. They didn't think about Peter's ailing mother, who couldn't handle the stress of her son's death. Remus was the only one who showed up for her funeral, and for Peter's. No one mourned that gray-eyed boy in a Gryffindor tie who died the moment he deceived everyone who had ever loved him; they immortalized the monster, made up stories, forgot all the good he'd ever done or ever pretended to do. Remus was cursed in more ways than one because he couldn't forget, though he pretended not to care, just like all the rest.

He pretended it didn't plague him still, and he prayed one day for his indifference to be true.

"Is that why you're here, professor?"

"What's that?"

"Are you here because you want to talk about…Black?" Remus didn't want to discuss Black. He never wanted to hear the name again, for as long as he lived.

"No, not explicitly, dear boy." Dumbledore poured a dash of cream and a heavy dollop of sugar into his cup. The conjured dishes crowded around him, eager to serve. "How are you these days, Remus?"

The younger man blinked at the non sequitur. This couldn't possibly be a social visit. "Well enough, I suppose. And yourself?"

"Oh, wonderful as could be. Though, I am a bit less handy these days." The Headmaster chuckled as Remus sucked tea down his air pipe and coughed. "Are you keeping yourself employed? It must be difficult with the Senior Undersecretary's new laws regarding werewolf registration."

Remus twitched at the mention of the word. "Yes, I've…opted to find work in the Muggle world."

"I must say that was a wise choice." Dumbledore set his cup down. "Ah, times are not rosy as others would have us think, my friend. The darkness is everywhere, even at Hogwarts. The students need brave, good hearts like yours, Remus."

"What do mean, professor?"

"Well, I'm here to offer you a job."

Remus' brow rose, stretching his scars. For a moment, he didn't know what to say. "A job?"

"Yes, a job. The post of History of Magic professor. Your NEWTs in the subject were exemplary and I believe you would have no difficulty teaching the subject. The previous professor has seen fit to abandon his post and shed this mortal coil. The Board has not been able to find their own candidate, leaving the position as mine to fill."

"That's—Professor, you couldn't possibly hire me. No one would want me near their children with my—condition. No matter the role."

"But you are not registered, are you, Remus?" The Headmaster peered over the rim of his half-moon spectacles. "Your condition, as you put it, would not need to be known by any but a select few members of staff."

"But it's not safe, sir. I'm—." A monster.

"It would be perfectly safe, I assure you. The current Potions Master is capable of brewing the Wolfsbane Potion. Have you heard of it? He would be—." Dumbledore blinked. "Amenable to producing it, should I ask. With proper administration and availability, you would not pose a threat to my students."

Remus' mouth went dry as the Headmaster spoke and he couldn't seem to unstick his tongue to respond. Of course he'd heard of the Wolfsbane Potion. He'd even tried a dose once, years ago, after applying for an experimental trial done by a budding Potioneer out of Exeter. It had been part of the man's mastery and, unfortunately, it hadn't fully worked as intended—but Remus could recall the sensation, the feel of his own mind slipping over that of the beast's, and it had been…indescribable. He would never be able to afford another dose. The ingredients alone could bankrupt a man, and that was without the cost of preparation and brewing.

"I—." Remus swallowed, his tone thready and weak. He wanted it. Merlin, how he wanted it; a career worthy of his skills, control over himself, a life outside dusty hovels and part-time Muggle jobs. He couldn't. He couldn't. Everything he'd ever touched had died or gone to pot. "I would have to think about it."

Dumbledore nodded, then stood, dismissing his tea service—though Remus noticed the full tin remained on the counter. "Yes, of course. Think on it. I will need your answer soon though, so I do hope you'll owl within the week."

"Yes, Professor."

The older wizard turned to leave. Remus was staring at the table, so the sudden touch on his slumped shoulder startled him. "You are not a monster, Remus," Dumbledore said, his voice soft. It wasn't the first time Remus had wondered if he could read minds. "No matter the phase of the moon. There are far, far worse people out there."

"…thank you, Headmaster."

"You may call me Albus, you know." Dumbledore patted his shoulder. "Be sure to write."

The door opened, then closed. Distantly, Remus heard the faint 'pop!' of Disapparition and he released the shuddering breath held captive in his chest. Dumbledore hadn't stayed for more than half an hour, and yet he'd tipped Remus' world on its ear. A job. A chance.

Hogwarts. His heart swelled in his chest at the mere thought of the old castle, the green forest and the dark, rippling waters of the lake. Could he go back? Could he really return and not lose himself to the memories? No one remembered the Potters. No one remembered Sir—Black, or Peter. No one gave a thought to that wicked fire that took Marlene and E—.

Somebody had to remember, didn't they? Somebody had to remember so they wouldn't be lost forever.

He rose and stumbled into the bedroom, where he sat on the edge of his bed and, after a pause, gave in to the urge to open the nightstand's drawer. From inside, he pulled out a folded photograph, and with slow, careful movements, Remus opened it just enough to peer at the image of a small, black-haired toddler in her mother's arms.

He had already made his choice.

x X x

Not terribly far from that London flat, a black dog slunk through a darkened lane on his way to see his goddaughter.

He came to a stop behind a bin to wait for a dotty old bat in carpet slippers to trundle past. His nose scrunched as he watched her, the smell of cats almost as thick as the smell of rubbish coming off the bin. He waited, and when the woman's vague muttering dwindled, he darted out from his hiding place and hurried past Wisteria Walk along Magnolia Crescent, pausing only to circle and sniff a sign that read 'Privet Drive.'

It looked just as it did in Sirius' head—ridiculously Muggle and plain, with that itchy feeling all wizards and witches felt in the presence of too much electricity. He'd visited once more than a decade ago; Lily had been a few months pregnant and visiting her sister, for what reason, he couldn't recall. The details had long since gone fuzzy. He'd come roaring up the drive on his motorcycle to pick her up because she couldn't Apparate and James had been called off by the Aurory—he didn't know why. All he really remembered was Lily's sister, Petunia, and her horrified face upon spotting him loitering by their house. The bint had been gobsmacked as if he'd stripped starkers and gone frolicking through her begonias.

Good times, he thought, panting. Good times.

Sirius padded up one walk and then another, sniffing plants and bushes, pretending he was an average stray minding his own business. He didn't rightly remember the number of the house but it hadn't been far from the corner…right? Things muddled themselves in his mind, bouncing about like pixies in a sack. He kept his nose down and sniffing, trying to find some hint of Harriet. Would he remember what she smelled like after all these years? Would she recognize Padfoot? Would he recognize her?

He trampled through the flowerbeds of Number Four, making a full circle of the garden before passing under the open den window. He stopped upon hearing a familiar, nasally voice.

"—matter, this is our home, and we won't have any of your sort in here!"

"Damn straight," echoed a louder male voice. "The wretched girl isn't even here! This nonsense with this Black fellow—."

Sirius peeked over the sill, unable to help himself. He recognized Petunia right off, and the fat bloke at her side had to be her husband—Vern? Bernie? Dursley. There were two others, though, that he hadn't thought to find; Emmie Vance and bloody Diggle, the wacky tosser! They'd been in the Order and both had been a pleasant sort, Diggle a bit too eccentric for even Sirius' taste, but pleasant all the same. They didn't appear pleasant at the moment, however. Both stared down the Dursleys like they'd spotted a nasty bug on the carpet.

"Whether or not Harriet is here is immaterial," Vance said, her tone cool enough to droop Sirius' tail. "You're related to her and Black knows she was sent to you."

Outside, Sirius huffed, breath fogging the glass. Oh, shite. She's not here?

"We're here for your family's protection, Mr. and Mrs. Dursley," Diggle squeaked.

The bloated Muggle hauled himself to his feet, his face gone red as a beet. "You listen here!" he thundered, pointing one sausage finger at Diggle, who stumbled and lost his garish top hat. "We don't need your sort coming round here, hanging on the bell at all hours—!"

Someone tossed out a Silencing Charm—sending both Muggles into hysterics—and Sirius decided it was time to leave. Disappointment weighed him down, but he stiffened his spine and set off at an easy lope, no one taking note of the great black dog running down the street. If Harriet wasn't here, then it was time to move on.

He had to get to Hogwarts.


A/N: Yay, Remus!

Chapter 107: the burrow

Chapter Text

cvii. the burrow

 

Harriet ran for her life.

She couldn’t remember when she began running; from one moment to the next she became aware of her pumping arms, her straining legs, her sore feet. The corridor spiraled on before her like unraveled yarn. It was cold, her breath cutting and sharp as it filled her lungs, but a fire flickered outside the windows. Fire, and something else, something black and shapeless like a moonless night sweeping over the countryside, coming closer and closer and—.

Harriet ran. She ran while the stone walls twisted, the bookshelves buckled, splintered, frayed. She recognized the Aerie only in the vaguest sense; everything had gone wrong with it, the ceiling a teeming mass of eagle bones screaming and calling, “Harriet Potter, Harriet Potter, Harriet Potter—.”

Let me in,” the voice cackled. Glass cracked behind her but Harriet didn’t look. “Let me in, LET ME IN—.”

She crashed into something heavy and solid, gasping aloud when her back landed on the floor. Weight wrapped around her, pinning her arms—coils, snake coils thicker than tree trunks squeezed the air from her chest. Harriet kicked her feet and tried to wriggle free to no avail. The shadow rose over her, higher and higher until it bowed its unnatural neck and stared at her with eyes like red, gaping maws rimmed in fangs instead of lashes.

You are nothing,” the voice hissed. The snake squeezed tighter and tighter still. “A worthlessss, forgotten girl, left to die in the rubble.

Harriet slammed her eyes shut and clawed at the coil wrapped around her neck.

An insssignificant worm!

It’s not real, she told herself, holding her breath, her heart racing. It’s not real—.

LET ME IN!

“No!” she shouted—and suddenly Harriet sat up, gasping, in the quiet of the Flamels’ guest bedroom. She gulped in air and trembled, the blankets kicked down by her feet. How Elara managed to stay asleep next to her she’d never know. On the nightstand, Kevin and Rick curled about a gray brick Charmed to stay warm and Harriet knew Livi would be coiled somewhere underneath the bed, fast asleep. Moonlight stole through the window and the shadows parted the milky glow; Set formed on the wall and seemed to turn to Harriet, considering her. They observed one another for a long moment before he vanished again, leaving only the spindly outlines of tree branches shivering in the breeze.

Harriet extended one small hand to cast her own shadow and stared at the shape of her blurred fingers.

“Set,” she whispered as her heart slowed. There was no answer.

As she’d grown older these last few years, Set had shown himself to Harriet less and less, appearing and disappearing at his own unknowable will, sometimes going before Harriet had the chance to realize he’d been there at all. Harriet didn’t know how she felt about that. It seemed like Set had been with her forever, from her earliest memories in the cupboard, doing chores about the garden or the house, hiding in the loo from the mean girls and Dudley in primary. But now he faded more and more or acted less and less, replaced by real, physical people in Harriet’s life, and it…scared and relieved her in equal measures.

It was frightening to let go of what she knew, but relieving to think she might be normal—or as normal as a girl like her could be. True, she hadn’t done much research on Set, but Harriet had never heard of anything like him before in the Wizarding world and had never considered telling Elara or Hermione about him. She worried they’d think her mad or—possessed or something.

Another part of Harriet agonized over the idea that maybe she was possessed or she was mad.

The nightmare faded as they always did, chipped away piece by piece until all Harriet could remember was the terror and churning unease, the amorphous mass of an unknown entity hunting her in her mindscape. She twisted and dropped her legs over the bed’s side, standing, and glanced once at Elara to ensure she remained asleep before slipping her feet into an untied pair of trainers, snatching up her glasses, and leaving the room.

No matter the time of day or night, the Flamel house was never really quiet. Not fully, at least. Harriet could always hear a popping or a humming sound coming from one of the rooms and the surrounding countryside echoed with sound from the village and the crash of ocean waves. During the day, Mr. Flamel made a lot of noise in his study and Perenelle chattered even if no one stopped to listen. Harriet liked it—she liked them, their home, and the whisper of magic they imbued in even the most mundane of things.

She tip-toed down the hall to the front door, pausing when the hinges creaked and complained. Harriet stepped out into the garden and shut the door behind her, but she didn’t wander far. No, she stepped off the path, shuffling through the wet grass, and dropped her backside onto an iron bench set by a lurking hedge. The cold night air cut through her sweaty t-shirt and flannel pants and Harriet shivered, crossing her arms against her middle. The click of bones coming together gave her pause and she tugged out her necklace, settling the crow’s skull in the palm of her hand.

She’d named it Hugh.

Harriet held Hugh up and ran her fingers against the cuts and grooves of the runes carved into the bone. They shone red, the crow gone off early in the evening with another letter bound for Hermione, but soon they’d be black once more.

Hinges creaked and she turned her head to see Mr. Flamel stepping outside, the wizard glancing about until he spotted Harriet on the bench and the stiffness went out of his shoulders. He still had on the clothes from the day prior and looked frumpier than he had earlier, which meant he’d definitely not gone to bed yet. His hair stuck up in all directions like Harriet’s did when it was cut too short, and the shadow of his beard had grown from a suggestion to a thick outline. Harriet guessed he’d fallen asleep at his desk. Again.

“‘Arriet, what are you doing out here?” Flamel asked.

“Sorry. I had a bad dream.” She shrugged her skinny shoulders. “I just wanted to clear my head.”

Mr. Flamel didn’t reply, but he did leave the cottage and shut the door, coming out into the garden to sit next to Harriet on the bench. “Is it anything you wish to talk about?”

Again, Harriet shrugged. “I can’t remember what happened. It’s just—a feeling, y’know? I wake up and, I dunno, it makes me want to be sick.”

Mr. Flamel studied her for a moment, his eyes flicking once toward her neck then away. “Ah, I know what it is you mean. You are taking Divination this term, oui?”

Puzzled by the question, Harriet nonetheless said, “Yeah. That and Care of Magical Creatures and Ancient Runes.”

“All good choices. You should ask your Divination professor to teach you about lucid dreaming. It is something I ‘ave no talent for, but it said to…help.”

Harriet nodded and thanked him for the advice. She stared at her shoes, the laces limp as noodles in the dark, trodden grass, mud creeping up around the treads. Mr. Flamel looked toward the trees, lost in thought, leaning forward to rest his elbows upon his knees, his posture tired and relaxed. They enjoyed the quiet together for a time, until Mr. Flamel reached into the pocket of his waistcoat and pulled out a small vial.

The vial itself wasn’t much to look at; Harriet was certain she had half a dozen just like it in her potions kit, the lid sealed with a simple cork, the glass thick and unlabeled. What the vial held made it truly remarkable, and Harriet gawked as she watched the small measure of red liquid gleam like crimson sunlight gilded in gold, seeming both solid and fluid at once, glittering in Mr. Flamel’s rough palm. The wizard uncapped the vial and pressed his thumb to the lid, tipping it once so a single drop formed on his fingertip, looking like a smooth red pearl. Without care, Mr. Flamel pressed the thumb to his lips and licked it clean.

Harriet gazed at the vial, realizing what she was looking at. Fear swirled in her middle and bubbled like a bad potion.

There’s so little left.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered, and Mr. Flamel looked around as if he’d forgotten she was there. Harriet couldn’t bring herself to look at him. In her head, she could still hear the crunch of the Mirror of Erised shattering, shards pinging off the stones as Quirrell fell amid the ruin. More than one life was lost that afternoon. “I’m sorry for what happened to the Stone. It was my fault—.”

He raised his hand and cut off her apology with a wave. “Non. I have said before it was not your fault, Harriet. You cannot apologize for the evils of others.”

Harriet had nothing to say to that. Mr. Flamel turned the vial in this hand so what little of the elixir lingered in the glass crawled up the sides and threatened to spill out. “It is okay. I have been alive a very long time, and what I ‘ave learned best is that nothing is forever. I could remake the Stone—it is not as if I forgot how, oui? But I won’t. Others would disagree, but I think it best such a thing is not brought back into this world and should instead remain lost. Mortality is a precious thing, petit oiseau. One day we all meet our end and it makes what time we ‘ave all the more important. To deny death forever is to cheapen our lives and the people who make it special.”

He replaced the cork and pushed it into place, sighing. “Perenelle and I ‘ave lived for more than six hundred years. I do not believe most can conceive of it, the things we have seen, the way the world has changed. It is exaltant, and terrifying, but our families, our friends, they are all gone. We have lost everyone. I would not trade the memories I have made with zem for anything, but it….” Mr. Flamel shut his eyes. “It has been difficile. So difficult. It wears upon the heart to know those you come to love will go on without you one day. Immortality is not real, Harriet. If it was, I would pity the one cursed with it.”

Harriet squeezed Hugh’s skull and held it close. The vial disappeared back into Mr. Flamel’s waistcoat, secreted away from the world once more. The wind came again, colder now, a subtle reminder that the summer would end soon. September was coming.

For once, Harriet didn’t want to return to Hogwarts. At Privet Drive, school had been its own kind of torture, but it had provided sanctuary away from her aunt’s sharp tongue and Uncle Vernon’s threatening presence, and Hogwarts was—well, Hogwarts was home despite all the danger Harriet had and would continue to encounter there. Here though, in Trefhud, Harriet had experienced what it would be like to have a real family for the first time in her life.

She’d seen what it was like from the outside before, watching Aunt Petunia and Uncle Vernon and Dudley. A mother, a father, and a son doted upon at every turn. Harriet had never been doted on before. Mr. Flamel wasn’t her dad and Perenelle wasn’t her mum and yet…in her heart of hearts, she wished it could be true. The only mother and father she’d ever known resided six feet under and Harriet wanted to keep this for herself because next summer would be different. Black would be back in prison and she and Elara would go back to Grimmauld Place. Like a bubble doomed to burst, this interlude could not last.

It had almost been a month and September loomed. The days slipped through her fingers like loose sand on the beach, the final taste of childhood savored and now bound for memory. Time was inexorable, as Hermione would say. Harriet was no longer a child and even if she visited Trefhud again, things would not be the same. She would not be the same.

“Y’know, when I first learned about ghosts, I was…angry,” she told Mr. Flamel.

“How so?”

“Because…because my mum and dad didn’t come back to take care of me. When I learned they must’ve had a choice, I—. It was selfish, but I was upset. I didn’t tell anybody, didn’t even want to admit it to myself. How could they go on without me? I was angry, and Voldemort—he knew that. He used it against me, tried to tempt me, and I was tempted. Sometimes I’m afraid I’ll be tempted again, but I know better now. I know nothing is forever.”

Oui. It is a thing you have learned too young, but oui.”

It was grower colder, the night deeper and darker than before. The starlight felt so very far away.

Mr. Flamel straightened and stood. “This conversation is too serious for it being so late. Back to bed with you now, petit oiseau. Time to lay such weary thoughts aside. You need to be well-rested! We have dueling practice again tomorrow….”

 

x X x

 

It was decided that Harriet and Elara would not spend the last two days of the holiday with Mr. and Mrs. Flamel. Harriet didn’t know who exactly made the decision—though she expected it had been a pooled consensus more than anything and had the ridiculous image in her head of the adults in her life sitting around a table casting ballots on her life. She knew she and Elara needed to visit Diagon Alley for their school supplies and couldn’t go with the Flamels; visiting the Night Market was one thing, but skipping about the heart of the British Wizarding quarter with two world-renowned alchemists in tow wouldn’t be prudent for either of them.

Harriet knew that, but she didn’t have to like it.

Their possessions were packed back in their trunks, clothes cleaned and folded, mud Vanished from the bottom of their shoes. Cygnus returned to his cage and Harriet made her snakes comfortable in their terrarium, though Livius remained displeased, the Horned Serpent not keen on leaving the prey-rich forest surrounding the seaside village. Item by item and inch by inch, they retracted their presence from the cottage until the guest room looked just as it did before, as if they’d never been there at all.

The Flamels Apparated the two witches to a small road not terribly far from Trefhud, to another part of Devon near a Muggle village called Ottery St. Catchpole. It was outside any magical community and Harriet could spy powerline poles popping up over the swaying fields and woods. The house itself was definitely magical, made of a hodgepodge of rooms stacked atop each other at impossible angles, leaning a bit too far to the left, chickens scratching about the garden, pecking at dry earth. Harriet could hear the wireless playing through an open window.

“Here we are,” Mr. Flamel said, glancing over the house—’The Burrow,’ as a crooked sign on the gate proclaimed it to be. Elara shared Harriet’s dubious look and they both grimaced—not because of the house, but rather the idea of having to leave the Flamels and spend two days with near-strangers instead. Harriet didn’t know any of the Weasleys outside of Ginny; she and Ron weren’t friends, she’d shared maybe a handful of words with the twins, and Ginny had told her Percy Weasley had been made Head Boy, which meant he was going to be a right pain in the arse for Slytherin House next term. Harriet like meeting new people well-enough but Elara disliked strangers and had been more moody than usual since the Flamels told them of their early departure.

The Flamels pulled them into a hug a piece, Harriet wrinkling her nose when Perenelle kissed both her cheeks. Both alchemists held on tight and seemed reluctant to let go, though that could have been Harriet’s imagination. “Keep up with your letters, oui?” Mr. Flamel told her, a warm hand on her shoulder. “Write if you need anything. Stay safe—that goes for the both of you.”

Harriet and Elara muttered their acquiescence and, at the Flamels’ insistence, they passed through the garden gate and started toward the house’s door. Harriet stepped onto the porch and looked back; standing together, the Flamels waved and, after a moment of hesitation, Disapparated into thin air.

Elara stopped on the first step and glared at a chicken. Harry felt sorry for the poor bird.

“Are you all right?”

“I’m fine,” Elara replied, her tone rather short, her face a bit green from traveling. “I’m just annoyed at being handed off like luggage and taken in out of pity.”

“It’s not pity.” Harriet paused because she couldn’t be sure it wasn’t pity, really. “Err, well. It’s not forever. Just until Black’s captured, and then you’ll be safe again and we can go back to Grimmauld.”

Elara closed her eyes and, for half a second, Harriet thought she saw a flash of pain cross her face. “Let’s just get inside.”

“…Okay.”

Harriet rapped her knuckles against the door. A moment later it opened, revealing an older, red-headed witch on the other side. She wore an apron over her patched robes and flour smudged her plump cheek.

“Oh, you must be Harriet and Elara! The Headmaster said you’d be here this morning, but I didn’t think you’d be this early. Come in, come in!”

The witch waved them inside and Harriet stepped into a warm kitchen smelling of cooked bread and bacon, the skillet and spatula on the hob Charmed to move on their own, the announcer on the wireless chatting on about the expected weather. It actually reminded Harriet quite a bit of the Flamels’ house, except where the items there exuded mystique and whismy, the Weasley house had a practical feel to it, everything in its place and with its own purpose. An empty owl perch waited by the open window, a bunch of lettered jumpers hung on the line outside. A book of household Charms lay open on the cluttered counter.

“You can put your owl here if you’d like, dear. We’re not expecting Errol back until later.” The witch took a tea towel from the table to wipe her hands.

As Elara let Cygnus out of his cage, Harriet said, “Thank you for having us, Mrs. Weasley.”

“You’re most welcome! Call me Molly, if you’d like. Now, tell me if I have this right—.” She pointed first at Harriet, then Elara. “You’re Harriet, yes? And you’re Elara?”

They nodded.

“Excellent. You’re just as Ginny described. She and the others should be down soon enough. Breakfast won’t be ready for a bit, but if you’re peckish, I can whip something up?”

“Err, I think we’re fine—?”

“Or maybe just a snack? Have a seat, let me get tea started….”

All too soon, they found themselves seated at the table with tea, biscuits, and juice, begging off the helping of pancakes Mrs. Weasley tried to press on them before she resumed her station in the kitchen. A few minutes later, stairs creaked somewhere in the house and a wizard passed through the swinging door, thinner and taller than Mrs. Weasley, his red-hair thinning at the crown of his head. Mr. Weasley spotted them right off and started, surprised by their presence. Mrs. Weasley came to his rescue.

“This is Harriet and Elara, Arthur. Ginny’s friends. This is my husband, Arthur.”

“Right! I’d forgotten Albus said you’d be staying with us for a few days.” Mr. Weasley shook their hands, his puzzled expression replaced with a welcoming one. “Nice to meet you both. Having a lovely summer? Just the tea, Molls, I’ve got to be off soon….”

Mr. Weasley joined them at the table with his own cuppa, asking after their holiday while Harriet skirted the details on where they’d been exactly and instead asked about Mr. Weasley’s work, which was apparently at the Ministry and involved something with cursed Muggle artifacts. “Magic makes Muggle objects go wonky, you see?” he explained. “Something about the exposure to a new element, but they go over that more at Hogwarts. Do you know anything about Muggles…?”

They conversed for a while, avoiding the proverbial elephant in the room that was Sirius Black’s daughter spreading butter on a hot crumpet. Harriet wondered if the Weasleys knew who Elara was, but she decided they must, if only because Professor Dumbledore would want them to be wary in case Elara’s dad came looking for her. Not that he will, she reminded herself. He can’t know she’s here at the Burrow, after all.

Ginny was the first of the children to come rattling down the steps and she hugged both Harriet and Elara, exclaiming happily about them visiting. Next came the twins, Fred and George, who grinned in mirrored mischievousness.

“Oi, mum, there’s a pair of snakes at the table!”

“Never a good sign to have snakes in the house, is it, George?”

“Never.”

“Boys,” Mr. Weasley said with a warning look in his eye. “Be polite.”

“Yeah,” Ginny piped up. “Stop being berks.”

“Ginny! Watch your language!”

Next came Ronald and, to Harriet’s displeasure, Neville Longbottom, who had the good sense not to say anything about their presence because Harriet thought Elara might chuck her hot tea in the prat’s face if he did. Percy was the last to arrive, strutting about with a shiny Head Boy badge pinned to the front of his pajamas—though strutting was a strong word, considering how crowded the kitchen had become in a matter of minutes. Plates of food had to be passed around the table, extra chairs conjured, pitchers of milk, pumpkin juice, and coffee making their rounds.

Harriet already missed Trefhud but this was…surprisingly nice. Comfortable. The Weasleys were kinder than she’d expected them to be.

Mr. Wealsey went off to work, Disapparating from the road like the Flamels had. Mrs. Weasley rebuffed Harriet’s offer to help with the dishes and Ginny instead showed them about the house, chatting about her summer abroad in Egypt. “We just got back a few days ago,” she said, flipping her long hair back over her shoulder. “That’s why Ron still looks like a tomato. It was fun, but Mum wouldn’t let me go see the ancient Wizarding tombs even with Bill there. Oh, Bill’s my oldest brother—he’s a Curse-Breaker for Gringotts. Have I told you that before? No? He gets to see all sorts of things. Anyway, I’m excited to visit Diagon tomorrow. Luna said she should be able to meet us there, if her dad ever lets her out of the bloody house again. Have you heard from Hermione? Will she be there as well…?”

Ginny finished the tour by showing off her own room on the upper floor, two extra camp beds already set up and waiting. Harriet and Elara took their shrunken trunks from their pockets and resized them, which immediately took up what remaining space could be found. They split ways from there, Elara deciding on a nap while Harriet went outside with Ginny to help her feed the chickens. They spotted Neville and Ron in the garden taking care of the gnomes, and when Fred and George came out, they all begged off their chores and headed into the neighboring orchard, behind which resided a small, makeshift Quidditch pitch.

Harriet didn’t have her Nimbus—because it technically wasn’t her Nimbus—so she took turns with the rest of the Weasleys on their rickety Cleansweeps. Neville had his Nimbus Two-Thousand but left it aside, given how it outstripped the others too much and the pitch didn’t have much room to maneuver around. Hovering at the tops of the trees, Harriet could glimpse the roofs of the Muggle village waiting much too close for them to get careless.

The afternoon wore on as the Weasleys, Longbottom, and Harriet played pick-up matches of three-on-three teams, two Chasers and a Keeper each, no Beaters or Seekers. It was fun to forget about the first of the month coming upon them in just two days, and no one said a word about Sirius Black, which Harriet appreciated. They ate cheese sandwiches at lunch sitting in the tall, browning grass, and they only came in for supper when Mrs. Weasley herself came from the house and waved them down. Elara had spent the afternoon debating the efficacy of astrological predictions with Percy and both bore the twins’ resulting teasing with ill-suited grace. Mr. Weasley returned just as Mrs. Weasley dished out the food—bowls of a tasty beef stew—and they all tucked in.

It was later, after she’d washed and readied for bed, that Harriet chanced a look into her trunk to feed and check on the snakes.

“Ginny’s in the lavatory,” Elara mumbled from where she’d stretched out on her bed, reading a letter from her solicitor. “You won’t get another opportunity tonight.”

“Yeah.” Harriet undid the latch for the proper compartment and lifted the lid, poking her head inside to look down into the illuminated depths. She’d positioned the terrarium at the bottom of the ladder so she needn’t go inside to see her familiar—but when Harriet glanced downward, all she spotted was an empty glass box of sand and stones and a lone teacup.

“Livi?’ she said, holding the trunk’s edge so she could stick her head inside. “Livius?”

Rick and Kevin stirred from their cup, raising their little heads to peer curiously at Harriet hanging above them.

Where’s Livi?

Gone,” Rick reported.

Harriet choked. “What do you mean ‘gone’?!

The big one isss not here, Misstresss,” Kevin added, swaying. “He doesss not like the box.

Doesss not like it at all, Misstresss.

Hasss gone exploring.

Harriet snapped the lid shut and began to panic. “Livius!” she hissed. Elara lowered her letter.

“What is it?”

“That great bloody arse of a snake got out somehow!” she said, rushing over to Ginny’s bed to check underneath of it, riffling through the knitted blankets. “Oh, shite! If one of the Weasleys find him—.”

“He did manage to escape the Menagerie,” Elara pointed out. She left Harriet to her searching. “It was only a matter of time before he got out of the trunk. That and he can become invisible.”

“Yes, I know that!” Harriet rushed to the door and popped it open, peeking into the dim hallway. “Livius, get back here!

Her familiar didn’t answer, but when she managed to take a breath and calm her pounding heart, Harriet thought she heard the softest whisper of scales scraping wood—the sound coming from somewhere above her. “Livi? Livi, I swear I’m going to take you back to the bloody store one of these days—.”

Harriet hurried up the stairs, walking as silently as she could past the shut doors leading into the Weasleys’ rooms. Some of the steps creaked and she felt certain someone would come out at any second and find her sneaking about like a thief or a creep, but thankfully her luck held until she neared the top floor. She walked by a loo door, the water running inside, just in time see a familiar tail—a familiar, visible tail—slipping into an open room.

Merlin, whose room is that again? I hope it’s not Mrs. Weasley’s. Livi’s going to give that poor woman a heart attack.

“Potter?”

“Ah!”

Harriet almost jumped out of her skin when Longbottom spoke from behind her, the Gryffindor standing on the landing by the shut loo door carrying what looked like a stack of freshly cleaned laundry. He took in Harriet’s pale, startled complexion and narrowed his eyes. “…What are you doing?”

“Nothing.”

“It doesn’t look like nothing.”

Harriet scowled. “Mind your own business, Longbottom.”

“It is my business when you’re standing outside my room like a sweaty stalker.”

“You’d know all about stalking, wouldn’t you?” she quipped, fighting the color rising in her cheeks. “You sure got your fill of it last term—.”

From inside the room came a sudden, panicked squeaking and low hiss. Harriet lurched away from Longbottom and rushed inside, almost tripping on the top step, and found her Horned Serpent by one of the two beds inspecting a glass fishbowl. The bowl didn’t hold a fish, but rather a fat brown rat now scurrying for its life as the looming reptile watched, his blue eyes wide and gleaming in the lantern light. In a way, Harriet was lucky it was Longbottom who’d caught her searching, since he at least knew about Livius after seeing him in the Aerie.

“Bloody hell, Potter! What’s your familiar doing in here?!”

Livius!

Misstresss,” the snake finally acknowledged.

What have I said about eating other peoples’ pets?!

I wasss not eating,” he said, forked tongue flickering. The rat hadn’t stopped circling and squeaked all the louder when Livi nosed the glass, but it stopped upon seeing Harriet. “I would not eatsss it. Sss…the prey sssmellsss…wrong.

You’re not supposed to leave the trunk while we’re here! You’re gonna get me in so much trouble….” Harriet picked up his tail and gathered the serpent up like a heavy coil of unwound rope. Neville watched from the doorway, torn between irritation and frank terror as the small witch hefted a large, venomous creature into her arms like an errant puppy. Livi, for his part, went without complaint, though he never stopped watching the rat. “Listen, Longbottom. I, uhm, sorry about this, he’s really quite well-behaved normally….”

“Just get it out of here before Ron gets back. Merlin!”

Harriet did as he said, chastising her familiar as she went. Neither she nor Longbottom gave much thought to the rat—but the rat gave much thought to her. Beady little eyes watched the girl disappear to the landing and the darkened stairs beyond, watching until she faded from sight.

His nose twitched in curiosity.


A/N: A few people mentioned Dumbledore is awful for not telling Remus about Elara, but I have to ask: why would he? Dumbledore doesn’t know everything about everyone’s personal lives. The story looks at and explores the dynamic of the Sirius-Remus-Elara Depression Triangle and I don’t want to give it all away, so I’ll just say Dumbledore doesn’t know that Elara would mean anything to Remus; if anything, he probably expects Remus would hate her if he knew she was Sirius’ kid and is protecting Elara by not telling him.

Chapter 108: mischief maker

Chapter Text

cviii. mischief maker

 

It took only ten minutes for the morning to descend into chaos.

Harriet woke early as she usually did and went about getting herself ready for the day, squeezing around the extra beds in Ginny’s room to get her clothes and find the loo. Once clean and passably presentable, she dithered on the dim landing until she decided to head down to the kitchen. Mrs. Weasley joined her there only a few moments later, taking over the tea preparation, shooing Harriet off to have a seat at the table. Then, Mrs. Weasley started waking up the house.

They were set to go to Diagon Alley that day and, according to Molly, spend the evening at the Leaky Cauldron so they could make it to the station tomorrow in a timely—and safe—manner. The Weasleys descended to the kitchen in a loud, braying mass of tired complaints and clumsy stumbling after Mrs. Weasley went and banged on more than a few doors. Breakfast got underway and trunks came whizzing down the stairs—but Ron and Neville hadn’t finished packing, so they had to run back up, and then Ginny misplaced her trainers and those had to be summoned—and then Cygnus frightened the Weasley owl, Errol, so badly, the elderly bird flopped over face-first into the porridge and left a mess of molted feathers behind.

All in all, Harriet found it a relief to escape into the garden after cleaning her dishes.

“Hey, Potter! Got a second?”

She glanced over from the hedge to see Fred and George dropping their trunks with Percy’s by the gate. She thought the one who’d called her name might be George, but she wasn’t certain. “Yeah?”

“There’s a rumor goin’ round about you,” George said as he and his brother wandered over to her.

The hair on the back of her neck prickled. Uh-oh. “Err—what’re you on about?”

“Word is you can get through those Moon Mirrors like ol’ Snape can.”

“Oh.” Harriet let out a relieved breath. She’d worried they knew about her talking to snakes—or any of the other numerous secrets she wasn’t supposed to let others know about. Sometimes all the lies got muddled. “I mean—I don’t know what you mean.”

Fred propped his arm on her shoulder and leaned on it. Harriet had a feeling she wouldn’t like what he had to say. “See, that’s not what we heard. Is it, George?”

“Not at all, Freddie.”

We heard you have a bit of a…snakey talent—.”

“A talent of the linguistic sort—.”

“That lets you get through.”

Harriet gaped—and, all at once, heat rushed into her face. “I’ll kill Longbottom,” she seethed, fully intending to march right back into the house and hex the blighter. What was he thinking?! In hindsight, she probably should have feigned ignorance and told the twins she didn’t understand what they meant—but even if it wasn’t true, they’d undoubtedly believe Neville over her!

“Oh, don’t go cursing poor Neville,” Fred told her.

“Because we heard it from Ronnikins.”

Ron?!”

“Who, on further thought, probably did hear it from Neville in the first place, I reckon.”

Groaning, pure dread sunk through Harriet like a stone in water as she imagined the repercussions of this rumor getting out. Well, Snape would probably murder her whether or not it was her fault and Dumbledore would be disappointed—which was somehow worse. If Slytherin found out…. “You can’t tell anybody,” she said, deciding to ditch ignorance and emphasize the severity of the situation. “I’m serious. Longbottom wasn’t supposed to go telling Ron anything!”

“Well, what are you willing to give us to stay quiet, eh?”

Again, heat blazed in Harriet’s face and prickled along her neck. Bloody Gryffindors! “I’m not giving you shite!” she snapped. “I’ll just go tell Snape and he’ll Obliviate you both! So, bully for you!”

Fred lifted his arm off her shoulder and held up both his hands. “Whoa, hang about! We were just having a laugh!”

“Didn’t mean anything by it! No need to turn us into the Dungeon Bat.”

“We actually wanted to propose a trade, if you’re interested.” George reached into the front pocket of his jumper and pulled out a folded bit of parchment, the color of it off with age, the edges softened and a bit tattered.

Harriet narrowed her eyes and crossed her arms, still peeved. “What’s this, then? A spare bit of parchment?”

Fred tutted under his breath as he withdrew his wand from his trousers. “Hear that, George? ‘A spare bit of parchment!’ Come on, Potter, have you no faith in us at all? I’m shocked.”

“Shocked and wounded, Freddie.”

“Shocked and wounded.” Fred held his wand over the parchment and said, “I solemnly swear I am up to no good!” before giving it a sharp tap.

Harriet couldn’t help but lean in closer as smudges of black ink appeared on the paper and spiraled outward, forming letters and shapes. “’Messrs. Moony, Wormtail, Padfoot, and Prongs, Purveyors of Aids to Magical Mischief-Makers, are proud to present the Marauder’s Map.’ The Marauder’s Map? What’s this?”

“You’re in for a treat!”

“And it’s a secret, too! If that makes you feel better.”

“We haven’t shown it to anyone. Just you, our favorite Slytherin.”

“You’re our favorite because you beat up Ronnikins.”

“I didn’t—.” Harriet huffed. “Just tell me what it is.”

“Right you are.” George pressed the parchment into Harriet’s hands and she realized it was thicker than she originally thought, folded into numerous flaps and creases, the ink sprawled over the flat surfaces seeming to teem under her fingertips. After a moment of inspection, she let out a soft breath of surprise.

“That’s the Transfiguration corridor,” Harriet said. “This is a map of Hogwarts.”

“Yup,” Fred replied, popping the last letter.

“D’you two make this?”

“Nah.” George wore a toothy grin as he admitted, “Nicked it in our first year out of Filch’s office. Dropped a load of Dungbombs and pulled it from a drawer. It took a bit of finesse to figure out how it works—but oh, was it worth the effort. You’re missing the best part. Here—it’s hard to tell, given school hasn’t started yet, but look.” He reached out and folded a few flaps about, stopping when he found what he was looking for. Harriet had to squint slightly to see a pair of footprints in a room labeled, ‘Staff Lounge.’ Above the footprints hovered a tiny unfurled banner, and in the banner was the name, ‘Minerva McGonagall.’

“Wait, wait,” Harriet sputtered. “Does this map actually tell you where people are in the castle, too?”

“Yup!”

“That’s wicked.” She paused. “A bit creepy, too, if I’m being honest.”

Fred and George wore mirrored chagrined expressions. “Well, it can be, I guess,” Fred admitted. “But me and George here never used it to watch or—stalk anyone.” The mention of stalking pricked Harriet’s nerves, her mind flashing back to all those times she spotted Longbottom lurking in the corner of her eye, following her from class to class. “Like the title there says, we use it to help make a spot of mischief.”

Harriet hummed, neither agreeing nor disagreeing as she continued to inspect the map. She spotted Headmaster Dumbledore and Professor Flitwick in the Charms classroom, and on the fifth floor there seemed to be a meeting going on with a bunch of people she didn’t know. Board members, maybe? “Does this really have everywhere at Hogwarts on it?”

“We thought so, originally. It does have most everything, yeah—.”

“Loads of secret passages in and out of school, tons of rooms we’d have never seen otherwise—.”

“But there’s also loads that it doesn’t have, which is why we’ve come to you….”

Harriet wasn’t listening. Blood fled her head, leaving her ghastly pale, her ears roaring as if she’d done one too many loops on her broom. She’d turned a flap and found a name she never wanted to see again. “Why….” She swallowed, her tongue dry and tacky. “Why does it say Tom Riddle?”

Fred and George peered at the map. “Oh, that’s Slytherin, in his office. It always says that—see, we either think that’s his real name—.” Fred snorted. “—or the Map’s a bit dodgy. It’s old, innit? Charms can get iffy as they age. A couple of times we’ve seen names that aren’t right—or it’s shown people who’re—well—dead and not there.”

Harriet swallowed again, blinking, trying to shake her sudden shock. Tom Riddle. Headmaster Dumbledore told her Professor Slytherin and Gaunt and—and him, the Diadem, were all the same person, but also not, all of them some kind of magical copy of one another with disparate identities and goals. Harriet still didn’t understand, but seeing the man’s name on the map chilled her to her core. She felt cold despite the sunshine. “I, uh…what d’you want with me? Why show me this?”

“We want to trade.” George slipped the map from her clammy hands and Fred gave it another tap with his wand, saying, “Mischief Managed!” The ink dissolved back into the parchment. “We’ve had the map for years, you see, so we’ve got most of it memorized. It’d be difficult for us to let go—but what we’re really keen on is those Moon Mirrors.”

Tearing her eyes away from the blank map, Harriet looked up at two fifth-years. “But you can’t use them.”

“We could if you taught us. Ron said all you had to do was tell them to open in Parseltongue. We should be able to mimic it, right?”

Her brow lowered. “How much did bloody Longbottom—? Never mind. It’s not that easy. I don’t know if I could teach you how to open them, and I haven’t had much of a chance to explore the passages. There’s no telling where they go.”

“Well, the offer’s on the table.” Fred shrugged. “If you map out the Mirrors and tell us how to use them, we’ll trade the Marauder’s Map.”

Harriet glanced at the pocket the map had disappeared into. It would be awful handy to have that. Come to think of it, it’d be fantastic to have a map of the Moon Mirrors, too. Harriet kicked herself for not thinking of it first. How’d that map get made? It’s dead useful. I bet Hermione would know. “…I’ll think about it.”

“Excellent.”

A window clattered open and a frazzled redhead popped outside. “Fred! George!” Mrs. Weasley shouted. “You get back in here and clean up your mess this instant!”

The twins glanced at one another and George waggled his brows. “We might’ve lit a few of Filibuster’s Best Sparklers in our room.”

“All in the name of creativity! And some experimenting.”

“Might’ve singed the ceiling a bit, though.”

“Just a bit.”

Smirking, the twins loped back inside, leaving Harriet standing flustered by the hedge, wondering if she needed to tell the Headmaster about Fred and George. If they’d kept the Marauder’s Map a secret for so long, maybe she didn’t need to worry they’d blab about her being a Parselmouth—but she still had half a mind to punch Longbottom right in the gob. Where in the hell did he get off?

Two dark green cars rolled to a stop beyond the gate and Harriet would have been alarmed if she hadn’t seen the familiar golden ‘M’ emblazoned on their doors. She didn’t know what kind of cars they were—only that they were large with sharp angles, nicer than Uncle Vernon’s company car had been. A wizard and a witch in maroon robes stepped out of the cars and Harriet recognized the former, though she didn’t know why Neville’s dad would be here.

It must be because of Sirius Black, she thought, approaching the gate. So the Ministry will send cars and Aurors for the Prat Who Lived but only loans out Lockhart when a deadly serpent’s on the loose?

“Hello!” Mr. Longbottom greeted with a welcoming smile. The resemblance to Neville couldn’t be mistaken; they had the same ears and soft jawline, though Mr. Longbottom appeared more genial than his son. He studied Harriet, his eyes lingering on the scarring peeking above her collar. “You must be Harriet.”

“Yes, sir.”

“I’m Neville’s dad—oh, and also part of the escort taking you lot to Diagon Alley today. It’s nice to meet you!”

“It’s nice to meet you too.”

The Weasleys dribbled out of the house one by one, hurried on by their mother. Elara was the last to step over the threshold, looking tired and a bit short-tempered, carrying Cygnus’ cage under one arm. Harriet sidled into the second car with the lady Auror and the Ministry driver, joined by Elara, Ginny, Percy, and Mr. Weasley. Elara commented on the oddity of the Ministry of Magic keeping Muggle cars—but, of course, the car hardly qualified as Muggle anymore. The backseat sat five comfortably, and the engine turned over only when the driver gave the dashboard a solid thunk with his wand. Harriet wondered if there even was an engine in there.

The journey to the Leaky Cauldron took a few hours, during which Harriet chatted with Ginny or flipped through a book on useful Charms. They settled into their rooms once they arrived, then met up in the pub before heading out into the Alley proper.

“You lot will need chaperones if we’re splitting off,” Mr. Weasley said, standing just outside the brick archway. Collective groans escaped the group. “Now, now. It’s important we stick together. Neville, Ron, you’re with Frank. Fred and George, you’re with Percy—.”

“Oi, what’s he going to do if we’re in danger?”

“Flash his Big-Head Boy badge at it—?”

“Harriet, Elara, Ginny,” Mr. Weasley continued, ignoring the twins. “Stick with Auror Hopswitch.”

The blond witch they’d taken the car with gave a friendly, if firm, nod of her head that Harriet returned, feeling awkward. Really, she didn’t understand the need for chaperones in a place like Diagon Alley; she’d tromped over half the United Kingdom on her own at eleven and, for the most part, got on just fine. The continued restriction to her movements chaffed—and yet Harriet kept her mouth shut because if Black decided to show up, she wanted Elara to be safe.

They found Luna loitering outside of Florean Fortescue’s, enjoying a fig flavored scoop of sherbet as she hummed along to the wireless. “Daddy’s at Wiseacre’s,” she informed them as she hopped off the iron fence separating the patio from the path. She wore a pair of hoop earrings with what looked like stuffed canaries perched inside. “But I told him you’d be here soon enough. Hello!”

From there, they popped by Wiseacre’s Wizarding Equipment to see Mr. Lovegood—who shook Harriet’s hand like a man trying to strangle a chicken—then hurried on to Gringotts. Hermione was there with the Malfoys, Mr. Malfoy meeting with an account manager or something—Harriet didn’t much care where he went off to, so long as she didn’t have to see him—and Draco stood deep in conversation with Goyle and Crabbe. Mrs. Malfoy pursed her lips when they asked if Hermione could come with them and Harriet thought she’d say no—until her gray eyes swept over the Auror. She agreed, so long as Hermione returned to the bank before they left for home.

“Oh, I’ve missed you both terribly,” Hermione exclaimed once they’d come outside onto the marble steps. She hugged Harriet and Elara, squeezing tight. “Draco’s been driving me spare these last few days. Hello, Luna! Ginny! How have your summers been? Have you finished all your homework?”

“Good enough, I suppose.”

“Just lovely, Hermione, thanks.”

Hermione looked at the older witch. “And, um…?”

“Auror Hopswitch.”

“A pleasure to meet you. I’m Hermione Granger.”

The witches made quick work of buying the things they needed for school. Hermione had the lists for both third and second years memorized and Harriet knew the layout of Diagon Alley better than most people, so they didn’t get lost or turned around on their way. Hermione asked Ginny dozens of questions concerning Egypt, and Luna chattered on about astrology with Elara—who didn’t chatter so much as respond with “Mmm” and “Ah” in the appropriate places. The group had to drag Harriet away from Quality Quidditch Supplies when she stopped to stare at the Firebolt displayed in the window again. They happened upon Gilderoy Lockhart outside Obscurus Books—his publisher—and the wizard bought them all lunch at the nearest cafe just so he could talk Harriet’s ear off about his latest story idea.

“A quartet of singing trolls. Ballerinas! No? Swimming hippogriffs and a pygmy giant rider racing kelpies to his inevitable doom! No…? Well, how about this….”

Harriet imagined she’d have half a dozen owls from him by the time she reached Hogwarts tomorrow.

“Where else do you lot want to go?” she asked as they left Flourish and Blotts, their school books shrunken and tucked away in their pockets. The afternoon had worn thin during their time inside the shop and soon they’d have to head their separate ways. “I think we can make it to one more place.”

“Well….” Hermione said, fidgeting with the front of her blouse. “I asked the Malfoys if I could get a familiar and they agreed. I say asked, but badgered would be a better word for it, really.”

“That’s brilliant,” Harriet laughed. “What were you thinking about getting?”

“An owl, maybe. Or a toad would be nice.”

“A toad?” Elara wrinkled her nose and scoffed.

“The secretions from some breeds have exceptional magical value!”

“It’s still gross, Hermione.”

The pair continued their bickering until they reached the Magical Menagerie—which Harriet entered with a feeling of profound guilt, anxious sweat warming her palms. Missing posters still speckled the windows.

“You needn’t be so nervous,” Luna said, speaking too loud for Harriet’s comfort. “No one would recognize your snake as the one that went missing, you know.”

“Shh! Bloody hell, Luna….”

Her nerves took a further beating when they came upon Neville and Ron haggling with the shop keeper by the main register. Neville had a glamor on that tweaked his features just enough to make him unrecognizable, and his dad hung back by the entrance, half-hidden behind an open Daily Prophet bearing yet another reprint of Sirius Black’s mugshot. Elara’s eye ticked every time she saw it and she purposefully turned away.

“Potter,” Longbottom acknowledged.

“Prat,” she replied. He snorted.

“It’s a real shame about that snake, isn’t it?” he said with a short, jerky nod to the wall behind the counter. One of the posters had been tacked up there, the print beginning to fade from age. “The reward for information is quite tempting….”

“It’s going to be a real shame when someone uses a Permanent Sticking Charm to seal your mouth shut. It’d probably be an improvement, though.”

“—That’s bloody robbery!”

Ron had been the one to speak, and the clerk—the same mustachioed wizard who once told Harriet off for looking at Livius in his tank—scowled. He had a little bottle in his wizened hand, and Harriet noticed for the first time that Ron had laid his rat out of the counter between them.

“What’s wrong with his familiar?” she asked Longbottom. It didn’t have anything to do with Livi, did it? Did her snake actually manage to scare the poor thing to death?

“Dunno,” Neville said, shrugging one shoulder. “I guess Scabbers has been off since they came back from Egypt. Honestly, the trip was probably a bit much for him.”

“Oh.” Harriet looked again at the creature, its fur patchy and lackluster. She didn’t much care for rats—she fed enough of them to her snake, after all, and dismembered them in Potions for ingredients when the recipe called for it. Still, she sympathized with Weasley worrying over his familiar. She’d be heartbroken if anything happened to one of her snakes.

A flash of orange barreled toward them from one of the upper shelves, and Ron let out a howl as a huge ginger cat landed on his head. It made a go for the rat—Scabbers—and the rodent squealed in terror.

“No, Crookshanks!” the clerk cried, grabbing the bandy-legged feline. “Bad!”

Neville dove for the rat as it leapt from the counter, but it was Harriet who managed to catch Scabbers, snagging him mid-jump. It turned beady little black eyes on her and stared, thrashing in her hand. Its nose twitched.

Meanwhile, the cat hadn’t given up the hunt quite yet, and only the clerk’s strangling grip around its middle kept the feline from leaping at Harriet. The bespectacled witch thought it best for all parties involved if she went outside, Longbottom and Ron following behind her.

“Scabbers!” Weasley said, relief in his voice as he accepted the wriggling rat from Harriet. “Are you all right?! Thanks for the help, Potter.”

“No problem.” She wiped her hand off on her robes. “I’m sorry your familiar’s not feeling well.”

“He just got a bit too much sun is all!” Ron tucked the quivering rodent into the front pocket of his shirt. Longbottom and Harriet shared a glance and a rare moment of understanding, because Scabbers looked more than a bit fatigued by too much sun. How long did rats live? And how long had Ron had it? “And the bastard wants three Galleons for rat tonic! Three! I bet there’s nothing in the stupid bottle other than water and bloody fairy farts!”

The door opened, the bell clanging above the sill, and out came the remainder of Harriet’s group—including Hermione, now cradling the ugliest ginger fur ball Harriet had ever laid eyes on.

“Did you buy that thing?!” Ron sputtered as he clutched his hands over his shirt pocket, covering the lump. “It’s a menace!”

“I think he’s quite clever. Isn’t that right, Crookshanks?” Hermione ran her fingers through the cat’s thick coat and it purred, its face squashed as if it’d collided with a brick wall at considerable speed, its fur sprouting like a lion’s mane around its thick neck. “The clerk said he’s been there for ages and no one would adopt him. Poor baby. I couldn’t leave him behind after hearing that.”

Poor—?! That thing has it out for Scabbers! You keep it away from me, Granger!”

Hermione rolled her eyes and didn’t give Ron another thought. Crookshanks certainly did, because it—he—didn’t let his yellow eyes waver from Weasley for a second, not until Ron had all but sprinted away. Aggravated, Neville was quick to get his dad and go after the berk.

“It’s not Crookshanks’ fault he wanted to eat that yummy rat, is it?” Hermione rubbed the cat’s ears as she hiked him higher against her chest. They turned and started back toward Gringotts where the Malfoys would be waiting for her. “You’re such a clever boy!”

Crookshanks continued to purr, his fat tail flicking back and forth, totally pleased with himself.

 

x X x

 

The village was quiet, drawn, the cobbled streets caught in summer’s waning grasp. The station, too, was quiet, the empty husk of the scarlet train waiting idle on the tracks. There it’d remain until tomorrow, when it would journey south and gather Hogwarts’ students for the start of the autumn term. At the station’s end, Albus Dumbledore stood and gazed across the lake, glimpsing the high wall of the castle’s West Tower, the roof cast like gold in the fading light of day. From somewhere farther east came the echo of young children playing in their gardens.

Bonsoir, Albus.”

A shorter wizard joined the Headmaster, hopping onto the platform the dirt path, his hands in his pockets and his posture relaxed. He went without robes and could have passed for a Muggle had his waistcoat and trousers not been of such a dated design.

Dumbledore turned his head and smiled. “Bonsoir to you as well, Nicolas.”

Nicolas Flamel stood by Dumbledore and looked everywhere but at the younger wizard. Something weighed upon him, Albus knew. It resided there in lines about his eyes and the deepening furrow between his dark brows. “Hmm. It is nice weather tonight, yes? A rarity here!” Flamel shivered. “It is still too cold for my taste.”

“I’ve always been fond of it. Though these old bones of mine prefer the warmer climes.”

They said nothing more for a time, two friends sharing an amicable moment while Hogsmeade readied itself for the night. They had not met here by chance. The impending conversation lay upon their shoulders with all the weight of a physical mantle, and Albus had opted to not speak within the castle itself. Not where Slytherin or his spies might be lurking.

At length, Flamel drew in a breath, his chest swelling. “Ah. I know you are hoping for good news, but I have none to give.” He exhaled. “I studied the curse mark, I studied her, but—. It is a magic…sans précédent. I….I do not think it can be removed.”

The levity in the air slipped, dimming like the sun did as it eased deeper into the trees. There was an ache in the alchemist’s voice. “I must admit, I’d hoped you would know what to do. My own search has been fruitless.”

“Horcruxes are horrid magique. Few have ever attempted their creation, let alone something this…monstrous.”

Albus thought of Harriet Potter, of that slight flicker of red in her emerald eyes, shouting, “Why haven’t you done anything?!

“Much of everything Tom Riddle has ever done can be described as monstrous.”

“What do you plan to do, Albus?”

Before, in his youth, when he trusted the word of a charismatic Durmstrang boy and believed himself so much more than he really was, Dumbledore would have done the unspeakable. He would have said, “The girl must die,” because it was for the greater good, because it was crueler to have hope when there was no light—but that was before. He had watched so many people die to Tom’s avarice, his cruelty, and he could not bear to think of those they would still lose. The war had been lost, for all that it appeared to have been won. Albus and the Order had lost. He could not decide if saying the girl must die so Tom Riddle could follow was cowardice or bravery, but at some point the greater good no longer means anything at all. It was just—words.

Albus and the Order had lost, and yet…and yet people like Harriet Potter persevered. People who came from adversity, children growing up in these dark, perverse times—and they did not bow or bend or break as Albus and the Order had. They did not compromise with the likes of Tom Riddle. They flourished in the places that Dumbledore had once considered fallow ground—and, Merlin, if only he could go back, seize his younger self by the shoulders, and shake him until he saw sense.

“Albus?”

“Nothing has changed,” he said, sighing. “Voldemort must be trapped, subdued, and held. There are ways to make a man—or a monster—sleep as if dead.”

Oui. Though it is a fate too good for the likes of him.” Flamel scuffed the heel of his boot against the stone platform. “She is a good kid, Harriet. Miss Black as well. Perenelle is heartbroken to ‘ave the house so empty again.”

“They are remarkable children.” Dumbledore’s gaze turned to the lake and the hint of Hogwarts’ silhouette on the darkening sky. “They all are.”

“I will help you in whatever way I can.” Mr. Flamel turned away. “For as long as I can.”

After he Disapparated, the Headmaster remained there at the station’s end. He repeated the words, “For as long as I can,” too quietly for anyone but himself to hear.


 

A/N: The Marauder’s Map has always sounded neat to me in concept, but also really…invasive. Like how Harry used it to stalk Malfoy in HBP. We can argue he was doing it for the “greater good,” but that there is the most slippery of slippery slopes.

Chapter 109: in want of happiness

Chapter Text

cix. in want of happiness

 

In hindsight, they should have expected the staring.

For the most part, Harriet and Elara had enjoyed the anonymity of the greater Wizarding quarter since they first heard news of Sirius Black’s escape. No one in Diagon Alley or Trefhud knew of Elara’s connection to the convict—but the same could not be said of those at Hogwarts.

They raced to the platform, dodging through the Muggles going about their business, and just barely managed to cross the brick barrier before the clock struck eleven in the morning on the dot. The scarlet steam engine let loose a billow of steam as the whistle trilled and they ran again, the Weasley parents shouting their love for their children, Harriet dragging Elara along even as the other witch wheezed for breath.

“Merlin’s beard,” Harriet panted once the train doors came sliding shut behind them. The train had already begun to move seconds after they arrived, the brakes releasing the wheels, the fixtures rattling, but now it heaved itself into proper motion and pulled from the station. Straightening, Harriet looked at Ginny. “Does this happen every year with your family?”

The Ministry cars had arrived promptly at ten to take the group to Kings Cross Station—but another round of misplaced possessions and last-minute packing delayed their departure from the Leaky Cauldron until half-passed the hour. From there, they’d hit an inevitable wall of traffic even the magical vehicles couldn’t squeeze around. They’d hit the parking lot not five minutes ago and had to sprint the whole length of the station. Harriet hoped the Ministry had someone on hand to Obliviate all the Muggles who heard their group shouting about familiars and letters and spellbooks.

The redhead snorted. “Feels like it,” she replied, running a finger over a large scuff on her trunk. It was second-hand and had already seen better days, and yet their mad dash had managed to put a few more marks on it. “We never seem to be on time for anything.”

Smirking, it was then that Harriet finally noticed the whispering, the half-veiled attempts at subterfuge as faces peeked from their carriages and stared not at her or at Ginny, but at Elara, who leaned against the wall in an effort to catch her breath. Harriet scowled at the watching berks and straightened to her full—and rather unimpressive—height. “C’mon, then. Let’s find our seats.”

They hurried along the narrow corridor down the train. Ginny’s brother and Longbottom had gone ahead or had jumped on at a different entrance. Percy would be in the front compartment with the prefects. The whispering swelled around them like a fat souffle waiting to collapse, joined by laughter and nervous, frightened tittering. People shuffled bags onto unoccupied seats as they neared, not that Harriet had any intention of sitting with those people. Numpties, the lot of them.

That’s his daughter.”

“The Madman’s Daughter, that’s what they call her—.”

“Can’t believe they let her come to school this year—.

Elara’s cheeks grew progressively pinker the farther they went, her eyes glassy and her fists tight at her sides. A Hufflepuff second-year had the gall to pop open his door to stare at her—until Ginny flicked him right between the eyes.

“Oi! Bugger off, Williams!”

Williams did, in fact, bugger off, and the brief show of violence prevented any other curious students from stepping out into the corridor for a look of their own. Still, Harriet couldn’t help her sigh of relief once they found Hermione and Luna and slipped into the compartment.

“What took you so long?” Hermione demanded, already dressed in her Slytherin robes. “I thought for sure you’d missed the train!”

Ginny hefted her trunk into the overhead rack with Harriet’s help. “Listen, Granger, you can’t say that being punctual is really a trait in my family….”

Harriet slumped into the seat by the window and Elara sat across from her, rigid as a board, settling Cygnus’ cage next to her. “All right, Elara?”

“I’ll be fine,” she snapped.

Whether or not that was true, they’d have to wait and see. Harriet didn’t dare ask her again.

The train rolled on into the English countryside and London’s boroughs dwindled in the wake of its sooty plume. Elara was quick to cross her arms, lean back, and doze in her seat while Hermione and Ginny argued the chances of perpetual tardiness being an actual human gene. Luna had a pad of parchment and a collection of pencils she shared with Harriet, who used them to pass the time by doodling and sketching. She wished she could use Livi as a model and draw him, but the Horned Serpent was tucked into her shrunken trunk still—and all the surlier for it. She did have Kevin in her shirt’s front pocket, not that’d she’d ever get him to stay still long enough to draw him. Plus, Ginny and Luna didn’t know about her Parseltongue ability and it’d be awful hard to explain why she’d got a snake in her pocket like a lucky Sickle.

The muffled sound of Exploding Snap emanated from the compartment behind her, laughter shaking the divider. People kept passing by trying to peek inside, but Ginny nipped that in the bud when she jerked the curtain closed over the window. The trolley came by around one o’clock and they stocked up on sweets for the remainder of the journey.

“Hermione?” Harriet said after a time, the other witch looking up from the book splayed in her lap. Outside, the landscape had grown wilder and the sky thickened with encroaching clouds.

“Yes?”

“What kind of magic is it that would show you people in an area?” Harriet kept her voice light as she worked on her sketch, using her thumb to smudge the graphite. “I know there’s Tracking Charms and stuff, but those only track one person at a time, don’t they?”

“Usually,” Hermione replied. Her mouth formed a slight moue of thought. “There’s a host of tracking spells to suit different needs. Hunters can track animals of a specific age and genus—and Aurors, when they’re looking for someone and can’t resort to—um—Darker spells, can utilize a reactionary trigger that pings or hums when in the vicinity of someone matching their query. Spells that track specific people over a distance are almost entirely unheard of.”

“Hmm.” Snape had managed it somehow, though Harriet guessed the fewer questions asked about that, the better. “But what about something that could show you everyone around you or in a certain place?”

For once, Hermione appeared stumped. “Well, I—. I’m not sure, actually.”

“Hypothetically, then? If you had a spell that could do it, how would it work?”

Hypothetically, it wouldn’t. There’s no—.” Hermione huffed and her brow lifted as she shut her book. “I wouldn’t use a spell. You’d have to tether the magic to each individual and it’d be draining—not to mention pointless. I’d use a ward.”

“A ward?”

“Yes. Witches and wizards set up all kinds of barriers over their homes or businesses—you know this. Hypothetically, the wards of your projected area would have all knowledge of who passed in and out of them. You wouldn’t need a spell that tracked people—rather, you would want one capable of reading and interpreting the information already stored in a ward.” Hermione looked rather pleased with herself for figuring this out—then shot Harriet a suspicious look. “…why do ask?”

“Just curious, I guess.”

“Harriet, what kind of trouble—.”

“Really! I promise, I’m just curious.” Harriet wouldn’t—couldn’t—tell her about Fred and George’s map, but the more thought she’d given it, the keener she had become on getting it. Worse come to worse, if she couldn’t follow the Moon Mirrors and couldn’t fulfill her bargain, maybe she could talk her friends into making their own version of the Marauder’s Map.

Harriet set down the pencil and turned the drawing over, showing Cygnus his slightly lopsided likeness. “What d’you think?”

The owl screeched and buried his head under his wing.

“There’s no need to be rude. Ruddy bird.”

“I think it’s lovely,” Luna said, inspecting the picture. “You captured his off-centered eyes perfectly.”

“Don’t let him hear you say that. He’ll claw my face off at breakfast, just wait and see….”

 

x X x

 

The clouds Harriet first noted outside London followed them like a bad mood, and as night approached and became an imminent threat, the clouds let loose a deluge of cold, lashing rain that painted the train’s windows and plunged them into darkness. Harriet couldn’t suppress a shiver and found herself thinking with longing of her four-poster bed beneath the Black Lake, or the comfortable stuffed ottoman by the fire in Trefhud. She wrote a letter to Mr. Flamel—and didn’t censor her questions about the Marauder’s Map quite as much as she had with her friends.

They changed into their robes as they neared Hogsmeade and Hermione layered them all in Impervius Charms. The Charms lasted once they reached the station but started to degrade with frightening speed, the rain coming down too fiercely for the magic to keep up. Hagrid and Professor Sinistra could barely be seen beneath the former’s large umbrella, Hagrid’s booming calls for the first years to join them competing with the thunder’s lowing. The older students ran for the Thestral-drawn carriages, several people sliding and slipping into the mud, elbows getting thrown as they competed for the closest carts. Harriet—as short as she was and blinded by the bloody rain—got shunted toward the back and separated from her friends in the confusion. She wound up in a carriage on her own and sat on the padded bench dripping, shivering, and eager to get on with the rest of the trek.

The wheels clattered and wobbled through the mud as the carriages meandered toward the castle. Harriet could just barely make out the welcoming glow permeating through the mist, her Threstral flicking its wings out every so often, just enough so she could spot it through the window. Harriet gripped the edge of the bench and sighed. Her breath escaped in a puff of white.

So much for it still being summertime.

Judging by the thump of droplets hitting the roof, she thought the rain might have abated—somewhat lessening from a barrage to a pelting, though that might be because of the thick tree limbs arching over the road. She could see the gate now, the individual posts tall and unyielding, each flanked with a torch doused in Ever-Burning oil. Sometimes Harriet wondered how long those torches had been burning—if, perhaps, one of the Founders had fixed them there and lit the match that would still illuminate the grounds a thousand years later. Hermione would probably tell her she was silly, though, since she doubted Ever-Burning oil had been invented back then.

The carriage slowed and came to a stop.

A minute passed, and then another. Puzzled, Harriet leaned in her seat to look out of the window belonging to the door on her left, but she couldn’t see much from her vantage aside from the shape of the gates and the back of the carriage in front of her. The Forbidden Forest hemmed both sides of the road. Maybe one of the carriages had gotten stuck—a broken wheel, or perhaps a fallen Thestral. They appeared rather sure on their feet—err, hooves—but Harriet knew the mud got treacherous on the hills and slopes around here.

She shivered harder, teeth chattering.

Suddenly, a shadow fell across her and Harriet started, a vague, looming shape approaching the right door. It threw itself open, the carriage rocking, and a monster filled the entrance.

Harriet couldn’t rightly name the feeling that came over her as the cloaked figure lowered its head and leaned in close. The hand it had braced on the door’s frame belonged to a withered, dead corpse—the puckered limb of a clammy body dredged from the bottom of a salted mire. Dust desiccated its cloak like an ancient funerary shroud. A sound came from the black hood—a heinous, forced rattling—and as it sucked, it seemed to pull in more than just air.

She wasn’t afraid. It struck her as odd, because in that instance, Harriet thought she should be fucking terrified. Instead, a hard, frigid chill settled in her chest and circulated through her blood, and Harriet felt only a sense of detached horror, a buzzing numbness striking her with a painful, unshakable rictus. Every bad thought she’d ever had welled and bobbed to the surface of her mind until she drowned under a cresting wave of grief and hate and anger.

Somewhere in the distance, Tom Riddle stood over her, the echo of her own tortured sobs bouncing on the stone walls, and he hissed, “Did you like that, little girl?

Quirrell kept mumbling, “M-master, M-master,” while the Dark Lord whispered, “What Voldemort takes, he can return,” and Harriet suffered again and again in the knowledge of her own weakness, her own temptation, her disappointment.

Worse of all was the chilling passivity of a summer’s day in which she was again nine-years-old, hungry, tired, sprawled beneath a hedge and thinking it might be better if she simply ceased to exist.

“N-no,” Harriet stuttered, hand clawing at the door, her back pressed to the glass. Ice crawled over the lenses of her glasses. She’d never been so cold and empty in her entire life. “Stop it!

A white fog descended. Far away, a woman was screaming, pleading. Harriet just wanted it to stop.

Her fingers spasmed against the door—and then she fell, soaring down, down into the dark until it swallowed her whole and Harriet knew no more.

Chapter 110: terrible reunions

Chapter Text

cx. terrible reunions

Remus fell asleep almost the instant he found a compartment for himself and sat down.

He couldn't help it; the full moon was two nights away after all, not that many would take notice of such a thing. Mostly potioneers would these days, or lunarologists, diviners—or women picking up a copy of Witch Weekly to read their horoscopes. Remus had never set much store by the stars but sometimes he thought on the sheer power every revolution of the earth held upon his life and wondered.

Muggle fiction suggested werewolves could actually feel the moon, as if it held true, tangible power over their being—but that was superstitious nonsense, like most werewolf lore. To suggest werewolves had lore meant they had culture, and Remus was steadfast in his denial of such a thing. It was a curse, not a way of life. The moon held no power over Remus until it rose full above the horizon. His reaction to it otherwise was psychosomatic; he knew it would be time again to weather the transformation and no matter if he retained a sound mind or not, his bones still broke, his skin would tear, his limbs would contort. He'd end up a screaming, howling mess.

The full moon neared and Remus grew wearier and wearier until he could barely stand the fatigue.

He should have gone to Hogwarts earlier in the week, he knew. It would have been the responsible thing to do—but Remus had left his tasks to the last minute in a fit of self-doubt and recrimination, allowing Dumbledore all the time in the world he needed to renege on his appointment. However, the Headmaster never appeared on Remus' doorstep again no matter how long Remus sat and stared at the door. The only owls he received contained vital information for his new post, requests and advice for lesson plans, needed signatures, etcetera. Albus had even forwarded several historical periodicals to which he could submit a few articles or topics of research. Hogwarts professors needed to stay published and relevant in their fields, after all.

So Remus spent the vast majority of his remaining summer holiday with his head in a book or visiting the national Tome Archival and Depository kept by the Ministry beneath the Radcliffe Camera. He'd visited once many years ago with his mother, so he noticed right off how many of the shelves, including those in the sections relevant to his studies, had been purged of their books and scrolls. Dumbledore had said times were darker than the media would have him believe, and so Remus wasn't overly surprised by the sudden dearth. After all, the best way to control a population was to spread ignorance and control information.

He kept his articles tame but insightful enough to garner back page listings in the periodicals; he maintained a low, unassuming profile, lest someone dig deeper into the identity of R.J. Lupin. Still, it was with some wonder and excitement that he looked upon his first published piece in the Journeyman's Journal. Then, the melancholy rose up and overcame Remus because he had no one to write to, no one to celebrate with. Just him and a dram of Ogden's Best.

Being busy and procrastinating on his move wouldn't have been a big deal if not for his furry little problem, as Sir—as certain people used to refer to it. Magical means of transportation—such the Floo, or Apparating, or the use of a Portkey—had serious consequences on his weary body during these few days of the month. He could have flown, of course, but that would be exhausting for its own reasons. Albus had offered the suggestion of taking the Express and Remus had jumped at the opportunity.

Dozing in his seat, Remus remained distantly aware of his surroundings: the call of voices, the scuttling feet, scraping trolley wheels, and when the train set off, the windows' rattling as the carts went along the track. The door to his compartment came open and he heard what sounded like a few boys entering, their conversation stilted and hushed as they took their seats and tried not to wake him. Rain thumped against the glass by Remus' head, the sun hidden behind amassing thunderclouds, and the occasional word broke through the tired haze in his mind— "Quidditch," "Mum," "Scabbers," "Charms," and "Potter."

The last word, of course, had Remus' heart leaping into his throat and he almost sat up, half-asleep or not. Potter. Harriet would be a student at Hogwarts, a third-year. He would get to see her again. More than once over the years, Remus had wanted to write her a letter, but he didn't know what to say. He still didn't. In his mind, Harriet belonged to that year of his life he tried so very desperately to blot out and Remus lied so often to others and himself about his depth of friendship with Lily and James and Sir— well. He didn't know what to say. He thought she might find it a bit strange if a man claiming to be a friend of her deceased parents wrote her out of the blue. He'd wanted to see her. He'd wanted to see her grow up because he would never see—.

He doubted Harriet's aunt and uncle would have wanted an odd, scarred man showing up on their doorstep asking after their little niece.

The train continued to rattle. It felt like sitting with an old friend, that nervous trepidation of bygone years humming in his veins. His first trek from Platform Nine and Three-Quarters had signaled the start of a new life—and, again, here he sat on his way to something new and terrifying and exciting. Being here was…comfortable. It lulled him into deeper dreams and Remus slept soundly for the remainder of the trip.

x X x

He woke when one of the boys—a freckled redhead in Gryffindor robes—gave his shoulder a hesitant pat and said they'd arrived. The rain went a long way in helping clear his groggy head and Remus welcomed it once he stepped onto the dark platform, pausing to turn his face into the downpour, water trickling over his brow and cheeks. Remus simpered, hearing the familiar, booming call of Hagrid beckoning on the first-years, and he would have stopped to say hello if not for the inclement weather. Instead, Remus kept on the path with the students—the students that would be his starting tomorrow. What a thrilling thought.

He didn't rush the carriages like they did, preferring instead to wait and take one near the rear of the procession. Once inside, a quick incantation dried his patched robes and heated the carriage's interior, so Remus relaxed on the bench, leaning with his elbows on his knees as he turned his idle gaze toward the window and the forest beyond.

When the sudden, inexplicable chill began to erode his Warming Charm at an alarming rate and the carriage rolled to a stop, Remus realized something was amiss. His breath fogged before him and the errant mist on the glass coalesced into a creeping frost. Another kind of cold needled along his spine, emanating from those dark, hidden recesses of his mind, that place where the war and 1981 had long been buried deep. Remus yanked his wand from his pocket and stood, crouching under the abbreviated height of the carriage, and he opened the door to lean out into the rain.

He spotted nothing unusual at first; the school's gates loomed ahead, illuminated by torchlight despite the downpour, and he could see the shadow of a person pacing through the yellow light. Movement drew his attention away from the gates to the line of waiting carriages—and Remus almost lost his grip when he saw a skeletal, robed form hovering in the air, rippling on an unfelt breeze as it descended upon a carriage two in front of Remus' own. The Dementor pressed its head into the open door—and suddenly a small student came toppling out the other side, hitting the wet ground in a solid, limp heap. They did not move.

Remus scrambled down the carriage's iron step and ran. "Expecto Patronum!" he shouted, and silver flare warbled from the end of his wand with a burst of warmth and joy as ephemeral as a puff of smoke coming off the backside of a Filibuster Firecracker. Weak as it may be, the Charm served in warning the Dementor away, as the Dark creature reared back from the silver dart worming its way and retreated toward the unlit trees. Remus watched it go for only a moment, then rushed past the uneasy Thestral to the girl crumpled by the carriage wheel.

He almost choked when he realized who it was.

Fate delighted in throwing Remus off-kilter—cursed, he often reminded himself with a chagrined sigh. He'd sat lost in thought about Harriet Potter a few hours prior, but he could not have guessed he would meet her again in the middle of a rainstorm as he knelt by her side and turned her ghostly face out of the muck. She didn't much resemble Lily or James; he could see that through the mud and rain covering her. He recognized the scar more than anything, the thin lines curling under her jaw and around her neck like pale spider limbs. Remus first saw the mark at her parents' funeral, when Petunia had arrived stone-faced and sober, carrying the unhappy toddler in a stiff, unyielding hold.

Remus shook himself. Someone approached, their heavy footfalls breaking through the puddles.

"Incarcerous!"

On instinct, Remus shielded himself, if only just. The spell pinged off his protego and spiraled into the trees, rustling leaves. "Hold your fire!" he yelled.

One of the figures he'd spotted by the gate came nearer and the glow of the carriage lantern gave relief to his maroon robes. An Auror, then. He'd know those robes anywhere. How many times had he seen James—? But now wasn't the time for that.

"Identify yourself!" the Auror demanded, his wand trained on Remus, who kept his hands raised.

"My name is Remus Lupin and I'm to be the new History of Magic professor at the school," he said. "There's a student injured here."

The Auror lowered his wand and came nearer, squinting against the lashing rain. He looked young—younger than Remus, perhaps, still green enough for his collar to be overly starched and his aim less than perfect. "Shit," the Auror muttered as he holstered his wand. "There was bound to be one."

"Why on earth is there a Dementor here?"

"Ministry orders. They're stationed outside the grounds, searching for Sirius Black."

"Searching the children?!" Remus snarled. He shook Harriet and when she didn't rouse, he placed his hand over hers. It was ice cold to the touch and the rain wasn't helping matters. What was wrong? He'd never heard of such a strong reaction to a Dementor before. Remus bent at the waist and hoisted her up, careful to hook one arm under her knees and the other around her shoulders. "She needs to get inside."

"Right, go on through, then. I'll make sure your effects reach the castle Mr.—err, Professor Lupin."

Remus broke into a light sprint, hurrying past the line of waiting carriages and through the checkpoint where another Auror appeared to be having students turn out their pockets. Oh, Remus didn't think that would go over well at all with the parents when their children inevitably wrote home in the morning. He ran up the path toward the waiting light of the castle's entrance, marveling that Harriet's sodden robes seemed to weigh more than the witch herself, but his burst of strength flagged as he mounted the castle steps. Panting, he banged on the door and almost dropped the girl when it flew open.

A woman gasped. Remus thought another Dementor waited in the entrance hall when a dark, looming figure stepped forward—but no, the wizard who yanked Harriet from him was definitely flesh and bone. "Give her here," the man snapped in an irritated baritone, lowering Harriet to the floor. He crouched and propped her head up against his knee.

"Term hasn't even begun! What mischief has she gotten herself into now, Severus?" McGonagall sighed—and it was McGonagall, the same witch who'd taught him in school. She had a few more lines gracing her face now but she otherwise hadn't changed a bit—.

"There's a Dementor out by the gate," Remus explained, trying to catch his breath. "She fell from the carriage and hit the ground quite hard—."

Wait. Did she just say Severus?

Reeling, Remus looked again at the wizard, at the head of oily black hair that parted at the nape of his neck, revealing a scant inch of skin. Long, pale fingers prodded at Harriet's scalp until they came back speckled in blood and mud. Merlin! "…Snape?"

The wizard stopped inspecting Harriet's head and stiffened, raising all too familiar black eyes to Remus' face.

During their time at Hogwarts, Snape had always been something of an oddball. He'd been gawky and ungraceful, always too tall and too skinny for his second-hand robes, mocked for his overlarge nose and for the fact that he'd always smelled like a cauldron. Pitiable—if not for his menace, for that quintessential Slytherin arrogance and predilection for Dark magic. That had always been the problem with Snape; he'd made it difficult to feel sorry for him when his bite had been infinitely worse than his bark.

The wizard before Remus had grown into his skinny frame, gawkiness eschewed for a sharpness so acute, it pricked against Remus' skin like a torch held too close for too long. He had scars on his face, too—small ones accrued around his left eye, a larger cut interrupting his brow and dividing his lashes. The eyes fixed on Remus had lost their teenage anger and frustration. They held only sheer hatred now, cold and unremitting, festered by time and unvoiced terror.

How could I not recognize him? Remus wondered. Sweet Morgana—Lily said he became a Death Eater. Why is he—?

"Lupin," Snape drawled almost too quietly to hear. To himself, he added, "That would explain the request for Wolfsbane. Fucking Dumbledore and his sodding misdirection." He flicked his wrist and his wand appeared in his hand. Remus couldn't fight the nervous fidget that shook him and Snape smiled—a smile sharper than his look and all the nastier for it. He pointed the wand at Harriet's chest and Remus' throat tightened. "Rennervate."

Harriet woke sputtering and gasping, nearly head-butting Snape when she sat up and swayed. She blinked wide green eyes—Lily's eyes—up at the three adults surrounding her and croaked, "What the fuck was that?"

"Miss Potter!" McGonagall exclaimed, her cheeks red with outrage and—perhaps—a tinge of relief. "How many times must I inform you that that kind of language is not tolerated at Hogwarts?!"

Harriet stared at Professor McGonagall as if the witch was a pixie short of a parade, and Remus chortled. She looked so much like James just then, and emotion blazed through Remus with such fury, it pricked in eyes.

The girl looked at him when he laughed and gave a dozy, shy grin.

"That, Potter," Snape said, grabbing her under the arm. "Was a Dementor. Up."

He straightened, dragging Harriet upright, and she sagged in his grip, struggling to get her feet under her. "Why'd everything go cold and—funny?"

"Because that's what Dementors do, you halfwit."

A sharp pain cut through Remus' cold hand and he flinched, turning it over to inspect the pain's source. A little green snake hung from the meat of his palm, tiny fangs clamped tight to the flesh—and he swore it glared at him as it wriggled about. "What in the world?" Alarmed, Remus raised his wand to vanish it—.

"Kevin!" Harriet blurted.

Snape snatched the snake before Remus could react and secreted it away in one of his robes' many pockets. Harriet made a move as if to reach for the reptile and the dark wizard slapped her hand away, his impassive glare daring Remus to question him.

Before he could, feet clattered on the castle steps and Remus let out an "Oof!" when a body hit his back. "Harriet!" a frizzy-haired witch cried. Heedless of the collision, she came around Remus and ran to her friend, dripping wet and shivering from the cold. Given the state of her shoes, Remus guessed she'd abandoned her carriage and ran here as he had. "Oh, Harriet, are you all right? We saw you getting carried to the castle and thought—."

"Great, did everyone see that? I'm fine, Hermione."

"You're going to the hospital wing," Snape interrupted.

"What?! No! I've only just got here!"

"Think about that before you dive headlong into the ground then, Potter!"

"I didn't mean to! Gerroff, Snape—."

Snape did not, in fact, gerroff; he redoubled his grip under the flagging witch's arm and marched her toward Madam Pomfrey's old domain, Harriet's complaints dwindling into ill-tempered grumbling. The other girl—Hermione—made to follow but McGonagall called her back. "Miss Granger, if you'd come with me. We have to discuss—well…."

A second witch jostled Remus and darted past with an uttered, "Pardon me." Without pause or consideration to those in the hall, she ran after Snape and James' daughter.

"Remus?" McGonagall said. He had to tear his gaze away from Snape's back to pay attention. "You can go and get settled in the Great Hall."

"Yes, thank you, Professor…."

"It's Minerva. We're colleagues, after all. Congratulations on your appointment."

"Right…."

Remus caught one final glimpse of the retreating trio. The second, dark-haired witch glanced back, and in the hazy gleam of lightning blazing across the sky, her profile became visible before she, Snape, and Harriet vanished into the dark.

He thought she looked…familiar.


A/N: According to the calendar, the full moon was on Sept 1st, 1993, so technically Professor Lupin shouldn't have been on the train, nor attended the Welcoming Feast in canon! For the sake of the story, I've moved time and space and bumped the full moon back a night. And, even without Hermione and Luna saving them seats, I have my doubts that a bunch of girls would sit alone in a compartment with a strange man. So no train ride with Remus!

Dumbledore: "We're gonna have a nice, normal year this year."

Snape: "Good."

Dumbledore: "But, y'know, with a murderous convict on the loose."

Snape: "Wait, what—?"

Dumbledore: "And some Dementors."

Snape: "You can't—."

Dumbledore: "And a werewolf, for flavor!"

Snape: "Somebody stop this man, please."

Chapter 111: magical creatures

Chapter Text

cxi. magical creatures

"Stop looking at the doors."

A guilty flush rose in Hermione's cheeks when Elara said those words because she had, in fact, been staring at the Great Hall doors. She'd been staring at the doors from the moment she sat down to breakfast, and now she returned to stirring her cold porridge around in its bowl and pretended nothing was amiss. "I'm not staring. I'm simply checking."

"Continuously checking. Which could also be construed as staring."

Glowering, Hermione gave up fussing with her food and leaned forward. "I'm just concerned," she hissed to Elara across the table. "Shouldn't she be here by now?"

"Pomfrey probably fed her in the infirmary," Elara replied, sipping a cup of orange juice, the picture of cool, unruffled ease. "You needn't be so worried."

"How can I not be worried? What if she stumbled into another secret chamber or—or oubliette, or bloody hidden trench?"

Elara arched a brow. "If Harriet managed to find certain doom before breakfast, we'll invest in a leash or something. Either we will, or Snape."

Hermione glanced toward the High Table at the mention of the Potions Master and found him absent from his seat. Instead, there was an empty chair between Professor Slytherin and the new History of Magic instructor. As Hermione watched, Slytherin lifted his red eyes from his untouched tea to look the drab wizard over, then turned away, unimpressed.

Hermione concentrated on her breakfast and her patience was rewarded when one of the Great Hall's doors creaked open far enough to admit Harriet. Snape arrived seconds after, a foul look on his face as Harriet darted forward, head down, and all but ran to the Slytherin table—not that it spared her the attention of the amassed horde. She didn't have time to sit down before Malfoy called out, "Poor little Potter, did you get frightened by the big bad Dementors and faint?" Accipto Lestrange cackled and Lucian Bole must have muttered something obscene that Hermione didn't catch, as the older Slytherin boys continued to howl with laughter.

"Bugger off, Bole!" Harriet snarled. "And you too, Malfoy! I didn't faint!" Given she flushed scarlet to her roots, Hermione wagered she had, in fact, fainted.

"Oh, Harriet," she muttered as the other witch settled, furious and scowling, leaning her elbows on the table. "Are you all right? We were terribly frightened. We saw that new History of Magic professor—Professor Lupin—carrying you to the castle and we didn't know what to think—."

"I'm fine!" Harriet stabbed the serving spoon into a bowl of scrambled eggs and heaped them on her plate, though she showed little interest in actually eating them. "I didn't faint. That—that thing startled me and I fell out of the carriage, hitting my stupid head on the ruddy ground." She glared along the table toward Malfoy, who caught her eye and swooned with a dramatic hand placed on his brow. "First bloody night here and they made me stay in the infirmary despite there being nothing wrong with me. I missed the whole feast!"

"Well, you didn't miss much. Just the Sorting and Professor Lupin's introduction."

"Did Dumbledore talk about what in the hell that thing was? Because neither Snape nor Pomfrey would tell me anything."

Hermione glanced again at the High Table. Professor Dumbledore savored his morning tea despite the teetering stack of letters being dropped near his plate by impatient owls. As Hermione watched, the wizard spoke and a house-elf appeared, gathered up the notes, and disappeared once more. Snape assumed his seat, pointedly ignoring the new wizard seated to his left.

"It was a Dementor, one of the guards from Azkaban. They're outside the grounds on the Ministry's orders." Nervous dread swelled in Hermione's chest as she remembered her own encounter with the monster and she couldn't stop the sudden stream of words coming out of her mouth. "A Dementor is an amortal non-being, a very dangerous Dark creature not even recognized on the quintuple-ex beast scale—which is what a Horned Serpent is rated, by the way. Known wizard-killers and un-domesticated beings—."

"Hermione."

"Yes—yes, 's not much known about Dementors—where they came from or how they breed or come into existence, but it is known that they feed upon positive emotions and memories: joy, excitement, erm—pleasure. Pulling these from people leaves them no buffer to their negative memories and feelings. It's a barbaric law but various Ministries have been using Dementors in their Wizarding prisons for centuries as a means of 'repentance,' the thought being their suffering can be a form of rehabilitation." Hermione fidgeted. "If a Dementor Kisses you…well. There's no coming back from that."

Harriet stopped destroying her breakfast and stared, horrified. "What?! If it kisses you?!"

"Not a normal kiss, mind. A Dementor's Kiss. They suck out their victim's soul."

"Great. Real great—perfect idea having those ghastly things hovering outside the fucking gate."

Hermione pursed her lips in disapproval but didn't say anything. Harriet let out a low, ragged sigh.

"I'm sorry. I hate the hospital wing and couldn't get to sleep. The daft woman tried to keep me through the morning, d'you know that? There's nothing wrong with me. I must have drunk a gallon of hot chocolate."

Reaching out to touch her arm, Hermione gave it an idle squeeze. "There's no shame in having an adverse reaction to a Dementor—not that I'm saying you did!" she hurried to say when Harriet's face flushed with new anger. "I'm only saying there's no shame if you did! I know for a fact Malfoy over there came into the castle white as a ghost and Elara—."

A foot slammed into Hermione's shin and she yelped. Right, she told herself, wincing as she reached down to rub the throbbing bruise. Elara has enough problems this year without me telling the whole of Slytherin House she sicked up in the carriage. Still, her acquiescence of the possible foolish mistake did not stop Hermione from narrowing her eyes at the quiet witch picking at her French toast.

"Can we not talk about this anymore?" Harriet grumbled. "Merlin knows I'll hear enough from people like Malfoy for the rest of the week. Have our schedules been given out yet? I need to grab my books and check on Livi still."

"Not yet, no."

Hermione spoke too soon, for Snape came down the aisle a moment later and started shoving sheets of parchment into waiting hands. He paused long enough to exchange bitter scowls with Harriet before turning to Hermione.

"Granger, I don't appear to have your schedule."

"Oh, that's fine, sir." Snape's scarred brow rose and Hermione cleared her throat, hiding her twitching hands in her lap. "Professor McGonagall gave it to me last night."

"Is that so?" He moved off, unbothered and unquestioning. Harriet scrutinized her schedule while Elara studied Hermione, who again fought her unhelpful urge to fidget. The skinny gold chain hiding under her collar felt hotter than it should.

"We've got Care of Magical Creatures first thing today!" Harriet reported with sudden cheer. "Then Transfiguration. No Defense or Potions! And History of Magic with the new professor after lunch and a free period before dinner. Hmm. I'll have to thank—Professor Lupin, was it? I didn't get a chance last night."

Elara leaned in her seat to read Harriet's schedule. "I've a second free period this morning."

"What? You're not taking Care of Magical Creatures?"

"Considering I can't even care for a house plant, I decided it better not to tempt fate."

"…You might have a point there."

They finished breakfast and hurried down to the dormitories, Harriet quick to placate her irritated familiar with a bit of sausage stolen from the table while Elara made good on an idle threat from that morning to go right back to sleep. Hermione couldn't help but envy her, considering how bad her own dreams had been the night before. Nevertheless, she put on a brave face and marched back upstairs. She and Harriet rejoined the student body than the whispering and pointing began in earnest.

"Bunch of prats," Harriet muttered, hands shoved into the pockets of her robes, bag slumping off her shoulder. "I bet half of them cried like ninnies when they saw that thing. I thought I heard someone screaming before I pa—fell."

Hermione uttered a noncommittal hum. She hadn't heard any screaming—a few loud exclamations and sniffling by first-years, but no screaming, no other bodies falling from their carriages. But, the rain had been loud, so who was to say Harriet was wrong? Perhaps Hermione only missed the sound. Her own senses had been…impaired by the Dementor. She'd suddenly felt like a child again, sitting alone, chastised by her parents, teachers, peers. It had been as if every tiny barb uttered in her presence had been repeated in an instance and it had weighed heavily on Hermione's mind all through the evening and night. So, maybe she didn't hear the screaming. Maybe.

Following the lingering train of their classmates brought the pair of witches nearer the Forbidden Forest, not terribly far from the track Harriet ran on for Quidditch. Harriet looked more and more green as they neared the edge of the grounds and Hermione quickly nudged her arm to spur the witch forward. "They're supposed to be posted by the gates," she whispered. "I'm sure Headmaster Dumbledore would never allow them anywhere near a class."

"Yeah, no offense to the Headmaster, but I'm sure he didn't allow that Basilisk to have a go at the Muggle-borns last year and it still did."

Hermione sighed. She's not wrong, a small voice in the back of her mind said. The best intentions are, at times, ineffectual against reality.

She shook her head.

"Hey, Granger! Potter!"

Terry Boot and Anthony Goldstein jogged over, the former the one who called out their names.

"'Lo," Harriet replied, distracted.

"Are you taking Care of Magical Creatures as well?" Hermione asked, her enthusiasm making up for Harriet's inattention.

"It was either this or Muggle Studies," Terry admitted with a shrug. "I'm not exactly keen on the subject."

"Oh, but there's been so many exciting inventions and innovations in Muggle society, especially in the last few years!"

"I know, I know—but Muggle Studies covers stuff like the function of a spring and Velcro. They pass around a bit of plastic to glory over." Terry laughed. "My brother took it a few years back."

To be honest, the news didn't surprise Hermione, though she still felt a niggling worm of disappointment. She'd gotten over the absence of Muggle things in her life rather quickly—magic did, in many ways, match or exceed Muggle advancements—and though she wished for simple biros from time to time, the ability to Transfigure and spell magical ink made up for the hassle. More than anything, Hermione missed the familiarity of Muggle things and had hoped to find a sliver of comfort in Muggle Studies. It sounded as if she'd only feel more alien and off-put.

Hermione rubbed at her sternum and the delicate, golden timepiece resting over her heart.

"It's an experiment the Department of Mysteries has agreed to try with the Headmaster and the Board of Governors," Professor McGonagall said as the last of the chain slipped into Hermione's trembling hand. "It was agreed to use a younger student to make certain any failures wouldn't interfere with later O.W.L and N.E.W.T studies. It took quite a bit of cajoling, but you are a perfect candidate, Miss Granger. It's a lot of responsibility, however, and its usage with be monitored."

"Yes, Professor."

She hadn't used it yet—not yet, but the itch was there, the curiosity. Soon, Hermione told herself, pulse fluttering. Soon.

Anthony's voice pulled Hermione out of her thoughts. "I think this is us, isn't it?"

Others in their year had gathered at a wooded paddock with a short, gray-haired witch manning the gate. Some had climbed up the fence's rungs but a stern warning from their prospective professor kept anyone from getting cheeky and jumping over. "Hurry yourselves along, now. Class is about to begin."

The bell rang, the peels echoing over the long, sweeping lawns and rolling hills, and the witch gave her head a firm, expectant nod.

"Now! Good morning, class. I am Professor Grubbly-Plank, your Care of Magical Creatures instructor. This is third form, correct?"

"Yes, ma'am."

"Good. Welcome to your first Creatures class. It is a truly fascinating and practical study that will benefit all of you long after your years at Hogwarts come to an end. That being said, we will be working with many different beasts and beings over the years and I require all of my students to treat every creature presented to them with the proper care and respect. One instance of hexing or slipping a Bowtruckle Wizochoc and I'll send you right off to your Head of House and you won't be welcomed back. Am I understood?"

Scattered agreements drifted in from the students lining the paddock fence. Professor Grubbly-Plank jerked her pointed chin upward.

"Best remember that. Let's stop dallying and get on with our lesson. Our groundskeeper has assisted me in procuring a few subjects for today." Grubbly-Plank unlatched the gate and held it open. "I'm going to ask the ladies to come forward while the lads stay a step back."

The class exchanged puzzled glances—but not Hermione. Girls first? It must be…. She lifted her gaze to scan the sparse, skinny saplings growing in the paddock until she spotted the tell-tale glow of white fur peeking through the greenery. She let out a soft, surprised breath.

The girls—and several of the boys—cooed and gasped as the three unicorns came carefully picking their way through the wispy underbrush. Two appeared to be foals, one still sporting its golden, downy coat, the second pure white but its horn yet stumpy. The third was full-grown and regarded the accrued humans with eerily intelligent—and distrustful—eyes.

"Can anyone tell me what we have here?"

"They're unicorns!" Hannah Abbott from Hufflepuff blurted out. Her friends Megan and Susan giggled.

"Correct, but do remember to raise your hand next time. Why did I ask the lads to stay back?" Hermione raised her own hand when Hannah shook her head but the Professor called on Terry instead. "Yes, Mr…?"

"Boot, ma'am. Unicorns, particularly the breed that lives in the United Kingdom, are more distrustful of wizards than they are of witches, especially as the respective unicorn or witch or wizard ages. The legends say it has to do with purity and—um—virginity."

A few boys snickered.

"Yes, yes. Thank you, Mr. Boot. Three points to—?"

"Ravenclaw, Professor."

"Three points to Ravenclaw, then. There is some credence to those legends as unicorns react more favorably to the fairer sex—young maidens especially, and those untouched by Dark magic."

The inner feminist in Hermione bristled, but it wasn't as if she could march up to a unicorn and argue the silliness of virginity or the perceived purity of men versus women. She couldn't help but study Terry for a moment longer, have turned when he spoke to answer, until he caught her looking and blinked in question. Hermione straightened herself, cheeks pink.

Professor Grubbly-Plank encouraged them to leave their bags and books by the fence and they did so before creeping nearer the waiting creatures. The youngest foal had its nose on the professor's sleeve, snuffling with interest. The oldest unicorn watched, pawing the spruce needles underneath its golden hooves.

"Be careful when you approach. Extend your hand like so—. Boys over here with this youngster, he won't mind so much…."

The large unicorn seemed more at ease the farther the boys of the class drifted away, though Hermione noted how it still watched the foals close. Was it a mare? She'd read mother unicorns were warier than most of their ilk.

The mare allowed Padma Patil to approach and gently rub its nose. She stepped back and Harriet took her place—only for the mare's eyes to flash and for it to jerk its head back with a harsh snort.

"You there, girl. Back up!"

Puzzled, Harriet did as told, taking several steps backward until the mare stopped tossing its head in a threatening manner.

"Hmm," Professor Grubbly-Plank frowned as she studied the unicorn, Harriet, and then the foals. "Not quite sure what the problem is there, but it's best for you to stand back. Respect the creature's choice."

"Yes, Professor."

When Grubbly-Plank returned her attention to the line of boys, Pansy glanced over her shoulder at Harriet, a wicked grin spread on her powdered face. "Ooh, Potter. You know what that means. Have you been having it off with some unlucky bloke this summer?"

Harriet gaped and her face went scarlet. "You're disgusting. Shut it, Parkinson."

"Aw, did he have a change of heart? Or maybe take the sack off your head?"

"I said shut it, Parkinson!"

"Quiet over there," the professor warned. Pansy smirked and twirled herself back around, giggling with Runcorn. Hermione thought it quite possible Harriet might actually hex Parkinson, so she shook her head and gestured for her friend to let it go. Harriet stomped over the paddock and, with unexpected grace, leapt up to the top rail to sit, arms crossed and expression sour.

"Oh, dear," Hermione murmured. Harriet wasn't having a good start of term, it seemed. Pansy's uncouth retorts aside, Hermione did wonder why the unicorn rejected Harriet's approach. Dark magic, perhaps? Whatever residual energy resided in the curse-scar marring her neck? They'd theorized before that the old curse might be what repelled the ghosts as well, though specters and unicorns existed on opposing scales and the theory didn't hold much traction. Maybe something of Tom Riddle's magic yet lingered. Madam Pomfrey had warned that consequences of the Cruciatus Curse could present themselves long after the last of the symptoms disappeared.

Nearby, Terry had one hand on the silver foal, gently carding his fingers through the short mane. Lisa and Morag from Ravenclaw 'oohed' and a few other girls cheered. Terry gave them a sheepish smile as the foal nuzzled at his loose palm. The corners of Hermione's lips turned up to mirror his expression.

A sullen scoff rose behind her. Malfoy glared at the back of Terry's untidy brown hair as he pushed away from Goyle and Crabbe. "Big deal," he hissed. "It's just a stupid horse. Watch—."

It happened fast; Malfoy shoved past Sally Smith and stuck his hand out to the unicorn, a cocky sneer on his pointed face. The mare reared, kicking—and Hermione grabbed Draco by the collar of his robes, yanking him back a mere moment before a hoof could strike him. "Protego!" she called, wand already in hand, and the horn set on goring the fallen Slytherin glanced off the magical shield in a sudden glint of golden light. The angry mare snorted and chuffed, galloping several yards away. Professor Grubbly-Plank started to shout.

"You absolute prat," Hermione snapped, letting Draco go. He crumpled in the dirt. "What on earth were you thinking?"

Gobsmacked by the speed of things, Malfoy could do nothing but blink and stare at the witch standing above him. "I, you—."

Hermione stashed away her wand and flipped her hair back over her shoulder. "Honestly!" Some people just had no brains in their skulls!

Unbeknown to Hermione, Draco continued to stare in stunned silence as she strutted off to join a laughing Harriet by the fence. He didn't notice when the professor hauled him up by the ear for a sound telling off; he just stared at Granger as if he'd never seen the witch before.


A/N:

Harriet: "Just let me pet you."

Unicorn: "Nay."

Harriet: D:

Hermione would 100% argue with a unicorn and the unicorn would lose.

Remember, there's a Discord server now where you can join the community and stay up to date on chapter releases! Here's the link: CDT Discord.

Chapter 112: liar

Chapter Text

cxii. liar

The rest of Harriet's first day back at Hogwarts proved relatively uneventful.

After Draco nearly got trampled by a unicorn and sent to stand off to the side by himself, Professor Grubbly-Plank lectured about the properties of unicorns, the various sub-species found around the globe, and their proper care. Though the subject interested her, Harriet found herself distracted by the sunshine and the slight, creeping chill still wheedling through her veins.

Madam Pomfrey had said coming in close contact with Dark creatures just a few months after what happened in the Aerie hadn't done wonders for her health—nor had the spill from the carriage or the time spent in the freezing rain. She'd probably come down with a cold in the next few days and would have to go back to the Hospital Wing—not that Harriet would go back, not unless dragged there by wild Thestrals or her well-meaning friends. She was bloody sick of waking up in the ward.

She saw Fawkes soaring across the sky during class, a mere smudge of Gryffindor red and gold flitting between gray clouds and dappled daylight. If she concentrated, she could hear the slightest whisper of his warbling song and it lifted some of the weight hovering around her heart.

When class came to a close, they gathered their bags from the fence, the bottoms slightly wet from the grass, and headed inside. Pansy whispered another nasty insinuation about Harriet under her breath to Daphne Greengrass, so Harriet muttered, "Offendimus," under her breath and sent the witch tripping down a—short—set of steps. As Pansy whinged about her skinned knees and broken inkwell, Harriet tucked her wand back into its brace and kept walking.

They found Elara in the Transfiguration corridor and took their usual seats in the front, waiting for Professor McGonagall to arrive. The professor opted to lecture instead of giving a practical lesson, discussing the history and typical application of the Animagus transformation. Harriet struggled to concentrate on her notes, but Elara watched Professor McGonagall change into a tabby cat and back into a person with rapt attention.

By the time lunch rolled around, Harriet felt tired and irritated—mostly by the continued, faux-fainting damsel shite being perpetuated by the older Slytherins and a few Gryffindors. She thought the people in her House might be doing it to get a rise out of her, but Harriet didn't appreciate the teasing. She wouldn't admit it, but running into that Dementor had been a horrid experience, and the less she was reminded of it, the better. She would've skived off History of Magic if not for the novelty of having a new professor and needing to make a good impression with the teacher she'd have for at least another three years. What she wanted more than anything was to go crawl into her bed and not wake up for a week.

Harriet shuffled into the History of Magic classroom after Hermione and Elara, and though the venue hadn't changed, the room felt…more welcoming than it had when Selwyn had darkened the front desk. Professor Selwyn hadn't kept any personal possessions in the room and the new professor hadn't set anything out yet, but the desk, floors, and windows had all been cleaned and the shutters opened to the afternoon light. Harriet took a seat between Elara and Hermione in the first row and put her head down on the desk. It smelled of polish.

Elara sighed. "Go see Madam Pomfrey for a Pepper-Up."

Harriet grunted.

"You are looking a bit peaky," Hermione mentioned as she rifled through her bag for the right textbook. "Maybe you should head to bed early after supper?"

Again, Harriet grunted. Elara nudged her in the ribs until she sat up in her seat with a baleful glance at her friend. "No, I'm not going to bed early. I'm going to do something else." The free period after History of Magic would give Harriet the perfect opportunity to go snooping about looking at Moon Mirrors, given much of the castle's corridors would be empty.

"What?"

"I'll tell you later."

"Tell us what—?"

The professor arrived a moment after the bell, a skinny bloke with a relaxed expression and faded, drab robes. Harriet couldn't guess at his age but thought him far too young to have so much gray peppering his brown, floppy hair. She didn't notice the facial scarring until he set his textbooks on his lectern and Wayne Hopkins leaned toward Oliver Rivers whispering, "Merlin, what d'ya think happened to him?"

"Hello, I'm Professor Remus Lupin. Welcome to your third year in History of Magic." He beamed, his green eyes flicking toward the front row, then away. Harriet hadn't seen the wizard teach yet, obviously, but she thought he had easy, unassuming confidence about him, his voice tinged with the slightest bit of nervousness that would probably fade by the end of the week. "I'll have to ask you to bear with me as I acquaint myself with life as a professor and learn how far we all are in the curriculum."

He retreated from the lectern to the desk and gave the scrolls stationed there an uncertain shuffle, peering at the titles. "As far as I understand it, before the summer holiday you were wrapping up studies on the International Warlock Convention?"

Heads bobbed in agreement. Someone had a packet of Bertie Botts open because Harriet could hear the distinct rattling sound of beans being shared, though she couldn't say who it was. Her bets were on Crabbe.

"Potter," Malfoy hissed behind her.

She didn't turn around. "What?"

"Switch me seats."

"Don't be stupid."

"Excellent!" the professor said, unperturbed by the silent argument and illegal sweets distribution. "That means you're ready to move on to the witch hunts and famous figures of the fourteenth century. Exciting stuff!" Professor Lupin looked up and gave them all a tight-lipped smile as he tidied his lesson plans, finding another sheet of parchment near the top of the pile. "I'm going to take attendance—apologies in advance if I mispronounce your name. Hannah Abbott?"

"Present."

"Thank you. E—?"

The professor froze and sucked in a sudden, short breath. He had one hand on the desk still, fingers splayed, and Harriet wondered if he'd pulled a muscle or something because he looked strange.

A full minute passed.

"…Professor Lupin?" Hermione ventured after exchanging uncertain glances with Harriet. "Are you all right?"

"I—." The wizard shook himself, a soft noise leaving his throat. "Yes, perfectly fine. I—bit of a cold I'm getting over. Not at my best—." Harriet could believe that. His face had the same peaky pallor as Harriet's. Had he gotten sick in the rain too? "E-Elara Black?"

Elara stiffened, perhaps sensing the same hesitation in the man's voice that Harriet did. "Present, Professor."

Lupin looked at her—wide-eyed and pale, the scars stark in relief. His eyes switched to Harriet, then back again, and the muscles in his jaw jumped in protest as he forced a smile. "Any relation to—." Elara's hand closed in a fist. "—M-Marlene McKinnon?"

Elara relaxed, though her puzzled stare conveyed her confusion. "…Yes?"

"Oh." Professor Lupin swallowed and looked away. He sat down suddenly, very nearly missing the chair only partly tucked under his desk. "Oh. That's—. Where was I? Attendance, yes. Ah, Susan Bones?"

"Here!"

He continued on down the list, staring at the parchment with total single-mindedness. Elara turned in her seat and mouthed the word, "What?" but Harriet didn't have an answer for her, so she shrugged. Maybe it had something to do with Sirius Black. Why else would the bloke act so weird when saying Elara's name?

Frowning, Harriet fidgeted with the corner of her textbook, folding the first page back and forth.

When he finished attendance, Professor Lupin moved on to the lecture without pause, using his wand to throw key words on the blackboard without bothering to stand and write them himself. Harriet pushed his strange behavior to the back of her mind in favor of taking notes—or drawing wobbly concentric circles and lopsided trees in the margins of her parchment. Twice Hermione muttered a soft admonishment under her breath and twice Harriet returned her concentration to the lecture only for her mind to wander a few sentences in.

Professor Lupin kept talking like he couldn't afford to stop.

"Circe's knickers, is he always going to be like this?" Zabini moaned from somewhere behind them.

"I hope not, he's going so fast," Nott whispered. "What was that bit about Balinda the Benevolent?"

"I thought it was Malinda the Malevolent?"

"Shite, seriously?"

Class came to an end with Harriet having little to show for it aside from a headache and ink splotches on her cuff. She shoved her things away into her bag as the others filtered out. Professor Lupin slumped when the bell rang and didn't stir.

"Can you wait a second?" Harriet asked her friends before they followed the rest of their peers.

"Is something wrong?"

"No, just—. I'll be right back."

Hefting her bag a little higher on her skinny shoulder, Harriet returned to the front of the room. Professor Lupin heard her coming and lifted his head, startled eyes finding her own so quickly, Harriet almost stumbled.

"Err—Professor Lupin?"

He blinked and lifted his head a touch more, clearing his throat. "Yes, Har—Miss Potter? Can I help you with something?"

"No, I—thanks. For yesterday, I mean." Harriet dropped her gaze to her shoes. Had the professor heard the screaming, too? Merlin, it hadn't been her, had it? "For when I fell."

Professor Lupin fidgeted. He brought his hands together on the desk and squeezed hard enough for Harriet to see his knuckles turn white as bone. He was definitely odd. "Think nothing of it." His smile didn't quite reach his eyes, the motion strained and uncomfortable. "You're feeling better, I take it?"

"Yeah—I mean, yes, sir." She glanced over her shoulder toward Hermione and Elara. Professor Lupin followed her line of sight and blanched, clearing his throat again as he shuffled the mess of papers in front of him. "I just wanted to thank you."

"Of course."

Harriet departed then, rejoining her friends on their way to drop their belongings off in the dorm. She didn't know what to make of Professor Lupin yet, nor of the man's rather strange behavior. Why had he reacted to Elara's name that way? And had he almost called her Harriet?

Well, she decided with a snort. As long as he doesn't unleash a prehistoric monster on the school, he's still better than Selwyn.

x X x

Remus started to tremble when the door shut with a gentle click behind the last of his students.

He'd woken that morning ready to face whatever the day had to throw at him—nervous, yes, but excited and pleased, eager to see James' daughter again, though he hadn't a clue what he'd say to the girl. If he'd say anything at all.

He should have known the day would turn when Harriet entered the Great Hall, fresh from the hospital wing, and sat at the Slytherin table.

There was no excuse for his ignorance; the green on her uniform could be seen from where he sat, as green as her eyes, as green as the uniforms of those surrounding her—and yet it had never occurred to Remus that she might have been Sorted anywhere other than in Gryffindor. Definitely not Slytherin. By Merlin, he'd take the knowledge to his grave, but James would've had kittens. He'd once—jokingly—told Remus that he'd disown any of his children if they became Slytherins, and though Remus knew the statement had been given in jest, he couldn't deny James' probable disappointment.

Lily wouldn't have minded, though. She was the most open-minded of them all. No, she wouldn't have cared in the slightest, not when she—.

Remus' gaze had slid to the dark-haired wizard seated next to him at the High Table. Snape refused to acknowledge his existence.

He'd prepared for her class. He'd prepared himself to see her again, to accept the reality of her Sorting, but—.

Nothing could have prepared him for her.

Standing, Remus wiped his sweating palms off on his trousers and started to pace. His thoughts jumped and jerked from place to place, disoriented as if scattered by a physical blow, and the urge to vomit curdled in his middle like something living. It burned in his chest, his tongue moving listlessly in a parched mouth. His knees weakened and he caught the rough stone of the wall to keep his balance, forcing his lungs to expand and permit air into his body. It rattled low and heinous in his dry throat.

The smell of charred earth and blackened rock. Ash eddying in the breeze, the perverse glint of sunlight where the water puddled in the new ruins' cradled arms—.

Gray eyes in a still face—confused, suspicious, rimmed in black lashes, a quirk of her brow that once belonged to her mother. "Present, Professor—."

Snow where the fire had ravaged the manor. He could smell the burning flesh still, God have mercy—.

"There were no survivors."

"He lied," Remus managed to gasp, heart racing. "He lied."

He lied about everything, didn't he? He lied almost as much as you lie to yourself.

An abbreviated knock hit the door before it jerked open, revealing the black silhouette of the castle's resident Potions Master. Snape appeared as murderous as he had the night prior—perhaps even more so in the light of day. His movements oozed displeasure and aggravation, his stride quick but stilted as if he fought the urge to kick someone, hard.

Remus knew that stride. In the past, it had usually preceded a violent confrontation.

Snape spotted Remus half-slumped against the wall and hesitated, his robes curling around his legs when he stopped short. Remus didn't miss how he palmed his wand.

Ah, Remus thought in a voice little resembling his own. Still afraid of the big bad wolf, Snivellous?

"Lupin," the man drawled, teeth cutting into the final consonant with particular force. "Slacking off already, are we?"

"No, no," Remus assured him, plastering a fake grin on his otherwise slack face. "Just lost my…equilibrium for a moment."

Gray eyes in a still face, a gloved fist held loose on the table between her and James' daughter—.

"Do you plan to stand there like an ignoramus or are you going to take this?"

He noted the goblet in Snape's hand, the man's pale fingers crimped tight around the stem. Smoke curled from the liquid's surface.

"Oh, thank you, Severus. Could you put it on the desk there for me, please—?"

"No," Snape spat, lip curling. "No, you're going to take it now, in front of me. I won't be held accountable if you have a sudden…lapse in judgment."

What does he mean by that? Sighing, Remus straightened and approached, crossing from one side of the room to the other. With each step, Snape held himself stiffer and stiffer, nostrils flaring, black wand clenched in a shaking fist hidden in the folds of his robes. Remus took the goblet from him and Snape recoiled, one of the tables screeching against the stone floor when the man's side struck it.

The sound lingered as Remus held his breath and drank.

Were he an uncouth man, Remus would have said the Wolfsbane Potion tasted like piss. Perhaps not uncouth so much as blunt: it tasted of piss with the curious undertone of Muggle battery acid, and he almost vomited the mixture right back onto Snape's shoes the moment it hit his stomach. "Can't you—? Is there no way to maybe…change the flavor?" he croaked, one hand braced against his middle as the remainder crawled down his throat.

Sneering again, Snape summoned the empty goblet from Remus' grip. "Even if it were possible—which it is not—I would not waste my time for your benefit."

"Thanks for that."

The Potions Master turned to leave.

"I mean that sincerely. Thank you for doing this. It means so much, and I know—."

"I don't want your fucking gratitude. I want you to shut up and never speak to me again if it can be avoided."

Snape was almost to the door.

"Severus?"

He kept walking without pause.

"Severus, I—wait! You have E—Miss Black in your class, yes?"

Snape stopped dead, one hand on the door's handle. The barest tip of his dark head indicated that Remus had his attention, no matter how fleeting. "Obviously."

"Can you—what…what do you know about her?"

"…Why?"

"I—." Why? What possible reason could Remus have for wanting to know about a young girl he had only met this afternoon? How could he possibly ask that? "No. Never mind."

Snape turned and fixed Remus with a harsh, calculating look, and again the werewolf had to reconcile the image of a scrawny, cruel Slytherin boy with that of the menacing Dark wizard before him. "If you have any sense at all in that cavernous space between your ears," he said, voice soft, cold. Emotionless. "You will stay away from Potter and her friends. I am not that Headmaster. I am not a fool—because I remember with perfect clarity the people you once called friends at this school. How far do those old loyalties extend, hmm?"

Remus swallowed. "I don't know what you mean."

"You know exactly what I mean."

"I have nothing to do with Sirius Black."

"And I do not believe you."

Anger flared in Remus, kindling alongside the memories of old laughter, boyhood antics, and the smell of his life burning to ashes. "And you, Severus? What of your old loyalties?"

In a whorl of black fabric, Snape disappeared once more into the hallway and Remus remained alone in the empty classroom. He straightened the desk the Potions Master had collided with—and only when he had his hand pressed to the wood did he notice the tears splattering on the surface.

Only then did Remus begin to sob.


A/N:

Remus: *Drops to the floor in a panic, caterpillars out of the room.*

Class: "…"

Harriet: "Still not the strangest professor I've had."

100% believe Snape is irrationally terrified of Lupin and werewolves in general.

Chapter 113: insidious little things

Chapter Text

cxiii. insidious little things

Somewhere on the fifth-floor corridor, while much of the rest of the student body tucked into their lunches and enjoyed their midday break from classes, Harriet Potter's head peeked from an oval mirror set high on the stone wall. She turned in place, squinting, and studied the ground, the wall, and then the corridor itself, blowing her hair from her eyes as she did so.

Mrs. Norris happened to be passing by—and when the old cat glanced up to see a head hanging from a mirror, two green eyes blinking at her, Mrs. Norris yowled. Harriet stuck out her tongue and the cat went sprinting in search of her master, which meant it was time for Harriet to scamper. She jerked back, the cold prickling over the crown of her head and against her cheeks until she appeared once more in the seventh-floor reading room.

"That one leads to the fifth floor," she said to Hermione and Elara as she hopped off the mantel. The smell of old soot tickled her nose, the rug underfoot dusty and frayed "Could be a bit dangerous to go through, though, since it's out in the open and high on the wall. I think I scared Mrs. Norris half to death."

Elara snorted and took another bite of the sandwich she'd stolen from the Great Hall, flicking specks of dirt from her thigh. "At least we know where Filch is now."

"How does he understand what that daft cat is saying? D'you think he can speak feline?"

"Don't be silly, Harriet."

"I don't think it's silly. I mean, I can talk to snakes, after all."

She dropped onto the ratty couch next to Hermione and dragged the sheet of parchment she'd been using closer, beginning a loose sketch of the seventh floor. Hermione watched her do so for another minute before speaking up.

"It seems a waste to put all this on paper. It could be ruined so easily."

"It's a map, though, Hermione. Isn't this how you're supposed to make maps?" Harriet studied the ornate hearth flanked in badgers and drew the shape of it in minuscule, biting her lip as she concentrated on holding the quill steady. "I guess I could use an Impervius Charm, but then I couldn't add anything more to it."

"Even an Impervius Charm would only protect it from liquid—not from fire, or tearing, or crumpling." Hermione crossed her legs, the lifted foot bobbing as she thought. "We're magical for goodness' sake. There has to be a better way."

"Well, I left my stone and chisel in the dorm, so unless you've got a better idea, I'm going to keep using the quill." Harriet finished a notation and sighed, eying the mess of convoluted directions and half-filled in sections. In theory, finding the Moon Mirrors sounded like a thrilling afternoon adventure, but it consisted mostly of them blundering through rooms that hadn't been touched in a few centuries, getting chased by pixies and Elara's persistent dusty allergy. "It feels impossible to actually map all these bloody things. A third of the mirrors don't exist half of the time—look, like this one. The reading room disappears on Tuesdays!"

"That was probably by design," Elara remarked after finishing her food, wiping her hands clean. "I doubt anyone other than Rowena Ravenclaw herself was aware of all the Moon Mirrors and their positions."

"What about Slytherin?"

"Maybe, but doubtful. He may have assisted in creating them, but I would assume he didn't help place them all."

"True." Harriet folded her splotched map after drying the ink, then had a sudden thought. It was likely only the Founder could locate every Moon Mirror—but Harriet knew exactly where to find Rowena Ravenclaw to ask. "Huh."

I'd have to go back to the Aerie, though, she reminded herself with a grimace, choosing not to say anything. Merlin, I don't want to do that. The portrait might not be there, either. It could have been toasted along with the Basilisk.

They gathered their school things and the rubbish left over from lunch and departed, dragging wary feet down the long path to Defense Against the Dark Arts. They passed the Headmaster and Filch on the fifth floor, the latter gesturing wildly about with a yowling Mrs. Norris tucked under his arm. Professor Dumbledore gave the three Slytherin witches a knowing smile as they hurried by.

"We could probably look for more Moon Mirrors after dinner," Harriet mentioned as they walked. "We have plenty of time before Astronomy, after all."

"Can't," Elara replied.

"What, why?" Elara muttered something unintelligible and Harriet raised a curious brow. "What d'you say?"

"I have choir practice," Elara repeated, louder, and from the way her eyes shifted about, Harriet knew she wasn't entirely comfortable admitting as much. "McGonagall signed me up for it."

Hermione brightened at the mention of something extracurricular that didn't involve charting broom cupboards for three hours. "Oh, that should be fun, shouldn't it? I didn't know you could sing!"

Elara went decidedly pink in the face and scowled. Harriet coughed.

"I've signed up for the debate club," Hermione rushed on with a tentative smile. "I would have done it last year, but what with things being as they were….Anyway, it'll be good for both of us to have a hobby outside of schoolwork!"

Harriet barely suppressed a snort as she didn't really consider "debate club" too far from the realm of schoolwork, but she kept her comments to herself. She wouldn't judge her friend on what she found enjoyable. "Say, isn't that the club with all the Ravenclaws in it?"

"Yes—I mean, I'm not sure. It probably has a good few—." Hermione cleared her throat. "Why do you ask?"

Smirking, Harriet said, "No reason, really. I was just wondering if Mr. Boot would be joining you—ow."

Hermione whacked her arm.

They rejoined their class in the first-floor corridor outside the Defense room, finding spots against the wall while they waited for their inimitable professor. Nearby, Longbottom stood with Seamus and Weasley, the Gryffindor trio looking put out and sullen. Neville didn't have his shirt tucked in and Ron had foregone his tie, a trend Harriet noted was popular with the older boys—well, popular until Professor McGonagall came around docking points for disheveled uniforms or too much makeup.

"I was hoping he'd get the sack," Ron said under his breath, having enough sense to check the corridor before speaking. Merlin only knew where Professor Slytherin might suddenly appear. "It was almost nice having that Lockhart bloke substitute last term. The daft tit didn't have a clue what he was talking about, but at least we weren't afraid of getting hexed."

"Dad says Slytherin's got the Board in his pocket, basically." Longbottom ruffled his own hair, exhaling. "I don't understand it much, but he told me it's more complicated than it seems."

"Bloody Basilisk could have at least done us a favor and eaten him before it croaked."

Next to Harriet, Hermione stiffened and grit her teeth. She turned as if to give Weasley a piece of her mind, but the door chose that moment to sail open and crash against the wall, so she snapped her jaws shut and followed the rest of their peers into the cold room.

Harriet hadn't missed Professor Slytherin in the slightest over the holidays. Seeing him again—appearing like a summoned demon in the thicker shadows bleeding between the lit torches—sparked anxiety in her veins and it prickled along her arms. The uncanny resemblance to Tom Riddle stirred those haunting memories of the Aerie as the Diadem's specter looked down upon her with mad red eyes and screamed his rage at her.

"Welcome to your third year of Defense Against the Dark Arts under my instruction," Slytherin said as he approached his lectern, his movements calm, almost apathetic. Gone was the frantic, hate-filled ire of the previous year; the elimination of the Basilisk and the person framing their professor had returned Slytherin to usual calculating self. Harriet almost preferred the angry version. At least then he would only set them to reading and ignore their presence until the bell rang. "Quite the achievement. Despite the…interruption incurred in your previous year of study, I have sufficiently taught you basic shielding and offensive spells. You have all matriculated…to the minimum standard."

People twitched under Slytherin's judgmental gaze but the class remained otherwise silent.

"For your third year, your studies will progress from practical spell knowledge to theory and its possible application. In particular, we will be concentrating on learning and recognizing various Dark creatures." He smiled and Harriet shivered, because a smile like that couldn't mean anything good for the rest of them. "Today's lesson will introduce you to a rather banal and common monster called a boggart."

A small snap! came from somewhere on Harriet's right, and she turned to see Elara had broken her quill in half.

Professor Slytherin didn't notice or, more likely, didn't care; he waved his hand toward a large trunk hidden behind his desk and it rose up over the barrier, drifted through the air, and landed with a bang in front of the class. Everyone stared at it—and when the trunk jumped, Lavender Brown shrieked.

"Now, now, where's that Gryffindor courage?" Professor Slytherin soothed as he swanned over to the trunk and placed a placating hand on it. "There's nothing to fear—so long as you have no fear, of course." He laughed—the sound higher and colder than his usual voice, a keening, unhinged sound Harriet despised.

"Can anyone tell me what a boggart is? Yes, Mr. Malfoy?"

"It's an apparition that takes on your worst fear."

"Close, but not quite. It is not an apparition; it is, by common terms, a parasite." Professor Slytherin flicked his fingers and stepped back from the trunk, receding once more into the shadows. "Boggarts infest magical homes and gain their sustenance through the emotional energy of fear. To harvest this emotion, the amorphous being takes the form of the greatest fear of the nearest witch or wizard."

He suddenly waved his hand and the trunk's lid opened, the belts securing it closed flapping like broken bird wings. Vapor rose from the trunk's insides, coiling in upon itself until it congealed like lumpy toothpaste, twisting and expanding, the class taking in a collective gasp and leaning back in their chairs as the moving shape landed before Parvati—.

The Gryffindor let out a shriek as the form solidified into a twitching, lopsided mummy. Bedraggled bandages covered its withered form and black blood oozed from the crevices where the bandages didn't reach. The mummy bellowed, groaning like wind through dry reeds, its joints creaking and snapping as it reached for Parvati—.

Slytherin gave his wand an indolent twirl. "Riddikulus!"

The mummy disintegrated back into a whorl of smoke. The Professor dispersed it the trunk before it could take another shape, and once the lid shut, silence held the room like a stiff, painful spell. Overcoming her shock, Parvati started to sob. Lavender put an arm around her shoulders to comfort her and the witch only cried harder, the trunk jostling itself not two yards away.

"Five points from Gryffindor. Come now, Miss Patil. I do hope you paid close attention to the lesson, lest you wish to fail the test."

Truth be told, if Harriet hadn't heard Snape dispatch a boggart over the summer at Grimmauld, she wouldn't have the slightest idea of what occurred. The bottom of her hands felt tacky with sweat and her heart had fallen somewhere down by her feet. The mummy had looked so—realHad it been real?

"Professor Slytherin," Lavender said in a strained voice, holding onto her friend. Parvati's shoulders heaved up and down. "I think Parvati might need a Calming Draught."

The professor sighed as if terribly put upon. "Yes, yes. See her off to Pomfrey if you must, Miss Brown. That'll be a fail for both of you for the day."

Lavender helped Parvati to her feet, who needed no more prompting to bolt down the middle aisle stretching between the Gryffindors and Slytherins, forgetting her things behind her. Her crying continued into the corridor where it echoed back to them from a fading distance. Slytherin's lip curled as the girls disappeared, and another flick of his wand slammed the door in their wake.

"Longbottom. You're first, then. Approach and perform the spell."

Neville grimaced, but—to his credit—he got up without comment and came to the front of the room. He didn't blink when Professor Slytherin stared him down, nor did he flinch when the trunk crashed open again. Harriet gripped the edge of her desk as the boggart writhed, transforming into a wild-haired woman in black robes, her face twisted as if caught in the middle of a malicious laugh. Neville didn't let the boggart gather itself. Instead, he shouted, "Riddikulus!" as soon as he could and turned the boggart into a scarecrow that swayed and toppled over.

A new, cutting smile appeared on the professor's face, his head tilted so only the barest glimpse of torchlight could gleam in his terrifying eyes. "Very well. A passable demonstration, Longbottom. As you can see, laughter is the weapon of choice against a boggart. It's a simple-minded creature. Fixing a humorous image within your mind and using the incantation will force it to assume a less frightening visage, and will—in essence—starve the parasite to death. The rest of you should have no difficulty with this exercise. Next, Mr. Weasley."

Several students followed Longbottom. If they ignored Slytherin's snide comments and concentrated, most were successful to varying degrees, the boggart flopping from shape to shape as students obeyed their professor's command and stumbled up from their desks, though no one actually laughed, no matter how funny looking the creature became. If the boggart turned toward Slytherin, he struck it with a silent variant of the Knockback Jinx and forced it closer to the class once more.

Harriet didn't know what the wizard meant by humorous image, and she wasn't sure what her boggart would become. Sitting in her chair, listening to others worry and shout and cry over the cracking sound of the boggart's shifts, Harriet tried to think of what could possibly be her worst fear and couldn't decide.

Most everything scared her, honestly. Harriet wasn't very courageous—just stubborn, stubborn enough to persevere despite her doubts, racing pulse, or clammy hands. What would the boggart become? A Basilisk, perhaps? Or—the Dark Lord? Tom Riddle? What would happen if Riddle showed up in the middle of the classroom with Slytherin to bear witness?

Merlin help me if it does, Harriet griped, chewing on her lip. What was a 'humorous image'? Riddle with clown makeup? A Basilisk sock-puppet? Turn Quirrell into a two-headed penny?

"Miss Black," the professor called.

Next to Harriet, Elara didn't move.

"Your turn, Black."

"No thank you, Professor."

Heads turned in the resulting hush. Fay Dunbar gasped.

Blinking, Slytherin's expression shifted from one of perverse delight to distaste, and he flung the boggart back into the trunk as he strolled out from behind the lectern and crossed the aisle. Harriet swallowed past the lump forming in her throat, Slytherin coming to stand before Elara's desk and, by extension, near Harriet's own. He braced his pale, skinny fingers on its edge and lowered his face nearer Elara's. She shrunk farther into her seat.

"You will either do as you're told," he said, voice quiet and deriding. "Or you will receive a failing mark for the day."

"Yes, Professor." Elara crossed her arms and yet still didn't move. Harriet almost kicked her for bringing his scrutiny onto herself—but doing so at the moment would be unwise. Slytherin's lip pulled back to bear his sharp white teeth.

"Detention, Black. Tomorrow afternoon."

"Of course, Professor."

He straightened and, as if sensing her attention, jerked his head toward Harriet. "You," he snapped. "You're next, Miss Potter. Approach the trunk."

Nodding, Harriet stood, expending the effort to put as much space as possible between herself and Slytherin, and hurried forward. She could feel all eyes upon her as she faced the front of the classroom, her fingers clumsy and cold as she tugged her wand from its brace and held it in her fist.

What would it become? Quirrell? A Basilisk? Riddle? A Dementor—?

Bang! The trunk lurched and skittered several inches on the stone floor. Without warning, Slytherin again cast a spell and the lid opened, allowing the boggart to come spilling out like bubbling tar. Harriet sucked in a deep breath, preparing herself—.

The boggart stiffened and expanded, becoming larger than anything it had so far. It grew large enough to almost blot out the torchlight and Finnigan, in the second row, swore aloud and almost fell out of his chair. The boggart grew—until it stopped. Confused, Harriet took a step back as her classmates exchanged puzzled murmurs.

After all, how odd was it that Harriet Potter feared a boot cupboard?

The little door came open and the innocuous brass chain rattled against the painted panel. The hinges complained, a noise so ingrained in Harriet's memory, she jumped as if jolting awake from terrible dreams, ducking to avoid the stair riser. A black haze of tiny spiders spewed from the inside and the class shrieked, Ron Weasley screaming louder than anyone—and yet all Harriet could do was stare at the unrelieved darkness bared within.

"You don't have the right to anything, you ungrateful freak!"

Her mouth was dry, dry as a bone.

"See if we let you out before Christmas!"

Harriet didn't understand. She hadn't expected this, not in the slightest. Why the cupboard? Why the cupboard?

"You don't talk to me like that!"

The voices were only in her head. They weren't here. She wasn't afraid of—.

"There is no such thing as magic."

The darkness seemed to swell and creep closer and closer.

"There's no such thing—."

She wasn't afraid of—!

"—As magic."

"Potter!"

Stumbling, Harriet turned to her professor, who once more had his wand trained on the immobile boggart-cupboard. She gawked at him, breathing hard, and Slytherin rolled his eyes as he again defeated the boggart and dismissed the ugly, creeping mist into the trunk. The torches flickered in their brackets. "What a dismal showing. Return to your seat, Potter."

Harriet did so. She dropped into the chair behind her desk, her wand still in hand, and didn't hear the giggling or whispered speculation over the roaring in her ears. She didn't feel Hermione's hand on her arm or see Elara glowering at their instructor. Harriet just stared at the empty blackboard and tried to remember how to breathe.

What in the hell had that been?


A/N:

Harriet: "Professor Slytherin looks like he's in a good mood."

Slytherin: "Good morning, children! It's trauma time, my favorite time!"

Harriet: "Why do I go to this school."

Chapter 114: fortune teller

Chapter Text

cxiv. fortune teller

 

The first weekend proved a welcome distraction after only two days of class.

Harriet loved Hogwarts. She loved learning and exploring the old, twisting corridors, discovering new magic and figuring out how it all came together—but she didn’t love the gossiping or the snide, sideways glances she got in the Great Hall or common room. She could do without that quite nicely.

In a strange twist of fate, so many strange rumors about Harriet had occurred in a such a limited time frame—the Dementor, the unicorn, the boggart—that no one could get their story straight, and the gossip-mongers started making up ridiculous tales even the most gullible of people didn’t believe. Besides, they much rather talk about Sirius Black than some weird third-year Slytherin witch.

The rampant discussion regarding her criminal father meant Elara didn’t want to leave the dormitory much, spending an awful lot of time writing to her solicitor, Mr. Piers, while Hermione claimed she had far too much homework to complete to do anything else. Harriet didn’t know how Hermione could have so much homework after only two days of class. Had Harriet missed an assignment somewhere?

Harriet spent much of her weekend on her own, occasionally running across Luna and Ginny or the Weasley twins, who helped out in her map-making expedition by showing her a few hidden areas around the castle where she did, in fact, find another Moon Mirror. This one dumped her somewhere in the lower dungeons, and it took Harriet almost two hours to find her way out.

She avoided the second-floor corridor and the hidden passage by the library, knowing full well her best choice would be to find Rowena Ravenclaw and ask about her system of mirrors. She would have to go eventually, just to check…but not yet. Not quite yet.

So Harriet wandered about, made notes, and drew places around the castle that served as landmarks. Alone, she had ample time to sit, write her own letters, and also reflect on what had happened in Defense Against the Dark Arts.

It didn’t make sense. The cupboard at Privet Drive, for all that it had been small and cramped and spider-infested, had more often than not been a refuge away from her relatives and their insults. It hadn’t frightened Harriet, no more than Uncle Vernon or Aunt Petunia had, and definitely not more than Tom Riddle.

Harriet decided to push the why of the situation to the back of her mind, no matter the lingering splinter of disquiet still needling her. It wasn’t important. When she crossed a boggart again, she’d be ready for it—and Professor Slytherin could just go stuff himself.

Sunday afternoon found Harriet farther afield than she knew she should be wandering, perched on a column outside Gagwilde Tower in the Sunweather Courtyard. The weather definitely wasn’t sun-weather; the rain drizzled in intermittent bouts and mist clung to the forest’s roots, pawing at the edges of the grounds like ghostly cat claws. She kept an eye out for Dementors but had failed to see any daring to cross the boundary.

The column wasn’t very tall, perhaps only four meters or so in height, the flat top of it plenty wide enough for Harriet to sit cross-legged upon. She’d scrambled up it without problem from the stone railing below—and besides, it wasn’t as high off the ground as the column in the courtyard’s middle.

The upperclassmen called it “the Angel’s Plinth,” but on closer inspection, Harriet didn’t think the statue on the raised platform looked much like an angel. It looked like one of the old woodcarvings depicting the fae. The summer before last, when Snape had been in one of his more contemplative moods, Harriet had chanced to ask about the fae she’d read in a Wizarding book, and Snape had said they were a part of an old belief about the origin of magic. Legend said they’d descended from the fae—but Snape attributed it all to a kind of creationism or a pagan religion that had existed before other religions like Christianity spread. Namely, it only held as much truth as one ascribed to it.

But that was neither here nor there; the statue didn’t matter so much as what it held. The crumbling stone fingers were wrapped about the frame of a mirror, and Harriet knew it to be a Moon Mirror because Hermione had taught her a spell to test for the presence of Occamy-silver. It could only be seen from a higher vantage, and only by chance had she thought to jump onto the railing to check the odd, murky glimmer. She couldn’t get close to inspect it, but the spell indicated from a distance, and Set had been the one to point out its location the day prior, all but tugging Harriet off her feet as she passed the tower on her morning run. Without a way of telling whether it was an entrance or an exit, Harriet settled for drawing the mirror, its statue—and the thick boards covering the grunge-encrusted surface.

She hoped it wasn’t an exit, or her indiscriminate explorations might land her with her head stuck between two planks like an old stockade.

The breeze kicked up and played with the edge of her parchment, Harriet leaning on her palm to hold it steady. A sigh escaped her. “Hermione might have been on to something about paper being rubbish,” she mumbled, studying the damp spots and stray streaks of ink caught by the rain. She cast another Impervius Charm on the stone beneath her, but the dew still welled and dripped over the top, soaking into the page and the seat of her trousers.

Water fogged her glasses and Harriet directed a second Impervius at the lenses. A glimmer of gold caught her eye—and she didn’t almost fall off her perch when Fawkes suddenly appeared before her, though it may have been a near thing. “Hullo,” she greeted as the phoenix clacked his beak and preened his pretty feathers. “You’ve been out and about more often than not this week, haven’t you?”

Fawkes trilled a lovely sound and Harriet grinned—until he started nosing about in her open satchel. “Hey!”

He managed to scavenge a Chocolate Frog, making quick work of the packaging with easy snips of his beak. Harriet frowned as he tore the frog apart and tossed it back. “What if you get sick, you numpty?” she chastised, gathering the rubbish before it could blow away. “Oh, look. A Dumbledore card.” She showed the bird and Fawkes cocked his head to study the portrait with one black eye. “I have a feeling you don’t listen to him either—oof!”

Harriet got a mouthful of tail feathers when Fawkes spun around, graceful as could be, and hopped into the air. Harriet thought that to be it, his mischief accomplished—so she was not prepared for the talons that sank into the back of her jumper and hoisted her up as if she weighed no more than a biscuit. “Put me down, you bloody birdbrain!” Harriet cried, locking her arms so she didn’t slip out of her overlarge jumper. The phoenix chirped—and then dropped the struggling witch a respectable two feet or so from the ground, letting her land in a heap by the waiting Headmaster.

“P-Professor Dumbledore!” Harriet exclaimed as she clamored to her feet, snatching her satchel up from where it had fallen in a puddle. “Sorry, sir!

“Hello, Harriet,” he returned with a gentle smile. “It appears you and Fawkes share a fondness for high places.”

“Oh, err—yeah?” She shot a sour look at the bird in question, who’d fluttered down to settle on Professor Dumbledore’s shoulder, feigning innocence. “What brings you out here, Headmaster?”

“I thought it a lovely afternoon for a walk.” Given the increasing rain and the low temperature insulting the summer date, Harriet knew he was telling a fib—or a bad joke. Did Professor Dumbledore do sarcasm? Either way, he knew he’d find her there. “What have you got there, dear girl?”

She’d had the presence of mind to snatch hold of her map before Fawkes snatched hold of her, and Harriet quickly stuffed it into her bag. “Nothin’. Just scribbles.”

Professor Dumbledore wasn’t convinced; in fact, he spared both Harriet and the Angel’s Plinth a knowing glance and quirked a brow. Harriet blushed.

He brought her back to the school proper and Harriet expected one of those light but firmly-worded reprimands against climbing and wandering off, but the Headmaster said nothing about her misbehaving, only wishing her a wonderful evening. Later, when she returned to the dormitory after supper, Harriet found two books wrapped in paper and twine left on her trunk’s lid, dropped off by an owl or a helpful house-elf.

There was no note, but Harriet knew where they came from all the same.

 

x X x

 

The Proteus Indices sounded like the title of a science fiction novel. The language inside certainly appeared as if it belonged to some forgotten alien species—but the book was not a novel. Rather, it was a text cataloging and discussing the existence and various applications of spells derived from the term proteus, the most notable being the “Protean Charm.” Harriet managed to read—and understand—just enough to know the Protean Charm, in its most basic form, affixed one object to its mimic, changing it as it itself was changed.

Harriet scratched her head as she read this in the dead of night, her wand-light hidden by the closed curtains around her bed. Why would the Headmaster give her this? After some time, and shameless picture hunting, she learned the charm could be used in all sorts of ways—like potatoes at supper time. It had to be the daftest comparison she’d ever thought up, but it made an odd sort of sense to Harriet; you could boil, fry, slice, dice, or mash them up to your preference, and so too could the Protean Charm be tweaked or applied in clever ways to make something seemingly new or inventive.

For instance, it could—theoretically—be applied to another spell to create a magical relay of sorts, one capable of mimicking information to another spell or—perhaps—onto a map.

Harriet fell asleep reading and woke with the alarm in the morning, slurring, “It’s all potatoes.” Daphne Greengrass looked at her like she was a deranged goblin.

The next book didn’t pertain to one spell in particular, being a part of an encyclopedia set Harriet knew she’d have to return to the Headmaster at some point, lest he forever be missing The Jargogle Jargon of Charms, Hiems Glassius through Illegibilus. One particular section had been marked for her review.

The Homonculous Charm,” Harriet read while sitting outside Ancient Runes on Tuesday, “is a circumstantial, non-renewing Charm specific to the schools of Animation and Translocation, as defined by the British Circle of Magical Mastery and Manifestation. The Charm, when applied to a proper medium, displays information pertinent to identity and movement of Ministry defined species classifications Beings and Spirits [Stump, 1811]. It should never be confused with the object known as a homunculus [pl. Homunculi, ref. The Jargogle Jargon of Transfiguration, Vol. 14, p. 321], an item of decidedly Dark origins sharing a Latin root with the Homonculous Charm.

“So that’s how they made it,” Harriet murmured under her breath. Dumbledore obviously knew she was making a map—and maybe knew about the Marauder’s Map himself, though she couldn’t say for sure. She would need to show this to Hermione and Elara when she got the chance. Both the Homonculous Charm and the Protean Charm built upon a knowledge of Charms Harriet hadn’t had the chance to accumulate yet, and yet she wanted to understand it. The deeper she peered into the magic of it, the more fascinated she became.

The teacher arrived before the bell and shooed her waiting students into the classroom. Professor Babbling was a short witch with a cloud of red curls escaping from under her hat—and she spoke with both a lisp and the strongest Glaswegian accent Harriet had ever encountered. That meant she spent much of their first lesson gesticulating and drawing funny symbols on the blackboard, and by the time class ended, Harriet wasn’t sure she hadn’t been speaking a foreign language for the duration of her lecture.

After another grueling session of Defense Against the Dark Arts on Wednesday, the trio of Slytherin witches trudged their way up to the very top of the North Tower, Harriet especially grateful to Hermione for memorizing the way, as she believed they wouldn’t have ever found it without her. They arrived first to the circular trap door at the tower’s top, attached to which was a slender brass plaque.

“Sybil Trelawney, Divination Instructor,” Hermione read aloud, a small moue forming on her upturned face. “That’s curious.”

“What? The professor’s name?”

“No, not that so much as the fact that her name is there to begin with. I haven’t seen such a plaque for the other professors.”

Harriet leaned against the wall and rubbed her tired eyes, listening to the wind rattle in the high windows.

“Maybe she lives here,” Elara said. “I haven’t seen this Professor Trelawney out in the commons or the Great Hall before. Have you?”

“No, I suppose not.”

More people joined them as the end of the break loomed, Hufflepuffs and Ravenclaws and a few other Slytherins dashing up the long, spiraling steps. Last of all came the Gryffindors—led, of course, by their intrepid leader, Neville Longbottom.

“Merlin’s arse,” Harriet groaned aloud when the Prat Who Lived came around the corner, him and Finnigan and Weasley all panting for breath.

“Got a problem, Potter?”

“No. Never mind.”

Neville scowled and appeared on the verge of instigating an argument, then paused and glanced at Hermione. Kneeling, Hermione had her hand in her bulging school bag searching for something, so she didn’t notice Longbottom until he said, “Granger? I thought you had Ghoul Studies.”

Hermione flinched and straightened, nearly knocking her head into Harriet’s elbow. “Why would you think that?”

“Because Sophie’s taking it and said you were in her class.”

“Well, I’m here, aren’t I?” She flipped her hair over her shoulder and turned away from the puzzled Gryffindor.

“But—.”

“Leave off, Longbottom,” Elara interrupted. Harriet gave him a steely-eyed, foreboding look—though, in her mind, she thought it was a strange kind of mix-up for Sophie Roper to make. But, then again, here Hermione stood, and it wasn’t as if she could be in two places at once.

The trapdoor popped open and out tumbled a spindly silver ladder. Of course, Harriet and other girls gathered on the landing—all dressed in their uniform skirts and robes—frowned. Some of the boys, catching on, snickered, and Dean Thomas whistled. Neville lived up to his shining-hero persona by ordering his group mates up the ladder first.

“This is ridiculous,” Hermione huffed as Malfoy shoved Crabbe and Goyle over to the ladder. “It’s sexist and—stupid. Why do we have to climb a ladder to get into our class like it’s a—tree fort?”

“At least I know to wear my shorts next time.” Sighing, Harriet readjusted her bag over her shoulder, poked Kevin and Rick to still them in her robe pocket, and then climbed into the classroom.

The heat pressed upon her as soon as her head breached the floor, somehow both sticky and dry, fueled by a thick fire raging in a soot-stained hearth mixing with melting condensation. Harriet sucked in air laden with patchouli and frankincense, a tangible haze of it sticking to the rafters of the circular attic room, swirling around twisted baubles hung on frazzled twine. Among the low tables, chintz armchairs, and spongy poufs stood a skinny woman who had a striking resemblance to large, a bejeweled dragonfly. She’d draped beaded shawls over her bony shoulders and wore thick, bulbous glasses that accentuated the bugginess of her dark eyes.

“Greetings, greetings,” the witch—Professor Trelawney—rasped, wafting her hands in a wide, lofty manner. The bangles on her wrists clattered together. “Find your seats, my children, find your seats.”

Elara needed only take two steps into the room before she sneezed, twice, and cast an aggravated, teary-eyed glare toward the line of burning incense sticks stuck to the stained mantel. They went to the table set farthest from the hearth—which was, unfortunately, already occupied by a smarmy, pointy-faced git.

“Potter,” Draco drawled as she dropped onto a pouf. He’d taken the only armchair available.

“Malfoy.”

“Good to see you didn’t faint on your way here.”

“And you didn’t get trampled by any sparkly horses this morning.”

Hermione hissed at them both to be quiet as Professor Trelawney continued speaking.

“You have all found your way here—as I have foreseen. Today, you shall begin your spiritual journey in Divination, the most difficult of arts for one to accomplish—the art of divining that which has not yet come to pass. You!” She suddenly pointed at Michael Corner. “You, boy. Your name?”

“I—? Michael Corner, ma’am?”

“Beware the color green. It is not your friend this week!”

Michael’s eyes widened—and he glanced at the Slytherins in fright. Harriet huffed.

“I am your guide, your adviser, your professor—Sybil Trelawney, and together we shall open your Inner Eye to the many wonders of the astral plane!” Again, the bangles clacked together like checkers on a board when she threw her hands in the air. The class stared. “But, alas, not everyone is capable of truly appreciating the marvelous gift of Divination. Few will prove themselves, as the Sight is a flighty wonder whose touch is felt by so very few! Books can only deliver one so far into this practical realm.”

Hermione dropped Unfogging the Future onto the table and almost knocked over the candle.

“Disappointed, Granger?” Malfoy snorted, leaning his elbow on the table’s edge.

“What are you even doing in this class, Draco? Didn’t your mother tell you to take Ancient Runes instead?”

“Yeah.” The slightest of pink tones tinged his pale face. Harriet guessed it could be from the stifling heat. “But Father said an ‘O’ is easier in this class, and it’s not like I’ll need an Ancient Runes N.E.W.T for Ministry work, is it?”

“Hmm.”

Professor Trelawney came nearer their table, swaying in the dull, crimson light struggling to pass through the covered lamps. “This term we will be concentrating solely on tasseomancy—that is, of course, the study of tea leaves. A very important cornerstone of any magical ritual. One should never risk venturing from their home without first consulting the vagaries of the tea leaves.”

Elara sneezed.

“You, girl!” Elara froze. “Fetch me the teapot there. The big silver one.”

Elara did as bid, rising and walking over to one of the many shelves lining the rounded walls to pick up a large teapot and bring it to their professor.

“My thanks. Oh, and dear? That which you are fearing will come to pass will happen before the Yuletime.”

A ghastly pallor overtook Elara as she sank onto her pouf like a water droplet falling down a windowpane.

Professor Trelawney gave them further instructions while she quickly brewed a plain tea and distributed cups of the murky liquid. They split into pairs—Hermione drawing the short straw and grumbling when she turned toward a smug Malfoy—while Elara and Harriet settled on the other end of the table, drinking the tea and swirling the dregs about until they flipped the cups over to drain.

“Remember to consult the figures in Unfogging the Future! The references there will help uncloud your Inner Eye.”

“My inner bullshite,” Harriet muttered as she flipped through her book and looked for the index, more than a bit ticked off. The professor had no business saying something like that to Elara. Her friend was under enough stress as it was. “Hmph. All right, give me your cup, lemme see….”

Harriet spun the cup around in her hands a few times. She couldn’t make heads or tails of what she was meant to be looking for and the low, obfuscating light played tricks on her eyes. “Erm, I think it’s a—uh…a person, maybe?” She tilted the cup, face scrunched. “Or a gnome, or a dwarf? Let’s see….dwarf…it says—oh, projections of calamity and disgrace. Let’s just—.” Harriet poked her little finger into the cup and manipulated the dregs about. “There we go! Now he’s a cow! And cows mean…a profitable transaction! Brilliant!”

Elara rolled her eyes and dragged the book closer for her own inspection. Harriet did see a small smile at her lips, though.

Perhaps sensing Harriet wasn’t taking this seriously or seeing her cup still face down on its saucer, Professor Trelawney picked her way over and snatched it up, leveling one owlish eye in her direction. “What do they call you, my dear?”

“Er, Harriet Potter, ma’am.”

“Potter…Potter…ah, yes! There’s a touch of destiny about you, I See it!”

Harriet glanced down at herself. A bit of dirt clung to her sleeves and arms from where she’d gotten down on the floor to talk with Livius under her bed. “I think that’s just dust, professor.”

Malfoy and Hermione pretended to be fascinated with their own cups as to not laugh aloud. Either Trelawney didn’t hear Harriet or she just didn’t care, because she kept going.

“Ah…geese in a flock…an unwelcome visitor will come to call upon you soon. And here—.” She gave the cup a practiced swivel. “A tiger! A poor omen indeed. Your protectors will place you in peril through inaction or poor decisions! And last—the gallows! Tragedy awaits you, Miss Potter!”

Harriet gawked at the woman, her heart worming its way up into her throat, choking her breath. It doesn’t mean anything, she told herself, tension making her neck and shoulders ache. She’s just having a laugh, spooking the new third-years….

“Poppycock,” Hermione grumped just loud enough for Trelawney to hear. The professor gave her a peeved once over as she set Harriet’s cup back down.

“Your name, if you would be so kind?”

“Hermione Granger.”

Well, Miss Granger, it is a horrid fate indeed that we cannot all be blessed with the splendor of an Inner Eye. Oh, to live life so myopically—you have my sincerest pity, dear child….”

Trelawney may have been batty, but she had the good sense to flutter away before Hermione could recover from her shock. Fuming, Hermione slammed her book shut, face flushed and tea forgotten. “That—that daft cow!”

Malfoy started to laugh.

Harriet, on the other hand, didn’t join in, her mood thoroughly ruined by prophecies of doom. Instead, she nudged Elara’s cup aside to rest her head on the table, and by the time Trelawney flipped Neville’s cup over and started to wail about finding a Grim, Harriet stopped paying attention and took a much-needed nap.

She didn’t think she was going to like this class very much.


A/N: Petition for the wildlife to stop harassing Harriet.

Trelawney is honestly one of the hardest characters to write, wtf. And 90% of tasseomancy symbols are just “Doom awaits you, dummy.”

Chapter 115: brother mine

Chapter Text

cxv. brother mine

Severus Snape released a low, aggravated sigh as Gabriel Flourish continued to sob.

Few would believe it of him, but Severus did actually keep office hours and those office hours were, on occasion, taken over by blubbering, homesick children or supercilious teenagers with a grudge. He would sit behind his desk with his markings and allow them to talk themselves to death—or to their own amelioration, whichever occurred first, and sometimes he had to send an owl to their parents or Pomfrey or the Headmaster. Rare were the times in which he had to drag Slytherin into his office to deal with what, by all rights, should be his duties to begin with.

He pinched the bridge of his nose as Flourish sniffled.

Slytherin enjoyed the perks of being Head of House—the prestige, the access to more information, being the entitled figurehead of his Death Eater breeding grounds, and, more specifically, having a direct line of ascension to the role of Headmaster if—when—Albus passed or stepped down. God help them all if—when—that day came to pass. What Slytherin did not enjoy, however, was the menial and more routine duties assigned to a House's Head: namely, taking care of the bloody students.

It fell to Severus to enforce the wizard's wayward demands, to offer begrudging counsel and discipline as needed, to chase errant students down after hours or wake in the dead of night when one of the idiots passed the ward on the common room entrance. Oh, they only dared come knocking on his office door if left with no other recourse, and for that small mercy, Severus gave thanks to whatever cosmic force looked over his shitty soul. He couldn't imagine what kind of nauseating coddling Pomona or Filius had to dole out on a daily basis.

He retrieved his pocket-watch and judged it against the hour on the carriage clock, exhaling when the first-year sitting before his desk sniffled snot up his nose. "Mr. Flourish," he said, drawing upon the vestiges of his patience. "I will have a word with your dormmates regarding the…reallocation of your possessions, and if they are not summarily returned, consequences shall follow. I will write to your father in regards to your damaged textbooks."

"I don't want to bother my Da about this."

Severus rolled his eyes. "I doubt your father would be bothered by such a thing, but I will refrain from writing for the time being." He ground his teeth and jerked a handkerchief from his pocket when the boy wiped his dripping nose on his sleeve. "Pull yourself together, Flourish. That's a disgusting habit."

He jumped at Severus' brusque tone and accepted the handkerchief, using it to clean his nose. "T-thanks, sir." He sucked in a breath, hiccuped, and found another, calmer one. "Professor?"

"What is it?"

"What i-if they don't stop? What if they keep taking my things a-and taunting me?"

Frowning, Severus bit back the first retort to come to mind—to hex the lot and cover his tracks. That's what he had done when the pure-blooded cunts in his year had nicked his things. "Then your dormmates will suffer the consequences of failing to behave in accordance with the rules all students of this school must adhere to." He paused. "You need not associate with them, Mr. Flourish. If they do not respect you, they are not worthy of your time—or your tears."

Flourish blew his nose a final time and made some vague attempt to hand the handkerchief back—but Severus' scowl had him quickly stuffing it into his own pocket. "Thank you, sir."

"Off with you, then. I have other matters to attend."

Flourish scuttled through the door having survived the Potions Master's dreaded temper—though Severus surmised his dormmates wouldn't fare as well, especially if Severus had to repeat himself in regards to this matter. "Idiots," he grunted, writing himself a note to tend to later. He spared the clock another glance, then departed his subterranean office to brave the light of day. The unseasonable weather had relented, marginally, and the student-body took advantage of the sunlight breaking through the bank of iron-colored clouds.

Severus followed the shouts and laughter down from the school proper toward the Quidditch pitch, his robes eddying behind him in the cold, Scottish wind coming in off the lake. No one took note of their Potions Master out on the grounds, and so he made his way to the pitch without incident or delay, stopping only once he reached the shadow of the stands and looked out over the field. A makeshift game appeared to be happening among Gryffindor's players on the far side, while Slytherin House was holding a more regimented tryout on the other side. Members of both Houses dotted the stands, immersed in schoolwork or conversation. Hooch sat at the sidelines with a goblet of something decidedly alcoholic, ready to mediate the inevitable tiff between Houses.

Turning, Severus swept away from the entrance and the stands themselves to patrol the lower reaches, striding through the wooden supports and creaking rafters, his way illuminated by stray shafts of light peering through the boards. The occasional broom rocketed past and the wood groaned in the resulting downdraft.

He passed toward the stadium's outer edge where the struts lay bare and the ground eroded into a cliff above a wide crevasse and part of the forest. Here the wind bit harder, fiercer, with all the freezing gall of its winter counterpart, bellowing low in the open crevasse like a dying thing. His eyes slid over the dark trees and shadowed underbrush, finding nothing amiss.

"You're getting predictable, Severus."

He whipped about, wand raised—only to lower it when he spotted McGonagall watching him, her lips pursed as she shot a displeased look at the wand leveled in her direction. He didn't know how he'd missed her there, wearing her tartan cloak and obligatory hat.

"Minerva," he said, irritated by her sudden intrusion. Severus did, however, lower his wand and let her approach. "It's hardly being predictable when I'm set to do rounds, now is it? Aren't you to one who creates those timetables?"

The old cat snorted, briskly rubbing her arms as she came out into the wind. Her pointed hat jostled but stuck firmly to her head. "Rounds inside the castle, yes. Not out marching about the woods."

"It's hardly the woods." Severus kept walking, taking the narrow path looping around the stadium, dipping into the crevasse, revealing the beginnings of a briny delta bridging the Black Lake and a smaller tributary disappearing into the forest. Below lurked Hinkypunks and the occasional kelpie, and all along the silt-covered shore bobbed the bulbous heads of grindylows. He continued on, Minerva keeping pace.

The Transfiguration professor was silent until the path rose again and they climbed the stone steps carved into the side of the slope and fell once more into the stadium's chilling shade. "I suppose we had the same idea," McGonagall admitted—and when she shifted her arm, Severus could spot the familiar handle of her wand tucked into her buttoned sleeve. "But I doubt Black would come this way, even if he did access the grounds through the Forbidden Forest. Nor would he show himself in the middle of the afternoon."

"If he can escape Azkaban, he can cross a bloody bog." His statement lacked conviction. Weeks had passed with little news of Black's whereabouts and Severus had begun to dare hope the bastard had been flattened by a Muggle lorry, but still he made it a point to check the weakest points in the warding—if one could consider a mire infested with Hinkypunks, kelpies, and grindylows weak. In truth, Severus didn't believe Black needed to tromp through the wilds to gain access to the school; he felt certain the bastard need only ask his old acquaintance for assistance"And should he decide to hunt Potter or Longbottom, he won't care about witnesses. He's shown that shining quality already."

"No, I guess not." Minerva frowned, her expression gone melancholic as she thought of times long passed. Severus didn't share in her reverie; it only served to fuel his rage and his sick vindication that Black was at last seen for the monster he'd always known him to be. That vindication wasn't worth twelve Muggle lives, Lily, and two orphaned brats though, and so the feeling curdled in his gut until Severus wanted to vomit to purge himself of it.

"I don't think I'll ever understand why he did it," Minerva sighed. "He loved James and Lily—."

"Spare me," Severus spat. "You and the Headmaster exemplify the notion of the blind leading the blind. Don't be so surprised by a trait I recognized in Black years ago." His hands flexed, fingers tightening. When he sent me down into the dark of a tunnel to die by his best mate's hands. Or claws, as it were.

They paused once they crossed under the stadium's supports and stood at the field's entrance, watching their respective students fly about. The Gryffindors continued to play their game, members of their House not on the team dotted around the goal post, taking turns in the air, the mood genial and decidedly Gryffindor. The Slytherins had not ceased running drills.

"The girl needs to be told," Severus intoned as he leaned a shoulder against the wall, the exposed wood snagging on his robes. "She needs to be told her life is in danger. Albus found her out at the Gagwilde last weekend. Merlin only knows how she managed to tear off without any of us being the wiser."

"We can't know what Black intends to do. Her life may be in danger, yes, but so too are the lives of the others—Mr. Longbottom, Miss Black." Minerva gestured at the field before them, a scowl deepening the lines on her face. "They are all in danger while that—man is on the loose, Severus, and you cannot deny that Miss Potter is having a rougher time than most this year. Why would you wish to burden her with knowledge of Black's relationship with her parents?"

"Is it our place to coddle the girl, now? Where was this vaunted Gryffindor compassion when Potter was living in a cupboard?" The staff had all heard about the boggart by now; Slytherin took particular delight in taunting children over their fears and did so every year, always enumerating the manifestations he found most amusing. He thought Potter feared the dark—but Severus knew better.

Color rose in Minerva's cheeks. "Don't get shirty with me, Severus!" she snapped. "I see you haven't taken the liberty of going against Albus' decision and telling her yourself. If you believe she needs to know so badly, then do so. On your head be it!"

He clenched his jaw. The damn witch has a point.

A sudden whistling drew their attention upward in time to see two brooms swerve hard and clip the stands, Marcus Flint driving the object of their conversation into a bench, the resulting bang echoing in their ears. Flint shot off again, laughing, and Severus barely had time to register the tingling in his wrist before the girl flung herself after him with a growl.

"Och, they're going to break her neck, playing like that!" McGonagall exclaimed. "Can't you do anything about those boys—Severus?"

The Potions Master hadn't heard a word she said. Distracted, he stared at his hand, at the fingers as pale as cut stone bleached by the sunlight, feeling the phantom sting wend through his veins until it discharged like unwanted static. Minerva stared at his hand as well, until he jerked it back and hid the offending limb once more in the folds of his robes.

"Severus—."

"Don't."

His footsteps made little noise, but still the crunch of gravel could be heard in the silence strung between the pair as Severus strode away. McGonagall followed, of course, and while the witch might not match him in height, she certainly matched him in speed. "Your vehemence over this issue will not put me off, young man! What if you drop dead, for Circe's sake! What would have us do?"

"I'd be dead and beyond caring, witch!" Severus stopped and glowered, willing Minerva to let it go, to return to her pride of disobedient dunderheads and leave him be. He was the only person alive who knew of his Vow and it belonged to him. It was penance branded into his flesh, his promise, and he didn't owe McGonagall a damn explanation. Severus took a breath, then another. "If I drop dead, do yourself a favor: find a ditch, shove me in it, and move on. You'll have far more pressing issues to deal with, I assure you."

"You're being ridiculous."

"Have you mistaken me for some maudlin fool all of a sudden? It is none of your business—and it certainly isn't Albus' either. It is mine. Keep your nose out of it."

With a final glare, Severus continued on to the school, leaving Minerva and the daylight behind.

x X x

Naturally, the interfering witch didn't leave the issue be.

She stepped out of his office Floo not ten minutes before curfew, arching a brow when he cursed under breath and dropped the book he'd been consulting. "Have you a purpose for being here, Professor? Aside from sorely testing my patience?"

"I'm not one of your students, Severus, and you won't address me as such." One uttered incantation later and Minerva had a comfortable wing-chair to sit in, sniffing in disdain as she glanced over the shelves of preserved specimens. "We haven't finished our discussion. No—you needn't raise your hackles. You've said what you wish to say, and now you will listen to me."

She folded her hands together on her lap and cleared her throat, square spectacles catching the dim glow from the fire. Haven risen partly from his seat, Severus dropped back into it with a huff. "Have you ever been told what happened to my younger brother, Robert?"

"Given the trajectory of this conversation, I postulate it was something…unsavory."

"You could say that." Minerva exhaled, her tone mild and yet somewhat disquieted. "He died in the first war. To Death Eaters, in a manner of speaking."

The fire crackled, and beyond his door echoed the footsteps of Slytherins hurrying down to the common room, eager to be shut in before their Head of House emerged for his rounds. While Severus and Minerva sat in strained silence, guilt swum in the wizard's chest. Not because he had anything to do with Robert McGonagall's fate; no, Severus hadn't participated in the raids, relegated instead to the horrors of the laboratory, which provided their own abominations and night terrors. However, he'd enabled those who'd killed Minerva's brother, blinded himself to the atrocities committed by and in the name of the Dark Lord. He traded his soul like a rumpled quid for a packet of rotten crisps. That Minerva could stand to be in the same room as him was a testament to her strength, not his.

"He was always very impetuous, my brother Robert. You would have thought him the quintessential Gryffindor. Our brother Malcolm and I spent years trying to bring into line, but he also proved wilier than our efforts. When Rookwood broke down his door and threatened his family, Robert did the only thing he could to protect them."

When she didn't continue, Severus cleared his throat and forced himself to speak. "And that was?"

"He took an Unbreakable Vow. That was what Rookwood was after, in the end. He was spying at the Ministry but sought all forms of information, anything he could gather and present to You-Know-Who. The movements of Order members were especially coveted at the time." A grim smile ticked the corner of Minerva's mouth. "Rookwood swore Robert to report on all of my activity in exchange for his family's lives. Part of the Vow ensured he could not reveal his duplicity to me or anyone in the Order, and still Robert swore to it."

Severus waited again while Minerva gazed into the hearth, lost in thought or memory. She met his eye and grimaced.

"As I said, he was horribly Gryffindor. Not an ounce of sense in the poor lad's skull. He moved Allana and his boys into hiding and did the stupidest thing he could; he told me of the Vow." Again Minerva exhaled a long, drawn-out sound. "The fool died in my arms."

Severus shut his eyes. "My condolences."

"Well, he's been dead for quite some time. There's nothing for it." Minerva straightened her robes, her expression somber, but her eyes remained dry, steely. "But don't you dare tell me to stand by while you kill yourself, Severus Snape, and then tell me to shove you off into a ditch. That is a level of callousness I refuse to accept, even from you!"

The Potions Master steepled his hands together and rubbed at his brow. A headache brewed there, brought on by the constant worry he maintained to stay alive in Slytherin's presence, and now by Minerva's well-meaning—but ultimately misplaced—haranguing. "What would you have me do, Minerva?"

"I would have you place some measure of trust in me. We've been colleagues for over a decade."

"I am not afforded the luxury of trust."

His clock chimed once in recognition of the hour, and Severus turned a pointed look to the door. Minerva rose to leave, the disappointment clear in her face. She went to the exit, but paused with one hand on the knob, delivering a final, parting remark. "And what would Miss Potter think if you were to die without a word? Without anyone the wiser as to why?"

Severus couldn't help himself; dark laughter rose unbidden inside him and escaped in a cold, unfeeling chuckle. "I imagine she wouldn't think anything at all."

Chapter 116: though hate were why men breathe

Chapter Text

cxvi. though hate were why men breathe

"We don't have to go, you know. We could stay with you."

Elara had been repeating something similar for the duration of the week leading up to Hallowe'en. She repeated it again now and still Harriet shook her head and repressed the morose little sigh trying to escape her middle as she watched the other students march by Filch and file out the door.

Harriet wanted to go to Hogsmeade. She wanted to go just like everyone else, her entire class fit to burst with excitement over the prospect of visiting the Wizarding village, but she couldn't. She hadn't given the permission slip that came with her Hogwarts letter this summer much thought, considering she chose to pretend her real, legal guardians didn't bloody exist most of the time—but without the slip, Harriet couldn't leave the castle. She'd asked Professors McGonagall and Dumbledore if they'd sign—if anyone but the Dursleys could sign—but both had gotten a curious, unsettled glint in their eyes when they said they couldn't sign and that it'd be best if she stayed in the castle for now.

Harriet knew she had moments of stupidity and dense-thinking—she was thirteen, it came with the territory—but she recognized lying well enough when she saw it. Something went unsaid in her professors' answers, a reason for why they didn't push and prod at the rules to give Harriet a bit of leeway. She wasn't looking for special treatment necessarily, but she hadn't seen the Dursleys since she was ten and imagined popping by for them to sign a magical permission form wouldn't go over well—not after leaving a few dozen snakes in their foyer. The professors preferred Harriet remain at Hogwarts and she wondered why.

It also didn't help that the permission slip had burst into flames when she tried to forge Aunt Petunia's signature, putting paid to that idea.

"No, I'll be fine here," she said to her friends, smiling as best she could. "I might work on Transfiguration homework—or my map."

Hermione fussed with the fastenings of her cloak. "Don't experiment with that Charm while no one's here," she warned, holding a finger up. "According to the books, the Protean Charm can react unpredictably and potentially spark fires if overheating occurs—."

"Yes, I know, Hermione. I won't try it."

"But maybe we should stay. It's not fair to you—and it's just a silly village, after all—."

Hermione's statement ended in a yelp when Harriet pinched her side. "No, go to Hogsmeade and stop dithering. Get me something from that candy-shop everyone's always talking about."

"Honeydukes?"

"Yeah, that one."

Elara fidgeted with her robe pocket and pulled out a slip of parchment and a small pencil. "What do you want?"

"Oh, um. Chocolate Frogs? And one of those nice gift assortments—you know the ones the pure-blood families always use for their Yule gifts? It'd be great to not have to owl order this year."

"There's usually another Hogsmeade trip before Yule."

"And they'll be sold out, knowing my luck." Harriet snorted. "Could you get some Cauldron Cakes, too?"

"Mhm."

"And some parchment? I'm almost out. And quills. And—."

"Mhm."

Elara dutifully wrote all of Harriet's rambling down. "I don't have my money on me, I have to pop back to the dorm—."

"It's fine."

"But I—ow!"

Harriet jumped when Elara flicked her between her brows. "I said it's fine."

"Girls!" came McGonagall's firm reprimand, the professor having appeared at Filch's side. Harriet guessed she might be there to make sure she didn't slip out. Not that Harriet couldn't; she'd found a classroom on the upper floor with a wonky window opening onto an eave she could, theoretically, slide down into the tree growing below it. She could cut across the grounds easy enough—but she'd never get past the bloody gates, even with her Invisibility Cloak. She couldn't fathom the kind of trouble she'd be in if a professor caught her. "Miss Granger, Miss Black, are you heading to the village, or are you staying behind?"

"Going, ma'am."

"Then hurry yourselves up."

Harriet hugged her friends one last time and saw them to the door, watching as they caught up with Terry Boot and Anthony Goldstein and turned just once to give her a wave. Harriet returned the motion, then allowed her face to settle into a frown, crossing her arms against her middle. "This is bollocks."

"Two points from Slytherin, Miss Potter," scolded Professor McGonagall. "You need to keep your language, and your temper, in check."

"Yes, ma'am."

Sullen, Harriet shuffled away from the entrance hall, taking the steps into the dungeons. She had to duck into an unused classroom when she heard Professor Slytherin come stalking past, not at all inclined to explain to the wizard why she wasn't in the village with everyone else. When he disappeared farther down the corridor, Harriet continued to the common room and slipped inside, slumping over to her preferred table by the window.

"I don't want to do stupid schoolwork," she grumbled at the textbooks they'd left behind before Elara and Hermione departed. Harriet stuffed her unfinished assignments away in their proper folders, then shoved her books into her bag, staring glumly out the window into the depths of the lake. A fish swam through the scraggly reeds and paused to look her over, then went on its way.

All right, Potter, Harriet told herself, heaving a large sigh. Time to stop brooding, lest I turn into bloody Snape.

Like last year and the year prior, Hallowe'en had proved a difficult day for Harriet to endure. She felt morose—and sore, because though Professor Slytherin's new curriculum meant he'd stopped hexing her into the floor or the desks, Flint and the Quidditch team seemed to be personally affronted by her perceived weakness after the Dementor incident and had taken it upon themselves to toughen her up. It was either that or they'd decided to pound her into a pulp one Bludger at a time.

Stretching, Harriet cast a look around the common room. She was the oldest student present, naturally, and the second-years were taking full advantage of their seniors' absences to crowd near the main hearth, taking up the best armchair and chaise. Harriet cast her gaze toward the other end of the dim room and spotted a few first-years milling about. A particular pair caught her attention, as the shorter boy was trying to grab his book while the other held it out of reach. Harriet pushed herself to her feet and wandered over.

"—give it back, Mullins!"

"You're making a scene, Flourish. Don't whinge like a mutt—."

Having walked up behind the one called Mullins, Harriet snatched the book from his hand and whacked him in the back of the head.

"Ow—! What the hell, Potter!"

"Stop being a prat," she told him, shoving the first-year Transfiguration textbook into the hands of the shorter, red-headed boy.

"Mind your own business, half-blood!"

Harriet snorted. "Yeah, I'm real scared. Bugger off, smart-arse." Mullins' mouth popped open in a way eerily reminiscent of a certain pompous pure-blood prat in her own year, and Harriet was quick to cut him off. "Before I go get Snape."

"You can't! He's in the village today!"

"Slytherin, then."

The boy paled, his skin gone blotchy behind new acne. It'd only been two months, but the first-years already knew better than to bother the Head of Slytherin with trivial matters. "You wouldn't."

"I just might." She wouldn't, actually. Calling on Slytherin was like playing Muggle Russian roulette; at times, the wizard almost seemed to care about his House, moments of chilling competency hinting at a calculating mindset Harriet would never truly understand—and then he did things like hex his own House members and laugh when third-years broke down in tears before their worst fears. She'd rather smack Mullins in the mouth than go to Slytherin—and she really didn't want to do that either.

Mullins hesitated, then decided his pride wasn't worth calling Harriet's bluff and stomped off to join his mates by the fire. The other boy—Flourish—clutched his book close and gazed up at Harriet with a suspiciously dewy-eyed look that made her uncomfortable. "Y'know, next time, you can just get a prefect—or, well, bugger there's none here—or just, I don't know, kick him in the shins. Don't let him walk all over you is what I'm saying."

"O-okay. Thanks, Potter!"

"Right."

Harriet quickly scuttled from the common room after that, feeling self-conscious and not wanting to get in another tiff with Mullins. Without anything else to occupy her time, she journeyed deeper into the dungeons to avoid Slytherin lurking somewhere around the Great Hall or his office, and took one of the Moon Mirrors she memorized to a higher floor. Her foot caught on the gilded frame and she toppled to the corridor floor in a graceless heap.

"Stupid thing…." She winced at the resounding ache throbbing in her sore knees. "Shit…."

"Ha—? Miss Potter?"

Harriet rolled to her side and spotted Professor Lupin stopped on his way to his office, carrying what looked like a towering stack of student essays. She got to her feet and gave a hasty greeting.

"What are you—?" He gave the mirror a baffled look. "How—? Why aren't you at Hogsmeade with your friends?"

"Oh, um. I'm not allowed." Harriet brushed the dust from her robes and winced when her fingers probed another bruise. Ruddy Flint. "My rel—guardians didn't sign my permission slip."

"Why ever not?"

"They—. I don't know, you'd have to ask them, Professor," she fibbed, shrugging. "D'you need any help with those?"

Blinking, he let several of the loose scrolls in his pile spill into Harriet's arms and she followed him to his office, dropping the stack off on his desk. "Would you care to join me for tea, H—Miss Potter?"

"Okay, sure."

The professor went about ordering a fresh pot from a helpful house-elf while Harriet settled in the visitor's chair. She grimaced at the hard seat and stiff, wooden backing, guessing the chair was a holdout from Selwyn's time in residence. She'd never visited the office before, the wooden shelves mostly bare aside from a few tattered tomes left here and there. There were no framed photos on the wall or on the desk, the simple mantel above the cold hearth left empty except for a few candles. She hoped the professor wasn't thinking about leaving. It hadn't been very long, but Harriet liked Professor Lupin. His lectures had leveled out from the initial, nervous rush to a more sensible stream, and he did his best to engage them in fun, history-related activities.

"You can call me Harriet if you like," she commented, eying the scarred wizard. "Since you've almost said it a couple of times now."

Lupin flushed and fidgeted with the cups as he poured the tea and slid Harriet's across the desk. She accepted it—and dipped her Erkling spoon inside when the professor looked down to doctor his beverage, just to be safe. "I apologize. I don't mean to make you uncomfortable. I—." He cleared his throat and folded his hands around his teacup, eyes on the amber liquid inside. "Well, I was…friends with your parents in school and—after. It seems like only yesterday to me that you were born."

"Really? You knew them?" Harriet asked with a sudden smile.

"Yes. James more so than Lily. I only got to know her better when they married."

"What were they like?"

Something in the eagerness of her tone gave Professor Lupin pause, but he sipped his tea and forged ahead. "They were good people. Honest and—very kind. We were in the same House—same year. Gryffindor. I imagine you already knew they were Sorted there."

"…yeah."

Remus set his cup down. "They would have been happy to see you doing so well in school. Professor Dumbledore told me you were in the top ten of your year last term."

A soft snort escaped her. "Hermione and Elara were first and third, and I was only ninth. They're much cleverer than I am."

Emotion flickered over the professor's face, gone as soon as it appeared. "Yes, well…."

They chatted for a time, enjoyed their and eating the chocolate biscuits delivered with the tea service. Harriet didn't want to reminisce about her parents overly much—not today, not when the memory stung deeper than usual—and so she moved the conversation away and asked Professor Lupin if he enjoyed teaching so far.

"I like it very much," he said with a smile. "I always wanted to teach, but I feared I wouldn't have the constitution for it. I get sick rather often, you see."

"I'm sorry. You're much better than Professor Selwyn. He was a bit of an ars—not nice bloke?"

Remus chuckled. "So I've been told. His lesson plans alone have given me an unfavorable impression of the wizard. Truth be told, though I wanted to teach, I never saw myself as a History of Magic professor. I would have preferred Defense."

A muscle twitched in Harriet's mouth and she swirled her cooling tea around the dregs in the bottom—thinking about Professor Slytherin and Divination in equal doses. Slytherin had moved on from boggarts in September, but the thought of the cupboard still lingered in Harriet's mind like a splinter in her skin. It didn't bother her for the most part, but sometimes it caught and pulled, resulting in a nasty sting. "Professor? D'you know anything about boggarts?"

"Boggarts? Yes, a fair amount. Why do you ask?"

"Why would a boggart become something that wasn't…scary?" She set her finished cup down on its saucer and gripped the edge of her chair, taking a moment to think of the right words. "My boggart—well, I'm not afraid of it, at least I don't think so. It could have become something a lot more frightening and I guess I just don't understand."

"You didn't ask Professor Slytherin?"

Harriet choked. "Have you met him? Sir?"

Professor Lupin conceded her point, leaning back in his more comfortable chair, elbows on the arms, hands clasped against his middle. "Most people have uncomplicated fears. They fear things with tangible presences: insects, spiders, dogs, snakes. But other fears are less tangible: a fear of heights, deep water, darkness, etcetera. In an effort to match your worst fear, the boggart must become something that best symbolizes it, and the more abstract the fear, the odder the boggart's choice may seem." He sighed and unlaced one of his hands to idly rub at his scarred cheek. "I knew of a man who…lost a child in a fire. His boggart became a pile of ashes."

"That must be terrible to see."

"I imagine it is. My point, however, is that this man didn't necessarily have a fear of ashes or even of fire, but still the boggart became exactly what it needed to become in order to evoke his terror. A trigger, you could say."

"Oh." Harriet again pictured the cupboard in her mind, the angular door with the brass vent, the dusty, unfinished underside of the stairs. If she closed her eyes, she could almost see herself there; the stuffy darkness, the smell of pine cleaner in her nose. Hunger rippled in her middle and somewhere overhead Dudley sat in his room playing a video game, the controller rattling in his pudgy hands, the sound drifting down the stairwell. Aunt Petunia walked by, heels clicking on the floor.

But what did it mean? She didn't care about the cupboard, and the Dursleys—she wasn't afraid of them. She was a witch, for Merlin's sake, and she wasn't afraid of being locked in the dark when she knew how to open a door and how to make light, and she knew no one would ever make her go back to Privet Drive. If Uncle Vernon ever laid a finger on her again, Livi would eat the bastard alive. So why did the boggart choose the cupboard?

She guessed, like Professor Lupin had said, the cupboard itself was just a symbol—inconsequential in and of itself. Ashes were just ashes, but they spoke of a ruin once belonging to something precious. As Harriet thought about her relatives' house, the image of Uncle Vernon looming overhead flickered in her mind, the man's face beet-red, walrus mustache bristling as he hissed, "There's no such thing as magic!"

Harriet shivered. That would be a nightmare worthy of a boggart. Maybe it was selfish or foolish, but the terror of Voldemort and Riddle or any of the monsters she'd come against so far paled before the horror of somehow waking up alone in her cupboard and realizing all of it—Hogwarts, her friends, magic—had been a dream. She would much rather be here, fighting adversity and facing danger, than back at Privet Drive, suffering under the heel of normality.

"Thanks for the tea, Professor Lupin. And the information."

"You're quite welcome, Harriet."

x X x

Elara and Hermione returned from Hogsmeade with the rest of the school minutes before the Feast was due to begin, which meant they only had time to drop their belongings off in the dormitory before they were all escorted to the Great Hall. Harriet's mood remained strained, but she brightened when greeted by her friends, and they told her stories about the shops and landmarks dotting the village and its exterior setting.

"It's one of the only fully magical villages in the kingdom," Hermione explained as she spooned yams onto her plate. "So there aren't roads, really. The streets meander a bit back into the mountains—there's farmland back there apparently utilized by the school to help procure meals—."

"What she means to tell you," Elara interjected. "Is that the village streets loop back upon themselves—all bordered by the Forbidden Forest, the Black Lake, canyons, or sheer rock face. It can't be approached on foot or by car by Muggles."

"Yes, that," Hermione said with a nod. "It's rather fascinating to see, really! Magic being used openly without the thought of hiding it. It reminded me of Diagon Alley—but more domestic, and a bit tamer in its approach."

Harriet, who'd already seen several Wizarding villages on her trek across the country, hummed in agreement and stuck another spoonful of potatoes into her mouth.

"Hey, Potter," Malfoy said from his spot next to Hermione. Harriet wondered why he was sitting there when, in the past, he'd stuck his nose in the air and claimed he couldn't be bothered to join such company. "Why weren't you in the village?"

"I got in trouble over the summer," she said. After leaving Lupin's office, she'd gone off to the library to poke about and had time to imagine a better story for her absence. "They punished me by not signing the slip."

"That's barbaric. What did you do?"

"I—err, set my uncle's trousers on fire."

Malfoy snorted and returned his attention to his food. Hermione arched a brow in question and Harriet shrugged. "It actually happened once."

The Feast ended when the final dish of treacle tart was swept away and tired students toddled off toward their common rooms. The trio of witches stopped at their favored table, the same table by the window Harriet had glared out of that morning, and they delved into the veritable hoard of sweets, confections, and necessary stationary Hermione and Elara had dragged back with them.

"What did you two do, buy out the store?" Harriet asked around a laugh as she surveyed the mountain of boxes. She swore she was too full for another bite—and yet she unwrapped a Cauldron Cake and ate it anyway.

"Close enough," Elara admitted. "You did have a point about it being easier to buy the gifts now rather than wait and order by owl. Those there are mine, so keep your sticky fingers to yourself."

"What kind did you get?"

"I said don't touch—."

"Honestly, Harriet, we just ate…."

They wandered to their beds not long afterward and, in the quiet of the unlit dorm, Harriet laid on her back and stared at the canopy above her, listening to the other witches breathe evenly until they dropped off into sleep one by one. Livius crawled his way up from his nest beneath the bed's skirts and made himself comfortable under Harriet's body, hissing soft, nonsensical things in her ear as he dozed.

"That boggart's an idiot," Harriet murmured to herself, eyes sliding shut, heavy with lethargy. "Magic's real…."

She would have joined the others in slumber—if not for the door coming open with a sudden, forceful bang, Prefect Farley standing at the threshold, illuminated by the dim silver lamps flickering in the corridor. "Up!" she shouted. "Up, now! We need to report to Great Hall, immediately!"

The prefect disappeared before anyone could ask a question, already throwing open the door to the next dormitory. Startled awake, Harriet hurried to her feet and pulled on her dressing gown, her heart thumping in her chest, her hand sweaty on the handle of her wand. Already the sleepy calm that had settled upon their room shattered, replaced by a high-strung tension mirrored in the echoing shouts of Prefect Farley moving farther away.

Parkinson dragged herself out of bed with a reluctant cry. "I swear this stupid holiday is cursed!"

It just might be.

Tight fingers clasped hold of Harriet's forearm, and she followed the arm up to Elara's pale, stricken face. They moved into the corridor, and from there into the common room, the Slytherins little more than dark shapes moving under the doused lights, muttering and rustling. Unease prickled in Harriet's neck. Was it possible she was asleep already? Merely dreaming?

"What's going on?"

Motion stirred in the darkness of an open door and stepped forward, Harriet balking and almost tripping over Hermione in her rush to move. There stood Professor Slytherin, red eyes gleaming, the wizard a pale and ghastly figure framed in the black of night. His smile was wide and almost manic as he looked upon the three witches.

"What's happening?" he repeated in a soft, sibilant voice. He turned his eerie gaze to Elara and held it there. "Allow me to spoil the surprise. It appears your father has come for a visit."


A/N:

Remus: "Harriet's so quiet and studious, just like her mother."

Harriet: [topples out of strange mirror, swearing.]

Remus: "Welp, never mind."

Chapter title is from E.E. Cummings' poem "My father moved through dooms of love," about a father who, despite the hatred, hardship, and evils of life, lived true to himself and his own convictions.

Chapter 117: in the ashes

Chapter Text

cxvii. in the ashes

 

Remus met Sirius Black in the early morning of September second, 1971.

He remembered himself being a tentative and wary boy—a byproduct of a childhood spent terrified of discovery, moving from village to village before the neighbors caught on that the howling around the full moon was not, in fact, a dog. He’d come down to breakfast earlier than all but a few studious Ravenclaws, looking up at the High Table to see Professor Dumbledore glance his way and smile. He had been excited to begin class—and anxious about being around so many children his own age. His experiences in a dozen different Muggle primary schools had taught him that strange, scarred boys did not make friends.

Students had trickled into the hall—and then Sirius Black tromped in with James Potter, the pair familiar with each other in the way most pure-blood children were, having met once or twice before at some far-flung common relation’s birthday party or wedding. Despite being in their year—in their dorm—Remus had felt excluded and ready to accept that exclusion, to exist in the peripheries, grateful just to be allowed into the school—and then Sirius Black had thrown himself onto the bench at Remus’ side, arm brushing his with shocking casualty, and had held out his hand.

“Hey, nice to meet you! I’m Sirius.”

Remus had shaken his hand, had blinked up into the blinding smiling directed toward him like a starstruck fool, and had said, “I’m R-Remus.”

Sometimes, Remus looked back and thought it would have been better if he’d said nothing at all, if he’d stuck by his initial plan of keeping his head down and completing his studies—but there were certain things he could not bring himself to regret no matter the pain later inflicted upon him and his heart. Even so, he could not help but wonder how his life would have changed had he not shaken Sirius Black’s hand.

He’d only just settled into his bed when Dumbledore’s Patronus came sailing through the wall of his quarters, the spectral phoenix’s beak opening to tell him Sirius Black had attacked the Fat Lady, had slashed her portrait to ribbons. Remus sat frozen in the dark after the Patronus vanished, feeling as if he’d had a close encounter with a ghost—which wasn’t terribly far off from the truth. Then, he moved, bolting upright with enough force to throw his blankets to the floor, and he ran for the door, pausing only to shove his feet into his shoes without socks and to slip on his robes over his pajamas.

Panting, Remus met with the rest of the staff on the main floor, the lot of them making a show of being cool and collected—but Remus could feel the nervous tension in the air, the unbearable tang of fear burning in the back of his throat. Maybe they had a reason to be frightened, no matter their age or experience. If Black could escape Azkaban, if he could—could murder so many people and laugh about it—maybe they all needed to be a bit fearful.

“Severus has gone ahead to scout the dungeons,” the Headmaster was saying as Remus joined the group. “Professor Slytherin is—.” Remus could see Slytherin already, standing with his back to the wall inside the Great Hall while the last of the students were ferried inside the doors. He looked bored, for lack of a better word. Remus didn’t trust the wizard at all, not after Albus had taken him aside the first day and strongly cautioned him against conversing with or even meeting the eyes of the Defense professor. The students shuffled onto Conjured sleeping mats and gathered spangled blankets. “Minerva, you will stay here, and Remus—?”

“Yes, Headmaster?”

“The third floor, if you would. Quickly.”

Remus nodded and departed, shaking off the vestiges of his exhaustion as he pulled out his wand and strode through the unrelieved corridors. Sometimes he forgot how menacing the castle could be at night when the students were meant to be abed and the torches dimmed or doused themselves. It became an entirely different place—menacing and watchful, each footstep caught and magnified in the empty stone passages. He imagined it must have been similar, if not the same, centuries ago.

Of course, he didn’t think the Founders ever had to root out a serial killer hiding in their castle.

He reached the third floor, and Remus’ traitorous mind jumped to thoughts of Gunhilda of Gorsemoor—the One-Eyed Witch and the secret she hid inside her stone hump. Sweat prickled the back of Remus’ neck despite the pervading chill. He couldn’t be using the tunnel, could he? Surely someone in Hogsmeade would have seen him, and the map—. Remus had checked Filch’s office for the Marauder’s Map back in September but had come up empty-handed. Either it had been destroyed or misplaced—hopefully permanently.

Rounding a corner, he found Gunhilda in her usual place and inspected the statue, relieved to see undisturbed cobwebs linking the hump to the wall, a thin layer of dust laying atop the seal. He didn’t come this way. Perhaps the passage behind the mirror on the fourth floor? But, no—I checked that in September as well, and it’s closed off. Remus huffed a breath and moved on, his wand illuminated. Maybe we should start asking students if they’ve let in a great, black shaggy dog.

He nearly froze in place as the thought crossed his mind. It could not be possible; Remus couldn’t fathom Black still having the ability to change forms, not after twelve years in Azkaban. From everything he’d heard and learned over the years, it took a measure of thought, patience, and clarity of mind to hold the Animagus transformation; Black had to be barking mad after a decade in the Dementors’ loving care. There was no possible way—.

Anxiety crawled in Remus’ skin as he chewed his lip and checked behind a tapestry. Again he played the old worries in his mind, wondering if he should approach Dumbledore with concerns of his old map and Black’s illegal Animagus status—but that would mean informing the Headmaster that he and James and Peter had all direly broken his trust in their schoolboy years. What would happen to Remus then? Would Albus chuck the lying werewolf out on his ear? Merlin and Morgana be kind, he didn’t want to go back to Knockturn Alley. He didn’t want to go back to minimum wage jobs in Muggle stores, buying stale crumpets at the corner shop, his tea tin empty and his flat dark as a tomb. Having tasted this life, it’d be all the crueler to return to the dire straits he’d been living before.

And what if your negligence gets someone killed?

It wouldn’t. It wouldn’t. He just needed to pay more attention, be a bit keener in looking after the children—more so Neville, as it seemed the attack on the Fat Lady proved Black meant to go after the poor boy. The sheer relief Remus felt in realizing the bastard hadn’t tried to sneak into the Slytherin commons disgusted him, but at least Harriet and…her should be safe. Hopefully.

Remus became so absorbed into his own thoughts, he neglected to notice when a curtain of black parted from the greater shadows clinging to the stairwell, and he nearly shouted when that shadow collided with his side and threw him into the wall.

“For God’s sake, Snape!” he snapped, heart beating out of his chest, his embarrassment at being caught out quickly overshadowed by anger. “Are you out of your mind—?”

Snape had his wand raised, the edge dangerously close to Remus’ face, and so he kept his mouth shut even as he glared. The other wizard had a wild look about him, dark eyes glinting, hair disheveled, and Remus noted he still wore the entirety of his teaching attire, right down to the dragon hide boots and cinched cravat at his throat. He held Remus at arm’s length and jostled him, hard, startling Remus’ gaze back to his own. The wand twitched, and then—.

Legilimens!

Remus felt a sudden cold force hit his face, like opening a window in the dead of winter, the biting chill of it sinking into his flesh and bones in an instant. He was assaulted with a barrage of images ripped out of his subconscious, violent bursts of color like Muggle bombs falling from an unseen sky. At the forefront of it he could sense something other, a presence he quickly realized was Snape suddenly inside his head like a bloody jetty in the tide. From him rose a single idea—a thought, a name, a beacon, a tuning fork shivering to a very specific tone, searching for what matched it. Sirius Black.

He was a skinny lad in new robes, prefect badge on his chest, and Sirius reached out to straighten it—.

—Sirius’ hand was on his shoulder. They were older, seated a table, two plates of breakfast and The Prophet thrown aside—.

“—SIRIUS BLACK ESCAPES,” the headline proclaimed, Remus unable to look away as he dragged his weary feet past the newsstand, “MADMAN WANTED FOR—.”

“—the murder of twelve Muggles and the wizard Peter Pettigrew. He has been taken into custody by the Aurory.” He couldn’t believe what the wireless had just reported. He couldn’t breathe. No, no—not James and Lily and little Harriet—.

—Potter sat in his classroom, an open, curious expression on her small face. A pity she didn’t resemble James or Lily more, but she was a darling thing all the same. Her look was a bit harder than anything her parents had ever worn. Remus glanced at the girl next to Harriet and met a pair of familiar gray eyes—.

“—She has my eyes, of course,” Sirius said as he cradled the infant to his chest. “But there’s a little of her mother in there too.” Laughing, he carefully extended the wrapped bundle to Remus, and he accepted the slumbering child with exceeding care. “Isn’t she beautiful, Moony? Our—.”

“—daughter is dead,” he choked out between strained breaths, handsome face painted in soot and ash. “Marlene, her whole family, Elara—they’re all fucking dead—.”

—the remains of a burnt cradle like a hollow ribcage reaching through the ashes. Remus can’t stop sobbing—.

“—Where is she?” Remus ask as he came into door, tired and spotted with rain. Sirius didn’t stir from the armchair.

“I thought it best,” he said, quietly, “if she went with Marlene into hiding.”

“What? How could you—? How could you decide this without asking—?!”

—Shock bled from his heart—shock and betrayal and—.

—Rage, all he felt was rage as he screamed at the man he lo—.

—Despair, the ashes of a once grand home still drifting in the morning breeze, scorch marks and snow upon the cinder of walls, furniture, bones—.

“—no survivors,” the Auror said as he stood with Remus amid the wreckage. His face began to distort when Remus choked. “No survivors.”

All at once, the presence in his head retreated, and Remus sucked in air like a dying man as he blinked and focused on the wizard in front of him.

“Ah,” Snape commented, voice quiet. “So that is why you asked after the girl.”

Remus saw red.

“You son of a bitch.” He threw his fist into Snape’s face and they toppled, slamming hard into the stone floor below. “You had no right—!” Beyond reason, Remus aimed another blow at Snape’s face, only to get caught by a strike to the middle forcing the air from his lungs. They rolled, his head bouncing on the floor—but he had enough sense to jerk out of the way just far enough for Snape’s own fist to crack against the flagstones instead of his nose.

Fuck—!

They struggled, flailing like drunken Muggles outside a dingy pub—right up until somebody else dashed into the corridor.

“Enough!” Headmaster Dumbledore shouted, and the two men were yanked apart by a spell gripping the collar of their robes. Snape landed hard on his knees, not quite steady on his feet, while Remus stumbled but remained upright, blinking stars out of his eyes. Professor Dumbledore, marching forward to stand before them, looked less than pleased. “I will not have you fighting in the halls! What is the meaning of this?”

The uncharacteristic anger in the Headmaster’s voice made Remus feel thirteen again, standing with his three cohorts under the looming stare of his Head of House. Even Snape was here—just as sullen and snide as ever. The more things change, the more they stay the same.

“He accosted me,” Remus said, swallowing. “And invaded my memories somehow.”

Dumbledore turned his head toward Snape. “Albus, see reason,” the Dark wizard retorted, blood dribbling from his split lip. “How else would Black be getting into the school, if not without help from his faithful wolf—.”

“Severus.”

The Potions Master quieted.

“I have told you that Remus has my trust.”

“He does not have mine.”

“Be that as it may, you will have to hold faith in my judgment, then.” The disappointment in his tone couldn’t be mistaken, and even in a daze, Remus could see how it rankled Snape against his will. “I won’t accept this kind of behavior from either of you. We are colleagues and cannot be driven apart by petty grievances in these dark times.” Dumbledore rubbed at his brow, sighing. “I take it by your presence here the dungeons have been checked over?”

Snape nodded, his black hair falling forward to hide his face when his head dipped. Blood welled and dripped from his mouth.

“Good. Return to the Great Hall and watch over the students now.”

Again, Snape nodded, spinning on his heels to stride—limp—toward the stairs. Remus watched him go and exhaled, shaking hand coming up to prod a shallow graze on his cheek. He was pleased Severus hadn’t resorted to magic. He knew from experience that, by seventh year alone, his hexes had begun to far outshine the Marauders’ in both variety and viciousness. Remus didn’t much fancy spending the night in the infirmary. He already had a sizable bump on his skull.

“I do hope you’ll forgive Severus,” Headmaster Dumbledore said, his sad eyes also trained on the now empty stairwell where Snape had disappeared. “His occupies a rather…stressful position here. More stressful than my own, I daresay. He did not react well to your appointment.”

Remus grunted, not finding that surprising in the least. “I struck him first,” he admitted. “He…I wasn’t prepared for the memories he…stirred up.”

“He had no right to do such a thing. I will be speaking with him later.”

“I—.” He imagined that would only embitter the wizard all the more. What in the world had that spell been? Remus had heard of mind magics before but had never seen them in action, the art terribly esoteric and mostly relegated to lying, back-alley tricksters and frauds. That had not been a fraud. “I don’t understand why he seemed so—.”

“Angry?”

“No.” Not angry. Not a day passed in which Remus witnessed Snape in a mood varying from irritated, indifferent, or angry. This had been something else entirely; the fervor of his movements, the tightness of his grip, the tremor in his breath. “…afraid.”

Surprised, Dumbledore hummed in thought and furrowed his brow. They stood together in the barren corridor and all was silent, not a madman to be found, the night beyond the windows clad in dark clouds and nascent fog creeping in from the mountains. Remus knew the Headmaster wouldn’t be there if the rest of the castle hadn’t already been scoured. He knew Black must have gotten away. Merlin, how he hated Hallowe’en.

“I believe Severus has a lot to lose if Mr. Black were to attack the students.”

That puzzled Remus. “What would he have to lose, sir?”

Dumbledore just smiled and didn’t say a word.


A/N:

Dumbledore: [banging pots together in the corridors] Wakey-wakey, escaped murderer in the school! Slumber party time!

Chapter 118: between these yearning stars

Chapter Text

cxviii. between these yearning stars

The gentle scratching of quills was the only sound to be heard in the quiet classroom.

Professor Babbling sat at her desk, idly turning a page in her book as her students identified and copied the long lines of runes drawn upon the blackboard. Most had blank, tired looks on their faces, resting their chins on their folded arms. Some watched the clock in hopes of time going faster.

A moratorium had been placed on all conversations concerning Sirius Black after Hallowe'en, but that hardly meant much to the students, who spent their free time in the corridors gossiping and glancing about as if expecting Black to come popping out of a suit of armor. In an effort to curb the panic and rumor-mongering, some professors—like Babbling—had implemented assigned seating and separated chatty groups, a consequence Harriet loathed. Even so, It hadn't taken Hermione more than a quick trip to the library to find a work-around.

Seated near the front, Harriet paused in her transcribing to glance at Professor Babbling, then over her shoulder toward her friends. 'Do you think they're going to send Aurors?' she scribbled on a note. 'For the Prat Who Lived's protection?' Harriet folded the slip of parchment, eyes still on Babbling, and when the professor paused in her reading to yawn, Harriet twirled her wand below her desk and muttered, "Permuto."

The folded note flickered—suddenly replaced by a different slip of parchment, her own note landing either on Elara or Hermione's desk. Harriet was never certain which one it'd make it to; she could use a bit more practice with the Switching Spell. Pretending to work, she unfolded the new note, spotting Elara's handwriting. 'The breach is on the front page of the Prophet. They're citing Dumbledore's incompetence as Headmaster and Slytherin's lack of efficacy. As usual.'

A soft scoff left Harriet as she dipped her quill in the inkwell. 'Of course,' she replied. 'The Prophet's basically run by the Ministry, innit?' She folded the note, returned it to the corner of her desk—and it switched on its own, swapped out for her original note. Glancing at Babbling again, she opened it and read Hermione's response.

'Well, the Ministry doesn't seem very keen on action, do they? They seem more amiable to the idea of giving Professor Dumbledore just enough rope to hang himself with, if you'll excuse my expression.'

Harriet replied, 'As long as they don't post a Dementor INSIDE the school. Or send another tosser like Lockhart.'

'You write to that "tosser" at least once a week.'

'He's a funny tosser. But, at heart, still a tosser.'

Harriet heard a muffled laugh from the back row and Professor Babbling raised her gaze, surveying the busy students, then went back to reading. The note flickered again, replaced by Elara's parchment.

'The Prophet presents its own bias but provides a powerful tool in swaying public opinion, don't you think?' Another line below that read, 'We need that map.'

'The Weasleys' map?'

'Yes.' A large inkblot marred the page as if she'd held the quill above it, pausing for thought. 'It would be prudent to have if Black has managed to infiltrate the school. If he can do it once, he can do it again.'

Unease wriggled in Harriet's middle as if she'd swallowed a worm. She was pleased Sirius Black apparently wanted to get into Gryffindor Tower and murder Longbottom—not that she was necessarily happy about someone wanting to kill Neville, rather more relieved the madman hadn't tried to go after Elara. Still, Harriet had learned from Quirrell that attacking one student didn't make a bloke incapable of attacking another. It'd be dead useful to have a map that could tell them if a bloody murderer was in their school with them.

The night before had been a startling experience for the entire student body, but more so for Elara, who'd spent hours staring at the Great Hall's ceiling, her blankets bundled in white-knuckled fists. Everyone they passed in the halls kept whispering or pointing. An older Hufflepuff prat told Elara, "Hey, can you ask your dad to take it easy on the rest of us?" and Harriet hexed his shoes to the floor when he wasn't looking. Hearing the thump! and alarmed cry of his body falling behind them had been satisfying.

'We have to finish the Moon Mirror map, then. Or rob the Weasley twins. Think we can break into Gryffindor Tower? They got that portrait of Sir Cadogan now, y'know, the nutter from the south tower? Apparently, he changes their passwords fifteen times a day.'

'We obviously need to finish the map.'

Harriet stifled a groan. She didn't want to finish the map. Finishing it meant finding Rowena Ravenclaw's portrait—which meant returning to the Aerie.

She could almost feel Elara's gaze burning a hole in the back of her head, waiting for a reply, and Harriet was saved by Professor Babbling, who dropped a clean quill into her book to mark her place and returned to her feet. "All right, class. Eyes up front! Let's see what you've come up with…."

When the bell rang and released them, Harriet needed only to wait a moment in the corridor for Elara to turn to her with an expectant look. Elara didn't often look at her like that; really, Elara didn't often want anything, which made denying her all the more difficult. "Bugger it," Harriet whispered under her breath as she shook the nervous, buzzing tension out of her hands and wrists. "Okay," she said louder, shoulders slumped. "Okay, you're right. We'll finish the map. Let's go to the Aerie."

Hermione—who had only ever heard the stories of the Aerie and the vast aisles of books—brightened, then paused. "But we have Charms right now."

"Flitwick is out with the flu," Elara reminded her, the upper-year Slytherins having told much of the rest of the House they'd arrived to class earlier in the day only to find a substitute waiting for them. "We can skip it."

Sputtering, Hermione said, "We can't just skip a class!" then lowered her voice despite the lack of other people in the corridor. "Are you mad? We'd be in so much trouble!"

"What else is new?" Harriet shrugged. "Who's teaching it, then?"

"Madam Pomfrey, they said."

"Hmm." Harriet waffled over the idea, weighing the threat of imminent detention over the looming drudgery of two hours in what would basically be a study hall. Swaying, she took a decisive step in the direction of the Aerie and Elara grinned. Hermione put up a fuss as they walked, but it was half-hearted at best, and soon the idea of wandering into Rowena Ravenclaw's hidden trove of knowledge won out. They reached the library's floor by the time the bell rang to signal the end of break and hurried onward, worried they'd cross a professor curious why they weren't in class. All the while, Harriet's hands continued to shake.

Don't be stupid, she chastised herself, wiping her sweaty palms off on her robes. It's empty now. It's just like the library. Perhaps better, given Pince isn't in there lurking.

Exhaling, Harriet concentrated on their destination and the hidden passage revealed itself, the three witches taking the corner past the portrait of the goose wrangler to find the faceless bust waiting for them. The uncanny eyes seemed to watch as Harriet approached.

"Once I thought, but can no longer. Once I saw, but now am blind. Empty, empty am I."

Frowning, Harriet glanced to her friends, both of whom shared thoughtful looks as they considered the statue's riddle. Hermione figured it out first. "You are a skull?"

The bust slid backward, receding into the wall, replaced by the smooth, flat surface of the Moon Mirror reflecting the trio of Slytherin witches. "Open," Harriet hissed in Parseltongue, and she slipped through the Mirror with Elara and Hermione coming right after her. Hermione blinked to get her bearings—then gaped, taking in the new corridor and the solemn bookshelves stretching in either direction as far as they could see.

"Wh—? Are all these shelves filled? How large is this place?!"

"Bloody huge," Harriet answered as she peered first one way, then the next. Either passage looked identical, and Harriet couldn't remember which way she ran the first time she entered the Aerie. Had they entered at the same place as before? She couldn't tell.

"It's about intent," Elara reminded her. "The Aerie leads you to where you intend to be."

"Right. You're right." Taking a deep breath, she added, "Hopefully Slytherin and Ravenclaw are still there."

Standing about wouldn't get them anywhere, and so Harriet chose a path and took it, picturing in her mind the lounge with the brass armillary sphere and the portrait above the hearth, one of the few memories of this place Riddle's Cruciatus hadn't scrambled or distorted. It didn't appear with any expediency—and Harriet fully blamed Hermione for that fact, seeing as the other witch couldn't take more than a dozen steps before getting distracted. Her friend's propensity to get lost in knowledge was both endearing and—at the moment—incredibly frustrating, so Harriet resigned herself to mindless feet shuffling while she waited for Hermione to sate her curiosity.

An hour passed. As Hermione studied a shelf of books on the idiosyncrasies of magical Byzantium emperors, Elara came to stand next to Harriet, her hands folded behind her back, her expression contemplative. "We haven't seen any evidence of the fire," she commented, turning her head as if searching the corridor again. "Even if we didn't encounter direct damage, we should have seen ash on the shelves or smoke damage. Both are pervasive after a blaze."

"The Aerie's huge," Harriet repeated, glancing toward one of the windows and the gentle orange glow beyond. "I've seen it with Professor Dumbledore, remember? I mean, it's actually tiny, only about the size of my palm—the relative size is massive when you're inside. It's possible we just haven't found anything yet."

"Perhaps it has something to do with the Aerie itself."

"What d'you mean?"

Elara gestured ahead of them, toward the far end of the corridor that never appeared to end and yet continued to turn and twist in upon itself. "There's some level of…cognizance here. Of intelligence. It's possible the Aerie is keeping us away from the area. The Founders concerned themselves with the safety of their students, so I would assume Ravenclaw's Aerie would actively seek to route us away from perceived danger. It would also explain why it took so long for Longbottom and I to find you, if the halls kept counteracting our desire to run straight into Riddle's clutches."

"Maybe," Harriet said. The Aerie's ability to read intent might be picking up on Harriet's wish to avoid the corridors the Basilisk had traversed, or the atrium where Riddle and Luna had been. Her entire body vibrated with gratitude as her shoulder finally relaxed.

"Or," Hermione chipped in, hefting a large tome off its shelf. "The Charms upon the space might have shut down areas where the outer containment was damaged, like an airlock on a Muggle ship. We're apparently the size of a pin's tip at the moment, and whatever spells Professor Ravenclaw used—oh, and they must have been so clever! Rendering matter this tiny without incurring disturbance or diminishing returns? I haven't seen anything like that, even in the more advanced tomes! It's far beyond N.E.W.T level and beyond most masters! Could you imagine—? Anyway, the Charms would have a limit, a boundary, and if the Fiendfyre damaged that boundary, the afflicted area would be…wonky."

Harriet snorted and shed the last of her unease. "Is that a technical term, now?"

"Shut up," Hermione grumbled, tucking the book under her arm. At their questioning looks, she stuck her nose into the air and said, "I'm borrowing it. For a bit of light reading before bed, you understand."

"…sure we do."

Another ten minutes of focused searching brought them to the arch they sought, and inside Harriet found the lounge just as she remembered it: the arms of the astrolabe spinning at very slow increments, the ceiling above spangled in painted stars. She immediately looked to the portrait above the stone mantel—and discovered it empty.

"Oh, come on," she muttered, peering into the flat, barren backdrop within the frame in hopes of spotting the Founders. Dropping her school satchel by a sofa, she shoved an ottoman closer to the hearth and stood on its pillowed top, pushing her face nearer the canvas. "Erm—Salazar Slytherin, sir? Mr. Slytherin?"

"According to his book, he was a professor, master, and Hogwarts' almoner. Those are his titles. Ravenclaw was a professor and a master—Mistress of Charms and Transfiguration. Gryffindor was a Grandmaster and Hufflepuff was Hogwarts' first Headmistress."

"What's an almoner?"

"Well, back in his time, he was in charge of—never mind that now. Just call him 'Master' or 'Professor.'"

Tossing a funny look over her shoulder, Harriet returned to the task at hand. "Professor Slythe—. No, that's bollocks. Master Slytherin? Master Slytherin?"

The use of Parseltongue appeared to have the wanted reaction, as the dark-haired wizard with his oiled beard and knowing eyes shifted into view, his brow jumping when he came face-to-face with Harriet. "Ah, child of mine House. You have escaped the guardian."

"Oh—er, yes, sir." Harriet cleared her throat and tried not to fidget. "That's been taken care of now. The, um, Basilisk was killed. Sorry."

Slytherin waved a ringed hand. "'Twas a simple beast corrupted to madness, its purpose perverted from mine goals. Tell me of what fate met the pretender?"

"The pretender?" Harriet blinked. "D'you—do you mean the Heir?"

"Bah!" The sharpness of the portrait's exclamation made Elara and Hermione jump. "You say Heir and I say nay; he is no Heir of mine—besmirched! A wreck of a boy, a monster of a man, I tell you. To see my House so far in disgrace, taken by the errant mewlings of an inane cur!"

It fascinated Harriet to learn Salazar Slytherin had no love for Riddle, and though she wondered if he knew more of Voldemort and what had happened to him, she decided they didn't have time to explore the issue at present and the topic seemed to only infuriate Slytherin. They needed him compliant, not belligerent. "He died with the Basilisk."

"Then perhaps Fate has levered itself at last in veritable recompense."

Hermione—all but bursting with excitement—whispered, "What is he saying?" Slytherin glanced past Harriet to her two friends.

"You have brought compatriots. Maids of my House."

"Yes, sir," Harriet said. "This is—oh. I haven't said my name, have I? I'm Harriet Potter, and this is Hermione Granger and Elara Black."

Slytherin's eyes sharpened on Elara. "Of the Black Circle?"

"I—don't know?" What was he referring to? What circle? The mention of it tickled her mind, and Harriet dredged up a vague memory of Elara once mentioning 'Circles' existing before the Wizengamot came together. "It's an old family, the Blacks, but I'm not sure."

Master Slytherin feigned disinterest, but Harriet had been around enough Slytherins to notice how his eyes brightened ever so slightly in curiosity. "Hmm. You have come calling for a reason, yes?"

"Yes, sir. We were hoping to ask you and Professor Ravenclaw a few questions about the Moon Mirrors."

"Very well. A moment."

Slytherin disappeared out of the frame once more and Harriet exhaled, wiping her hands off on her school robes again. Conversing with one of the Founders was nerve-wracking, like Merlin suddenly turning up on the doorstep for a spot of tea and a nice chat. It left her feeling decidedly wrong-footed. "Hermione? Could you grab Mr. Flamel's translation primer from my satchel?"

"You're carrying it around with you?"

"Sometimes. It helps in Ancient Runes, not that we needed it today."

Hermione fished out the requisite book and joined Harriet on the ottoman, the stool just wide enough to accommodate them both. She set the primer on the mantel and flipped through it, glancing over the pages until she found the well-used section on old Anglo-Saxon English. Master Slytherin had returned by then, Ravenclaw joining him inside the portrait. The other Founder smiled when she saw Harriet, and Harriet guessed she was pleased she'd survived the Basilisk as well.

Hermione jumped into a rushed, breathless introduction and Professor Ravenclaw latched onto the attempt at conversation. Slytherin raised a bemused brow at the exchange and addressed Harriet in Parseltongue. "There is much change to the language in these intervening years. Your companion speaks with…an odd tongue."

Harriet coughed to cover a laugh. "It's a lot different now. It's been a thousand years, after all."

"A thousand years…."

Slytherin looked away, expression distant, and Harriet wondered what it was like for portraits, if they were conscious during that passing time, or if they slept like the portraits in the Headmaster's office and just didn't wake for long, uninterrupted years. Maybe they only came to life in the presence of magical beings. A lesson in Transfiguration earlier in the year had discussed the exchange of menial energy between magical items and the people who made them. That continued exchange fueled Harriet's magical golems past their projected expiration dates, and it explained why Muggle things didn't mesh well with magic. Harriet thought it was the reason why Hogwarts remained so very alive centuries and centuries after its construction.

"She asks after the glasses of silver."

Roused from her thoughts, Harriet nodded, pushing her glasses a little higher up her nose. "We're trying to understand them more and make a map. I've started one but it's been difficult finding them all."

Slytherin raised a brow again and, for an instant, Harriet thought he looked so eerily like Snape, she almost laughed. Shaking her head, she pulled her rough map out of her pocket and opened it with all the tentative, bashful awkwardness of a child showing a stern adult something they'd made themselves. Slytherin huffed—but it wasn't the outright derision Harriet thought he would give. "Do they not offer tutelage in cartography in the school?"

"No? Did they before, sir?"

"At a time. A passable attempt, then."

Shrugging, Harriet folded her map again, pleased to have at least been given a 'passable.' Hermione tugged on her sleeve. "Professor Ravenclaw says she has a map we can use. We have to go to her workroom."

"Where's that?"

"Apparently where everything else is here: just a thought away."

Bidding Slytherin a quick farewell, Harriet hopped off the ottoman and the trio of witches returned to the arch. This time, she allowed Hermione to go first, the other witch's face scrunched in concentration—and they walked right from the lounge to a new, broad room filled with towering shelves and vibrant, glittering spheres of light hovering above their heads. The lights followed them like small moons encircling their planets as they took a few hesitant steps into the workroom. The space brightened, orange light fluttering from a circular window set high on a tall, stone wall.

There were books, of course, hundreds of books and journals and tightly bound scrolls sorted into a rack resembling a wooden lattice, but there was also an inordinate amount of stuff. Harriet couldn't think of a better descriptor for the crates and boxes overflowing with all manner of objects—broken quills and polished horns, bones, stone slats, withered plant bushels, rumpled balls of parchment, and bolts of fabric. A barrel by the entrance had been filled with bricks, runes etched into the dry clay—and against the wall where the single window resided could be found a massive, flat workspace Rowena Ravenclaw must have utilized to conduct her experiments. It contained dozens of odd glass beakers and brass contraptions.

"It's almost a bit sad, isn't it?" Elara commented, voice soft, unwilling to break the strange, solemn sanctity of the room. She brushed her fingertips against one of the larger glass receptacles, a gray, undefinable powder left inside.

"What is?"

"The thought that Ravenclaw left here one day and simply never came back. Here it's sat for a thousand years, untouched and unknown. Lost."

Harriet nodded, gaze sweeping upward, studying the many portraits and paintings and diagrams framed and hung above the well-used desk. The landscapes showed sweeping vistas and forests, rising gray mountains and tumultuous storms boiling on distant, unknown horizons, but most of the portraits had long been abandoned by their inhabitants. One, a younger witch with a striking resemblance to the Founder, shot them a haughty, unfeeling glare before staking out of sight. Professor Ravenclaw appeared in a small frame positioned above an empty cauldron and addressed Hermione, speaking in that too fast rush of Old English Harriet had no hope of following.

Hermione listened to Ravenclaw, then turned to survey the rack behind her, her sharp, quizzical eyes searching the tomes and bound papers. "She says it should be—here."

She snatched up a large scroll almost as large as she was and Harriet rushed forward to help her lift it. Elara rolled her eyes and used a Levitation Charm to lift it out of their arms and dropped it onto the desk, rattling the glass containers.

Blushing at her lapse into Muggle habits, Hermione undid the ties binding the scroll and spread it flat. Harriet scrounged about the bins until she found several heavy geodes she used to weigh down the corner threatening to curl back up, and the three witches brought their heads together to look at the revealed design.

"These…these are the original architectural plans to Hogwarts," Hermione breathed with reverence, daring to touch one of the faint lines made by a quill and a steady hand. It was a marvel to see in Harriet's opinion; each floor had been sketched and inked onto a single sheet, every passage and door, window, tunnel, and parapet, done in loving, exacting detail. Had it been made by magic? Or had the Founders pored over this as she, Elara, and Hermione did now, creating their dream one inch at a time?

"They're not entirely accurate," Elara said, pointing at various sections. "This tower isn't there any longer, and there should be another wing here. The greenhouses moved from there to the other side of the castle. However, look—the Underneath is shown here. Ha, so much for Slytherin's secret chamber."

"It would make sense for the castle to have experienced renovations over the years," Hermione conceded. On the wall, Ravenclaw watched the trio with interest before calling Hermione's attention again. Hermione listened, consulting the translation primer, then returned to the rack for another scroll, this one roughly the same size as the blueprint but far thinner and lighter. Harriet helped her unroll the sheet and winced at the oily texture of the transparent vellum, realizing it must have been made from the skin of a magical creature.

"This is a celestial map. An old one."

"Why's it on something so thin? Why not parchment?"

"I'm not sure."

Sighing, Elara leaned past them both to flatten the new page, using both hands to press it firmly to the sheet below. Only then did they see how those lines and arches creating the constellations fell into place over the inked walls of Hogwarts, and Hermione gasped, smoothing more of the vellum out, ogling at the revealed design. "Oh," she uttered in pleased shock. "They match. They—the Founders mapped Hogwarts in relation to the stars. See, here? Polaris? It's the Sundial Garden. And the three points of the West Tower? Orion's belt. The curtain wall here makes the arm of Aquarius."

Harriet dipped into her pocket and retrieved her map again, unfolding it to make note of where the Moon Mirrors would land on Ravenclaw's constellation chart. After a minute of consideration, a snort escaped her. "The Moon Mirrors are planets—and moons. Bloody cheeky. But how would Ravenclaw know all their names? While we learned in Astronomy that a lot of the moons were discovered earlier by wizards than they were by Muggles, they didn't have the names they do now back in Ravenclaw's time."

"The paper must be self-adapting," Hermione said, running a reverent finger over the oily vellum. "Consuming and replicated knowledge, just like the Aerie itself, feeding on Hogwarts' collective knowledge. Oh, this is the most fascinating place I've seen in all of Hogwarts…."

On the wall, Ravenclaw interrupted with new information, and though Harriet didn't know what she said, the Founder sounded awfully smug.

"Really?!" Hermione blurted, checking the primer again. "She says the relative position of the Mirrors serves as their passwords!"

Harriet opened a drawer and searched for a quill, ferreting about until she found a magically sealed inkwell that was still usable. She almost burst into giggles when she realized she was using Rowena Ravenclaw's quill. Surreal.

It came as a pleasant surprise to learn that Harriet had managed to find many of the Mirrors on her own sporadic wanderings, but it was less pleasant to learn how many of the Mirrors had been lost to the slow ravages of time. Those places she'd taken to be exits she now theorized might have been connected to Mirrors that either never came into being or were no longer in existence. Several towers and the Moon Mirrors noted on the blueprints weren't part of modern-day Hogwarts. Had they ever been built? Where had they gone?

"I think I've been using the Moon Mirrors wrong," Harriet muttered to her friends, leaving an inky smudge on her nose as she scratched it. "I don't think they're actually passwords. Not exactly."

"How do you mean?"

"Well, I think, when I tell the Mirrors to open in Parseltongue, it kind of…forces them the wrong way, like a door bending on its hinges or something. We keep considering them in terms of single passages, but they're not. Like these Mirrors here—." Harriet placed her map next to a spot on the blueprint, the desk's wooden edge digging into her hips and she strained to reach. "This is the Underneath—and bloody hell, I didn't see even half of all of this while I was there! Slytherin must have been part mole, I'm telling you. Anyway, the Mirror here, in his study? It's Jupiter."

"And?"

"The Mirror I came out of when I landed on top of you? The one over…here? It's Ganymede, one of Jupiter's moons. I think—I think giving the password, Ganymede, to that Mirror would take me back to Jupiter."

"And Jupiter takes you to Ganymede?"

"Not necessarily. I'm just guessing here, but from Jupiter, I think you can go here—to Callisto. Or even here, Europa. But those could only go to Jupiter. It might be why I couldn't open them when I tried before."

Elara and Hermione considered this information while Harriet continued adding new Mirrors to her list and naming the ones already sketched within. "You can't add Jupiter and its moons to the map you give the Weasleys," Elara said, considering her words. "From your own account, the Underneath is dangerous, isolated—and patrolled by Slytherin."

Harriet shook her head. "I'm not telling them where to find that. I'm not telling them where to find the Aerie, either. Which, for future reference, is Neptune."

A strange expression crossed Elara's face and she glanced from the work table to Ravenclaw's spectating portrait.

"Well, write down what you can for now," Hermione said. She was looking at her watch and nibbling on her lower lip. "We'll have to come back for the rest—because we've been here far too long. Charms ended an hour ago and supper's halfway over!"

A bolt of dread went down Harriet's spine. They needed to get back before Snape realized they were missing!

They scrambled to gather their things, leaving the maps as they were, stopping only to give polite goodbyes to Professors Ravenclaw and Slytherin when they grabbed their bags from the lounge. They dashed to the nearest Moon Mirror they could summon—Proteus—and Harriet was delighted to find her theory worked, as a single utterance of the moon's name sent them right back to the Mirror Neptune beyond the faceless bust. Their proximity to the library made it possible to feign coming from there, having gotten lost in the archives if anyone thought to ask. Hopefully Snape—and the rest of the staff—were distracted enough by Sirius Black to not notice their absence.

The trio neared the entrance hall, and then slowed to an easy, unassuming walk, listening to the general warmth of voices and clattering flatware meet their ears through the open doors. Elara paused by Harriet and faced her, the pair stopping just shy of the entrance while Hermione continued on to the Slytherin table. "I know Hermione doesn't believe much in astrology, nor does she seem to recognize its symbolism."

Confused, Harriet furrowed her brow. "What symbolism?"

Elara shrugged, lifting one shoulder and dropped it again. "I found it curious, the planets Ravenclaw chose for her and Slytherin's respective domains. Neptune and Jupiter."

"How so?"

"When Neptune is in aspect with Jupiter—when they are together—it can reference a desire for escape." Elara turned to the Great Hall and the welcoming glow of candlelight shone in her pale eyes. "A deep and abiding need to escape reality into a wanted fantasy."

Together, they continued on to their House's table and found their seats, but while the others chatted about classes and Quidditch and Sirius Black, Harriet sat thinking about what Elara had said, ruminating on a wizard and witch a thousand years dead whom fate had conspired to tear apart. She thought about how Rowena Ravenclaw could make all the stars align except for the ones she wanted most.


A/N:

Harriet: [Holds up picture she drew]

Salazar: I deem this worthy.

Harriet: Thanks, snake-dad.

Remember, there's a Discord server now where you can join the community and stay up to date on chapter releases! Here's the link: CDT Discord

Chapter 119: in the spirit of things to come

Chapter Text

cxix. in the spirit of things to come

For the next several days, Harriet and her friends returned again and again to Ravenclaw's Aerie, spending as much of their free time as they could delving through the quiet, sprawling halls of the Founder's archive. Any subject they could fathom learning about leapt forward—references, encyclopedias, dictionaries, biographies, indices, all just a thought and a few steps away. Hermione had to be physically torn from whatever tome she'd buried her nose in every evening, lest she fall asleep there and never be found again.

Harriet spent hours wandering the area, familiarizing herself with the details and small quirks of the Aerie. Her anxiety lessened as she explored, but she couldn't deny it remained rather creepy, given how sound didn't travel in predictable ways and the silence pressed close enough to become its own tangible being, like a second heartbeat hovering at her ear. She spoke with Salazar Slytherin and Rowena Ravenclaw—what little she could manage—though both Founders proved their brilliance when they started to assimilate bits and pieces of the modern language the longer they conversed. She also learned, perhaps unsurprisingly, that Salazar Slytherin loved to talk about himself—and that Rowena Ravenclaw loved to make fun of Slytherin talking about himself, resulting in Slytherin stomping off in a huff more than once, chased by Ravenclaw's gentile laughter.

For the most part, Harriet sat on a stool at Ravenclaw's work table, tracing the lines of Hogwarts' design with her fingers or quill, studying those spots of carefully made illustration and embellishment. Kevin and Rick would inspect the old instruments shuffled off to the map's extremities, and Livi would wrap himself around the stool and Harriet's legs, occasionally peeking above the desk's edge to converse with Slytherin.

"We almost don't need the Weasleys' map," Hermione muttered one afternoon, partially hidden behind a tower of moldering tomes. "We have a better, if outdated map available to us—and it seems so limited! The potential for more—." She pouted and spun her wand in her hand. "If only we could figure out how it works."

Unfortunately, figuring out how one might go about making something like the Marauder's Map was more difficult than Hermione, Harriet, or Elara expected. Two successive attempts at the Protean Charm resulted in two spectacular fires, the latter of which led to a rather awkward conversation with Madam Pomfrey where Harriet tried to explain how she'd misplaced her own eyebrows. Hermione tried for a third go, but Elara put her foot down.

Beyond their peaceful escape of the Aerie, Hogwarts continued to bubble with speculation over Sirius Black—how he'd gotten inside the castle, if he'd actually gotten inside, where he could have gone and if he'd come back again. Harriet admitted to herself she was leery of the deeper, darker parts of the dungeons now, never entirely sure what might come crawling from a drafty crevice or the damp mush. Surely Fred and George would go to Dumbledore if they saw Black strutting about on the Map—but how often did they actually look at it? If they were ready to hand it off to Harriet, how much use did the Marauder's Map actually see these days?

Life continued despite all murmuring of escaped convicts, Dementors, and accidental face-singeing. The arrival of November meant Quidditch season was about to begin, and nothing proved more gossip-worthy than speculations on upcoming Quidditch matches. Not even Sirius Black could compete. Flint assigned more practices later in the evenings and Harriet savored her time in the air, the sharpness of the cold wind against her skin, the heady feel of the world dropping away. She could do without being subjected to additional time with Malfoy—a new Chaser—or the Beaters aiming Bludgers at her head.

Friday evening provided a rare chance for Harriet and her friends to relax, waiting for Astronomy to start later that night. They gathered at their preferred table in the common room, holding their cold hands close to the jar of Bluebell Flames Hermione had conjured for them, talking about nothing specific. Hermione's familiar, Crookshanks, sat in her lap, the top of his ginger head barely visible, and Kevin wound about Harriet's wrist. Elara twirled her wand over a matchstick, idly changing it from one material to another, the soft winnowing of magic almost loud against the common room's stillness. Their dormmates had all gone off to bed, and only a few upper-years remained by the main hearth, discussing Quidditch or reading books.

"I still don't believe Professor Slytherin needed to bring in an actual Matagot to lecture about them," Hermione said, a look of consternation on her face as she scratched behind Crookshanks' ears. "Poor Dunbar might never get rid of the scarring."

"At least it's on her leg," Harriet said, tilting her chin to the side so the blue light could illuminate the markings on her neck. "That's easy enough to cover-up."

"That may be true, but it's not the point I'm making. She shouldn't have been injured in the first place."

"I know."

Light flickered in the periphery of their vision, diffused and muted, piercing the thick, liquid gloom lurking beyond the adjacent window. The light caught Elara's attention and she stopped fiddling with the matchstick to instead look out into the lake. A few moments later, thunder boomed in the distance, almost too far for the fine tremble of it to reach their ears.

"Oh," Hermione commented. "It's a storm. I had wondered when it would finally make it past the mountains."

Elara suddenly stood and startled Harriet, who jumped in her own seat and banged her knee on the table's underside. "Ow—! What are you on about?"

Lightning flickered again and Elara's eyes widened. "It's an electrical storm."

"Yeah? They'll probably cancel Astronomy unless Sinistra decides to lecture instead."

"I've been waiting for this," Elara continued as if she hadn't heard Harriet. "It's the first lightning storm of the season. The first since—."

Hermione gasped. "The first since I made the Animagus potion! Does that mean—?"

Nodding, Elara leaned on the table's edge. She looked out the window, and against the lightning tinged green by the water came, setting Elara's bright, determined eyes ablaze. "It's finally time."

x X x

They had only just departed the dormitory, the box holding the Mandrake potion cradled in Elara's careful hands, when they encountered their first problem.

The Aerie, as Hermione pointed out, was remote and all but inaccessible to the majority of the school's population. At first glance, it seemed an ideal place for attempting an illegal Animagus transformation, but further consideration illuminated a complication they couldn't overlook. The actual transformation bit in learning to be an Animagus was the most dangerous part, and though Elara assured them she didn't foresee having any issues, there still existed a chance of something going terribly wrong.

"If you need Madam Pomfrey," Hermione said, "We'd either have to bring her into the Aerie or find a way to get you to the infirmary. And what if you're too injured to move? What if you're bleeding out or—?!"

"Thank you for the imagery, Hermione. Truly."

So they ruled out the Aerie or any of the other secret, isolated places Harriet had charted over the past months—but Harriet knew much more about the school than she had at the beginning of the year, and she was able to list several quiet, out of the way locations that were still perfectly accessible in the event of an emergency. They decided on an old, closed dueling hall on the fourth floor, a room that had seen little to no foot traffic in recent years, given the thick layer of dust covering the floor and the cobwebs swaddling the unlit torches. Old banners hung on the walls between the shuttered windows, but time and Doxies had eaten away at the color and patterns, leaving barren rags on iron bars behind.

They ventured deeper into the room past the raised, narrow platform marked with old carvings and spots of spell damage. Harriet's eyes traced the patterns and lines, wondering when Hogwarts last had a proper dueling class or club. Elara chose a spot of floor made moderately clean after liberally applying some household spells she'd learned from Andromeda. The three witches settled there, another jar of Bluebell Flames positioned in the middle of their loose ring, providing the only spot of light in the otherwise drab space. The storm roared louder here than it had in the dungeons, and Harriet flinched when the wind screamed.

"Bloody eerie, that is…."

Elara opened the latch sealing the little wood box, revealing the velvet lining and comparatively cheap, student-issue potion bottle inside. She didn't remove it quite yet, instead opting to smooth her skirt over her crossed legs and take out her wand, considering it for a moment before turning it toward her chest. Elara took a breath and slowly incanted, "Amato Animo Animato Animagus." She set her wand aside, picked up the potion, pulled out the cork, and downed it in a single gulp.

Nothing happened. Elara returned the empty vial to the box, sealed it again, and then shut her eyes.

"Is that it?" Harriet whispered to Hermione.

"Shh," Elara said, opening one eye. "That's not it. I have to concentrate."

"D'you know what you're going to become?"

"Part of the risk is not knowing what the transformation entails," Hermione stated, lowering her voice to suit the quiet, stormy atmosphere. "It's a very esoteric magic. Some reach this point in the process and can't find the 'inner spirit,' or so it's called. Most of the pure-blood tosh the Malfoys have on the subject defines it as an intrinsic magical force. Being unable to access it is seen as a sign of 'inferiority in the bloodline,' which is absolute rubbish, seeing as only a select number of witches or wizards ever even attempt the transformation—."

"Shh."

Hermione subsided into silence, muttering a brief apology.

Minutes ticked by, rain battering the windows, brief, ghoulish flashes of lightning pierces through the narrow slits on the shutters. The castle itself remained quiet as the grave. Feeling a mite uneasy, Harriet traced slow, mindless circles over Kevin's coils, the snake's inquisitive nose rising to inspect her fingertip. Life at the Dursleys' had taught her how to be still and silent without any kind of mental stimulation—but Hermione started to struggle after the first half-hour, fidgeting where she sat. Elara didn't move, her hands folded neatly in her lap.

In the distance, the clock tower tolled the hour and Harriet swallowed a yawn, rubbing her eyes. Hermione finally gave in to the need to pace, walking quiet circles around the dueling platform with her lit wand held in front of her. Harriet thought about joining her—when Elara emitted a small, stricken gasp, and disappeared.

"Ah!" Harriet yelped, leaping to her feet, kicking the jar of flames over. The blue light went out. "Elara!"

Hermione dashed around the platform again. "What's happened? Is she all right—?"

She held her wand up, and the renewed light revealed that no, Elara hadn't actually disappeared; in her place sat a rather baffled dog. At least, Harriet thought it was a dog. It could have been a wolf, or perhaps something else entirely, but what Harriet did know was that Elara—normally tall, bordering on statuesque—had become undeniably…small.

"Merlin's knickers," Harriet said, breaking the quiet. "You're a puppy!"

The dog's head whipped in her direction, large, pointed ears quirked. The face was expressive, especially for an animal, and Harriet couldn't contain the giggle that escaped when Elara's nose wrinkled. A displeased huff left her in a woof, and Harriet's giggles turned into outright laughter.

"Elara, can you understand me? Are you all right? Harriet, stop it—." Hermione jabbed Harriet in the ribs. "If you need me to, I learned the Charm to turn an Animagus back into a human—?"

Elara woofed in negation, startling herself. She looked down at her large paws—ears swiveling forward—and lifted one leg, peering at the pads under her foot. Her coat consisted of thick, pitch-black fur—which explained why Harriet thought she'd disappeared into the shadows surrounding them—except for a patch of white over her heart. She tried to stand and toppled over like a newborn fawn.

"Oops, let me help—."

Harriet reached for her, and suddenly Elara appeared again, sprawled and disheveled. She blinked wide, stunned eyes up at Harriet. "A puppy? Really?"

The sheer indignation in her tone had Harriet clasping a hand over her mouth to stifle her amusement. Hermione cleared her throat—though her mouth twitched as if trying to grin. "Well, what did you expect? You are only thirteen! It's an impressive feat of magic, but it doesn't exactly make you fully grown, does it?"

Elara exhaled, aggravated, and sat up. "Yes, but a puppy? What am I, exactly?"

"I'm not certain. A canine, for sure, but beyond that? I couldn't say."

"She looks kind of like those drawings of the Grim in the Divination text," Harriet said, crouching to Elara's eye level. "Maybe we can put you in Gryffindor Tower and give Longbottom a heart attack. Trelawney sees the Grim in his tea leaves every class."

"Don't be ridiculous," Hermione chastised. "Elara, are you feeling well? Anything injured? The books say the first transformation is the worst."

"I believe everything is well." Elara turned her arms over, glancing at her legs. "It's more difficult to hold the second form than I anticipated, but I assume it's easier with practice." She pulled in a deep, orienting breath—then scowled at Harriet. "Don't pet me."

"Aw, c'mon…."

Elara changed—and immediately collided with the floor when she attempted to rise, yelping. She accepted Harriet's help getting up onto all four paws—though not without a rather miffed bark—and ambled about, stumbling like a drunkard coming out of a pub. Harriet and Hermione watched until she tripped a final time and changed again, careening on unsteady legs. Elara caught herself on the raised dueling platform and perched on its edge, her breathing heavy but her smile radiant and unexpected. Harriet didn't think she'd ever seen Elara smile like that.

"I did it," she said, voice soft. It was the culmination of months and months of research, dedication, and perseverance—a quest she'd started when she'd been a nervous first-year on the train clutching an old family journal. Suddenly, Elara lurched forward and grabbed Harriet and Hermione by the front of their jumpers, jerking them forward into her embrace. Harriet could barely breathe past Elara's grip, and yet she hugged her back just as fiercely. The three witches laughed—the sound of their muffled amusement at odds with their grim, dirty location, but Harriet didn't think any of that mattered. In fact, she hardly noticed.

Outside, the storm continued to rage, and in the eaves of the darkened forest, a black dog turned his silver eyes to the gleaming outline of the castle. He sighed.


A/N: Yay, Elara's an Animagus! I chose her form based both on her connection to Sirius and the symbolism behind the dog spirit—which includes loyalty, constancy, friendship, and fierceness, if the dog is crossed. There are also many cultures wherein the dog represents a guide and a guard to Death or his messengers.

Harriet: "Number one doggo."

Elara: "…"

Harriet: "Best pupper."

Elara: "Sirius isn't the only Black who wants to murder you."

Chapter 120: the burning light

Chapter Text

cxx. the burning light

The rain didn't stop.

It continued to pour into the weekend and throughout the following week, the clouds wreathing Hogwarts in an ever-thickening band of lowing thunder, the mountains turning white under the black shroud of mist. They spent Care of Magical Creatures by the lake's swollen banks, learning about the magical wildlife flitting through the water, and Professor Sprout had to cancel Herbology after a stray bolt of lightning set one of the greenhouses on fire. Potions had become its own kind of torture in the bleak, chilled classroom.

Needless to say, Harriet was not looking forward to her first Quidditch match of the season.

The thunder woke her from unsettled dreams early on Saturday morning. She sat up in bed and listened to the lamps rattle in their silver brackets, Pansy snoring in the background. No one was awake yet, aside from her. Cold sweat dripped along the nape of her neck and she thought she saw Set sitting by her side until she turned to find no one there. Livi stirred down by her feet, so Harriet decided it best to get on with it and got up and went about finding him his breakfast.

Later, after the rest of the dorm had woken and Elara sat Harriet on her trunk so she could braid the short witch's hair, Harriet glared at the water outside their window and how it rippled under the force of the pounding rain.

"How am I supposed to play in that?" she grumbled, fiddling with the hem of her emerald Quidditch jersey. "I won't be able to see the handle of my broom, let alone the Snitch."

"Try knocking the other Seeker off the broom."

Harriet snorted. "There's a thought, but Ginny's Gryffindor's new Seeker. Flint will probably tell me the same thing, though."

"Well, if we're lucky, someone will drown Longbottom in a puddle. There's always that to look forward to."

The storm refused to relent even when the sun rose behind the gray, swirling curtain of clouds and Harriet marched toward the pitch with the rest of her team, the lot of them soaked through despite the Impervius Charms on their uniforms. Malfoy—who'd started the morning out boasting and swaggering about—didn't look quite so pleased as he tromped along the squishing grass, chilled to the bone. His blond hair was plastered to his brow and he appeared just pathetic enough to not earn an insult from Harriet.

She hadn't eaten a thing at breakfast. She'd swiveled her spoon through the bland, mushy porridge, and stared at the Great Hall's ceiling, willing the weather to calm itself, if only for an hour. Her stomach twisted itself into knots. Harriet simply didn't have the stature to play in conditions like this; she'd been a weedy, underfed child growing up and still retained that slight, peaky build in her teenage years. Shifty, the neighbors had called her, like she was a bony-fingered street urchin out to nick their garbage.

Harriet glowered at a dripping tree and it shied away.

Once inside the locker room, she plopped down on the nearest bench and tried to wring the water out of her hair, no matter how pointless it was to try.

"This is rubbish, Flint," Cassius Warrington growled as he slammed open his locker and started putting on his leather padding. Warrington, like Malfoy, was a new Chaser added to the team this year, replacing Adrian Pucey—but unlike Malfoy, Warrington looked a lot like Flint, namely trollish and stupidly muscled. He wouldn't have any issues staying still in the wind. "They can't expect us to play in this, can they?"

"They have before," Flint replied, unlocking the Slytherin storage cupboard. The Nimbus brooms inside still looked a bit damp from their practice the night before.

"I still think someone should take one for the team," Bletchley, the Keeper, said. He looked pointedly at Harriet as he spoke. "Just a broken leg. Pomfrey would fix it up in a second, but if you whinge enough, Hooch'll postpone the game."

Harriet scowled. "Don't look at me. Break your leg."

"C'mon, Potter. It's more believable if you throw a crying fit."

"Why? Because I'm a girl?"

"It'd only take a second…." Bletchley mimicked breaking something between his two meaty hands—and, really, the fourth-year wouldn't have any problem snapping her scrawny leg like a twig. Worse yet, the Beaters Bole and Derrick were both considering it, sharing speculative looks between themselves, and Harriet swore she'd hex the lot of them bloody if they made a grab for her.

Irritated, Flint said, "Knock it off," and started to dole out the brooms, nearly knocking Harriet in the head with hers. "Listen, Potter," he snapped, shoving a finger in her face. "These conditions are shite and none of us want to be out there freezing our bollocks off. Your only job is to catch the bloody Snitch as fast as possible, do you hear me?"

"Yeah."

"Yeah, what?"

"Get your finger out of my face, Flint. I heard you." Harriet smacked his hand aside and Flint turned away, handing a broom to Malfoy. The prat sat next to Harriet on the bench, perching on the end of it as if nervous, both of his hands gripping the broom to his chest. More than a bit nervous herself, Harriet snapped her goggles into place and ignored him.

"Err, is he always so…uncouth?" Draco asked, eying Flint and the bigger, meaner boys. Harriet shrugged a shoulder as she tugged on an arm-guard, wriggling her fingers to make sure they were free to move.

"He's been a bit of a bastard this term," she replied—then paused, frowning. She hadn't given it much consideration before, but Flint's behavior had been more…abrasive than last year. Quidditch with the Slytherins was always rough, and yet the team had been…discouraging of late. It didn't make sense. "I'm not sure why, honestly."

Flint called Malfoy closer and started going over their plan for the game. Harriet listened with half an ear as he explained how the Chasers would focus on defense, preventing Gryffindor from making any points while Harriet went after the Snitch and, hopefully, ended the game as quickly as possible. They disparaged Ginny's ability despite having never seen her play, and though it rankled, Harriet kept her trap shut and stayed silent.

No one could hear when the crowd arrived, not with the storm settling itself atop the school like a fat, loathsome hen. Madam Hooch had to come banging into the room and ordered them out onto the field because no one wanted to open the doors and wander into the pelting rain. They marched out two by two—and a burst of wind struck Harriet hard enough to push her into Bole, who shoved her forward again. The mud sucked at their feet and dragged on their cloaks. Harriet wondered if she could flop over and pretend to be dead to get out of it, or if that was the kind of overly dramatic stunt Snape would give her a verbal hiding for.

They met the Gryffindors in the middle of the stadium, the House of Lions not looking anymore pleased to be in the deluge than the Slytherins did. Harriet couldn't hear a thing, the flat turf transformed into a shallow mire, the crash of water on water as loud as the storm itself. Across from her, Ginny shuffled from one anxious foot to the other, glancing toward the section of red and gold in the stands. Harriet gave her a reassuring smile and a thumbs up, which Ginny returned. Flint wouldn't like it but Harriet didn't much care what Flint liked.

Madam Hooch tried telling them to get on their brooms, then resorted to miming the action, the teams moving to get into the air and—hopefully—finish the game. The sound of her whistle managed to pierce the din, and Harriet jumped upward only for the wind to strike, forcing her feet into the mud. Merlin! She marveled as she shook her head to rid her ears of the ringing. She threw herself skyward with all of her strength and managed to get airborne.

The rain drove itself into the bare skin of Harriet's face and hands like dozens of sharp, twisting needles. She winced, cursing as the wind came again and forced her off course, swerving close enough to the stands for her knee to smack the wood. The resulting bruise throbbed.

Never mind catching the Snitch, Harriet would be lucky to make it back to the ground in one piece.

The odd word from Lee Jordan drifted through the storm but not enough for Harriet to make sense of the game's progression. Smears of green or red streaked along nearer the field, much of the stands lost to the creeping white mist coming in off the lake. It seemed unusually cruel of the universe to make it both rainy and foggy at the same time, and yet the intemperate weather denied all hopes and prayers and persisted. Harriet flew repetitive laps, straining to see even the vaguest flash of gold in the thickening sleet, fighting her broom with every spiraling pass. She paused near the staff section just to see the scoreboard under Lee.

Zero to zero. Bloody hell.

An hour later, Harriet reconsidered the idea of throwing herself face-first into the mud and feigning injury, even if it meant getting an earful from Madam Pomfrey or Snape or Dumbledore himself. She'd let Bletchley break her bloody arm if it meant going back inside. The dungeons would be downright balmy, her four-poster bed practically heaven after flying in this wretched weather. When Madam Hooch blew her whistle again, Harriet could have wept with joy, thinking they'd called the game—but no, Wood had used one of his time-outs, prolonging their miserable suffering.

Harriet landed by her teammates and only then realized how hard her legs trembled, her entire body vibrating from the chill. Harriet had always found it difficult to get warm, and now she felt closer to frozen than merely cold. Hooch had to hit her hands with a Warming Charm so she could release her broom, and Harriet stuffed her trembling fingers into her armpits, bowing her head against the stinging rain.

"Potter!" Flint snarled, stomping over to the hunched witch, his uniform sodden and streaked with muck from a nasty fall. "What part of catch the Snitch didn't you bloody understand?!"

"I'm t-t-trying!"

"Bullshite!"

"Five points from Slytherin!" Hooch bellowed. "That kind of language is unacceptable!"

Flint grit his teeth.

Too soon, the referee sent both teams back into the air and Harriet returned to her monotonous, pointless circling. A Bludger came sailing by her head and Harriet dodged, grunting at the resulting strain in her arms.

"Derrick!" she yelled. "What are you doing?!"

"Can't see what I'm aiming at in this!" came the exasperated reply. After that, Harriet decided it best to put as much space as she could between herself and the Beaters, rising higher and higher above the game.

The temperature plummeted and steam curled inside her goggles, ignoring the Charms laced into the glass. She could hear little aside from the wind's howling and the small, distant clamor of the watching spectators. Growing frustrated, Harriet leveled her broom and stopped flying, reaching up to yank the goggles off and let them fall—flung into the wind and probably out into the lake. Shaking, she pulled out her wand and cast another Impervius over her glasses and Warming Charms over her hands and chest. The trickling heat pooled in her ribs and Harriet shuddered, stowing her wand away.

Now, where is that Snitch?

Harriet scrutinized the crowd, letting her gaze sweep from the staff section through the corrugating mix of House colors, find no fleeting glint of gold among them. The mist had taken over one side of the field, and so Harriet searched the opposing end, knowing it futile to look for the Snitch without any kind of light to reflect upon its surface. The fog continued to roll in, blurring the edges of her vision, and frost gathered in Harriet's fringe, burning the tops of her exposed ears.

It was while scanning the audience that Harriet happened to glance at the top of the stands and spot…a dog. A large, black dog, big as a bear, staring right at her.

Abrupt cheering jerked Harriet's head around in time to see Ginny Weasley rocketing into the clouds, chasing a spec of gold.

Cursing, Harriet threw herself against her broom and darted after her, her eyes watering from the whip of the wind, knuckles raw and bloodied by the chips of ice ricocheting on her hands. Faster and faster she flew, eyes trained the flapping red cloak in front of her until it disappeared, swallowed by the mist, and Harriet had to stop because she couldn't see anything at all.

It was…quiet. Quiet in a way it hadn't been since the storm's beginning, the pall of static clinging to her frosted clothes. She could taste copper on her tongue, blood leaking from her cold, wind-chapped lips.

Somebody screamed.

"Ginny?!" Harriet shouted, soaring higher. She could hear her heartbeat, a loud and laborious thumping competing with her stilted breaths. Dread sunk its teeth into her and gnawed, intensifying, spilling over into anger and confusion and grief like a river bursting a dam. Harriet shook so hard she could barely hold the broom. Still, the screaming continued. "G-Ginny?!"

"Run, Lily!"

Harriet whipped around, foot slipping from the broom's rear brace. A man's voice echoed, indefinable motion stirring the colorless fog.

"Go, I'll hold him off!"

Harriet forgot about Ginny, about the Snitch, about the game and the people gathered below. Numbness ate at her heart.

"No, please, not Harriet—take me instead!"

A flapping sound neared—a sound like the beating of leathery bat wings or stiff cloaks billowing—. Something—things—approached, a writhing murmuration of heinous, black-garbed beings, circling tighter and tighter around her—.

Harriet had her hands over her ears.

"Stand aside, foolish girl, stand aside—."

She knew that voice, had heard it spoken from the back of a man's head, tempting her to throw away everything that was good and just in her life on an impossible dream—.

He isn't here, he isn't here, he isn't—.

Harriet couldn't breathe, could barely see, but she felt the scaled, desiccated hand touch her face and shrieked. A Dementor gripped her broom and leaned forward, sick, hungry rattling replacing the pulse in her ears—.

"Kill me instead! Not Harriet, not my Harriet!"

Green light. Green light burning and bursting between those black spots where the Dementors swarmed like virulent mold. It wasn't pretty. It wasn't the green of new things growing in the early spring, but the green of something left to rot and die. Harriet turned and pushed away from it, not wanting to see—.

"No, no, no…" somebody sobbed. A man, a different one.

Blind, Harriet could feel the air against her face, pulling through her hair like a mother's hand on her daughter's head. A touch Harriet had never known.

"I'm so sorry, Lily, please, please—."

The darkness came faster and faster, her body limp, cold, and unfeeling as it plummeted from the sky. Before the darkness swallowed her whole, Harriet thought that last voice had been…oddly familiar.


A/N: Chapter title is from an Oscar Wilde quote: "Never regret thy fall, / O Icarus of the fearless flight / For the greatest tragedy of them all / Is never to feel the burning light."

Chapter 121: grief and other terrors

Chapter Text

cxxi. grief and other terrors

 

Minerva McGonagall loved Quidditch.

She’d always loved it, from the very first time she’d sat in the stands on Hogwarts’ pitch at eleven-years-old and watched the players soar across the sky. She loved it when she played for Gryffindor, and she loved it even after those cheating blighters in Slytherin shattered half her bones and sidelined her for good. Minerva could admit her love dipped into zealotry when the end of the year approached and the House Cup was on the line, but most of the magical world regarded Quidditch with a degree of frenzied mania. There was an addictive thrill to it few could deny.

Still, even Minerva could admit love and zealotry had their limits when faced with a massive blizzard.

“Och,” she breathed when she and other members of staff stepped out beyond the castle’s eaves and braved the first bracing gale. Her hat stayed on by virtue of the Charmed pin, but Pomona wasn’t quite so lucky, cursing up a storm of her own as she summoned her hat back to her hands before the winds carried it too far. Ahead of them, Remus hunched his skinny shoulders and pulled up the hood of his cloak.

“Nimue’s blessings,” Filius squeaked from behind, using his taller colleagues to block the worst of the draft. “That’s brisk! I’m so glad my Ravenclaws aren’t playing in this today!”

Descending the castle steps, Severus scoffed, apparently unperturbed by the weather. “Yes, they might have to display a modicum of effort if they were. Merlin forbid they pry themselves from their books long enough to try.” He swept off without waiting for Filius’ reply or pausing to magic the rain from himself. At times like this, Minerva thought the boy really did deserve that unfortunate sobriquet of dungeon bat.

“It seems Severus is already in a competitive spirit,” Albus commented, bringing up the rear of their group. He waved his hand above their heads and conjured an umbrella-shaped ward, the rain pooling and dripping from its edges.

“Is that what we’re calling it now? A competitive spirit? I thought it was called being a miserable bawbag.”

Pomona chortled, and Albus had the gall to pretend he didn’t hear Minerva.

They continued toward the distant, looming outline of the stadium visible through the thickening downpour. Minerva broke away from the group to catch those loitering students playing in the rain, pulling apart a pair of Slytherin and Gryffindor sixth-years before their bickering could come to blows. She urged a final group of Hufflepuff second-years toward the stairs leading into the stands and stopped to reapply the Charms to herself, grimacing at the ache building in the exposed joints of her fingers. Above, she could barely hear the clamor of her students talking over the fierce wind—but it lulled then, just enough for Minerva to catch her breath and for unexpected voices to meet her ears.

“—expect you to merely follow my directions, Mr. Flint. Is that too much for you to comprehend?”

“No, Professor.”

“Then do as you’re told.”

A door leading into one of the more extensive storage cupboards opened, and Slytherin came out of it, his head immediately swinging in Minerva’s direction. His red eyes glinted low and dull in the dismal lighting.

“Minerva.”

“Professor Slytherin,” she clipped. Marcus Flint stepped out behind the other wizard. “Is anything the matter?”

“Everything is just as it should be, Professor.” Slytherin smiled—a bland, saccharine thing that set Minerva’s teeth on edge. He brushed Flint past him, his tone more cutting when he addressed the boy. “Return to your team, Mr. Flint.”

“Yes, sir.”

Both departed, Slytherin not stopping to give Minerva another moment of consideration—and nor did he head towards the staffing section, instead returning to the mud-slicked path leading to the castle.

What dubious mischief does he intend to reap now? she wondered, watching the wizard until he vanished into the fog, and the increased clamor of noise brought her attention back to the imminent game. I wonder if Severus knows what Slytherin intends.

She climbed the steps skyward and reached the section set aside for the staff and visitors after the game had already commenced, Lee Jordan doing his best to talk above the booming thunder and visceral wind. Usually, Minerva would take her place by the boy and at least attempt to curb his partisan commentating—but after her run-in with Slytherin, she opted instead to sit between Albus and Snape, the wizards sliding apart to grant her room. Minerva could feel the cold emanating off of the Potions Master’s wet cloak through her Warming Charms.

“Severus?”

His black eyes slid in her direction, peering through the wet strands of his hair. “What.”

“I witnessed a rather odd conversation between Slytherin and Mr. Flint just now.”

“And?”

“He seems to be expecting him to complete some task. Do you have any idea what that is about?”

Severus shrugged one shoulder, his attention again fixed on the field and players below. “Contrary to popular opinion, I am not an expert on all things Slytherin. The only person who knows what goes on in his mind is Slytherin himself.”

Lips pursed, Minerva glanced to Albus, who frowned but had no comment to give on their discussion. He extended a bag of licorice sweets and Minerva huffed. “You’re of no help, either of you.”

She tried to displace the scene from her mind, to instead concentrate on the game, but something of Slytherin’s behavior bothered her. She wasn’t a fool; she may not know as much about the situation as Albus or Severus, but she understood Slytherin’s influence settled like a cancer on his House, corrupting and ruining many a young Slytherin who passed through their hallowed halls. Seeing that influence in action, however, disturbed her.

The game continued, the Chasers on either team barely making any effort at all, waiting for their respective Seekers to fulfill their roles. Ginny Weasley hovered near the pitch itself, and Minerva kept a keen eye on her. Poor girl; it was bad luck for her first game to take place in this horrid weather.

A blur of green swept close enough to their seats for the ward overhead to ripple, Harriet Potter stopping long enough to squint at the scoreboard positioned under Mr. Jordan. Minerva saw a silent curse form on the girl’s mouth before she flew off again, staggering in the gale. Next to her, Severus’ gaze followed Potter across the field, and Minerva saw how tightly his hands gripped his knees.

“I would caution you against interfering with Professor Slytherin,” Albus said, soft enough for his raspy words to reach Minerva’s ears alone. She turned to glare at the man, and he held up his hand. “Yes, I know you worry about the students’ safety, just as we all do. I simply worry about your safety as well, Minerva. It is not your place to get in his way, but mine. I’m a cantankerous sore spot he cannot be rid of quite so easily.”

“And you think he could be rid of me without an issue?”

“Of course not. That’s is not what I mean to imply.” Albus sighed. “Ah, we should have this conversation later, I fear. Our students are battling on without our attention.”

Minerva let the discussion pass, if only because she didn’t wish to shout at the man in the middle of a blood rainstorm.

A brief timeout was called, the intermission over before Minerva could fathom why it had been necessary in the first place. Again, she was reminded that love and zealotry had their limits, as she found herself hard-pressed to keep watching this half-hearted game when she fully intended to pry what answers she could from Headmaster’s head by the end of the day. Even the cheering fell flat as a limp bit of cloth, most of the students and staff content to either inspect their pocket-watches or follow the Seekers from one end of the stadium to the other.

The fog crept nearer. The cold nipped at the wards and Charms holding back the elements and made Minerva, and most of her colleagues, shift in their seats or magic themselves again. Severus was a notable exception. The wizard barely stirred at all; Minerva could see frost forming in the daft fool’s hair and he didn’t take notice! He’s going to take ill if he keeps on like this! Minerva huffed, throwing a Warming Charm at him, startling Severus into a glare. Albus chuckled.

Suddenly, Miss Weasley jerked her broom to the side and rocketed upward into the obscuring cloud bank. Farther out, Miss Potter gave chase.

“Thank Merlin,” Minerva uttered under her breath, more than ready for one of the girls to catch the Snitch and win the game. She didn’t even care if it was Potter, no matter the ribbing she’d have to withstand from Severus later on in the staffroom, so long as someone caught the bloody thing and allowed them to return indoors.

Seconds ticked by and nothing occurred.

Severus gasped, barely audible against the storm, and he gripped his right wrist. “Headmaster,” he said. “Headmaster, something is wrong—.”

The cold didn’t dissipate. It intensified, and the wards gave way with a sudden snap, dousing them all in frigid rainwater. If Minerva hadn’t been holding her breath, she would have noticed how it coalesced in thick, white plumes under her nose—but she couldn’t find the strength to breathe. The fog peeled back far enough to uncover a festering horde of black-cloaked Dementors descending upon the stadium.

Minerva was ashamed to admit that she froze. The surrealness of the sight fairly baffled her mind, like a drawing she might have seen in her father’s family bible, or those images of the Wild Hunt one could still find in the old witch grimoires. A hundred Dementors circled above, and she could not tell how many more lurked in mist. The worst of her memories came rushing back—the feel of her brother Robert’s dead weight sagging into her arms, the sound of the eulogy at Elphinstone’s funeral. Her hands buzzed with impotent magic and grief.

She might have continued to sit there as limp as a gormless Mooncalf if Severus hadn’t screamed, “Albus!

Harriet Potter was falling from the sky.

Arresto Momemtum!

Albus stood, wand extended, and his spell barely had time to catch the child plummeting toward the earth. Her momentum slowed, but she still hit the mud with considerable force, the impact hard enough to be audible over the screaming and raging storm. White flickered in the corner of Minerva’s vision, and Albus’ Patronus burst to life, the great, silver wings of the spectral phoenix spread wide as it threw itself toward the Dementors circling the downed girl like vultures after carrion. The Dementors reeled and scattered, driven off by every pulsing beat of pure, trembling light.

Minerva’s own Patronus chased after Albus’, and a chain reaction followed from those members of staff capable of the spell. She turned to Severus—but the Potions Master had vanished. Minerva rose and ran for the stairs.

She found him again once she reached the pitch, Severus already kneeling by Potter’s side as Poppy ran to them as quickly as her short legs could manage. Minerva pushed her wet hair from her brow, taking count of the Gryffindor players dotting the field, Albus still forcing the Dementors farther into the Forest and the mire. Crying students exited the stands en masse, shaken and scared by their sudden proximity to the Dark beasts. Morgana help them, the entire school would need to be tended by the Matron after this. Minerva felt entirely overwhelmed.

“Remus? Remus—!” Catching the younger professor by the arm, he turned to face her, his expression just as haggard as her own. “Gather the Gryffindors and take them to the Great Hall. To the Great Hall, do you understand? Tell Aurora she needs to manage the Slytherins; Professor Slytherin isn’t present, and Severus is—.”

“Yes, I understand.”

“Good, quickly, then. Go.”

As he ran off, Minerva marched out into the brunt of the elements, feet sinking into the muck, her heart hammering much too hard in her chest. She pointed her wand at her throat and incanted, “Sonorus. All students report to the Great Hall immediately. Detentions will be given out to those who disobey. Get to the Great Hall and stay with your House, please. Quietus.”

She got her first look at Potter when she approached Severus and Poppy, the small girl ghastly pale and unresponsive, blood on her mouth and over the raw skin of her hands. For one awful moment, Minerva feared the worst—that she had been Kissed, or that the fall, despite Albus’ spell, had snapped the child’s neck—but then she stirred, weakly, as Severus followed Poppy’s instructions and lifted her from the mud into his arms. Her leg dangled in a way it was not supposed to.

“Will she be all right?” Minerva asked, following the pair as they headed toward Hooch’s office and Floo beyond. Potter groaned.

“Yes,” Severus replied, short, curt, and to the point. “Make yourself useful and stop those idiots before they interfere.”

Minerva would have taken exception to his tone if she hadn’t needed to turn at that instant and catch Misses Granger and Black by the arms before they could barrel into the office after the Potions Master. Severus, for his part, ignored them entirely, stepping into the green fire pouring from the dirty hearth and disappearing inside. Madam Pomfrey followed right after.

“Professor!” Miss Granger cried. “Where’s Harriet? Is she hurt?!”

“She’s going to be fine,” she said, tightening her grip when Miss Black attempted to shake her free. “She’s going to be with Madam Pomfrey and receiving the best of care. Meanwhile, I believe I instructed all students to report to the Great Hall. That includes the both of you as well.”

“But—!”

“No, no arguments. This is not the time for it.”

Only the threat of detention and being barred from the hospital wing convinced the pair to follow her directions. Minerva saw them off through the Floo to the Great Hall—and then dropped into Rolanda’s weathered, grass-stained chair, her head in her hands. She removed her square spectacles and released a shaky sigh, wiping her eyes. Her hands shook.

“Minerva?”

Raising her head, she met the penetrative gaze of the Headmaster framed in the office doorway, the shoulders of his crimson robes stained dark by the rain in a cruel, lurid mimicry of fresh blood. “Are the Dementors gone?”

“Returned to the borders of the grounds for the time being. It seems they couldn’t resist the high emotion of the game.” Albus grimaced, fury bringing a bright flush to his otherwise pale cheeks. “I will need to contact the Ministry immediately. Are the students—?”

“All in the Great Hall or on their way there, as far as I know. I will do a head-count as soon as I arrive there.”

“Good. And…Harriet?”

“She’s alive.” Albus seemed to deflate with relief, and Minvera’s posture mirrored his, spine bending under the stress of the situation. “But it was terribly close. By God, Albus, how can we stand for this? How can we allow the Ministry to place those—those monstrosities around these children? Is there nothing we can do to force them to take them back? They’re worthless! They don’t have any bloody impact on Black getting into the castle, apparently!”

The Headmaster shook his head, pinching the bridge of his nose. “I have argued with Minister Gaunt at length regarding the subject, but he is as unmoved as ever. You know the Minister doesn’t think much on my opinions.”

Minerva snorted, but she was not amused, merely angry, upset. “Perhaps we should drop the body of the next lifeless child on the Ministry’s doorstep! Perhaps they would be forced to take you seriously when their voters and constituents turn away in horror!” She began to pace, her stride cut short by the middling length of the room.

“I know it is frustrating, Minerva. I do not believe I could have continued all these years without your strength to lean on—yours and Severus’, and those who continue to resist such injustice. We must merely do what we can to protect the students and give them all of our ability. I will not cease petitioning the Ministry and the Aurory, and hopefully they will remove the Dementors by the end of next term.”

Minerva sank into the chair again, her ire spent. Next term was not soon enough. “I don’t understand it,” she said. “Merlin knows they’re horrid, horrid creatures, but I’ve never seen a person have such a negative reaction to a Dementor as Miss Potter does. Not even when I worked at the Ministry all those years ago.”

Albus looked down, the lines of his face deepening with sadness, with remorse. “The Dementors feed on all the best parts of a soul, all the happiest memories and small glimpses of joy we experience in life, but for a person who has seen…more hardship than most, and less happiness….”

Minerva squeezed her eyes shut. She didn’t wish to hear more, didn’t wish to think about her own complicity in leaving a defenseless child in the arms of a cretin like Petunia Dursley. She knew they were the worst sort of Muggles, but had she truly known how deviant the worst sort could be? There would never be a day when she didn’t berate herself for not trusting her instincts and arguing with Albus against leaving Harriet Potter at Privet Drive.

“Come, Minerva. The students need us.”

The students. Yes, the students. She allowed herself that moment of weakness, that chance to shake her fist at the sheer frustration and futility of fighting against the Ministry’s rubbish restrictions and dictations. Some days, she couldn’t fathom what they continued to fight for, why it mattered at all when the whole of their world felt cloaked in darkness and no one had the forethought or wherewithal to look up and miss the sun. When there wasn’t a single spell or law that could touch the likes of Slytherin or Gaunt, when so many were perfectly complacent in following their corrupt dogma, why did they still try?

Then, Minerva thought of her students. She thought of those children who needed her, and stood. She forced her hands to stop shaking, found her wand again, and nodded. “Yes, of course. Let’s go.”

Chapter 122: consequences

Chapter Text

cxxii. consequences

 

“—arriet?”

“I don’t think she’s awake yet.”

“She should be. Madam Pomfrey said she’d be up by now—.”

“Wait, her eyes are moving—.”

The voices surrounding Harriet quieted, and she groaned, words flopping about in her brain like slippery, beached fish. She felt bitterly cold and wanted nothing more than to sink back into the comforting warmth of darkness—but a hand tightened around her sore fingers, and she pried her unwilling eyes open.

She wasn’t in her dorm. Why wasn’t she in the dorm?

“Harriet?”

“Wha’ happened?” Groggy, she searched for her eyeglasses—and recognized the end table by the bed with another heartfelt groan. Elara placed her glasses on her face. “The hospital wing? Why am I here?”

“Are you all right? Do you remember the game?”

It came back to Harriet in pieces, the memory of her hands burning from the frigid wind, the lashing rain—and the Dementors. She shivered anew and clutched the blankets closer as she sat up.

“Did I—fall? What—? Who won?”

Four people stood around her bed—Elara, Hermione, Luna, and Ginny, the latter of whom still wore her muddy Quidditch gear. Harriet needed only to take one look at her uncomfortable expression to understand.

“Oh,” she breathed.

“I didn’t see that you’d fallen,” Ginny rushed to explain, blushing. “I caught the Snitch, but you were already on the ground. I tried to argue—but Hooch said it was a valid play, and….”

Disappointment bristled in Harriet’s chest. She’d never lost a game, had never failed to catch the Snitch before—let alone taken a fall from her bloody broom! How had she survived?! “Well,” she said, clearing her throat. “Good game, yeah? You saw the Snitch before I did!”

Ginny smiled, but she still looked dissatisfied, and Harriet hated that her first game had been such rubbish. “I don’t really remember what happened after the Dementor—erm—pushed me off the broom.” She hedged the truth, not wanting to tell them what she’d heard or that she’d passed out long before hitting the ground. “What was it doing there? Is anyone else hurt?”

“No, just you.” Hermione fidgeted, her hand still around Harriet’s. “They weren’t supposed to be on the grounds. The Aurors who are meant to be handling them by the gates said they must have sensed Sirius Black was nearby, but that’s ridiculous! Professor Dumbledore was furious! He used a Patronus Charm and drove all the Dementors from the field.”

Harriet furrowed her brow. A Patronus Charm? She made to throw off the sheets and get to her feet when a sudden sharp pain in her leg made her gasp. Madam Pomfrey materialized at the sound, a ferocious scowl on her face.

“Not a foot off that bed, Miss Potter!” she ordered. “And Miss Granger! I thought I told you to notify me at once when Miss Potter woke?”

“Erm, I’m sorry, ma’am.”

Madam Pomfrey shoved a thick, porcelain mug into Harriet’s hands, and she almost dropped it, the weight unexpected. A gritty, tar-like substance filled it to the brim and smoked under her nose. “What’s this?”

“Drink it all, Potter. And don’t move about! You’ve broken your leg and haven’t the energy for me to heal it yet.”

Harriet gave the mug a few tentative sniffs before taking a sip. It was chocolate—but not the kind of chocolate one could get from a sweetshop or the Express’ trolley; this chocolate was heavy, bitter, and not the slightest bit sweet. Harriet coughed at the chalky texture, and her eyes streamed against the heat. “Bleurgh!”

All of it. You’ll feel better, and then you’ll need a Pepper-Up before you rest. You four—.” The Matron turned her steely eyes to Elara, Hermione, Luna, and Ginny. “You’ve got five more minutes before I insist you return to your dormitories—and you, Miss Weasley. You’ll be taking a Pepper-Up with you, after having been out in that abysmal weather. Utterly foolish for them to allow students to play about in that nonsense….”

Madam Pomfrey returned to her office, voicing her irritation the whole way, and Harriet set aside the mug as soon as she was out of sight. She pulled up the blankets to peek at her legs, the painful right one in a splint. Bruises littered her skin. “D’you reckon she broke it to make sure I don’t escape this time?”

Luna laughed loud enough to summon Madam Pomfrey again. After haranguing Harriet into finishing her chocolate sludge, she shooed her friends from the ward. Harriet thought that’d be it, that the Matron would force her to sleep and leave her to think on those horrid, nightmarish voices brought on by the Dementors—but Harriet had one last visitor.

She stiffened when Marcus Flint came shambling past the open curtains. Like Ginny, he hadn’t changed out of his gear yet, trailing mud on the floor. How long had Harriet been unconscious?

“What’re you doing here, Flint?” she asked. He couldn’t be there to check on her. Not a chance.

Flint squared his stout shoulders and announced, “You’re off the team,” without preamble.

Harriet hadn’t known what to expect, and his words shocked the air right out of her lungs. A horrid sinking sensation gripped her as Harriet jolted in the bed, pain prickling through her injured leg. “I—what?!” she gasped. “What do you mean?!”

“I mean, you’re off the team, Potter,” the towering boy told her. “Like I told Malfoy last year, if you can’t sit a broom, you can’t play!”

“But that’s ridiculous!”

“It’s my decision.”

“I’m the only Seeker in Slytherin! Who’re you going to have play in my place? Higgs?!”

Flint grunted. “It’s not your concern, is it? The Whomping Willow trashed the broom—the broom that wasn’t yours—and we don’t need idiots on the team who can’t fly and go about ruining the equipment.”

“I—.” She hadn’t known about the broom, but Harriet should’ve considered what would have happened to it after she dropped. “I can replace it!” She could, theoretically, replace several brooms—though spending that much money was as alien to Harriet as television was to pure-bloods. “It’s no problem!”

“That’s not the issue.”

“But—.”

“I said no, Potter. You’re off the team.”

Flint left without hearing another word from Harriet, and she stared after him, trapped in place, something dangerously close to tears burning the back of her eyes. She could feel her nails bite into her palms even through the blanket clutched in her fists.

“Miss Potter?” Madam Pomfrey had reappeared, carrying a single, smoking vial of Pepper-Up. She studied the muddy footprints on the floor with clear disapproval. “Is everything well?”

“Everything’s fine,” Harriet lied—because nothing was fine, nothing at all, but Harriet refused to cry. She wouldn’t cry, not because of Flint, and not because of her aching leg, bruised heart, or the terrible things the Dementors forced her to hear. It made her miserable, but Harriet wouldn’t say a word. “It’s all…fine.”

 

x X x

 

As was usual in Hogwarts, rumors traveled faster than most magic spells, and by the time Harriet was released from the hospital wing a few days later, there wasn’t a soul who hadn’t heard about her being kicked from the Quidditch team.

The dismissal added another bitter layer to the mocking she endured from those who couldn’t believe she’d fallen from her broom in the middle of a Quidditch game. The faux-fainting she’d suffered at the beginning of term returned with a vengeance, and Harriet couldn’t go anywhere in the castle without someone having a laugh at her expense.

“It’s just as well you weren’t sorted into Gryffindor, Potter,” Longbottom said one day as she passed him in the Great Hall. “We don’t have much room for cowards here.”

His friends, of course, found this incredibly funny, snickering into their plates, but Harriet had heard cleverer insults from her own House and didn’t stop to acknowledge the prat. She snidely wondered how well Longbottom would hold up if he had to hear his mum die every time a Dementor came near.

She hadn’t told anyone about that yet. She didn’t know if she would.

More than anything, Harriet was upset at the prospect of missing Quidditch, but no matter how many times she braved the laughter and mockery of the upper-years to approach Flint, he refused to let her back on the team. She must’ve asked him a dozen times before he threatened to hex her mouth shut, and Harriet shuffled off in a dejected slump.

A first, she thought Malfoy had something to do with all this. After all, he wanted to be Seeker and had threatened her last year after he failed to show up for tryouts—but Malfoy seemed just as perplexed over Flint’s actions as she did.

“I don’t know what Flint’s on about,” he admitted. “Yeah, you fell from the broom and almost broke your stupid neck—but it’s not like it hasn’t happened in the past. Father told me a Chaser in his year lost their arm when he clipped into one of the hoops too quickly. Flint’s an idiot if he thinks putting Higgs back on the team would be anything more than disastrous.”

The more Harriet thought on the matter, the more perplexed she became. Flint had only allowed her—a shrimpy second-year who weighed less than six stone soaking wet—on the team last year because her ability outstripped Terrence Higgs’ by a wide margin. She hadn’t been boasting when she said she was the best Seeker Slytherin had in their midsts. Flint was obsessed with Quidditch and fanatical about winning, to the point where he spent considerable time forcing his players to train and bend the games’ rules. The Seeker was one of the most critical roles.

Harriet expected to get chewed out for losing, but to get kicked off the team?

It didn’t make logical sense.

“Well, you’ll probably make the team again in no time,” Hermione said, Harriet sitting with her and Terry Boot at their favorite library table, the one farthest from Pince’s desk. Elara was at choir practice, and though Harriet didn’t begrudge her the time spent with her club, it did remind Harriet of her own new lack of extracurriculars. “I imagine Flint will see Higgs play and immediately change his mind.”

“Or he’ll bring Pucey back and put Malfoy on as Seeker.” Hermione whacked Terry’s arm after he spoke. “What? It’s what I would do if I were Flint. Not admitting the truth would be silly.”

Harriet sighed, sagging in her chair. The storm had finally passed, but the world outside the muilloned windows seemed grayer in its absence, as if the clouds had sucked out some of the color before they thinned. Harriet stared out at the grounds, resting her chin on her hands.

“It doesn’t matter what he does, I guess,” she muttered, still sounding more sullen than she wanted to.

“Isn’t Flint a seventh-year? I thought he was a seventh-year last year—but, well.” Terry cleared his throat, sparing them any disparaging remarks. Harriet wished he hadn’t bothered, wanting to hear a bit of abuse get thrown at her former captain. “He’ll be gone next year. Someone with some actual brains will be in charge. You’ll make Seeker, easy as can be with your skills.”

Harriet forced a smile onto her face. “Thanks, Terry.” She found it difficult to be happy about much of anything lately. “That’s enough of my moping, though. Nothing to be done about it now. Have you made progress on the Protean Charm, Hermione?”

Hermione’s expression changed from concerned to thunderous, which Harriet guessed meant ‘no.’ “It’s proving—difficult,” she sniffed, shutting the book in her hands. A small puff of dust escaped. “Terry’s helped me a bit in the research—.” A slight blush colored her cheeks. “But there’s something in the application I haven’t quite figured out yet.”

She set out two blank sheets of parchment, shoving aside her texts and bag. Over the first, she held her wand and incanted, “Proteus Imito Alterius,” moving in her wand in what Harriet recognized as the rune nauthiz. Above the second, she reversed the motion and said, “Alterius Imito Proteus.”

Hermione dropped her wand and picked up a quill. “Watch.”

She made a single, firm stoke on the first parchment—and a second later, it appeared on the second.

“But wait, that’s brilliant!” Harriet exclaimed. “Isn’t that what it’s supposed to do?”

“On the most simplistic level, yes, but for what we want? No. There’s just so much missing. It doesn’t properly copy, store, interpret, and relay information, and—here. Look, pick that up.”

Harriet picked up the second sheet of parchment and, at Hermione’s insistence, stood and walked a few meters away. Hermione created another line on her first parchment, and instead of appearing on Harriet’s sheet, the second parchment burst into flames, and Harriet dropped it with a yelp. She stomped the flame out before Pince could come to investigate.

“Why did it do that?!” Harriet asked as she rejoined the table. Hermione groaned and covered her face.

“I don’t know! Magic is notorious for losing stability over a distance, but not like this. I’ve obviously missed something along the way.”

Terry chuckled. “I don’t know what you ladies are up to, but the Protean Charm is really advanced magic. My older brother says it’s on the N.E.W.T.s.”

“It’s for a project,” Harriet bluffed, using her wand to scatter the ashes of the burnt parchment. “Just a little something that struck our interest, y’know?”

“I don’t know,” Terry said, smirking. “You Slytherins are walking trouble. If there’s no extra credit to be had, then I don’t want to know.”

Snorting, Harriet returned her attention to her Transfiguration homework and tried to concentrate.

Hermione made another passing attempt at the Protean Charm, experimenting with her use of nauthiz, trying to adapt another rune to augment distance, and Harriet ended up scattering more ashes, nursing a burnt thumb. She had just plopped into her chair again when Anthony Goldstein came running up, an edition of the evening Prophet clutched in his hands.

“Hey, Terry, have you seen—?” He paused, sniffing. “What’s burning?”

Harriet quipped, “My reputation in Slytherin,” and plastered a fake smile on her face. “All right, Goldstein?”

“All right, Potter. Have you lot seen this? Take a gander before Pince comes back here and bans us all for you burning her books….”

He laid the Prophet on the table’s edge, and Harriet craned her neck to read—.

WEREWOLF FENRIR GREYBACK ESCAPES AZKABAN.

Below the blinking title rested a black and white image of Greyback taken during his incarceration. He was nothing short of devilish in appearance, large and imposing with a mouth of blade-like teeth. He bore those teeth at the camera, and it caused his wild eyes to gleam like new coins.

“So that’s what a werewolf looks like?”

“No,” Hermione refuted, scowling at the picture. “That’s what a monster—who just so happens to be a werewolf!—looks like. Don’t be closed-minded, Harriet.”

Goldstein glanced at her and shook his head. “Look, Granger, I know you’re Muggle-born and might not know everything about the Wizarding world, but werewolves are bad news. Very bad news. Greyback is the worst of the bunch! He eats bloody children!”

“The Muggle world is far more expansive and doesn’t need the excuse of curses or magic to create its own monsters. Greyback is a beastly man with or without his lycanthropy. Don’t patronize me, Anthony; I may be Muggle-born, but I am as capable of reading as the next witch. I know what he’s done.” She picked up the paper and thrust it toward Goldstein’s chest, though Terry intercepted it, setting it atop his Charms text.

“Do you believe Black helped him?” he speculated, reading the article proper. “He is the only wizard to have escaped before….Merlin, listen to this. ‘Greyback’s escape is not without causalities; three Aurors are reported dead, a fourth is missing, and a fifth has been bitten.’” Terry lifted his head toward the window, squinting. “It was the full moon last night, wasn’t it? Poor bastard.”

“Whether or not Black helped the werewolf isn’t relevant,” Anthony argued. “That’s two Death Eaters who’ve gotten out and are walking free among civilized people! How long will it be before more escape? My parents are going to be terrified! What if they decide to take me out of school?”

Hermione crossed her arms. “I highly doubt Fenrir Greyback’s going to come to Hogwarts.”

“He bloody well might. The maniac’s hungry for children, and if Dumbledore can’t keep out the Dementors or Black, what chance does he have at keeping us safe from a werewolf?”

Hermione and Goldstein kept arguing and Terry tried mediate. Harriet read the article herself—and every word filled her with a new kind of anxious dread, a horrid premonition of terrible, terrible things to come. She didn’t know how Greyback escaped or what it really meant, but Harriet knew nothing good would come of it.


 

A/N: Instead of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, this part should just be “Harriet Potter and the Worst. Year. Ever.”

Stray note: Anthony refers to Greyback as a Death Eater. He was not a Death Eater. I think it would be a common misconception in Wizarding society to simply label Dark wizards or suspected Dark wizards as Death Eaters, when that’s not in fact true. It’s my theory (or maybe head-canon) that the marked DEs were more of a “select” group and the term came to encompass all of Voldemort’s supporters, like Greyback.

Hermione: “Greyback wouldn’t come here, pfft.”

Harriet: “I have a really bad feeling about this.”

Chapter 123: the head of slytherin house

Chapter Text

cxxiii. the head of slytherin house

 

When she exhausted all other options, Harriet decided it was time to talk to Professor Slytherin.

She didn’t want to talk to Professor Slytherin. In fact, she put it off for an entire week after her stay in the hospital wing, thinking of any excuse she could, any idea at all to get back on the Quidditch team, before entertaining the notion of involving her Head of House.

Slytherin usually allowed his House to govern itself, letting the upper-year run roughshod over the younger students, so long as they kept to whatever arbitrary rules he assigned and listened to Snape. In the same breath, he demanded a kind of constant, befuddling obeisance—wanting his students to both defer to him and leave him alone. Harriet had heard stories of Slytherins getting detentions for months or being suspended because they came to him with the wrong issue. Slytherin defined the word capricious.

Harriet really didn’t want to talk to him, but Slytherin was the one who had the final say over things like Quidditch team appointments. She could try going to Snape, but the Potions Master would most likely tell her to bugger off, and if he did listen to her, he’d still have to go to Slytherin for authority. Slytherin would be pissed at Harriet for not deferring to him in the first place—and, well, Harriet had tasted enough of his temper to last a lifetime. She’d most likely find herself banned rather than reappointed.

That brought her here, standing outside the closed door to her Head of House’s classroom just before dinner was set to begin, clutching her bag like a makeshift shield. Hermione and Elara didn’t know she’d come; they both thought it was a spectacularly stupid idea.

I could let the issue go, Harriet considered, eying the corridor leading back downstairs. Terry had a point when he said Flint won’t be captain forever.

But Harriet was convinced the issue went deeper than Flint, and she adored flying. She was actually good at it, in the way that Elara was just good at Transfiguration and Hermione was good at Charms. It had been a bright spot in an otherwise stressful term, and Harriet didn’t want to give it up. She just wanted to fly.

Bracing herself, she held her breath and knocked.

Nothing happened for a moment. Then, a brush of silent magic opened the door, and Harriet took the metaphoric plunge, hoping she wouldn’t regret this. She’d expected the professor to be in his office, but no; instead, Slytherin sat at his desk in the classroom, seemingly engrossed in some kind of letter. His red eyes rose and tracked Harriet’s slow, grudging progress into the room. None of the torches were lit, the shutters closed, the only light glowing from a single candle on the desk.

“Miss Potter,” he said, setting aside his letter. “Did you need something from me?”

He’d only said a few words, and already Harriet wanted to turn around and run from the room. She’d had a persuasive speech thought out, and now it all melted into a jumble in her brain. “I, um—.”

Slytherin raised a brow, the corner of his mouth lifting in what could have been a smile, but instead came across as a snide smirk. “Yes?”

Harriet swallowed and steeled her nerves, knowing she needed to say something, anything, before Professor Slytherin got angry. “Erm—Marcus Flint kicked me off the Quidditch team,” she blurted.

“And this concerns me how?”

“He—he doesn’t have a proper reason to do so, Professor. I know I—the broom was ruined, but I can replace it, and I wasn’t negligible! I—I’m the best player on the team.” Well, Harriet wasn’t entirely convinced of that, but a spot of self-confidence and bravado would serve her better than weak-mouthed mumbling. It firmed her voice. “I shouldn’t have been let go. There’s no grounds for my dismissal, and the—our House is going to lose the Cup if I don’t play.”

It occurred to Harriet that, in the grander scheme of things, the Quidditch Cup really didn’t matter, but she wagered losing at anything, no matter how trivial, would be unpalatable to Slytherin. Indeed, she could see the skin tighten around his eyes, his fingers drumming along the edge of his desk before he said, “Sit down, Potter,” in his lightest, most affable voice. Harriet did not want to sit down and wondered if Professor Slytherin was about to make her regret being born, but she nonetheless sank into the closest student desk. Slytherin rose, smoothing one hand over his chest to straighten his robes, and distantly Harriet heard the door follow an unvoiced command and swing shut.

Her heart jumped into her throat. She clutched her bag closer.

Slytherin studied her for a moment, his hands folded before himself, the picture of open and approachable. “You bring up a valid point, Miss Potter,” he said, coming around the desk, each step measured and meaningful. Harriet remained wary as he stopped before her. “And I appreciate the…thought you put into your little impassioned speech. It shows initiative.”

The smile he gave her could have frozen a Basilisk. Harriet shuddered at the imagery, not wanting to think about that—about Tom Riddle—when she was in front of the Defense instructor. She kept her gaze on his mouth, unable to look higher. With the candle at his back, it became impossible to see his face very well, yet his red eyes remained eerily stark.

“However, I don’t believe it’s in your best interest to continue with Quidditch, whether or not the dismissal was genuine.”

Harriet’s brow furrowed. “My best interest, sir?”

“Yes. I always have the best interest of my students in mind. Your…peculiar reaction to the Dementors aside, I don’t believe it’s the best use of your time.”

Confused, Harriet waited for Professor Slytherin to continue, and he did so, resting one hand on the desk, leaning ever so slightly forward. Discomfort wriggled in her middle, the conversation not going at all the way Harriet had expected.

“Enjoying Quidditch is all well and good, I suppose, and yet I find certain members of my House are better suited to play it than others. It has nothing to do with skill, you understand. Simply…some wizards and witches benefit more from learning how to follow orders, from being…physical people rather than cerebral ones.” Professor Slytherin canted his head to one side and Harriet could feel his eyes boring into the top of her skull. “To be plain—it’s a game for idiots, and you’re not an idiot, are you, Miss Potter? No, you’ve proved yourself quite…competent in my classes.”

Harriet had a cold, creeping feeling and she started to realize that Flint might not have been the only one who wanted her off the Quidditch team. But that was ridiculous. Professor Slytherin had every reason to keep her on the team, didn’t he? She wasn’t particularly bright and yes, she did have some talent at Defense, but what did he mean by all this?

Did…did Slytherin have Flint kick me off the team? Is he the reason they’ve been such berks all term?

“Put thoughts of Quidditch from your mind, Harriet. You would do better to devote your free time to studying more advanced magic.”

“Like the Patronus Charm?” She didn’t know why she said that, though it’d been on her mind since Hermione mentioned its existence. Slytherin’s gaze sharpened as he straightened. Harriet stared at his hand still on her desk, his nails perfectly shaped and clean. He had strangely soft, effeminate hands for someone so vicious and cruel with their magic. “I—Headmaster Dumbledore used it at the Quidditch game after I fell. Hermione told me it’s very advanced magic.”

“To some it may seem so,” Slytherin replied, voice dipping in octave. “It’s a soft magic. Weak. If you’ve half the intelligence I’ve credited you with, you’ll turn your mind and free time to more worthy pursuits.” In the distance, the tower bells tolled the hour and Slytherin glanced toward the covered windows. “Come, Potter, lest you try my patience over this trivial matter.”

He walked her out—and, as the door opened, Harriet froze, Slytherin dropping his hand onto the back of her neck. The skin under her collar burned.

“Do feel free to arrange a meeting if you’re interested in expanding your magical repertoire, Miss Potter.” His fingers tightened, then released. “Don’t spoil that potential of yours.”

He shoved her forward, through the open door—and closed it behind her.

Harriet stood in the hall for several seconds without moving, attempting to get her bearings. She had the unbearable urge to scrub at the nape of her neck, rid herself of the phantom sensation of fingers digging in too close to her spine. Professor Slytherin had gotten her kicked off the Quidditch team. He—.

Potter!”

Harriet nearly expired on the spot, Snape scaring the life from her when he came sweeping from a darkened alcove. “Bloody hell!”

“Ten points from Slytherin! What do you think you’re doing?” he hissed, eyes darting from her to the door at her back. He looked furious.

“I—I just wanted to ask him about Quidditch—.”

Snape grabbed her by the arm and dragged Harriet away from Slytherin’s classroom, ignoring the confused, curious glances of those students who still milled about in corridors despite dinner being in session. Harriet almost dropped her bag in her effort to keep up with Snape’s punishing gait. He pulled her along until they reached his cold office, at which point Snape dropped Harriet and her bag into one of the stiff-backed chairs and pulled out his wand.

“What’re you—?!”

“Hold still.”

The blue light of a silent spell fell over her in a misty sheet, followed by a second and a third, Harriet blinking in bewilderment as the Potions Master muttered under his breath, a deep crease forming between his brows. When the light faded, Snape’s rigid shoulders inched back down to their normal level, and he threw his wand onto the desk with a loud clatter. “What, in God’s name, possessed you to approach him alone, girl?!”

“I didn’t have a choice! And what was that funny magic? You don’t actually think he cursed me or something, d’you?” When Snape didn’t answer, his expression darkening, Harriet grew less certain of herself and a lot more worried. What had she been thinking? She knew there was something not entirely right about the bloke, some indefinable cord that connected him to Tom Riddle and Gaunt and Voldemort, but she’d been torn on what to do. Slytherin was supposed to be her Head of House. When Harriet spoke, she could barely hear her own words. “…I just want to play Quidditch.”

“And if he’d granted your request?” Snape demanded. “Surely you’re not naive enough to think Slytherin does anything without an ulterior motive! Use your head, Potter, for once. If Granger hadn’t come to me with suspicions on where you’d gone off to—.”

“I didn’t know he was behind it,” Harriet interrupted, wincing when Snape’s mouth snapped shut. “I mean, it sounds petty and stupid and not like anything Slytherin would care about, seeing as how he doesn’t seem to care about anyone outside of those students he tutors, but then he said…he said Quidditch is a waste of time, and I should concentrate on other things. He got me kicked off the team. If I’d known that, I wouldn’t have dared ask him.”

Snape didn’t speak, didn’t move aside from a slight tremor tightening his hands. Perhaps still shocked over what had occurred, Harriet couldn’t help but focus on the nearest visible limb, Snape’s hand pale, long-fingered, stained by potions and spells and ink. It wasn’t anything like Slytherin’s hand.

Seeing the girl shiver, Snape flicked his fingers at the hearth, lighting a fire in its belly, and went to sit in his own chair instead of looming over her. He released some of his anger, though it yet simmered just below the surface.

Shifting, Harriet asked, “Why would he kick me off the team? I don’t really understand. Sir.”

Snape scoffed. “Do you understand much of anything?” he retorted, drawing in a sharp breath, letting it out in a tired sigh. “You’re not blind. You’ve mentioned Slytherin’s tutoring group yourself. How else do you think he procures those students if not by cultivating them himself? By granting them favors, or offering guidance?”

“But that’s silly. I’m just a third-year.”

“And yet you won’t always be just a third-year, Potter. Slytherin is a master in manipulating talent, and despite being an utter dunderhead, you undeniably possess a spark of ability. Fool. You absolute little fool.” Inclined to get angry at his insulting tone, Harriet noted Snape’s attention had drifted toward the fireplace, and she had the inkling he wasn’t entirely addressing her. “What else did he tell you?”

“Some shite about arranging a ‘meeting’ if I wanted to know more magic and not to go ‘spoiling my potential.’”

Snape pinched his dark eyes shut.

“Well, I’m not going to ask him for anything, obviously!”

“I should hope not,” he said, scowling when he opened his eyes again. “What else?”

“Nothing, really. I wasn’t in the classroom for more than a few minutes.” Harriet turned her head, thinking, and considered again how Slytherin had recoiled when she asked about the spell Professor Dumbledore had used. “He did act strange when I asked him about the Patronus Charm. I don’t know what it is, exactly, but he discouraged me from looking into it. Said it was weak magic.

“Of course he would, seeing as he can’t cast it himself.”

“What, really?” Harriet asked, surprised. Snape crossed his arms and settled farther into his chair, tone taking on that terse edge Harriet knew conveyed his clear incredulity in her intelligence.

“The Patronus Charm is what some refer to as Light magic. Slytherin is a Dark wizard. He is incapable of it.”

“What d’you mean by that? I’ve not heard of Light magic.”

“That is because it is not a real thing, Potter. It is a misnomer brought on by conceptions of duality—for if there is Dark magic, then there should be Light magic as well. If this magic were to actually exist, it would suggest the potential for perfect actualization, the ‘ideal soul,’ and that, too, is the nonsense blathering of charlatans, knobheads, and the bloody Headmaster. All witches and wizards are exposed to various levels of corruption throughout their lives—not unlike Muggles and their radiation—which means no one is perfectly pure. The Patronus Charm is a projection of one’s inner soul, taking on the form a spirit guardian. That guardian assumes a shape in the Animalia kingdom best representing the caster’s various traits. A person cannot cast the Patronus if their soul is, for lack of a better definition, filthy and degraded.”

Harriet absorbed this information, her nose scrunched and eyes bright behind her glasses. She was fairly certain Professor Snape had just called Slytherin filthy and degraded in a roundabout way, which she thought was brilliant. “Could you teach it to me?”

Snape blinked as if he hadn’t expected her to ask. “What?”

“The Patronus Charm. Could you teach it to me, so I can protect myself from Dementors? I tried looking it up, but I couldn’t find anything in the library.”

“That is because it is a N.E.W.T spell and not one often mastered until after a student leaves this school.” Clearing his throat, Snape added. “No, I won’t teach you.”

Harriet slumped. “But why not?”

“Because there isn’t a point in doing so, and I won’t waste my time. I do have more to do than chase you and your ill-mannered friends about the castle, Potter. You’re off the Quidditch team, can’t venture past the gates, and won’t be coming into contact with the Dementors again—.”

“But you can’t know that,” Harriet pressed, suddenly desperate. “I—please, Professor. Please teach me. I…don’t want to hear it anymore, the things the Dementors make me remember. I want to learn to drive them away.”

Snape frowned, his black eyes intent on Harriet’s. The fire in the grate cast part of his face into shadow until he turned to look at her properly. “What is it you hear, girl?”

Harriet hesitated. She hadn’t told anyone the truth and didn’t much fancy telling Snape now, the idea of putting the horrors in her head into words sickening. Harriet wanted to pretend they didn’t exist, and yet…if she had to tell someone, it might as well be Snape. Then she could admit it, aloud, and it wasn’t as if Snape would be keen to bring it up again.

“My mum,” she mumbled.

“Don’t mumble.”

“My mum,” Harriet repeated, louder, Snape flinching on the other side of his desk.

“What are you on about? How could—?”

“I can hear her screaming, and my dad. He tried to hold him back. And Vol—the Dark Lord. He—my mum begged him to spare me, but she wouldn’t stand aside, and she screamed when he killed her.”

Snape grew progressively paler as Harriet spoke until he better resembled a corpse than a living person, his hands gripping the arms of his chair in a white-knuckled grip. Sweat beaded on his brow.

“…Professor?”

He didn’t stir, but Harriet heard a single word escape his slack mouth. “Out,” he whispered.

“What?”

Firmer, Snape said, “Get out,” and refused to look at Harriet. He hardly seemed to be breathing. “You need to leave. Go to dinner, go to the dorm, go—anywhere. Just go.”

“But what about the Patronus Charm—?”

“Not now!” Snape snarled, bolting to his feet, the chair falling and banging against the floor. The noise startled Harriet out of her own seat, suddenly nervous. What did I do? she wondered. What did I say? “Go, Potter. Go and stay away from Slytherin!”

“I—.”

“GET OUT.”

Harriet scrambled from the room, snatching her bag from the floor as she went. The door slammed shut at her heels, and the sound echoed far into the dungeons’ confines, chased by the lingering vestige of Snape’s bellowed shout. Harriet, shaken, glowered at the door and the man hidden behind it.

“Is every adult in this school utterly barmy? Merlin’s beard….”


A/N: I wanted to point out that Harriet’s not always a reliable narrator, especially in regards to herself. Probably because she grew up hearing “You’re rubbish” constantly.

Harriet: “Ha, yeah, I can hear my mum dying.”

Snape: Snape.exe has stop working.

Chapter 124: god-sister

Chapter Text

cxxiv. god-sister

 

November bled into December, and one dawn, the whole of Hogwarts woke to find the green hills beyond the castle grounds covered in a blanket of white.

The snow settled in, falling every passing morning and evening, and all too soon, a hard crust formed over the top of the lake. The forest creaked under the weight of ice, and more than one student ended up in the infirmary after falling down a slippery path. Harriet still ran outside on the track despite the cold and despite not being on the Quidditch team—avoiding the Slytherin players whenever she could.

She avoided most people outside of her friends these days. Since the last Quidditch game, no drama had occurred at Hogwarts, so chatter about Harriet’s fall and subsequent dismissal from her team still popped up in the corridors or Great Hall. Harriet also kept her head down around Professor Slytherin, keen on escaping the wizard’s expectant gaze whenever possible. Snape had been acting odd since he’d thrown Harriet from his office. He refused to look at her—not that Snape ever spent a lot of time doing that, but now his eyes pointedly skated over her table in the Potions classroom, and when Harriet raised her hand to ask or answer a question, he ignored it. She could only conclude that something she’d said in his office had deeply affected the wizard—but Harriet couldn’t figure out what that something had been.

Maybe he lost someone to Voldemort, she thought. Maybe listening to me talk about how my mum died brought back bad memories for him.

Considerations of Snape and Slytherin aside, Harriet forced her mood to stay upbeat as the term’s final Hogsmeade trip approached and her friends began to fret.

“We don’t have to go,” Hermione assured her. “We’ve already gone and seen it. Once was enough.”

But Harriet urged them to go, just as she did for the previous trip, determined she wouldn’t hold them back from having fun and getting their break from the castle. She promised she’d find Luna or Ginny while they were gone so she wouldn’t be alone, but Harriet didn’t mind having the time to herself and so didn’t seek out her younger friends. While the rest of the school took the carriages down to the village, Harriet gathered Livi and headed out into the grounds, finding a spot on the lake’s frozen shore. She practiced her Warming Charms as she sat there, feeling sorry for herself, watching the snow fall and melt.

Snape’s been acting weird,” Harriet told Livi as the serpent dragged his belly through the sand, hissing in satisfaction. “Or, well, weirder, since he’s always been an odd bloke. Most witches and wizards are odd, though. That’s just a common thing.” Sighing, she threw another Warming Charm toward the ground, and rills of steam issued from the drying sand. “I guess I shouldn’t have told him about the Dementors.

Livi uncoiled and brought his nose to Harriet’s, his eyes level with her own. “Bitter are the wordsss we asssk but do not want to know.”

Harriet hummed and touched the gem on his head, tracing the smaller scales surrounding it. “Maybe. I think he lost somebody. I wonder what Snape hears when the Dementors come close?” It was an idle curiosity, the answer being too intensely private for Harriet to ever really consider asking the question. Concentrating, she waved her wand at the lake—or, more specifically, the ice—and applied Warming Charms until a small hole appeared. Livi flicked his tail in appreciation—spraying her with wet sand—and dipped into the cold, dark waters, vanishing out of sight.

Harriet’s thoughts wandered to Snape again as she sat hunkered under her cloak, pressing her fingertips against a bruise on her red knee, watching the skin shift in color. She didn’t know what to think of the Potions Master most of the time. He could be a right bastard, rude and snarky and just plain mean—but other times, he did things that contradicted his snide, cutting personality. Harriet got so caught up in things that she failed to think, but as more time went by, the more she remembered smaller details she didn’t first consider. Like how Snape managed to get past the Moon Mirror into the Aerie and ran headlong into danger without missing a step. Or when Quirrell tried to kill her, and Snape was the first one through the door. Or when she was poisoned, and Snape was the one who shoved a bezoar down her throat.

Those details didn’t mean much at the time, eclipsed by more pressing issues and dangers and woes, but Harriet didn’t forget. Perhaps it was coincidental, the wrong person at the right time, and maybe Snape simply did as the Headmaster told him to do regardless of his own preferences—but Harriet didn’t believe that, really. Snape was a quintessential Slytherin; he’d never do anything if he didn’t want to do it.

Harriet laid back, not minding the cold or the wet grass or the stray snowflakes landing on her glasses. She plucked little pebbles from the dirt and tossed them into the air one by one, practicing her Shield Charms to bounce them into the lake. The clatter of stones striking the ice echoed.

“Hey, Potter!”

Harriet startled—and cursed as a pebble smacked her nose. Sitting up, she spotted the Weasley twins tromping down the snow-covered path toward her. “What?” she asked, mildly peeved, rubbing her sore face.

“Well, that’s quite a tone to use on someone who’s about to help you out,” George—and she was fairly certain it was George—said as he sat on a flat boulder. “What’s our favorite snake doing scrappin’ around here instead of the village?”

“I’m not allowed,” she grumbled, squinting up at the two twins now perched on the rock. “What about you two?”

“Oh, we’re on our way—but spotted you out here.”

Fred winked, and from his robe pocket he pulled out the Marauder’s Map and gave it a wave. Harriet eyed it with wistful curiosity.

“Have you given our deal anymore thought, then?”

Harriet shrugged, pretending she didn’t care, and pushed herself to her feet, smearing muddy hands against her shirt. “Yeah. I haven’t had a chance to finish it yet. The map.”

“But you’ve started it?” George asked, brightening. “We’ve been trying to find which mirrors are Moon Mirrors too, but haven’t had much luck.”

“Right? McGonagall caught us in one of the girls’ loos the other day standing in the stinks—.” Fred cut himself off when Harriet gave him a disapproving look worthy of Hermione. He held up his hands. “There was no one in there, promise!”

“She’s as scary as Gin is when she’s in a right snit, Freddie.”

“Scarier, even.” Fred shook his head, still smiling. “Listen, Harriet. Is your map almost finished?”

“…Almost. I have a couple I haven’t copied down yet.”

“We’ll trade you anyway.” He flapped the Marauder’s Map about again.

“Why?” Harriet asked, confused. “If it’s not complete yet, why trade?”

“Well, you have to give Georgie and me some kind of challenge, right? And Gin’s been a bit worried about you.”

“We think she’s still feeling guilty over your glorious swan-dive.”

Harriet huffed. “That’s ridiculous—.”

“Which is what we said, but what kind of honorary big brothers would we be if we didn’t look out for our snakey extended family?”

Giving them both a dirty look, Harriet said, “You’re not my brothers,” and turned her shoulder.

“Aw, c’mon, Potter—.”

Livi chose that moment to pop up from the broken ice, scaring both Weasleys into toppling off the flat boulder into the crunchy snow. Smug, Harriet smirked at the pair, and Livius slithered over, a dead grindylow hanging from his jaws. Livi hesitated upon spotting the boys and then went invisible—dead grindylow now suspended in midair.

“Wicked!” George said as he sat up and adjusted his lopsided cap. “Is this the familiar Neville told us about?”

“Longbottom has a fat mouth. He shouldn’t be telling you anything.”

“Don’t be cross. To be fair, it seems an awful big thing to be quiet about.” The grindylow started to disappear down Livi’s gullet. “Blimey, look at that, Fred!”

Fred, for his part, appeared a tad more squeamish than his bother but kept a straight face. “Here, Potter. Take it.”

He held the Marauder’s Map out to her, blank now aside from a few spots of water dotting the surface from the snow. When Harriet made no move to grasp it, Fred poked her with it. “Go on, take it.”

“I don’t have the Moon Mirror Map on me.”

“You can give it to us later. Take it, Potter, blimey. Do you remember how it works?” Harriet finally accepted the parchment, and Fred tweaked her nose, earning a grumble and a not-so-subtle hiss from an invisible Horned Serpent. George was trying to pet Livi and, judging by his jerking motions, Livius kept dodging his attempts.

“I remember how it works.”

“All right. Put it to good use, yeah?”

“If I might make a suggestion,” George put in. “You might want to find yourself on the third-floor this fine afternoon—.”

“Visiting our good friend Gunhilda of Gorsemoor.”

The name sounded familiar, something Harriet had heard or read in a textbook during History of Magic—but that class was easily one of her worst, no matter that Professor Lupin was a much better teacher than Professor Selwyn. “What are you two on about?”

In response, Fred and George shared an eerie, mischievous grin, and Fred simply tapped the Map in Harriet’s hand. “You’ll never know if you don’t see for yourself.”

 

x X x

 

On any other day, if Fred and George Weasley had told Harriet to find one of their friends on the third-floor, she would have known she was about to be pranked and would have had the good sense to ignore them both. Today, however, her inclination for caution had been replaced by bored inquisitiveness, and with the irresistible knowledge of the Marauder’s Map in hand, Harriet decided to have a look.

She returned to her empty dormitory, ignoring the rambunctious first and second-years out in the common room, returning Livius to his comfortable nest of warm blankets and pillows under her bed. Satisfied, she sat on the mattress and considered the parchment, turning it round and round.

“If this curses me,” Harriet muttered, retrieving her wand. “I’ll tell their mother about everything prank they’ve pulled this year. I solemnly swear that I am up to no good.

Ink spilled across the old, weathered pages, and Harriet watched with captivated interest as the walls and thoroughfares of the castle she’d so carefully recreated on her own map appeared on the page. She could see the young Slytherins’ tiny marks just down the corridor from her, and Filch was lurking in his office. Harriet folded back the map’s edges. Snape crossed through the entrance hall, and Luna, Ginny, and a few other Gryffindors of Ginny’s year loitered about the pitch. Slytherin conducted one of his “tutoring sessions,” Accipto Lestrange, Patricia Parkinson, Desdemona Bragge, and Hector Gibbon all gathered in his classroom. Harriet could see all the names of the ghosts she’d never met. Professor Dumbledore stood at one of the windows in his office, unmoving.

Harriet glanced over the third-floor, not expecting to see anything on the Map itself—but, as she traced the curling lines with her fingertips—she realized a small, crooked section broke off and twisted away from wall, spiraling toward the empty edge of the parchment simply labeled, “Hogsmeade.”

Eyes wide in excitement, Harriet hopped to her feet and dashed for the door—only to stop and double-back for her Invisibility Cloak, slinging it on over her head as she went. She stared at her own dot on the Map as she left the common room—diving into a spare broom cupboard when Snape’s dot approached dungeon stairs. She couldn’t hear the bastard pass by, but she could just barely see him on the parchment, illuminated by a weak shaft of torchlight managing to weasel past the door. Harriet watched until he disappeared and then released a low, gusty breath.

Well. The Map had already proved itself incredibly useful.

Harriet found her way to the third floor quickly after that, much of the castle vacant while the students visited the village. She walked until she stopped by the statue she knew only as the One-Eyed Witch—who was, apparently, named Gunhilda of Gorsemoor. The narrow little passage depicted in ink wended down and away from Gunhilda, but Harriet couldn’t see a way to get by her stony, impassable visage. Grumbling, she consulted the Map again—and squinted at a minuscule speech bubble blooming over her stationary dot. It contained the word, ‘Dissendium.’

A mini wand appeared next to it, mimicking a sharp, decisive tap. Harriet shrugged and checked the corridor despite knowing no one was about, then tapped the statue’s side. “Dissendium.”

Harriet jumped when the witch’s stone hump lurched, then pulled in upon itself, revealing a dark, open recess, a tiny crawlspace just big enough for an average-sized man to squeeze through. That left plenty of room for Harriet, who quickly blanked the Marauder’s Map and folded it into her pocket, levering herself up and into the revealed entrance. No sooner had she dropped down than the hump sealed itself off once more, and Harriet flinched in the dark, hurrying to light her wand.

The passage consisted of a narrow set of staggered steps plunging through a cavity built between the walls like a gritty mineshaft. Harriet covered her face against cobwebs as she went, and when the steps eventually ended, her wand illuminated the mouth of a rounded tunnel carved into the earth. She studied it for several uneasy minutes before deciding it had to be safe enough, especially if Fred and George had been using it. Harriet continued, listening to the harsh, quick beat of her heart in her ears, her school shoes catching on the uneven ground. The tunnel rambled on and on, so much so Harriet paused twice to check her position on the Map, noting how slowly her dot drifted toward the parchment’s edges. After the second stop, she stowed the Map away again and picked up the pace, one hand balanced against the rough wall, another holding her wand before her.

At last, she came upon a set of rickety ladder steps, and Harriet climbed until she brushed her head against the underside of a trapdoor. It was locked, but not by anything a simple “Alohomora!” couldn’t handle. Harriet inched the door open and peeked through the opening—startled by the loud guffaw of a dozen voices and clomping feet, the sticky smell of syrup and burnt sugar invading her nose. The room beyond the trapdoor was dark, but not overly so, an inviting warmth pervading the space that urged Harriet to lift the door higher, not realizing how cold she’d gotten in the tunnel below. Something slid and bumped against a hollow object.

Harriet crawled out and knelt among a dozen or so crates, obviously in some kind of cellar, the voices coming through the rafters and floorboards overhead. She let the trapdoor close, and it disappeared against the dusty, aged flooring, the outline invisible under the ancient carpet she replaced over the top of it. A door opened at the top of the steps, and Harriet clutched her Invisibility Cloak tighter around herself.

“Little blighters go through the stuff like Nifflers in a gold mine,” a portly man chuckled to himself as he shuffled over to a long, wide rack bearing various glass containers. “Surprised their teeth don’t rot out of their heads….”

Harriet spared him a puzzled glance, but when the wizard ducked behind a tall barrel in search of something, she made good on her chance to escape, weaving up the stairs and out the ajar door.

All the noise made sense once Harriet had a look about and realized she was in a shop—Honeydukes, given the overflowing bins of chocolate and licorice and jumping beans. Harriet had seen sweetshops before while touring various Wizarding quarters, but the sheer color and liveliness of the shop took her breath away, packed to the brim with her classmates choosing and bartering over their favorite treats. Harriet sidled out from behind the counter, and the throng of Hogwarts students was so thick, no one noticed the sudden invisible presence elbowing her way through their midsts.

Harriet couldn’t suppress the elated giggle that escaped her when she managed to exit the shop and tugged off the Invisibility Cloak. It gave her a thrill to be out from under constant adult supervision present in the castle.

The main street of Hogsmeade sprawled in either direction, the tidy stone buildings looking like a Muggle Christmas card under their crisp layer of frost, all the lanterns along the road still lit and burnished. Students tucked into their winter cloaks darted from one place to another, laughter abounding, the crowd dotted here and there by the occasional villager passing through. The snow began to fall in earnest, but no one stopped to notice.

Harriet set off in search of Hermione and Elara, not bothering with the Invisibility Cloak after she spotted the two chaperons—McGonagall and Sprout—having perhaps one too many glasses of rum at the Three Broomsticks. No one else gave the scrawny Slytherin third-year a thought. She popped round the shops she thought her friends would most likely visit—Tomes and Scrolls, Scrivenshaft’s Quill Shop, Gladrags—and when she failed to find them, Harriet turned her attention to Ceridwen’s Caldrons, the post office, The Magic Neep, and even Zonko’s. She walked into the joke shop and walked out holding her nose against the rotten smell of loose Dungbomb. She glanced into a seedy-looking pub off High Street called The Hog’s Head Inn—and yelped when she spotted the barkeeper, who looked so much like the Headmaster, it sent Harriet sprinting back into the snow.

She’d almost given up the search when she finally spotted the cloud of Hermione’s curly hair through a window. Harriet doubled back and checked the sign, wondering why in the world Hermione and Elara would be inside Spintwitches Sporting Needs.

A generous cluster of Quidditch players and enthusiasts had squeezed into the shop, Oliver Wood and Roger Davies both drooling over the single Firebolt on display behind a glass case. It smelled of leather and polish inside, and though Harriet usually enjoyed the scent, today it sent a prickle of tension along her spine. She purposefully ignored Marcus Flint and Derrick Bole’s presence chatting in one of the corners and instead eased behind Elara and Hermione.

“…don’t know if it’s the right time to get her something like this,” the former said as she studied a handsome leather book on Quidditch strategies. “I don’t know if she’ll enjoy it.”

“Maybe. She should be back on the team soon enough, don’t you think?” Hermione replied, frowning at the cheeky Chaser on one of the books who kept winking at her. “At least by next year.”

“She’s more put out by what happened than she lets on.”

Harriet stuck her head between the pair. “I’m not put out!”

Elara dropped the book and gasped. The glass case surrounding the Firebolt shattered into dust.

In the resulting confusion of shouting students and furious shopkeepers, Harriet winced when a hand seized her by the wrist and dragged her bodily from the shop. “E-Elara!” she choked, taken aback by the strength of her grip, a sharp pain in her shoulder from being tugged too hard. “Quit it!”

Elara dragged her from the chaos unfolding behind them right into the narrow, dodgy alley separating Spintwitches from Scrivenshaft’s. Ice layered the bricks of either building, and the wind cut bitter and cold as it howled through the byway. “What are you doing here?” Elara demanded when she finally let go and whirled on her. Harriet recoiled at her vehemence and bumped into Hermione. She’d never seen Elara so—urgent, so insistent. Her friend usually accepted things with grim deportment, a measured, sometimes apathetic calm. This was the opposite of calm. “You can’t be out here!”

“I—? What, because of the bloody permission slip? That’s bollocks, and you know it—.”

“It’s not about the stupid permission slip!” Elara swiped both hands over her face, looking to Hermione for assistance, then toward the alley. “Harriet, you have to go back to the school! You have to go back right now!”

“I’m not going anywhere until you explain.”

“Please, go!”

No! Elara, you’re scaring me—.”

“It’s not safe for you!”

The more she spoke, the more confused Harriet grew. The confusion twisted into irritation because she’d been excited to see her friends, excited to visit the village with them, show them the Marauder’s Map, and now—. “Not safe? Why? Because of the Dementors? They don’t come to the village. Sirius Black? What does that have to do with me?”

“It has everything to do with you! Please, it’s not safe!” Elara twisted her hands together, pulling so hard at the leather of her gloves, the seams threatened to tear. Her frustration grew as Harriet continued to stand there, disinclined to move.

“I…don’t understand.” Harriet said that too often these days, an echo of ignorance, a slow, disoriented spiral of forced ignorance. “If anyone should be worried about Black, it’s Longbottom—or you. If it’s not safe, what are you doing here? The bloke doesn’t even know I exist!”

“Damn it all, Harriet, listen to me!” Elara shouted, fighting for volume over the keening wind and the noise from the Quidditch shop. “He doesn’t know I’m alive! He—Harriet, please! There was no danger to me. It was about you, all the precautions this summer, Dumbledore and McGonagall not allowing you into the village—it’s not protected like the school is! Black might be after you, like he might be after Neville!”

“What—? That’s ridiculous, why would he—?”

“Because he killed your parents!”

Behind Harriet, she heard Hermione gasp, but it sounded a long way off. She stared at Elara as red crept into the girl’s otherwise pale face, her gray eyes vivid and gleaming and frighteningly sincere, the words pouring from her in great, stuttering bursts—as if she practiced them. As if they’d been held in too long.

“Because he was their best friend! Because he sold them out to the Dark Lord! Because—he was your godfather! And he was the one who sent Voldemort to your house that Hallowe’en night! He sent him there, then went out and slaughtered twelve Muggles and his other best friend! That’s why he was in Azkaban! He’s mad and dangerous and—please. Please go back!”

Harriet didn’t move. She didn’t breathe—while Elara, on the other hand, couldn’t get enough air, panting and trembling, clearly steps away from being sick. Concern burbled in Harriet’s chest but couldn’t seep by the sudden, pressing weight crushing it. She stared at Elara—the girl she’d known for years, had shared a bed with, had cried with, had laughed with—and felt as if she gazed at a stranger.

She had to have known. She’d memorized every fucking fifth and sixth cousin in her family tree, so there was no way—. Elara had to have known for all these years, had to have realized the moment she learned Harriet’s name that they were god-siblings, and yet—.

And Harriet never asked about Sirius Black. Because she was an idiot. A stupid, naive little orphan girl—.

She kept this from me.

Harriet wanted Elara to take the words back, but she couldn’t. They hung heavy and ugly between them, and they couldn’t be taken back, couldn’t be unheard. All Harriet could think about was the sudden, sparking realization of Elara’s withheld knowledge hitting her with tangible weight.

She…lied?

The cold burned in Harriet’s middle, against her wet cheeks, and the narrow strip of light painted between the two buildings seemed to grow thinner and thinner. She couldn’t recognize the witch standing across from her.

Because he’s your godfather!

Harriet grabbed the Invisibility Cloak out from under her arm, pulled it on, and disappeared.


 

A/N: Top Ten Anime Betrayals.

The One-Eyed Witch is canonically on the third floor, but like…how does it open to an underground tunnel?

Remember, there’s a Discord server now where you can join the community and stay up to date on chapter releases! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

 

Chapter 125: grieve it on its way

Chapter Text

cxxv. grieve it on its way

 

Growing up, Harriet remembered there came a time when anything the Dursleys said or did ceased to have any effect on her.

It’d been different when she was little, when she would peer into the kitchen or the den and see Aunt Petunia with Dudley and would wonder why she wasn’t allowed in there, or why her Aunt never kissed her forehead or smoothed her hair. She eventually learned to accept that invisible line between herself and others; normal people deserved kindness, sincerity, and affection, and Harriet—whatever she was—did not.

After that, nothing mattered. She took Aunt Petunia’s cold scorn and Uncle Vernon’s rude remarks with numb acceptance, forging a specific understanding of the world, one that allowed her to find spots of contentment in an otherwise drab, cruel existence. She lived for those moments when Aunt Petunia would say something half-way kind, when Uncle Vernon would tell off Dudley for being a bit too rough on a girl, no matter how scrawny and freakish she was. Harriet hardened her heart from a young age, and though she wasn’t happy, she wasn’t sad, either. When she decided to stop being surprised, to stop expecting more, Harriet felt nothing at all.

Then, she came to Hogwarts.

Somewhere along the line, Harriet’s heart lost its flinty exterior. It softened, and Harriet started accepting kindness into her life with gratefulness rather than desperation, eager to meet new people, looking for and seeing the best in them whenever she could. Somehow, she’d forgotten the simple, quintessential fact that people, for all intents and purposes, were the same. They were all people, and they shared between them similar strengths, follies, and faults. They were liars—just like the Dursleys. Just like Sirius Black. Just like her god-sister.

Harriet returned from Hogsmeade and tried, for hours, to make sense of what she’d learned, to twist reason out of the agonized bramble taking residence in her heart—until she decided it best not to try, best to push the tangle of emotion down into her belly and ignore it. People were liars. Thinking otherwise had, apparently, gotten her parents killed.

Because he was their best friend! Because he sold them out to the Dark Lord!”

It was easier when she didn’t try to unwind the threads from one another. It was easier not to listen to Hermione, to toss Elara’s notes into the fire unopened, to ignore the ravens Mr. Flamel sent and the Headmaster’s passing concern in the corridor. She spent time with Livius, or with the portraits, or forced herself to run on the track until her shins hurt and she vomited in the bushes. It was easier to surround herself with reptiles and dead people and to punish herself than it was to accept Elara Black’s betrayal.

Harriet stood outside the Great Hall and listened to the sounds of dinner commencing within. Her stomach had turned to lead in her middle, and so the smells drifting through the open doors did nothing to entice her appetite. The warmth pressed into her, too heavy and close, and Harriet felt smothered by the idea of going inside and pretending everything was all right. She turned and walked away.

It was easier this way.

 

x X x

 

Something was wrong with the Potter girl.

It didn’t take a genius to see it. The whole of the staff realized an inexplicable riff had driven Potter and Black apart, and neither had taken the division well. For the week, Potter’s presence in the Great Hall had been a rarity, the two sat apart from one another in lessons, and Potter refused to contribute to any classroom discourse. The homework she turned in lack depth or care, parts of it blatantly plagiarized from the book—and Black was no better, when she actually deigned to appear in class. The girl was dejected and ill, Pomona reporting that she’d shattered a wall of glass in one of the greenhouses on Tuesday.

Had he been in his right mind, Severus would have nipped the issue in the bud. He had neither the time nor the patience for whatever juvenile strop Potter and Black wanted to throw, not with Sirius Black on the loose and Slytherin breathing down his neck—but Severus wasn’t in his right mind, not since he heard Potter say, “My mum begged him to spare me, but she wouldn’t stand aside, and she screamed when he killed her.

Even thinking the words now, sitting behind his desk in front of his class, had Severus squeezing his eyes shut.

He’d lived with the guilt for years, the grounding knowledge of his own culpability in the deaths of Lily and James Potter. It’d perched like a gargoyle on his shoulders, heavy and crushing—but like a gargoyle, the guilt had been a static thing, unmoving, and he could shift it about to better accommodate his day-to-day life. Potter’s words had struck the burden with an Animation Charm, and it thrashed with the same verve and fury it had in the beginning. It was one thing to conceptually acknowledge Lily’s death—but to have this understanding? To know she’d screamed in the end? That her daughter had witnessed it all? He—.

Bile crawled in his throat. It was his fault. A mistake born of a desire to learn, to grow, a willing ignorance, just wanting to survive—fear, cowardice. It hadn’t been his hand on the wand, but it’d been his words in the wizard’s ear. Severus woke in the dead of night wishing, wishing he hadn’t been so fucking stupid—.

But, as the Muggle expression went, if wishes were horses, beggars would ride.

Potter sat in the back of the room, alone, and a mere glance in her direction had Severus grimacing. He couldn’t Occlude; doing so exacerbated the sentiment and would, without proper amelioration, drive him to the edge. He’d been there before, time and time again, but not in recent years, and never without Albus’ hand there to drag him back and remind him of his duties. The Headmaster was not above gas-lighting and guilt-tripping if it kept a broken man from throwing himself off the Astronomy Tower. Severus couldn’t bring himself to be grateful at the moment.

He needed time. He needed—.

He needed Potter to not blow up his bloody classroom, which she was well on the way to doing at the moment. Severus watched her crush snake fangs in her mortar, lacking the stabilizing, standard ingredient measures, the flame under her cauldron far too high, the odious liquid frothing in warning. Severus didn’t bother to say anything; he flicked his wand and vanished the concoction before Potter could dump the chunks of fangs into her Wideye Potion and douse the room in noxious, poisonous gas. The fangs clattered into the empty cauldron, and Potter scowled.

Longbottom, seated at the table next to her, snickered.

“Five points from Gryffindor, Longbottom.”

“What? Seriously?”

“Would you like a zero for the day as well? You’re well on your way to that all on your own, though.”

The boy had the sense to shut his trap, and Severus pretended he didn’t see Longbottom’s insolent muttering to Weasley. On another day, he’d delight in smacking the dunderhead in the face with a heaping scoop of humility. He always had cauldrons in need of manual cleaning and barrels of fresh—and fetid—ingredients requiring preparation. Today, however, Severus didn’t have the energy for suffering Longbottom’s presence. He turned a deaf ear to the noise.

In the front row, Granger worked at her cauldron, whispering soft nonsense to Black, who’d done nothing aside from stare at the desk for the duration of the double period.

Severus rolled his eyes to the ceiling, beseeching the universe to either send him patience or put him out of his misery.

One by one, potions got decanted and set in the labeled rack on his desk, the chatter increasing as more students finished their tasks. Potter packed her potions kit and satchel and would have been the first out the door when the bell rang had Severus not fixed her with a steely glare. “Stay behind, Potter.” When she made a move as if to disobey, he sent a silent Sticking Charm in her direction and stuck the insolent girl to her stool. The others departed with the usual fervor—aside from Black and Granger, the former watching Potter, who refused to lift her head and acknowledge her presence.

Severus stood and swept to the front of his desk, stopping Black before she could go to the back of the room. “Get out,” he told her and Granger.

“No,” Black retorted, hardly pausing to consider him. The Potions Master, for his part, simply seized a witch in each hand and marched the pair from the dungeon. “Detention. Tomorrow, with Filch.”

He slammed the door closed in their faces—but not before hearing Granger wail, “But I didn’t do anything!”

Potter didn’t move while her friends were thrown from the room. Her shoulders loosened once Black vanished from sight, but she kept her head down, fists grasped tight on the stool’s edges. Severus steeled himself, mind dipping into the stilling calm of Occlumency’s disassociation, and looked.

The girl had missed too many meals, evidenced by her thinning face and the dark smudges below her eyes. Frankly, she had a mean look about her, like a kid off the streets of Cokeworth pretending they weren’t out nicking papers off stoops or throwing rocks at car windows.

After another unsuccessful attempt of freeing her backside from her seat, Potter ceased her efforts and glared at him. “Why am I here?” she demanded, and when Severus didn’t reply, his arms crossed and expression impassive, she added on a halfhearted, “Sir?”

“It’s called a detention, Potter.”

She stiffened. “That’s bollocks. It’s lunchtime.”

“As if you planned to actually attend,” he snapped, arms uncoiling. “Don’t play me for a fool, Potter. I have far better things to do than tend to you and your idiot tagalongs.”

Potter’s jaw flexed, and her mouth moved, something suspiciously like, “Bugger off, then,” escaping in a low murmur.

What was that?

“Nothing, sir.”

Severus canceled the spell holding her in place, and Potter toppled to the floor, regaining her feet with remarkable dexterity. “Rikkety!”

The house-elf appeared, popping into existence on one of the other desks. She wrung her hands together as she considered the professor and student staring each other down. “What can Rikkety be doing for Professor Snapey?”

“Sandwiches, Rikkety. If you would.”

The requested sandwiches appeared after the house-elf returned to the kitchens, and Severus dropped the plate before Potter. “Eat.”

“I’m not hungry.”

“Eat anyway. Before I summon the Headmaster to have one of his obnoxious, heartfelt chats.” Huffing, the girl sat but did nothing aside from pick at the bread and roasted turkey. Severus pulled on years of handling recalcitrant teenagers to keep his voice level, lest he began shouting. “You wished to learn the Patronus Charm, did you not? Finish your meal, and I might be persuaded into teaching you the incantation.”

Potter ate then, her appetite increasing as she went, though she only managed half a sandwich and part of a glass of water. Severus leaned against a desk and waited, saying nothing, only stirring from his inner thoughts to order Rikkety to grab Potter’s cloak from her dorm and to remove the dishes when the girl finished. Potter wrinkled her nose in confusion as she accepted the garment from the house-elf.

“What’s this for?”

“For wearing.”

“I know that! Why are you giving it to me?”

“Because we are going outside.” Severus Summoned a burlap sack from his storage, as well as his own cloak. He threw the empty sack at Potter, who caught it before it could land on her head. “Take that and follow me.”

“What’s the bag for, then?”

“You’ll be needing it.”

“But what about Defense? I have that after lunch.”

“I’m certain Professor Slytherin can live without your presence for one class period.” He cut her off with an irritated swipe of his hand. “It’s a detention, Potter, not time for a bloody question and answer session.”

She followed him without another word, if only because she was curious and keen to avoid her friends and Slytherin. They ascended through the dungeons and the entrance hall, the cold bracing when they crossed through the main doors and felt the first gust of wind. The snow had turned to ice where exposed to the worst of the elements, so Severus’ boots barely sunk into the surface. He did slip, twice, Charms and magic on his treads only doing so much, and Potter had to grab him by the arm on the second occurrence to save him from hitting the ground.

Not that he’d ever acknowledge that.

“What’re we doing out here? It’s bloody cold,” she complained once they reached the forest’s edge, the branches’ cover sparing them further exposure to the snow. Severus flicked his hair back from his eyes and squinted into the gloom.

“If I have to repeat myself again, girl, I’ll hand your detention off to Filch and rid myself of the nuisance.”

They walked in silence, the world muffled by the snow, ice cracking where the tree branches swayed, the sound like the soft groaning of some giant beast’s shifting limbs. Winter had yet to begin, but it had already set in hard and fast in the highlands. The academic part of Severus’ mind wondered if the drastic ambient temperature shift had anything to do with the ring of horrid, soul-sucking fiends surrounding the castle day and night—but, mostly, he didn’t care about the weather. He just wanted the Dementors—and the Ministry—to sod off.

The worn path took them to a clear glade well-away from any of the forest’s dangerous territories, but Severus still cast a Detection Charm toward the surrounding trees before telling the girl to stop. He gestured at the ice-covered field, the lone post of an ancient, rotted paddock the only structure left in sight. “Here. We will be harvesting potion ingredients. In the spring and summer, Hagrid utilizes this glade for foaling the Thestrals—but it’ll suit our purposes now.”

Ignoring Potter’s confused glance, Severus flicked his wand into his hand and directed a single, powerful Warming Charm toward the snow nearest his feet. The water melted, revealing beneath it the brown, dormant grass—and the white, flowering tops of what appeared to be several chanterelles. Potter leaned in for closer inspection—until the exposed fungi began screaming in unison, attempting to uproot themselves and flee.

“Ah!” Potter gasped, jerking back. “What in the hell are those?!”

Morchella miser,” Severus drawled, Summoning the caps into his outstretched hand. “Or the Miserable Morel. They grow beneath the ice in composted soil rich with carnivorous animal scat.”

“That’s gross.”

“If it was pleasant, it wouldn’t be a detention, now would it? Open the bloody bag, Potter. Don’t just stand there like an idiot, for Merlin’s sake….”

The girl held out the bag, and Severus dropped what he’d collected inside, the mushrooms wailing all the while.

“Why do so many kinds of magical flora scream? I don’t get it.”

“Life is suffering, Miss Potter. Perhaps the plants understand something we don’t.” He hit the ground with another Warming Charm, and the uncovered Morels screeched. They wriggled out of the soil and wobbled about on legs formed of fibrous roots. “Hurry, girl, before they escape.”

For two hours, Severus paced from plot to plot, unfreezing the earth, and for those hours, he watched the girl scramble about catching mushrooms—cursing and stumbling the whole time, stubbing her dirty, half-frozen fingers, landing face-first in the snow more than once. He never said anything; he simply waited and marked the time by the weak, watery light filtering through the low-hanging clouds.

Severus had shite for patience, but actively spying for over a decade had taught him the value of waiting. In particular, waiting for the right situation to extract information—and, if such a situation needed help presenting itself, he had no difficulty providing it. For Death Eaters, this typically meant getting them sloshed; a rat-arsed follower of the Dark Lord couldn’t keep his tongue his head worth a damn. It was almost embarrassing the amount of clandestine work he undertook in seedy pubs across Britain.

However, for Potter, Severus didn’t need Blishen’s or Old Ogden’s—or, well, it would probably work, but Minerva would quite literally murder him for getting the girl pissed. Instead, Severus opted for the far more reasonable path of waiting for her to spend her anger and frustration on the mushrooms, and only then did he pose a single question;

“Why aren’t you speaking with Black?”

Potter jumped as if she’d forgotten he was there. She wiped the sweat from her brow and extracted one of the mushrooms that had somehow managed to find a home in her hair. “It’s none of your business,” she grumbled, squeezing a Morel too tightly. Its cries cut off with a gurgle, and she unclenched her fist, looking at the pulp with an aggrieved expression. “She lied to me.”

“About what?”

“About—.” She paused, eyes bright and suspicious as she looked up and met his flat gaze. “About Sirius Black. About him—about him being my godfather.”

Severus’ lip curled, a flash of dazed memories curdling in his head like lurid spots of color: the gray of smoke rising from the Potter house, the pale white of James’ dead face, the red of Lily’s hair fanned across the carpet, the green of Harriet’s wide, wide eyes. Black had been there. The bastard had been there that night to see his handiwork, and if Severus hadn’t been holding the bloodied child, he would have killed him where he stood.

He knew Potter would discover the truth one day, whether it was now from some ignorant pure-blood child or later in life, perhaps perusing a book about her family. It had not been a question of if she would find out—only when, and Severus had warned the Headmaster as such. It appeared Black was paying the price for her inadvertent deception.

“And? Is this all your pointless strop and histrionics is over?”

She dropped the half-filled sack. A few Morels escaped to freedom under a convenient drift. “You knew!”

“Of course I knew. It’s a small society, Potter; everyone tends to know everything about everyone, especially in regards to parentage or guardianship.” He crossed his arms and sniffed. “I don’t care for your accusatory tone, girl. Do remember to whom you speak.”

Flushed, the girl opened her mouth several times before gritting her teeth and grabbing the sack again.

“So Black failed to inform you of something that is common knowledge,” he said, snide, observing how the color rose higher in her face. It wasn’t common knowledge, precisely, especially so many years after the Potters’ deaths. It was, however, something any idiot with a current genealogy text could look up. “And this overrides years of loyalty and friendship? My, my. How very fickle of you.”

“No, it doesn’t,” she retorted. Her fists tightened again.

“Did she not apologize? Or was that touching display I interrupted in the classroom her first attempt at reconciliation?”

“No, it wasn’t.”

“Then what is it, Potter? Did she hurt your feelings?”

“I’m tired of everyone telling me how I should feel!” The girl rounded on him, her voice echoing on the thickly packed trees enclosing the glade. She kept her glassy eyes lowered, her shoulders trembling with her uneven breathing. “It’s not all about what Elara did! I’m tired of everyone telling me how I should feel or think—telling me where I can live, where I can go, who I can see. I can’t bloody do anything without someone having to give their stupid opinion! I feel like everyone’s got their thumb on my head and I, I just—.” She hiccuped. “I didn’t want to come back to Hogwarts this term. I wanted to stay in Trefhud—because it felt like home, which is shite, because it’s not and I don’t have a home! Elara’s the closest that I’ve got to that, and if she can go and keep something like this from me, then—.”

Potter stopped talking and subsided into quiet, broken sniffles, her face streaked with silver tears.

Oh, fuck.

“It’s like living with the Dursleys again,” she sobbed. “Always having to do what they said, them always telling me what I should and shouldn’t feel. They’d lie to me and I’d get upset and it was always my fault for being like that, for overreacting. I had to sit there and take everything they said and did. I don’t want to be told that I need to be the better person and pretend I’m not hurt. I just want to be angry!”

Severus stared. He took a breath to speak, then let it out, a paltry white ghost lingering in his mouth.

He’d come out here with the intention of resolving whatever spat had split Potter and Black. He meant to tell Potter she was an idiot and force things back to the status-quo—but his life rarely allowed itself to be so convenient.

The girl started to rub her face, smearing the skin with snot and tears and filth. Sighing, Severus strode over to her and crouched, taking hold of her wrists, pulling her hands down. “Stop that,” he muttered. He retrieved a handkerchief from his pocket and gave it to her. “Clean your hands, girl, and then your face. Take a breath.”

Potter sniffled again and dragged the cloth over her grubby palms. It did little good against the mess on her face.

“Listen to me,” he told her, still crouched to her eye-level. “If you want to be angry, then be angry.” Potter blinked in surprise and almost dropped the handkerchief. “Be angry for all your life, if you want, but ask yourself if it’s worth the misery. Because people who don’t let go of their anger—.” Like the Dark Lord. Like me. “Make stupid mistakes and get to be stupid, miserable creatures. That’s the consequence of it. So be angry if you want, but don’t be angry forever, girl.”

Potter nodded and wiped her nose. Tears still gathered and clumped her lashes, but they’d stopped streaming down her cheeks. “Okay, Professor.”

Satisfied, he stood and put distance between them. He took the sack of Morels for good measure, tying it off before more could escape. The serious, emotional nature of their conversation discomfited him, and Severus sought better equilibrium over his own thoughts. “Good. Take out your wand, Potter.”

She did so after wiping her nose on her hand again.

“Don’t point it at me—doesn’t Slytherin teach you lot anything about wand safety? Face those trees.”

Again, she did as told.

“The Patronus spell requires one semi-fluid half-twist parallel to your heart, widdershins. The difficulty in the Charm lies not in the movement or the incantation itself, which are both rather simplistic. The Patronus relies entirely on the caster’s emotion, on the encapsulation of sheer, unfettered joy.”

Potter glanced over her shoulder, her eyes still red with tears, the question clear on her face.

“Basically, you need to think a happy thought, Miss Potter.”

Snorting, she replied, “I don’t think I have many of those lately, sir.”

“No, I would guess not. It doesn’t matter. It is a feeling more than anything, one captured through the conceptualization of a happy memory. Theorists and Charm Masters postulate the chemicals released by the brain during this moment charge a witch or wizard’s magic with a so-called positive energy, and is the closest example of Light magic Wizarding society has ever seen. It will take time, effort, and dedication to discover the proper memory for your personal usage.” Severus cleared his throat. “Though, it remains to be seen if you’re actually capable of the spell. The magic is advanced and far beyond the skills of most. I won’t hold my breath for a miracle here. The incantation is ‘Expecto Patronum.’

Potter repeated the spell under her breath and gathered her thoughts. “Expecto Patronum,” she whispered—and then again, louder, performing the proper wand twist. “Expecto Patronum!”

Naturally, nothing occurred—and, naturally, the girl despaired, letting out a loud, aggravated sigh.

“What’d I do wrong?”

“Nothing, you idiot. What part of ‘advanced magic’ did you not hear?”

Scowling, Potter tried the spell a second time—and a third, putting a half-step into the motion that kicked up the snow with the sheer force of her magic, though the Patronus still failed to manifest.

“Stop. You’re needlessly exhausting yourself. As I said, you will need time to actually use your head and consider the proper memory before perpetuating all this pointless wand-waving.” Severus pulled his cloak closer around himself and lifted the sack of Morels under his arm. It wasn’t night yet, but evening set in quickly during this time of year, and already the falling snow had begun to thicken, replacing the melted patches in the glade. “Come, Miss Potter. We’re returning to the castle.”

The pair followed the same path back the way they’d come. Severus felt the steady weight of Potter’s curious gaze at his back like a physical presence but didn’t pause to tell her off.

“Thank you, Professor.”

“For what?”

“For teaching me. For giving me something else to think about, if only for a little while. I appreciate it.”

Severus breathed out through his nose. The castle waited ahead, dark walls framed in the mouth of winter branches, turrets white as spear tips raised to the sky. “I haven’t a clue what you’re talking about,” he said. “I merely gave you a detention.”

 

x X x

 

Later, the fire’s final embers smoldered and coughed sparks in the hearth. Severus remained in the shadows, pale hands posed around his empty goblet, the chill settling in his bones like an old friend. The carriage clock on his mantel chimed the hour, midnight having come and gone long before.

He set his goblet aside and withdrew his wand, studying the length of black wood poised between his fingers before taking proper hold of it. He gave it one exaggerated twist and whispered, “Expecto Patronum.”

The weak, spidery light gave him no comfort. He’d tried a dozen memories, all to a similar result, malformed, non-existent shapes hovering between him and the dying fire. Why? he asked himself. Was he losing conviction? Was he losing himself? What did it mean?

“My mum begged him to spare me, but she wouldn’t stand aside, and she screamed when he killed her.”

He could still remember the texture of the carpet under his knees when he knelt by Lily’s corpse. He had a scar on his thigh from a piece of the wreckage gouging the flesh.

Your Patronus has changed,” Dumbledore said, Severus too drunk to stand, collapsed against the dungeon wall, more a boy than a man and too anguished to care. “The doe was Lily’s, wasn’t it?”

“What does it matter?”

“Oh, Severus.”

Even now, he didn’t understand the pity he’d heard in the Headmaster’s voice that night.

The doe had faded, and Severus didn’t know when exactly, or why. He simply grieved its death.

 


A/N: I don’t think Harriet would have any kind of healthy coping mechanism for dealing with conflict—which is why her first instinct is usually violence (punching Ron, hexing others in the hallways, no matter how mild), or simply ignoring the issue and its potential triggers altogether. She’s not, at this time, emotionally capable of trying to look at the problem from Elara’s perspective.

-

Snape, his soul slowly escaping his mortal shell: “…..”

Dumbledore, sneaking up behind him with a butterfly net: “Oh no you don’t.”

Chapter 126: bridges

Chapter Text

cxxvi. bridges

 

Under other circumstances, Elara would have found smashing delicate glass baubles on the floor therapeutic—but, seeing as those damnable baubles were not supposed to be breaking, she was instead rather frustrated.

“Oh dear,” Professor Flitwick fretted as the Self-Repairing Sphere came back together and rose to Elara’s hand again. It had grown hot from her skin and the magic bringing the shards together over and over. “Try placing more emphasis on the final syllable, Miss Black. Like so! Simul habere. Go on, give it a try.”

Elara did as requested, holding the orb steady as she tapped the top with her wand and said, “Simul habere.”

She dropped it—and the sphere shattered again.

Hers wasn’t the only one to break, but most of the Ravenclaw side of the classroom and at least half of the Slytherins had successfully cast the Unbreakable Charm. Goyle’s continued to splinter into a thousand pieces, and the goon kept scratching his head, but Malfoy had managed to coach Crabbe through it, muttering directions from the side of his mouth. Stephen Cornfoot’s only broke into a handful of shards. Hermione had succeeded first—but Harriet had followed soon after and now bounced her sphere against the wall like a tennis ball.

Her attitude had lessened in aggression toward Elara ever since that odd detention with Snape at the end of the prior week. Slytherin hadn’t been happy about her disappearing for his lesson and had come down to the common room later to demand accountability, but Harriet could be incredibly evasive when she wished to be, both physically and in her answers. She laid the blame at Snape’s feet—something about cleaning equipment, a spilled potion, and being too ill to attend Defense. Elara didn’t get the full story as Harriet still refused to speak with her and barely shared a word with Hermione either.

At least she doesn’t run from the sight of me anymore, Elara thought, glum. And comes to the Great Hall to eat. She shouldn’t be surprised by the other girl’s cold, unfeeling regard. She’d known it would happen, hadn’t she? From the moment she heard McGonagall call out the name, “Potter, Harriet!” and she realized her new friend was Sirius Black’s godchild. She knew Harriet would find out one day, and she’d hate Elara for it.

Hermione said she thought Harriet’s new behavior meant she was moving closer to reconciliation—but Elara didn’t believe her. Elara didn’t deserve reconciliation, didn’t deserve forgiveness. She didn’t deserve—.

A sharp pain stabbed her hand, and Elara gasped.

“Miss Black!” Flitwick grabbed her wrist and spelled her hand open, the broken sphere reforming, then shattering again when it hit the ground. Blood welled and dripped from the open slashes in her palm. “My goodness! Are you all right, Miss Black? We’ll have to get you to the infirmary. Miss Granger, if you could—?”

“No,” Elara interrupted, closing her dripping hand. Flitwick had her open it again, conjuring bandages around it. “I’ll go on my own. I’ll be fine.”

Professor Flitwick hesitated, but Elara grabbed her satchel and gave him a reassuring nod before all but running from the room. She didn’t dare look back at her friends—friend, singular, and who knew how much longer Hermione would stick with her? Everything Elara touched died or turned to dust. She didn’t deserve anything—.

Her eyes stung. Elara stopped her mindless walking and wiped her face. The air in her chest hurt, and she tried to expel it, but it came out in a harsh, stuttered gasp. The water leaking from her eyes wouldn’t stop. Turning to the wall, she covered her face and tried to steady her breath to no avail; her throat tightened, her heart raced, and at that moment, Elara hated everything—Harriet, Hermione, the school, Sirius Black, and herself most of all. She wanted—she just wanted it to burn, the words sitting in the back of her mind like hot coals on a hearth’s edge, teetering, the desire to have all this hate and confusion and pain turn to nothing but ash and heat and—.

She remembered the drawings in the book, the book now burned to cinders. She remembered sitting up in the dead of night, finding the volume in her hands, fingers tracing over the sketches of fiery creatures bursting forth to devour—.

“Miss Black? Miss—Elara?”

A hand touched her shoulder, and Elara jerked, choking on a sob. She forced herself to look around and focus on Professor Lupin’s concerned face, and he—in turn—focused on the hand she held tight to her chest. Blood had managed to seep through the temporary bandage, dribbling into the snug cuff of her shirt. The corners of Elara’s vision grayed, spotted with black.

Professor Lupin cupped his hand under her elbow and held on even when Elara flinched. “Come along, let’s go see Madam Pomfrey.”

Elara didn’t want to go see Madam Pomfrey. She didn’t much like the Matron and didn’t know how Harriet survived spending so much time in the infirmary, being poked and prodded and confined to a bed. Professor Lupin kept a steady pace despite Elara’s dragging feet, and all too soon, he had the doors to the hospital wing open, Madam Pomfrey looking up from where she’d been stocking a cupboard with tiny potion bottles.

“Well, get her over here,” the Matron sighed, gesturing them closer to the nearest bed, Elara eying it like something dead and mildly rotten. “Yes, yes, Miss Black, your objections are noted. Now have a seat and let me have a look at that hand of yours; I can see the blood from here….”

Elara relinquished her hand to Madam Pomfrey’s care, pursing her lips when the bandages tugged at the wounds. Professor Lupin remained with her, and Elara flushed when she realized her eyes must be red from sniveling, her cheeks splotchy and wet.

“Gracious Rowena, what mischief have you gotten yourself into, Miss Black?” Madam Pomfrey asked once the bandages came free.

“I broke some glass in Charms. By accident.”

“I should hope it was by accident! Some of these are quite deep.” She waved her wand over Elara’s prone hand and green, numbing mist fell over it, followed by a fresh wad of gauze. “These will need a potion. I need to pop down to the dungeons—Professor Lupin?”

“Yes?”

“Stay with Miss Black, please.”

“Of course.”

With that, Madam Pomfrey gave Elara a warning look and bustled away.

She’s an unholy menace. “You don’t have to stay, sir,” Elara said to Professor Lupin, fidgeting with the gauze. “I’m not going to wander off.”

To her surprise, Professor Lupin chuckled. “You wouldn’t be the first to try.” He smiled, and the action lessened the apparent stress in his pleasant face. “I had to come here quite a bit in my own student days. Still do, unfortunately. My immunity isn’t the best, you see, and there’s only so much magic can do.”

That sounded true enough to Elara. She’d noted Professor Lupin typically had an absence every other week or so, canceling a class here and there, and some days he arrived weathered and exhausted. She and Hermione had speculated over his illness but, in the end, decided to respect his privacy. “I knew a girl who was immunocompromised in the—where I lived, before.”

“Did you?”

“Yes. She had lupus, and the others, they were…cruel.”

Professor Lupin kept his eyes on her face, his scrutiny almost too much to bear. Elara hadn’t said the word orphanage, but it hung there, all but written out letter by letter. Acknowledgment, professor McGonagall had told her. Is often the first step toward healing.

“They avoided her whenever they could and called her names. I tried to be friendly, but—.” But the girl, Gabbie, had believed all the same rumors as the others, that Elara Black had the devil in her and it would lead them all to ruin. Sometimes, Elara wondered if they were right. “She wasn’t open to my company.”

“What happened to her?”

“She died about a year before I came to Hogwarts.” Elara didn’t feel one way or another about Gabbie’s passing; children entered and left St. Giles’ all the time, not usually through death, but the transitory nature of their presences left little impact on Elara. Her head filled with the distant chanting and name-calling the others used to heap upon her, but years removed from St. Giles and Wiltshire had dulled their sound.

“You and Harriet are fighting.”

Startled, Elara squeezed her injured hand, and more blood stained the gauze, pooling warm and sticky in her palm.

“You’re fighting about Sirius Black, aren’t you? About his relation to Harriet.”

“How did you—? No, never mind. Is it obvious to everyone, sir?”

Professor Lupin shook his head, attempting another comforting smile, but it came out more of a grimace than anything. He was a strange wizard. No stranger than Professor Selwyn had been, of course, but peculiar in his own way. Harriet had mentioned spending time talking to Professor Lupin during the first Hogsmeade trip of the year, and in their discourse, he commented on his prior relationship with the Potters.

Which meant—.

“You knew him, didn’t you?” Elara asked. If he’d been friends with James Potter, he must have known or associated with Sirius Black. He couldn’t have avoided the man. Elara tried to not hold that against him, but the anger came again, a wary flicker glinting in her eyes like light on a knife’s blade. Professor Lupin saw it and lowered his head.

“Miss Black, I—.”

Madam Pomfrey returned, trailing soot and Floo Powder, muttering darkly about surly Potions Masters and their acerbic tongues. She doused Elara’s hand in a sticky, oozing cream that burned like hellfire but healed even the deepest of the cuts in seconds, then administered a Blood Replenishing Potion. During that time, the bell rang to signal the end of the period—and, as Elara’s luck would have it, her next class was History of Magic, leaving her no other option but to follow Professor Lupin from the ward and up the stairs.

He didn’t attempt to make small talk.

Elara entered the classroom before him and made for her desk—shocked to find Harriet seated in her accustomed spot next to her empty seat, pulling out a textbook. Hope dared to burgeon in Elara’s heart, tenuous as the morning frost, and it melted just as quickly when Harriet made no move to acknowledge Elara’s presence other than to shift her satchel to her own side of the table.

Elara sank into her seat and faced the blackboard. She didn’t know what to do, or say—didn’t know how to fix any of the things she’d ever broken in her life. “She’s cursed,” the orphans used to whisper to one another. “Elara’s got the devil in her. Black as her name.”

By what right did she expect friendship from a girl whose parents her own father betrayed? He hadn’t been there in the flesh as far as she knew, but part of Sirius’ conviction had been the “conscious and malicious impartation of sensitive information to the enemy.” A facilitation to murder and attempted murder. Attempted murder on the girl who sat not a whole foot from Elara now.

Professor Lupin commenced the lesson when everyone quieted down, not that Elara heard a single word of it. Her mind drifted somewhere in between, the muffled sound of the professor’s voice bouncing against her ears, her hands limp and pale like dead things in her lap. All she could think about was the injustice of it, the sheer unfairness of having to answer for her father’s crimes and losing the only things she cherished in her life.

She shut her eyes, and recalled Diagon Alley in 91’, Harriet grinning as she said, “It was really nice to meet you,” and shook Elara’s hand. Her hand had been so warm. Elara must have glanced at her palm half a dozen times after she returned home with Kreacher.

Maybe she should transfer school. It wasn’t a common practice, almost unheard of really, but would they make an exception for her? Or would Beauxbatons and Durmstrang reject a madman’s daughter just like the students of Hogwarts did?

“Miss Black?” Elara blinked, turning her stiff neck. The others gathered their things together, slipping quills and parchment back into their bags, but the class couldn’t possibly be over already—? “Miss Potter? May I see you both for a moment?”

Confused, Harriet and Elara rose from their seats and approached Professor Lupin seated behind his desk, careful to keep several feet of distance between each other. Harriet didn’t appear much inclined to listen to whatever the man had to say, and Elara mirrored the sentiment, especially after the conversation in the infirmary. Nevertheless, there they stood as the Slytherins and Hufflepuffs packed their belongings and chattered, oblivious to the two silent, grim-faced witches at the front of the room. Hermione didn’t leave, opting instead to linger far enough away to give the illusion of privacy, and Professor Lupin allowed it.

The door came shut with a final, muted thump, and the happy noises disappeared in the corridor, abandoning them in a bleak, stifling quiet.

Professor Lupin moved first, exhaling a heavy, tired breath. He ruffled his messy, gray-streaked hair once before lowering his hands, lacing the fingers together. “Harriet,” he said, addressing the bespectacled girl. “I owe you an apology.”

Harriet’s nose wrinkled in befuddlement, and it seemed she couldn’t help but glance in Elara’s direction. “Er—for what, Professor?”

“For not being truthful. For—in my negligence—contributing to the rift that has come between you two.”

Elara reddened, embarrassed and angry. “Professor,” she began. “It’s—.”

He shook his head, eyes still leveled at Harriet. “Sirius Black is your godfather. Several people are aware of the fact and, for the most part, decided against informing you, wishing to spare you the pain of having to know. I believe Sev—Professor Snape was the one most vocal in giving you the truth, but I think even he hesitated when given the chance. Elara should have been the last person forced to tell you of Sirius Black’s unfortunate friendship with your parents and his connection to you. After all, she didn’t know the man.” Professor Lupin dropped his eyes to the desk’s top, shoulders slumped. “Not like I did.”

The silence stretching after Lupin’s words could have smothered a person with its weight, and Harriet had her narrowed green eyes set on him. “You…told me you were friends with my parents,” she said, speaking slowly. “So you were…friends with Sirius Black, too.”

“Yes,” Lupin replied, voice strained but steady. “I was friends with him. I—.” He cleared his throat. “I was almost named your godfather, Harriet. Sirius—Black was perceived as irresponsible, even in our friend group, but things were difficult then. He was in a better financial situation to support you should the worst come to pass. And your godfather, Elara—.” He smiled at her, the dark green of his eyes glassy. “Was James Potter.”

“You never said anything. You wouldn’t have said anything.”

“No. Probably not.”

Harriet shifted her weight from one foot to the other as she sorted through her thoughts. She looked terribly peaky still despite returning to regular meals in the Great Hall. “I don’t need stuff like this being kept from me,” she muttered. “I don’t need to be protected from the truth like some stupid little kid. I’m mad, but not—.” She turned and addressed Elara for the first time since that horrid, horrid day in Hogsmeade. “It’s not all about you not telling me. I just need—time, okay? Just a little. I’m not going to be angry forever.”

The damnable prickling returned to Elara’s eyes. She had to swallow twice before saying, “Okay.”

Harriet nodded and made as if to follow their classmates from the room to the Great Hall, but she hesitated, her gaze on Professor Lupin. Elara had become fluent in translating Harriet’s looks and expressions over the years, but even she couldn’t quite decipher the emotion behind the younger girl’s glance. “You’re off my Yule list, Professor Lupin.”

The wizard laughed, though little amusement lurked in the sound. “Well, that sounds fair.”

Unimpressed, Harriet departed, huffing out, “Bloody adults,” on her way to the door—which she held for Elara and Hermione, only letting go when they’d crossed into the corridor with her. She didn’t walk with them, but she remained only a few steps ahead, and that shortening distance meant everything in the world to Elara.

She had never been forgiven for anything in her life before, and she liked to believe that, just this once, she might earn it. Might deserve it.

Hermione bumped Elara’s shoulder with her own, giving her hand a friendly squeeze. “She’ll be all right,” she remarked, a fond smile on her face. “You both will. It’s perfectly common for sisters to fight, after all!”


A/N: Harriet pulled the primary school equivalent of uninviting Remus to her birthday party.

Harriet: “I’m not getting you a Christmas present.”

Lupin, inwardly sobbing. “Okay, that’s totally fine.”

Chapter 127: the plague of hamelin

Chapter Text

cxxvii. the plague of hamelin

 

The days leading up to the Yule break passed quickly.

Whatever issues and drama kept bubbling between the students—between Harriet and Elara—dwindled to the background like fuzzy white noise because exams had to be taken and proctored, and not even Sirius Black could interfere with that.

Defense proved the most grueling course, Slytherin matching up groups of students with live Dark creatures, tasking them with subduing the monsters in a timely manner while he sat and drank tea. One particularly nasty revision resulted in the class huddling behind their conjured shields as a batch of furious Hodags snapped at their legs. In Herbology, Sprout had them handling prickly winter foliage, and though Harriet genuinely found Ancient Runes interesting, Professor Babbling’s concentration on theoretical work often bored her something fierce.

Despite all that, Harriet’s least favorite class had to be Divination; Trelawney kept the classroom sweltering, and sitting in the stuffy, dark room lit by the scarf-covered lamps made Harriet groggy and caused her scar to itch. She filled every homework assignment with lines copied from the textbook because she couldn’t seem to make much sense of anything otherwise. Elara enjoyed the subject—or, at least, she enjoyed it outside of Trelawney’s purview—and Hermione pronounced it hogwash from the beginning.

The three of them spent much of their time ensconced at their table in the common room or the library, talking of nothing aside from magic or classwork or their grades. Harriet was still angry with Elara—more upset, really, but the feeling had settled into something less rancorous, and when she realized her distance hurt Elara, Harriet stopped running off or giving her the cold shoulder. She didn’t want to hurt Elara, after all. She just needed time to think.

On the last day before the break, after their exams had been taken, the whole of Slytherin House spent the evening in the common room by the roaring hearths, celebrating a successful term with Butterbeer and hot cider. Even Hermione had taken a break from her frantic studying; she slumped in one of the small armchairs, chatting with Tracey Davis, and though Harriet had grown accustomed to Hermione’s hectic researching habits, she thought her friend look a tad…tired. Worn thin like a jumper that had seen a few too many washes.

Harriet finished her Butterbeer and dropped the bottle into the bin set out for them, the sweet flavor lingering overlong on her lips and tongue. The other Slytherins were saying goodbye to one another, none of them planning on staying for the holiday, especially not with Black on the loose or the Dementors haunting the gates. Harriet hadn’t bothered to ask if she could leave; being on the outs with Elara meant she didn’t know if she was welcome at Grimmauld Place, and she knew Snape and Dumbledore would want her to stay in the castle regardless.

Speaking of Elara—.

Harriet glanced around the busy room but didn’t spy the taller witch anywhere.

“D’you know where Elara’s at?” she asked Hermione, who blinked in surprise and paused mid-conversation. Harriet blushed. “I just—I need to talk to her, I think.”

Hermione hadn’t seen her, but Tracey said, “I think she’s in the dorm,” as she popped a piece of Everlasting Gum into her mouth. “She gave us all a filthy look when we were in there earlier for Pansy to finish her hair, and I didn’t see her leave.”

Harriet thanked her for the information and stood, meandering through the crowd toward the girls’ dormitories. It was quieter there, and colder, cold enough that Harriet didn’t hesitate in the corridor despite her nerves. She eased the door open and stepped inside.

A dog sat on Elara’s bed, reading. Said dog tensed when the door slipped from Harriet’s fingers and closed with a thud. Elara resumed her typical form, sitting cross-legged on her bed with some moldering old tome in front of her.

“Er, sorry,” Harriet said, giving the door a slight tug to make sure it closed properly. “Isn’t that—I don’t know, dangerous to do in here?”

Elara shrugged, not bothered. “The others are louder when they walk. I would have heard them approaching.”

“Oh. Can I, um, sit?”

Elara nodded, and Harriet settled on the edge of the bed, the mattress sagging under her weight. “They’ve got Butterbeer and stuff out in the common room if you wanna come out there.”

“Us having a fight hasn’t made me inexplicably fond of crowds.” Her brow quirk. “You can say what you want to say to me, Harriet. I’ll listen.”

“Right.” Harriet grimaced. Though she didn’t meet Elara’s eyes, she felt the other girl’s attention on her, waiting, and she didn’t know where to begin. The sting of betrayal had dimmed, and now she wanted things between them to be—better, back to what they had before. After all, they had to spend the next few weeks together as the only Slytherins, and Harriet had spent enough time thinking to realize people told lies, but it didn’t mean they meant harm. Elara hadn’t meant to hurt her.

She attempted to untangle her own feelings and explain.

“When I lived with the Dursleys,” she started, swallowing past the nervous tension building in her chest. “They used to tell me all the time that my parents were drunks. That they were layabouts and drunks and they didn’t care for anyone but themselves, and that they died in the car wreck that gave me this.” Harriet rubbed at her neck, over her scar. “That’s what I believed was the truth for most of my life.”

“Harriet….”

“I was—happy, I guess, when I learned they’d been murdered instead of just being victims to their own negligence, and Merlin, isn’t that horrible? I felt so bloody foolish, like everyone else knew the truth, and I was—an idiot. It was humiliating.”

Elara didn’t say anything.

“Like Professor Lupin said, it wasn’t right to expect you to tell me the truth about—about your dad, but with everything going on this year, I—. I thought you were in danger, and all the while, everybody was just going along with that narrative as if I was a kid who still believed in Father Christmas and they were all having a nice chuckle behind their hands at my expense. I dunno if that makes any sense.” Harriet sighed, scratching at her neck again. “I don’t expect to be told everything, but something like that—.”

“I couldn’t,” Elara replied, face set in a pained rictus. “But how could I ever admit to the horrid things he’d done?”

“It’s not your fault. You can’t help who you’re related to. I just want you to know I’m sorry for being so cold and—angry. It wasn’t your fault.” Harriet forced her hand from her neck and concentrated on her own bed next to Elara’s, spotting Livi’s curious nose poking out from under the bed’s skirt. She strove to change the conversation. “Y’know, that’s really amazing magic, becoming an Animagus.”

“You don’t need to apologize to me, Harriet. You never need to apologize.” Elara pursed her lips. “Do you really like the transformation? It isn’t odd or off-putting?”

“No, it’s wicked!” Harriet enthused. “Magic’s just—brilliant! And you don’t even need your wand to be an Animagus. It’s your own skill—totally reliant on you. It still surprises me what things magic can do, and every day we learn a little bit more.”

“I supposed that’s true. If you were interested…I could teach you.”

Harriet cast Elara a puzzled look, the other witch closing her book. “Teach me what?”

“To become an Animagus.”

“Wh—? Don’t be silly. It’s too difficult for me! I wouldn’t be able to do it.”

“Well, not with that attitude. It was just a suggestion—but you shouldn’t estimate yourself so poorly.”

Harriet watched Elara’s hands on the book’s edge, her fingertips worrying the rounded leather corners where years and years of casual touch had worn the texture smooth. Harriet’s first instinct was to decline the offer because she didn’t think it’d been made in earnest—but Elara was nothing if not earnest, even in her deception, and sometimes Harriet struggled to find the right words to say, but she could recognize an olive branch well enough.

“Okay,” she said. “I’ll try—and it’s something we can do together, right?”

A genuine smile broke Elara’s somber expression, the first Harriet had seen from her in ages, and it occurred to the bespectacled girl how very young it made her appear, how young they both were. It put their situation into perspective. What did people like Pansy Parkinson and Daphne Greengrass squabble over? Probably not the murderous past of a shared relative—but who could say? Nothing had ever been normal at Hogwarts.

“Have you two made up, then?”

Both Harriet and Elara jumped, startled by the voice intruding on their conversation. “Hermione! How long have you been standing there?”

“Long enough. I snuck in.” She crossed into the room proper and dropped onto Harriet’s bed, her heel bumping Livi’s face. “Oh, I beg your pardon, Livi.”

“Don’t mind him. Livi, budge over.

The Horned Serpent slithered out from his nest of blankets, his black scales blending in with the dark stone of the dormitory’s floor. “The noisssy one isss rude,” he complained, stretching his neck to reach the top of Elara’s bed—only to be blocked by said witch, Elara knowing only too well how difficult it could be to remove the snake from a warm bed. “Thisss one isss rude, too!

C’mon, then. Over here with me….”

Once the snake had successfully piled himself in Harriet’s lap, Hermione continued, “So, have you made up?”

Elara and Harriet exchanged glances. “I suppose,” Harriet said, and Elara nodded, smiling. A loud, relieved breath left Hermione—and then she hopped to her feet, and smacked the pair of them atop their heads. “Ow! What was that for?!”

“For worrying me sick over these last few weeks!” she exclaimed. “I’ve been at my wits’ ends hoping you’d talk things over, but you’re both as stubborn as hippogriffs!”

“Hey! That’s not fair at all!”

Elara leaned into her headboard, rolling her eyes. “You should be able to rest at home without us worrying you now.”

The mention of home did nothing to alleviate the stress in Hermione’s expression. “The less said about home, the better. My parents and I didn’t part on the best of terms last year. Anyway, I’ll have plenty to keep my mind occupied.”

“Oh? With what?”

Hermione gave a smug grin and reached into her robe pocket, extracting a carefully folded bit of old parchment.

“The Marauder’s Map? Wouldn’t it be better for Harriet’s safety if she kept it?”

In answer, Harriet shook her head, tracing the crack in Livi’s horn. The Horned Serpent stared up at her, his tongue flickering. “Not with the professors watching us so closely all the time. I wouldn’t be able to use the map at all unless I stayed in bed, and Professor Dumbledore doesn’t let us linger down here all day. He probably thinks it’s depressing.”

Hermione glanced up at the ceiling, at the silver lanterns and the gentle, wavering light of the gloaming hour warming the otherwise dark window. She probably had the same thought Harriet did, that to an outsider, the dungeons elicited ideas of grime and mold and rusted, rattling chains, but Slytherins grew accustomed to the small luxuries in their den beneath the lake. They had their silver lamps, their aquatic view, and the low murmuring of icy water lapping against the stone. The rest of the world and its problems felt very far away.

“I’m going to figure out how the map works over the holiday,” Hermione avowed. “I’ve already deduced it’s connected to the wards in Hogwarts somehow. Having the extra time will let me wrap my mind around the problem….”

She waxed on about her impressions of the Marauder’s Map and her plans to decipher its secrets, and Hermione somehow managed to talk them into a final, late-hour trip to the library so she could borrow a research book. Harriet and Elara plodded after her through the loud common room, the upper-years growing steadily more intoxicated in their absence, and when the trio stepped out of the protected portal into the corridor beyond, they almost collided with Ronald Weasley.

“What on earth are you doing, Weasley?” Hermione demanded as they spotted the red-haired boy straightening from his crouch. His cheeks reddened, embarrassed at being caught out. “You’re not supposed to be in this passage!”

“I’m looking for Scabbers,” he retorted.

“For what?”

“For my rat!” The red in his cheeks extended into his ears, the tops visible through his shaggy hair. “He’s been a bit off lately, and I’ve caught him down here before. I was just looking for him.”

“Well, get a prefect or a professor to Summon him, then. There’s no need to go skulking about in the dark.”

“You Slytherins would know all about that, right?” He crossed his arms, and Hermione bristled, but Harriet thought the retort lacked heat. “I think it’s your bloody cat that’s been driving him out of Gryffindor Tower, Granger.”

“Crookshanks? Don’t be ridiculous. Why ever would you think that?”

“I’ve seen that menace in our common room before! No one knows how he got in. That cat has it out for Scabbers, has from the moment he saw him in the store!”

“Good lord, Weasley, it’s a cat. Cats like rats. There’s no great plot behind that.”

Ron’s face and ears reached maximum redness, and the Gryffindor finally relented, beating a quick retreat out of the passage and into another corridor—taking a wrong turn. He’d end up getting lost and found out by Slytherin or Snape if he didn’t correct himself—but Harriet was feeling just petty enough not to help out.

She waited until the last of his footsteps faded before saying, “Livi almost ate that rat over summer.”

“What? Harriet!”

A nervous giggle left her as they continued to the library. “I’m just saying! If that rat came down here—well. We know Livi can get about just fine on his own when he wants, and he really doesn’t understand how some rats are food and some aren’t.”

“Oh, that’s awful. Poor Scabbers….”

The three Slytherin witches kept on their way, the dark cloud that had been hanging above them losing its strangling hold, but none of the girls or the redheaded boy who’d passed through thought to glance into a dim alcove housing the bust of Marcurio the Mediocre. Had they looked, they would have seen a pair of beady black eyes peering back, and a whiskered nose twitching in thought.


A/N: We’re only to Yule and I’ve cut 10 chapters already. Oh boi. We’re a little over halfway through PoA.

Pettigrew over here courting death by hungry snake and Crookshanks, kneazle assassin for hire. He better watch out.

Chapter 128: the face of man

Chapter Text

cxxviii. the face of man

 

The door slammed shut behind Hermione, and she sank to the floor, her head in her hands.

She’d known before stepping foot on the train that her homecoming would not be a pleasant one. Her parents were much like her—logical, hardworking, and cunning—and so Hermione understood they would spend the year between Yule holidays thinking and considering all the things they wanted to say to their only daughter. All the things and the reasons why they didn’t want her to return to Hogwarts.

It was strange being in a place so very—Muggle after twelve months away. A staleness hung in the air that competed with her fonder recollections of her childhood home, and when she reached out to swipe her fingers over her bookshelf, they came back sticky with dust. She’d known she was a witch for less than three years, and yet the twelve preceding those years had lost their sheen, had shifted from reaffirming to surreal. Magic had entered Hermione’s life, and nothing could ever be the same again.

She just wished her parents could accept that.

Three days. She’d been home for three days, and it seemed a lifetime had passed in those seventy-odd hours. Her mum had taken a firm hold of her arm the moment she’d crossed the station’s barrier and had marched her straight into her father’s embrace, who hadn’t let go for several minutes before passing her back to Jean Granger. The Grangers went to dinner in London, the affair’s genial nature surprising Hermione—until she asked to pop by Diagon Alley before they went home.

Her parents had vehemently refused.

Their denigration of magic started on the drive home with pithy quips asking if Hermione thought the car and traffic and basic street laws were too boring and average for her taste—to which Hermione replied that she rather enjoyed taking travel slowly. She tried to explain the inherent repercussions of fast magical travel, the reciprocal whiplash accrued by bending time and space to such mind-boggling degrees—but her parents weren’t interested in the conversation.

The silence had felt so strained, Hermione experienced a visceral sensation of disconnect, watching the Muggle world pass the window like images on a telly screen.

Most would overlook the small comments, the little jabs and jibes Hermione laughed at with her parents—and yet, in her heart, she remembered being an awkward little girl in primary school where all the other children would call her weird and ugly and strange, and how her parents had been the ones to comfort her at home. Now, she couldn’t help but associate the two in her mind; the Grangers had become those irritating children, and each time they put down magic, Hermione felt herself wilting more and more.

She loved her parents, and they loved her; their mutual affection and regard were not in question. However, they would never truly understand—and thus accept—magic and the Wizarding world as Hermione could.

Today, Robert Granger had cooked them breakfast, and as they sat down to dishes of eggs, tomatoes, and sausages, he’d said, “Hermione, dear. Your mother and I were thinking about taking a trip.”

“A trip? Where to?”

“Switzerland.”

“Switz—Switzerland?” Hermione reiterated, taken aback. Her parents had never mentioned a desire to go to Switzerland before, and their holidays in the past had been mainly to the seaside, France, or Spain. Their usual weekend jaunt never took them farther than London. “Oh. That—sounds nice. When are you going to go?”

“Well, we were hoping you would come with us.”

“Really? It’s awfully cold there during this time of year, isn’t it? But I’m sure it’d be fun to go!” Their desire to have her come along surprised Hermione, but it pleased her nonetheless. She hadn’t thought this morning would go this way—and yet the idea of seeing Switzerland and learning more about what kind of Wizarding community existed there sounded exciting. She wondered how they handled Muggle-borns. The Nordic countries feeding into Durmstrang had long taken a critical view on the population, while Koldovstoretz and eastern Europe had mixed reactions, and Beauxbatons had shown far more acceptance. Until the eighties, Hogwarts and British Wizarding society had been one of the most progressive in recognizing and supporting Muggle-borns.

And then Voldemort happened.

Her dad had wiped his mouth and glanced at Hermione’s mum, who cleared her throat and smiled. “It’ll be wonderful. We’ve found a lovely little town to stay in—and you’ll have to take a bit of time off your studies, but that shouldn’t be a problem.”

Hermione blinked, her thoughts grinding to a halt. “I—pardon?”

Jean spooned more eggs onto her plate. “Your father and I discussed it and thought it’d be best if you took a break from Hogwarts for a term and returned home. You can come with us to Switzerland—and they have excellent schools there, Hermione, just excellent.”

“Mum, I—well, I can’t just take time off school,” Hermione had said, surprised yet again by the twist in conversation. Dread had blossomed in her chest, an ephemeral fluttering against her heart. Her palms had begun to sweat. “I’m only allowed to come home during the Yule holiday and you can’t take sabbaticals from Hogwarts as a student; it just isn’t done.”

“It’s the Christmas holiday,” her dad had corrected in a sharp, brusque tone. “And learning these—spells and whatnot is all well and good, but Hermione, dear, don’t you think it’s time for things to get back to normal? What about your a-levels? What about university and a career? You can’t become a barrister or a doctor with a degree in—magic.”

“This is normal, dad. I can’t stop being a witch and tuck it all away. The MPA law prohibits—.”

“Hermione, we don’t want to hear about the law again. It’s not a real law, now is it? They can’t very well bring it into court and enforce it.”

But they could. The Ministry could very much find Hermione or her family in violation of the Muggle-born Protection Act, and she didn’t think they’d get the benefit of a trial before the Wizengamot. Not for a nobody such as herself. Her wand would be snapped, and her parents could possibly be Obliviated.

They simply couldn’t understand. Magic to them would never be real, and Hermione could do nothing to prove its reality without jeopardizing her enrollment at Hogwarts or breaking the law. The pictures she could procure, the odd objects gifted to her by her friends, weren’t enough. Hermione worried she would always be too much and yet not enough for her parents.

“We miss you. We need you home, Hermione. We’re your family, for God’s sake, and we’ve barely seen you!”

“Dad—.”

“No. We don’t want you returning to that place, and that’s the final word on the matter.”

The discussion devolved until Hermione had stood, excused herself without their permission, and returned to her room. Now, slumped against the door, she could hear the echo of her father’s voice calling down the hall, calling her back, and the narrow gulf between her and her parents widened until it seemed more a canyon than anything else.

Tears made sticky tracks on her cheeks, and Hermione wiped them away, refusing their existence.

You can’t become a barrister or a doctor with a degree in magic.

And that was the thing, wasn’t it? Hermione’s childhood had been filled with idle chatter on prospective universities and careers—and then Minerva McGonagall walked into their home, changing her life forever. Those idle dreams and hopes hadn’t stopped for her parents, but Hermione couldn’t imagine going to Muggle university and trying to divide magic from her mind, pretending it didn’t influence every little iota of everything. She didn’t want to be a barrister or a doctor. Not anymore.

“Switzerland indeed,” Hermione grumbled, drying her eyes. She stood and straightened her jumper, walking over to her desk and upending her rucksack. Her books landed on the desk and floor with heavy thuds, and Hermione sighed as she picked up a Transfiguration text and fixed a bent corner. Her stomach ached as if she were sick.

Growing up, Hermione would retreat to her books and interests whenever contentions arose between herself and her parents, and now was no different. She muttered as she stacked books and refused to sniffle or cry—because it wasn’t worth her tears or all this—nonsense. She didn’t wish to argue, and her parents couldn’t argue about this. Her hand landed upon a folder, and Hermione opened it, pausing when the old, weathered parchment inside was revealed.

The Marauder’s Map.

Honestly, what had the original creators been thinking putting the Map on parchment? Certainly, there was an element of commonality, having an item plain and average enough to not attract attention—but there was no permanence to it! It already bore so many rips and tears and odd stains. With magic, they could have made the Map anything at all, couldn’t they? It was so limited.

Hermione perched on the edge of her chair—ignoring the raised voices in the kitchen, her fingers crimped on the parchment’s surface. She retrieved her wand and muttered the passphrase, concentrating on the spindles of ink spreading out from the tip, filling out the familiar walls and pathways and corridors, tiny black shoes and little banners trailing above them.

Her tension lessened as she found her friends’ names in the Slytherin common room, sitting by the central hearth. A smile turned her mouth as she pictured the scene, and she hoped the pair weren’t arguing with one another and that they were staying safe indoors. Hermione loved them both dearly; her dad had said, “We’re your family, for God’s sake,” and that would always be true, but Harriet and Elara were her family, too, and Hermione had never been too much or not enough for them.

Most of Hogwarts had been abandoned for the holiday, though Hermione spotted a few people out and about. Professors McGonagall, Flitwick, and Sprout sat in the Great Hall, joined by several students Hermione didn’t recognize. Younger Hufflepuffs, maybe. Professor Snape was in the infirmary with Madam Pomfrey. The Headmaster was in his office, and Professor Slytherin—Tom Riddle—paced the second-floor corridor.

Hermione squinted and brought the Map closer to the window and the sunlight. A small pair of feet wandered by the hidden entrance to the Slytherin’s dungeons and paused.

“Peter Pettigrew,” Hermione said to herself. Where had she heard that name before?

The volume of her parents’ arguing voices rose to a pitch that began to drown out Hermione’s own inner dialog, and she concentrated on the Map, on the feel of it, listing every spell she knew and thought went into its creation, repeating the movements, the etymology, the origins. She kept at it until the rest of the world fell away.

She stared at her friends’ names on the parchment and wanted to be there. Hermione had grown up in this house, but it’d ceased to feel like home.

An abrupt, impatient tapping on the window grabbed Hermione’s attention and broke her train of thought. She glanced up and recognized the dark owl perched on the sill as one belonging to the Malfoys. Usually, such a sight would fill Hermione with trepid dread and anxiety, but all she felt now was guilty happiness at the sight.

You’ve gone round the bend now, Granger. Happy about getting post from the Malfoys.

She opened the window and accepted the letter attached to the owl’s leg. Hermione had an inkling of what the missive said, so she wasn’t surprised when the haughty creature took up residence on the cluttered bookshelf to wait for a reply. Crookshanks peeked out from his basket to stare.

Hermione peeled aside the wax seal, unfolded the parchment, and found the expected invitation to the Malfoy’s annual Yule ball, the words written in a glittering silver ink with the family’s crest embossed on the front. She’d received the same invitation last year and the year before, and both years she’d written back a polite—if curt—rejection. She should do the same now, she knew.

Her parents continued to argue. The words merged into a jumble, bouncing against the walls and her ears, but the tone weighed heavy on Hermione, just as heavy as the atmosphere had been since she left the Hogwarts Express and returned to the Muggle world. She thought of how tightly her parents had hugged her on the station—so tightly, she had barely had the strength to draw breath. She thought of two dots on a map, two girls in front of a fire, alone, unable to return home.

Hermione eyed the biros on the desk—then went to her trunk, found her quill and ink, and set about writing a response.

 

x X x

 

It was almost midnight when Hermione eased open the front door and stepped out into the garden, shivering against the cold air rising from the frosted grass. Her trunk’s wheels bounced on the steps and echoed in the quiet street as the door shut behind her.

Narcissa Malfoy made for a particularly incongruous addition to the tidy Muggle neighborhood, but if she felt uncomfortable standing there in her silver robes below the electric streetlight, she didn’t allow it to show. She patiently watched Hermione come down the walk and step beyond the garden wall.

“Ready to depart, Hermione?” she asked.

“Yes, ma’am.”

The imperious witch nodded—and then looked past Hermione to the dark windows of her silent Muggle home, a flicker of conflicting emotion passing through her face. She wasn’t a demonstrative woman, so the brief look stood out. “Have you spoken with your parents?”

Hermione shifted, staring at her shoes. “…I wrote them a letter.”

“…a letter.” Narcissa exhaled through her nose and brought her gloved hands together—a motion so like the one Elara often made, Hermione wondered if it was encoded into the DNA of all women hailing from the House of Black. Elara would be disappointed in Hermione’s choice to leave early—but Harriet, who’d grown up with toxic family members, would’ve understood.

“They were going to keep me from going back,” Hermione murmured, her heart again fluttering with dread because she shouldn’t be admitting to something so—illegal. Her parents could get into so much trouble! “I don’t want to hurt them, but—it’s better this way.”

Mrs. Malfoy stared at her. After hesitating, she extended a hand for Hermione to take so she could Apparate them away from that little corner of Muggle-modernity. “Yes,” she answered absentmindedly. “Yes, perhaps you’re right.”

 

x X x

 

Hermione had never seen the Manor in the wintertime. The idea of being here when she was meant to be with her mother and father had been anathema before, but now she felt…not happy, but content, no longer worried her parents might do something mad in an attempt to keep her away from Hogwarts. There was no more yelling, no shouting, no fear—just the familiar tension of being a ward to the biggest toffs in British Wizarding society.

Oh, it was lovely enough; Hermione never doubted the Malfoys’ estate looked anything but exquisite no matter the time of year, and Yule proved no different. Transfigured wreaths and bundles of holly festooned the halls, and every open area had been adorned with a Yule tree decked in golden ornaments. Mrs. Malfoy flitted from room to room with her house-elves in tow, making arrangements, while Mr. Malfoy spent time entertaining various Ministry officials in the lounge. Draco attempted to drag Hermione everywhere, eager to show off his mother’s decorations.

“Come along, Granger! You haven’t even seen mother’s winter gardens yet. They’re the best in the country—.”

While that might be true, Hermione couldn’t muster much enthusiasm, academic or otherwise. She wanted to be left alone.

She missed her mother and father. She missed them as they used to be, not the man and woman who’d taken residence in their bodies and looked upon their own daughter with such tentative uncertainty and disappointment. It was her fault for being a witch, Hermione knew, but she had no control over that, and she hated the guilt her family’s budding enmity formed in her.

She could set down her wand and never speak another spell for the rest of her life, and yet Hermione would always be a witch. She could not change that. She’d promised herself the day she went with Professor McGonagall that she’d never settle for being anything less than extraordinary, and so Hermione could not—would not—whittle herself down to the pieces her parents found acceptable.

It still didn’t make for a happy Yule holiday. She cried into her pillow at night.

The ball itself didn’t arrive until after the solstice, which occurred on the twenty-first, and Hermione got so caught up in her own head, she wouldn’t have had a thing to wear if Mrs. Malfoy hadn’t thought to ask. By the twenty-fourth, Hermione had a proper pair of navy dress robes, and Draco’s mother spent two hours and three bottles of Sleekeazy’s Hair Potion taming her impossible curls. While Narcissa worked, Hermione got the impression the older witch would have rather enjoyed having a daughter of her own.

Too many people to count crowded into Malfoy Manor once the evening arrived. It seemed all of Slytherin House made an appearance, and with them came their families, old Slytherin alumni, their children, and their relatives from other Houses or countries. She’d never seen so many magical people in one place, not even in Diagon Alley during its busiest hours.

Hermione spotted all of her classmates there, dressed in their best robes—and, naturally, they expressed curiosity over Elara and Harriet’s conspicuous absences.

“Oh, well,” Hermione bluffed, because it was imperative to redirect interest in their home lives, especially for Harriet. “Harriet’s relatives are busy, and Elara elected to stay with her. It’s lovely what Mrs. Malfoy’s done with the house, isn’t it?”

“Of course it is,” Draco sniffed, adopting a pose similar to the one his father held across the crowded ballroom. Hermione managed to not roll her eyes, if only just. “Mother’s tastes are impeccable.”

Next to him, Pansy in her frilly, magenta robes kept shooting fiery looks in Hermione’s direction. “Draco,” she whined, tugging on the boy’s arm. “I’m bored. Come dance with me!”

“Dance? Why would I do that?”

“Draco!”

“What’s wrong with you? Merlin….”

Many people danced in time to the soft, meandering string music played by a bearded quartet of centenarians. She knew how to dance, but Hermione didn’t intend to participate until Theo Nott broke from the group and asked her. Blaise Zabini’s older, Italian cousin followed afterward, and though he didn’t speak a word of English, Hermione enjoyed herself.

The problems of her home life felt less prominent as the evening wore on, and Hermione danced with several witches and wizards and matched faces with names she’d only ever read in dusty old annals before. She could also forget how distraught her mother and father must be at the moment, or the immediate peril her best friends faced even while cloistered inside an enchanted castle. However, the latter worry came rushing to the forefront when an older wizard stepped forward from the crowd and grasped Hermione’s hand in her own.

“Miss Granger.”

A harsh, burning cold strangled Hermione’s heart as she followed the arm up to a face she’d only ever seen in the Daily Prophet, caught in rare photographs given at his even rarer public forums—a face Harriet had described with chilling accuracy after battling Tom Riddle in the Aerie’s burnt depths. The man’s red eyes glinted like wine in ruby chalices, sluggishly churning with the movement of an indolent hand.

“Minister Gaunt,” Hermione managed to say. The wizard appeared much as her Defense professor did, if taller and a bit bulkier, his attire and stance lending a more intimidating air. His dark hair had been combed back from his narrow face, the ends coming to curl under his ears like splayed snake tongues. Hermione had been an idiot to not realize he’d be present at this function. “It’s a pleasure to meet you. How do you do?”

“Very well indeed. A dance, Miss Granger?”

He gave her no room for disagreement; he tightened his grip and pulled her onto the floor proper, and though he kept enough space between them to be appropriate, unease prickled along Hermione’s spine like ghoulish fingers. His other hand came to rest below her shoulder, and she flinched.

“How…how do you know my name, sir?” Hermione asked as they started to dance, and she wished her voice didn’t sound so weak.

“Oh, Lucius likes to keep me apprised of his clever wards when he has the opportunity,” the Minister replied in a drawl worthy of Malfoy senior himself. “It suits his inflated sense of self to take credit for their achievements.”

Hermione didn’t reply. The Minister turned her, and his fingers pressed down hard enough on her own to hurt, his ring as cold as frozen steel.

“You’re friends with the Potter girl.”

It was not a question, and Hermione stiffened in alarm, every instinct in her body urging her to lie. She didn’t need to be a genius to know the Minister said nothing without an alternative agenda; that was a common denominator with most politicians, Muggle or otherwise. However, when Hermione looked into the man’s face, she saw something much worse than a schemer or a manipulator.

She raised her eyes to his, and what looked back from behind that handsome face was cruel and alien, a skittering reptile assuming the shape of a person. It didn’t make sense to her. From everything she’d ever read or learned about magic, clones were not a thing; they could not be created, even if a body could be replicated through Dark magic. However, the soul, that indefinable spark of a human being, could not be mimicked or copied.

How was it then that Harriet had met this man in Ravenclaw’s Aerie? Why did Hermione look at the Minister and know she was staring at the same wizard who usually lurked in her Defense classroom? How could he possibly be and not be the same person? It didn’t make sense.

“Friends, sir?” Hermione said, swallowing. He wanted to know about Harriet. He wanted her to feed him information about her best friend—and Hermione refused. “That’s a strong word for it. We’re more acquaintances than anything.”

“I was informed you were close.”

“We share a dormitory, and that engenders a bond, of sorts.”

“Hmm. Perhaps I was mistaken.”

The song concluded and the dance ended. The Minister dropped her hand and wiped his own against his robes as if he’d touched something foul. He stepped back, sneering, and vanished again into the crowd.

The remainder of the ball passed without Hermione seeing Minister Gaunt again—but as the hours passed, the guests departing by Floo or Apparition, Hermione felt eyes lingering on her back long into the night, and it wasn’t until she returned to her room and shut the door, that the feeling stopped and she could breathe again.

 


A/N: As a woman who loves her son and would do anything for him, I think Narcissa would have mixed emotions concerning the MPA and removing children from their homes. The Malfoys are really interesting to write, because they’re not good, but they’re still people, and people are capable of flexibility and, in some respects, change. On the flip side, I imagine it’s almost impossible for the Grangers to form any kind of acceptance when they’re kept so separate from magic and its huge impact on their daughter’s life.

Chapter 129: winter friends

Chapter Text

cxxix. winter friends

 

 

Hogwarts was beautiful during the winter holidays. Though very few students remained behind once break began, the professors went to great lengths to ensure the castle was festive and welcoming for those who still lingered. Suits of armor belted out choruses of Auld Lang Syne whenever someone passed by and bunches of mistletoe threatened to follow the unawares from hall to hall. Harriet saw Snape setting more than one sprig alight—and she also saw McGonagall discreetly Charming more to sprout over his head, snickering all the while.

Despite the levity, a sense of melancholy remained around the castle, and Harriet sensed it whenever she found herself alone or when she gazed off into the distance, and the silence echoed in her ears. It was in the moments like that when Harriet remembered how old Hogwarts was, how it would have crumbled to ruins centuries ago if not for the people who continued to inhabit its wandering halls—and it made Harriet think of the Dementors surrounding them like a wreath of dark portents. It made her feel trapped—and scared.

On Christmas morning—which the wizards just called Yule morning, despite the solstice having passed days before—Harriet and Elara woke to sizable gift piles cluttering the ends of their beds. Most proved to be the expected gifts from the pure-blood families, things like parchment and quills and candy assortments, but there were also more personal presents from each other and the people they knew.

“Did Mr. Flamel send you something?” Elara asked.

“Mhm!” Harriet answered, holding up a wooden box filled with practice runes. The little tiles clattered together and emitted a soft glow. “D’you get something too?”

“Yes.” The other witch unearthed a strange ball of clay from under a new cloak sent by Narcissa Malfoy.

“What’s that?”

“A Transfiguration medium. It’s made for practicing elemental transmutation.”

“Oh, neat.” Harriet popped another Chocolate Cauldron into her mouth, savoring the tangy, warming flavor as she peeled the brown parchment paper off a plain gift. She jumped when the golden Snitch inside unfurled its metal wings and took flight, but instead of winging off, it chose to fly slow circles around Harriet’s head. She reached up to catch it, and it settled in her palm before flying again.

“Who sent you that?”

“I…dunno.” Harriet flipped the paper over, looking for a card or a signature of some sort, but she couldn’t find anything. “If it’s real, specialty Snitches cost a fair bit. Maybe the card fell off.”

“Harriet, there’s a mass-murderer out there who—.”

“And he’s going to be sending me presents, is he?” Elara raised a brow, frowning, and Harriet exhaled. “All right, all right. What would you have me do?”

“At least put it up until I can check my Gringotts account. If he bought something, he’d have to get the Galleons from the Black estate.”

“How would he manage that?”

“Goblins have their own sovereignty from wizards. Gringotts serves as a foreign embassy of sorts, meaning Black could very well walk right in if he wanted, and as Head of the House, he has final control over the vault’s assets.”

“That’s dumb.” Harriet popped another Chocolate Cauldron into her mouth and hiccuped. “I already touched it and stuff, though, and isn’t the post supposed to be screened?”

Elara exhaled, muttering on the worthlessness of post-screening spells—and then paused, eying Harriet before setting aside another gift. “…Harriet.”

“Mmm?”

“Are you feeling well?”

Harriet blinked, confused. “Um. Yeah, why?”

“You’re flushed.”

“I’m what?”

Elara stood, tossing her blankets, and touched the back of her hand to Harriet’s forehead and cheeks. “You’re warm and red.”

“Wait, really—hic!

Elara glared at the flying Snitch with suspicion, then shuffled through the papers and torn wrappings on Harriet’s bed, finding the nearly depleted sweets box. “What are these?”

“Chocolate Cauldrons? I got ‘em from—? What’s his name, that numpty—Lockhart.”

Elara broke off a piece, exposing the filling, and popped it inside her mouth. She grunted, wrinkling her nose. “Harriet!”

“What?!” Harriet yelped, surprised by the outburst. She picked up the broken Chocolate Cauldron and gave it a sniff. “Is there something wrong with it? Oh, Merlin—did that idiot poison me?!”

“In a manner of speaking,” Elara retorted, finding a handkerchief in her nightstand to wipe her lips. “Chocolate Cauldrons have Firewhiskey in them!”

Harriet sputtered as her friend quickly grabbed the package and tossed it in the bin. “What!”

“You’re absolutely sloshed, you tiny drunkard.”

“I’m not! I only had—.” Harriet did a quick count—and then did it again, swaying. She did feel awful warm. “Eight.”

“Eight. Only.”

“Yesh.”

Elara sighed, shaking her head. “Come on, up you get.”

“Why? Where’re we goin’?”

“To Madam Pomfrey, of course.”

“What! I’m be in trouble then!”

“It’s better to be in trouble than sick as a dog. Come along.”

Elara hooked her arm under Harriet’s and hoisted her out of bed, grabbing their robes and shoes on their way. It took two tries to get Harriet into her shoes and dressing gown, and then she started to giggle.

“Elara, if you’re sick, does that mean you’re sick as a dog? Because of, y’know—.”

“Merlin spare me. What was that fool thinking, sending you Chocolate Cauldrons? He’s a menace to polite society.”

“I thought they were like Cauldron Cakes!”

“Read the label before stuffing your face next time.”

Elara dragged her into the entrance hall—and they came stumbling to a halt, confronted with Professors McGonagall and Dumbledore having a conversation by the Great Hall’s doors. In their rush from the dorms, they’d forgotten the Snitch, and it now flew circles around their heads. Harriet had her shoes on the wrong feet.

“Good morning, Miss Black, Miss Potter,” Professor McGonagall greeted, crossing her hands before herself as she studied the two younger witches. Sprigs of holly had been threaded into the band of her black hat. “You’re both up early.”

Harriet did her best to straighten and almost burst into laughter again, because in light of how miserable and dangerous her entire year had been, getting caught out for being a bit too squiffy seemed a ridiculous consequence, and Harriet was going to write Lockhart a scathing note when the walls stopped moving about.

Bloody idiot can’t think about anyone but himself for more than a minute, Harriet grumbled in her head, clutching Elara’s arm to stop her from swaying.

Professor Dumbledore smiled, his blue eyes flicking toward the Snitch coming to settle in the mussed riot of Harriet’s unbrushed hair. She really hoped it wasn’t cursed, seeing as she’d touched it half a dozen times now. “You’ve been into your presents this morning. Excellent! I still find it my favorite part of every Yule. Did you get everything you wished for?”

“We, erm, haven’t had a chance to open everything yet, Headmaster,” Elara replied, clearing her throat. “Harriet overate Yule chocolate and is feeling sick.”

“Oh, dear.”

“You shouldn’t be eating sweets before breakfast, Miss Potter,” McGonagall chastised. Harriet hiccuped, and McGonagall’s brow rose.

“Yes, ma’am.” She didn’t even have to pretend she felt queasy.

“Go on and bring her to Madam Pomfrey before Poppy leaves to come down to the Great Hall, Miss Black.”

They gave their agreement and scuttled off before McGonagall’s keen eyes could suss out any misbehavior. They only made it into the next corridor before Harriet asked to sit, and Elara lowered her onto a convenient window seat. The frozen stone and wind rattling at her back helped cleared Harriet’s head, and she shivered as she yawned and wiped at her eyes. Huffing, Elara crossed her arms against the chill and sat next to her.

“Lockhart’s an idiot,” she grumbled. Harriet snorted.

“I’m going to send him an entire box of Dungbombs for this.”

“Why would he even send you Chocolate Cauldrons?

“Because he’s a numpty, Elara, and doesn’t think before he does anything—hic. I’m surprised the post made it through.” Harriet took a deep breath to settle her wriggling stomach and released, giggling. “It’s silly though, innit?”

“What is?”

“I mean, it’s something a normal student would do—get sick from eating Firewhiskey sweets, almost get caught by the Deputy Headmistress. It’s—I wish stuff like this happened more often, y’know? Not that I wanna be in detention or anything. I just wish that maybe I had guardians who’d actually give a shite if the school wrote to them, and that I didn’t have to always worry about someone trying to murder me.”

Elara’s eyes cut in her direction and then flicked away, something like guilt swirling in their depths. Betrayal still stung Harriet’s heart, but the idea of Elara being hurt stung worse, so Harriet pushed those lingering dregs of resentment away, refusing them, nudging her friend’s foot and smiling up at her. Elara and Hermione were her family. She wouldn’t allow hurt feelings to pull them apart.

Elara’s mouth twitched in return, but she didn’t smile. In the somber light of dawn leaking through the snow-bound window, she looked tired and older than she should, carrying a weight that pressed upon her shoulders—and Harriet’s. “I’d kill him if he tried to hurt you,” Elara said. “If he tried to hurt you or Hermione. I would not hesitate.”

Harriet scoffed and shivered again, though not from the cold. “But then you’d be a murderer.”

“Sometimes, I wonder if that’s inevitable.” Elara tightened her hands into fists, her skin as pale as bone, pink scars emerging from the end of her dressing gown’s sleeve. “I wonder if any of us will emerge from this path as innocent or as clean as we entered it.”

Harriet knew she was right and acknowledged in her heart the probability of her own young, imminent death—not by Black’s hand, but by Voldemort’s, because the Headmaster had told her years ago he would return and she’d lived in silent terror for that day ever since. Harriet was an untrained, middling witch, and the Dark Lord was the Dark Lord. She worried what would happen to Elara and Hermione and worried for herself, but Harriet was only thirteen and simply wanted to be a child a little while longer, if she’d ever been a child in the first place.

“I didn’t give you your Yule gift yet.”

Elara reached into the pocket of her robes and pulled out a bit of parchment folded into an impromptu envelope, holding it out for Harriet to take. Shaken from her grim thoughts, Harriet accepted the envelope and folded back the flap.

“Leaves?” she asked, plucking one from the bunch, letting her fingertip run over the spiked edges. She hiccuped again. “Or—wait. Are these Mandrake leaves?”

Nodding, Elara explained, “I went into the greenhouse and sneaked a few. No more than would be missed, but you’ll need multiples. It took me three tries before I managed to keep one under my tongue for an entire month.”

Harriet gave the leaf a sniff and grimaced.

“Exactly my sentiment.”

“Thank you for these.” Harriet gently tucked the leaves away in her own pocket. “I still don’t know if I’ll be able to manage it. I don’t have the talent you do.”

“You’ll do brilliant. I’ve every confidence.”

Her heart warmed, a warmth that defied the cold and had nothing to do with the lingering taste of Firewhiskey. Smiling, Harriet bumped her arm into Elara’s and said with a mischievous lilt, “Happy Christmas.”

“Happy Christmas, Harriet.”

 

x X x

 

That night, a flash of red light woke Harriet from dreadful dreams.

She didn’t realize it at first; she thought it’d been part of the nightmare, and after peeling open her eyelids, Harriet lingered in that space between sleep and reality, registering the world in small pieces—the feel of her blankets with a Warming Charm applied to the sheets, the dim glow of the silver lantern above her, the water lapping at the dormitory’s outer walls. She blinked—and a shadow moved against the bed curtains, a figure Harriet contributed to her night terrors, a short, stooped body with a hand reaching out. The curtain’s rings dragged on the rod.

Sharp, skeletal fingers stabbed into Harriet’s side, and she gasped, sitting up. A second later, Elara screamed.

The curtains rippled, and—hearing the noise—the shadow moved, then suddenly vanished, the lantern flaring to full light, Elara scrambling out of her bed.

“There’s someone in here!”

“What!” Harriet cried, falling from her mattress, her leg caught and tangled in the sheet. She had her wand in hand already, pointed at nothing in particular—because the dormitory was utterly empty aside from them. A dream, Harriet told herself. It had to have been a dream, but how did Elara—?!

The other witch shook so hard, she couldn’t hold her wand straight, but she still walked to the washroom and checked it from the doorway, breathing hard. Wincing, Harriet touched her side, and her fingers came away from the dark fabric of her nightgown tinged pink with blood. Set hurt me.

Something was amiss—and not because she’d woken from a nightmare into a nightmarish reality, or because of the pain in her ribs and banged up knees. “Livius,” she whispered, yanking up the bed’s skirt, reaching into the dark below. “Livi? Liv—.” The thick coils under her hand didn’t move. “Livius! Elara, oh God, he’s not moving—!”

Elara rushed to her side and dropped to her knees, helping Harriet drag the limp snake out from under the bed. Her hair spilled in long, limp curls around her pale face, tangling in the buttons of her nightgown, and she stroked Livi’s side. “He’s going to be okay.”

“He isn’t moving, Elara!”

“I think he’s been Stunned—see look, he’s still breathing, here.” Elara pulled Harriet’s trembling hand over Livi’s nose and a small puff and air touched her clammy skin. “I don’t know the spell to reverse it, but—Harriet, we need to get out of here.” Her voice rose and cracked. “He was here, he was in here! We need to go!”

“Where is he?”

“I don’t know! He could still be here!”

Harriet’s breath came in ragged, scared gasps, and every shadow seemed sinister, hiding a killer who had someone broken into their dormitory—a killer who’d known about Livi and had thought to hurt him. Elara’s hand on her arm felt slick with sweat. Gathering Livi, Harriet doubled her grip on her wand, and they ran for their lives.


 

A/N:

Elara: “What smells like a pub?”

Harriet, elbow-deep in a box of Chocolate Cauldrons: “I dunno.”

Chapter title from the GRR Martin quote: “Summer friends will melt away like summer snows, but winter friends are friends forever.”

Chapter 130: for the wicked

Chapter Text

cxxx. for the wicked

 

 

The sudden, thundering bang of fists raining on his door jerked Severus from his potion-induced slumber.

His migraine blazed anew across his left temple and Severus grit his teeth, breath stolen by the pain, sweat building and dripping along the nape of his neck. He cupped his palm to his left eye, cursing—and the rapid banging continued.

What now?

Kicking back the sheets, Severus stood and summoned his robes from the armoire, throwing them on over his gray nightshirt, striding through his living quarters. He expected to find Minerva or Filch or Albus in the corridor—though, if he’d given it half a thought, he’d have known Minerva or Albus would have sent a Patronus in the event of an emergency, rather than descend into the dungeons to beat his door down. Without students about, Filch didn’t have much reason to come whinging, let alone at this godforsaken hour.

He froze upon finding Potter and Black standing at his threshold.

“What in Merlin’s name do you think you’re—?!”

His thunderous remark cut itself short when he noted their wide, terrified eyes and the limp Horned Serpent in Potter’s shaking arms. They’d come in a hurry, neither wearing their dressing gowns over their pajamas or their slippers.

“He was in the dormitory,” Black blurted out, looking back the way they’d come. “He—Sirius Black was in the dormitory!”

Severus stiffened and forced his eyes to focus. “What are you talking about, girl?”

“He hurt Livi!” Potter said, her eyes glassy and wet in the corridor’s dim light. “He did something, there was this funny red light, and I thought I was dreaming—.”

“She gasped, and it woke me, and—.”

“There was a bloke just standing there, and then he disappeared—!”

“Shut up,” Severus hissed, trying to make sense of their rapid, panicked babbling. He slammed closed the portrait leading into his quarters and grabbed Potter by the arm, dragging her and Black across the corridor to his office. He shoved the pair into the dark, cold space, then stopped to flick a fire into the empty grate. The idiots would freeze to death if he didn’t do something for them. “Stay here.”

“But—.”

The door shut in Potter’s face, and Severus sealed it. Only then did he fully register their words, their fears of someone—maybe Sirius Black, maybe not, but an unknown male nonetheless—being in their dormitory. A curious tangle of dread and rage pulled through his chest as he snarled, “Expecto Patronum!

A paltry silver thread wove from the end of his wand, but nothing else. Severus didn’t bother to curse or try again, instead summoning a house-elf, ordering the short creature to bring the Headmaster down to the dungeons. He hurried after that, all but running toward the hidden portal barring passage to the Slytherin common room. He was almost there when Slytherin appeared at the head of the corridor, and for the briefest of seconds, they held each other at wand point.

The pain in his head hadn’t made Severus insensate enough to not know it best to lower his own wand first.

“My Lord,” he acknowledged.

“Snape,” Slytherin returned, red eyes roving from him to the supposedly blank stretch of dark stone. He still wore his day clothes, not a stitch out of place; Severus wasn’t entirely sure the bastard was capable of sleep. “One of our young charges has crossed the entrance ward and I came to investigate.”

Came to catch whoever it was out, more like. “Both, in fact. Potter and Black believe there was an intruder in their room.”

“And they came to you first? Not their Head of House?”

A worrying note wove through the shorter wizard’s tone, and Severus chose his following words carefully. They hadn’t the time for Slytherin to throw a fit over some perceived slight. “I am closer to the dungeons, my Lord.”

“Hmm. We’ll have a discussion on this later.”

Oh, I can hardly fucking wait.

Motion in the corridor’s mouth drew their attention as Albus arrived, appearing tired and wary, Minerva trailing after him, wrapped in her tartan dressing gown. Slytherin’s eyes cut to Severus, a not-so-subtle fury glinting in their ruby depths, and the Headmaster was quick to lie for Severus’ benefit. “The wards alerted me to a disturbance,” he said. “Is everything well, Professors?”

“Black and Potter claim there was an intruder in their dormitory.”

“An intruder?” Minerva and Albus shared an uneasy glance. “Are you certain? Is it possible they imagined it? They are young girls, and it can be rather, erm, eerie in the dungeons this late at night.”

“Potter and Black aren’t the type to be frightened easily. You know this, Minerva.” Of course, Severus couldn’t be certain of anything, but somebody had Stunned Potter’s snake—and that in and of itself was cause for alarm, because the only way a person would know of the Horned Serpent was if they’d watched the girl, if they’d observed her enough to discover its existence.

“And where are they now?”

“In my office.” The Transfiguration mistress made as if to head in that direction, but Severus cut her off. “I have sealed the room. You will not be able to enter.”

“Excellent, Severus,” Albus said. “Minerva, if you would alert the remainder of the staff and the Heads of House while we—.”

The Headmaster stepped toward the entrance of the common room, and Slytherin interceded. Severus’ pulse raised when Slytherin’s hand brushed Albus’ chest, and the Headmaster visibly recoiled, his wand out, a palpable burst of magic swelling in the air.

“I won’t have brainless Gryffindors stomping through my ancestral House,” Slytherin spat, unmoved by the cold steel in Albus’ gaze or the threatening stance adopted by him and the Deputy Headmistress. They’d stumbled upon a potentially dangerous situation—and not because of an intruder in the castle. Relations with Slytherin existed as a game of Muggle tug of war; if one wished to win, they had to know when to pull, and when to give, how best to displace their opponent and take their feet out from under them. The game would be more straightforward if Slytherin had been a sane man—but he wasn’t, and one day some slight infraction, such as challenging his authority in his own House, could throw him into an unpredictable rage.

If Slytherin pushed, Severus didn’t know what they’d do, what he’d do, what Albus would want for him to do, because the three of them together might be able to force Slytherin to retreat—but it would not be permanent, and Severus could not sacrifice his position in a futile gambit. He had spent years of his life, had killed, to remain in Slytherin’s good graces. In the same breath, if Albus allowed Slytherin to chip away at his own influence and authority—.

“Need I remind you that I am the Headmaster of this school, Professor?” Albus said, and if Severus hadn’t known the wizard well, he wouldn’t have heard the words and the anger that went unvoiced.

“For now.” Slytherin smiled. “Go on, then. Manage your school, Headmaster, and I will see to my House. Severus!”

The Potions Master hated being called to attention like a stung dog, but he nonetheless dipped his head in acquiescence and followed Slytherin into the common room, hearing the monster’s harsh, guttural hissing as he commanded the painted serpent above the hearth. A series of spells left his wand, a thin veil of yellow sweeping through the darkened room, illuminating purulent halos of ugly color in its wake. Naturally, a spell meant to detect traces of human presence would be ineffective in a communal space.

Slytherin went off to check the boys’ corridor while Severus checked the girls’, finding nothing but dark, empty beds until the two professors met again inside Potter and Black’s dormitory. The lantern had been left lit, their rumpled sheets thrown back, a bit of gift wrapping forgotten on the floor, but the room was otherwise surprisingly tidy and undisturbed. Slytherin again muttered a mantra of spells, and again, the room lit with color to indicate human presence—but the Defense professor’s voice cut short as something changed. Severus, too, noted the shift in resonance and swished his wand. “Appare Vestigium.”

Several hues bloomed in the dark, most faded to drabber tones—but three traces remained stronger. Three.

“It appears Potter and Black didn’t imagine things,” Slytherin crooned, pacing by Potter’s bed, his hand ghosting over the curtain. “A third party was in here—though, should that party be Mr. Black, it does beg the question of how he managed to breach my dungeons and why he fled from two pubescent witches simply because they woke to find him in here.”

Severus didn’t have an answer to those questions. The password for the common room changed every fortnight and had yet to be reset since the remainder of the juvenile horde had departed; he could only surmise that Black had lifted the password from someone who’d gone home for the break, since Potter and Miss Black weren’t nearly as careless as the others in their age group. But why flee? He’d already Stunned the snake, easily the most dangerous threat in the room, which meant he had a bloody wand trained on both Black and Potter. In his recollection, Sirius Black had always been one to press his advantage and had taken risks to get one last curse out whenever he and his band of merry-men attacked Severus. Why run? And how? How did he get out of the dorm?

A sharp breath drew Severus’ attention just as Slytherin yanked his hand away from Potter’s trunk, the pads of his fingers bright red with fresh blisters. For half a moment, Severus thought Potter might return to her dormitory to find her possessions reduced to ashes—but Slytherin pulled back his ire, instead settling for curiosity.

“Potter wards her trunk.”

“As any good Slytherin should, my Lord.”

“Hmm.” He allowed the matter to drop, and Severus bit back the desire to sneer, ill at ease with the wizard’s desire to go rooting through a witch’s things while a fucking serial killer might well be wandering the castle. The incessant pulsing in his temple forced Severus to close his eyes, if only for a second, willing the pain to recede to manageable levels. When he opened his eyes again, Slytherin was watching him, a sick, pleased grin on his handsome face.

“We should not discount this being a distraction,” Severus drawled, aiming to get Slytherin out of there. “It is odd, my Lord, that a wizard capable of breaching your protections would leave two unprotected children undisturbed. I can only imagine what his real aims must be….”

His vague suppositions were enough to redirect Slytherin’s mind onto his own agenda, and though the wizard scoffed, he retreated swiftly enough, doubtlessly off to check that his own office and chambers hadn’t been tampered with. Severus went to follow but paused to have a final look about, checking for any anomalies. He found none—but when his own pale hand passed over the latch on Potter’s trunk, his fingers drew back perfectly fine. Severus stared at them and the trunk for several seconds, and then gathered himself, dousing the lantern on his way out.

 

x X x

 

“And you saw nothing which could conclusively say whether it was Black or not?”

“No, Albus. Nothing in the room had been visibly disturbed.” Severus crossed his arms against his chest as they continued down the passage toward his office. An exhaustive search had been undertaken, but two hours of scouring the halls had—once again—turned up nothing. He wanted to blame Lupin for this farce—and he would discover how the mangy wolf was connected to this, he swore—but Lupin didn’t know of the Horned Serpent, and didn’t know the pass-phrase into the Slytherin common room. Deceitful knobhead he might be, but Lupin didn’t have that kind of finesse.

Albus sighed, eyes downcast in thought. “All of the other students are accounted for and, according to Pomona and Filius, deep asleep in their beds. I’ve done what I can to keep this from the Ministry; the perceived threat against Mr. Longbottom provides Gaunt with enough leverage to keep the Dementors here, but if Black is thought to be attacking seemingly blameless third-years in Slytherin House, he will push for more Ministry presence.”

Severus grunted. “Miss Black is his daughter. Already Lucius has told me there are mutterings in the Ministry speculating on their possible collusion. This incident would place undue suspicion on the brat.”

“Yes, it would.” They passed a torch, and the glow revealed the Headmaster’s severe expression. “I must admit, my theories for Black’s possible reasoning in breaching the wards and not violently attacking Miss Potter are very grim indeed, Severus.”

Gritting his teeth, the Potions Master spat, “He knows, Dumbledore. He knows the Dark Lord went to Godric’s Hollow and knows damn well he didn’t overlook the girl. I was in the house, he came there, he—.”

“Yes, Severus, you have told me this and I have taken it into consideration.”

“Black has that knowledge we have sought to hide from the Wizarding world for over a decade. If he does not seek to slaughter the girl in his Master’s name, then he will bring her to him!”

“But to do so, he would have to find Voldemort, and if he were able of finding Tom, we must ask ourselves why he is here in the first place. It is a pointless risk to remain in country.”

“There are always whispers of the Dark Lord’s whereabouts, Albus.”

“Not conclusive whispers, my boy.”

“No, but some are louder than others. Quirrell followed such a note into Albania, and look what happened to that fool.” They stopped outside his office door, and Severus lowered his voice. “You are underestimating the Dark Lord’s violence. Even the most ardent of his followers—those who haven’t drifted to another camp in his absence—would not approach him without an offering of appeasement. Mark my words, Headmaster, if Black doesn’t kill Harriet, he will drag her to the Dark Lord himself!”

Dumbledore grasped his arm, and only then did Severus register the fine tremble in his own hand, the thump of his heart against his ribs. Anger, he decided. I’m fucking angry.

Jerking free, Severus released the wards sealing the door and pushed it aside, allowing the Headmaster to walk in first. Black had apparently nodded off while they searched and now jolted upright in Severus’ chair. Potter stopped stomping about and fixed the pair of adult wizards with a glare.

“What’s happening?” she demanded. “Both Elara and I saw somebody in the room—and he hurt Livi! Was it Sirius Black? D’you catch him? Did—?”

Albus rested his hand on the girl’s shoulder to slow the endless onslaught of her questions, and they conversed in soft, soothing tones while Severus strode over to his desk and eyed the unmoving reptile laid on its top. Potter’s was the only Horned Serpent he’d ever seen, the creatures no longer being native to England and rare to boot, but he understood they reached a rather massive size and outlived wizards by a century at least. Potter’s beast was already approaching two and a half meters in length, its angular head nearly as large as Severus’ splayed hand.

At least she hasn’t taken to wearing it as a bloody scarf quite so often, he thought, inspecting the serpent to ensure it really had only been Stunned. Possibly because it’s getting bloody monstrous in size. He gave his wand a negligible flick, incanting, “Rennervate.”

He hadn’t accounted for the Horned Serpent being a wretched wild animal, and so when it writhed under Severus’ hand and opened its confused blue eyes, it lunged at his face.

Protego Serpens!

The snake bounced off a whorl of vapor as Severus reeled, gasping, and collided with the shelves at his back. The ghost of fangs brushed against his throat. Jesus Christ!

“Sorry, Professor!” Potter dismissed her Shield and rushed to calm the furious, seething mass of wriggling coils on his desk. “He’s—he didn’t mean it, he’s just scared—.” She dwindled into ghoulish hissing, and he shivered. Dumbledore came to his side.

“Are you well, Severus?”

No, he was not well; he hadn’t been well in fucking years! He’d just spent the better part of a winter night combing a Scottish castle for a serial killer, his migraine hadn’t abated in the slightest, and he yet had several hours of toadying to Slytherin ahead of him. He wanted to sleep, for Merlin’s sake. Severus shook Dumbledore’s touch from his arm and slouched, well-aware of Black’s inquisitive stare resting on the top of his bowed head.

Stupid brat, he thought viciously. Stupid brat and stupid, no-good cunt of a father.

“Harriet,” Dumbledore said to the bespectacled girl. Potter looked around and stopped trying to dislodge the serpent from wrapping itself around her. “Does your familiar have any additional information for us? Did he perhaps see something you and Miss Black missed?”

“I—dunno, Headmaster,” she replied, more hissing interspersed between the words. “He’s—bloody hell, Livius, stop squeezing—I think he’s a bit confused, and quite angry. He keeps mentioning the ‘rat one,’ but he gives people names like that all the time, and he changes it around. He changed Elara’s name to the ‘rude one’ just the other day.”

“I see.” Dumbledore straightened, the bones in his back popping ever so slightly. “Well, as I said before, a search has been conducted and largely completed. We found nothing suspicious, and the rest of the students are tucked tight into their beds.” The Headmaster forced a smile. “Now, for your safety, I have reached out to our mutual friend, and he readily agreed to take you both in for the remainder of the holiday.”

Both witches brightened. “Mr. Flamel?” Potter asked.

“Yes. Nicolas should be waiting for us in my office as we speak. Let’s move along and meet him, shall we?”

“But, Professor, what about our things?”

“Never fear, they’ll be sent after you in the morning. Now, come along.”

Severus followed their odd grouping, though he couldn’t say why, really. He found himself walking again for some reason, trailing Dumbledore, and didn’t stir until he felt the warmth of a hearth near him, a curly-haired wizard rising from one of the Headmaster’s comfortable guest chairs to greet the young witches in cheery French. Usually, seeing the world’s foremost scholar in alchemical science and potion creation would have garnered more of Severus’ attention, but he could barely bring himself to look at the man. A sense of relief had filled him the instant Dumbledore said Potter would be leaving, and that relief had robbed Severus of the adrenaline that had been keeping him upright so far.

He was bone-weary.

A hand tugged on his sleeve, and Severus blinked, glancing around to find Potter at his side, still holding her ridiculous snake, green eyes wide and focused on his own. “You’re bleeding, Professor. Livi didn’t bite you, did he? I thought I caught him fast enough.”

Severus swiped at his cheek and, sure enough, blood had begun to gather and well in the corner of his left eye like teardrops. The red smear stood out stark on his shaking hand. He bowed his head, allowing his limp black hair to swing forward and hide his face from view. “Mind your own business, Potter.”

Flamel recalled Potter to him, his arm coming to settle on the girl’s short, narrow shoulders. A sweet wrapper and a burst of blue light saw the trio off via one of Albus’ illegal Portkeys—and silence descended in their passage, the Headmaster sinking into his chair while Severus propped his elbow on the mantel and rubbed at his bloodied, painful eye. The portraits on the wall remained silent observers, as did the phoenix waiting on his golden perch.

What a night.

“Sometimes I wonder,” Dumbledore said, in a voice so soft the fire nearly masked it even from Severus’ keen ears. “I wonder if it would have been better had she gone to Beauxbatons.”

“Albus?”

The older wizard sighed and looked at him. “I wonder if young Harriet would be safer there, happier. If, by sending her farther away, would I remove her from danger—or simply abandon her to dangers unknown? Would I be sparing the child to only kill the young woman she is becoming? Because Harriet’s destiny is as bound to her and she is to it, and I do not know if it is crueler to allow her ignorance or to take it away from her.”

“You could send the girl to Siberia, and she’d end up getting pummeled by a Yeti. It’s from the Potter infesting her blood.”

Dumbledore chuckled. “Perhaps. Though truth be told, I don’t often see much of James in dear Harriet. Poor boy was rather….”

“Arrogant?” Severus supplied, though it lacked bite. He was too tired to have a go at James Potter, the tosser. “Foolish? Thick-headed?”

“Ignorant, I would guess,” Dumbledore continued. “Not with willingness or malice, but we were all quite ignorant then. Blissfully so.”

Severus shoved off the mantel and turned his wounded side from the Headmaster, lip curling. The first tentative breaths of light had begun to herald the dawn beyond the tower’s windows, fatigue like a hairshirt growing tighter and tighter over Severus’ chest. “As much as I’d love to reminiscent about James bloody Potter all day, I’ve other places to be, Albus. Other egos to assuage.”

The older wizard turned to survey the windows and the light that came so begrudgingly over the frozen horizon. “So you do. Be careful, Severus. Be watchful.”

“I always am.”

 


A/N: Next chapter goes completely off canon. Should be fun!

Albus: “Severus, why does your nightshirt say ‘Do Not Resuscitate’?”

Snape: “It was on a discount.”

Narrator: “This was a lie.”

Poor Severus didn’t get to fangirl over meeting Nicolas Flamel.

Chapter 131: the garden

Chapter Text

cxxxi. the garden

 

 

The gentle rocking motion of the train’s movement lulled Harriet back into wakefulness.

The compartment was bigger than those of the Hogwarts Express and rather more delicate in appearance, the brass fixtures adorned with extra filigree or lavish Fleur-de-lis, the bench extra-wide and padded with creme colored leather. Elara had curled up on the other end, invisible under a conjured blanket, and Livius had laid himself down next to an iron receptacle holding a very fat yellow salamander. Mr. Flamel had used metal tongs to feed it burning coals until the magical creature refused any more treats and went to sleep, filling the compartment with a pleasant heat.

The alchemist sat across from Harriet, his chin balanced on the heel of his palm as he leaned an elbow against the window sill and watched the drab landscape pass them by. He’d seemed preoccupied for the entire trip.

Professor Dumbledore’s Portkey had taken them to London, to the Leaky Cauldron, a distance far enough to nearly level Harriet and Elara, and even Mr. Flamel had appeared peaky after enduring so much magical travel that evening. After Transfiguring both witches a pair of temporary robes and shoes, they went to Kings Cross Station, where they crossed the barrier onto Platform Seven and One-Quarter and boarded an emerald train bound for the continent. Mr. Flamel hadn’t been in country when he’d received the Headmaster’s urgent missive, which meant he—and by extension, Elara and Harriet—had a considerable distance to cover before they returned to his second home.

Harriet shifted, untucking her legs from underneath herself, and Mr. Flamel stirred from wherever his thoughts had taken him. He smiled. “Good morning, Harriet.”

“Morning,” she replied, though a glance out the window showed it’d been daylight for some hours now, the flat, Muggle lands outside of Paris having given way to rolling hills made dark and dim by the season. “Are we almost there?”

“Oh, nearly. We’ll be in the Wizarding quarter of Toulouse soon. Perenelle will be waiting at the station.”

“Thank you for coming to get us all the way from Hogwarts.”

Pas de quoi, il n'y a pas de quoi.

Harriet turned to peer out the window, watching with curiosity as the landscape changed kilometer by kilometer, more structures becoming apparent the closer they got to the city. This was the farthest she’d ever been from home—though her first trip from London all the way to Hogsmeade had been much more nerve-wracking than this venture. Harriet had roused when they’d pull into different stations along the way, the conductor’s French voice filtering through the train, and she’d watched witches and wizards disembarking, greeting family members or disappearing into Floos. Most of the stations had been decorated for Yule, cheerful tidings written in tinsel and golden baubles.

“Harriet?”

“Mmm?”

Mr. Flamel studied her for a moment. “Did you see ze man who was in your dormitory?”

Harriet frowned as she considered the question, pulling on the hazy images from the night before. Already it seemed as if it’d happened so long ago when it’d been less than ten hours. “I—kind of. I didn’t imagine him; I know he was there, but I…well, I have a lot of bad dreams, so at first, I thought I was just dreaming again when I saw the shadow against the curtains. Then, Elara saw him, and saw him more solidly than I did, though neither of us could make out much in the dark.” Harriet shrugged one shoulder. “So we can’t say for sure it was Sirius Black, but it’s not as if there’re many blokes sneaking about the castle in the dead of night, are there?”

“No, I would not think there are.”

The salamander made a plaintive noise and belched ash. Livi opened his eyes to glare at the lizard before quitting the floor in favor of Harriet’s lap. They sat in amiable quiet until they neared their destination, at which point it proved pertinent to wake Elara, who was as irritable and surly as she ever was in the early morning. Mr. Flamel reapplied the Transfigurations to their clothes when the train stopped, and they exited onto the platform.

The station was on the River Garonne, hidden from the Muggles, nestled among the rose terracotta buildings, smelling faintly of something fishy wafting up from the water lapping at the brick foundation. It was cold and a bit humid, but the sun was out and the station blissfully free of snow. Perenelle was waiting just as Mr. Flamel said she would be, and the older witch was quick to leave the bench she’d been sitting on when she spotted the trio of travelers leaving the emerald train.

“‘Arriet! Elara!” she called, embracing them both in turn—Harriet choking when she nearly got the life squeezed from her. “Oh, my sweet girls, ‘ow are you?”

“We’re okay, promise.”

Perenelle looked them over, from their untidy hair to tired faces, blue eyes lingering on the smudge of blood staining Harriet’s Transfigured nightgown. The wound underneath had scabbed over, though it stung when she twisted the wrong way. “Quelle horreur! Nicolas, have you Transfigured their clothes? Was there no time to change?”

Non, ma moitié. Albus is to send their things on to ze house for Bigsby to handle.”

Perenelle muttered something French and distinctly upset as she drew Harriet and Elara each under an arm. Elara was nearly taller than her by now, but Perenelle still managed. “Come along, then. We need to visit ze Jardin.”

“Ah, Perenelle, do you think it is best—?”

Oui!” she replied with unexpected heat. “It is past morning, and zey must be famished. We must visit the Jardin.”

Sighing, Mr. Flamel relented—not that he’d tried very hard—and came closer. “Very well. You had best come with me, Monsieur Livius. I believe it best if you had your hands free, Harriet….”

At Perenelle’s insistence, they left the station, stepping off as if to head toward the Muggle streets—but Mr. Flamel led them straight toward a gray stone arch waiting at the end of the sidewalk. It looked very old—much older than the more trendy shops lining the avenue, wider than an average doorway but not much taller. None of the Muggles seemed to take any of note of it, walking around it as if bouncing off an invisible ward, and as she got closer, Harriet could read the words, “L’allée Du Jardin” chiseled into the stone.

Passing under the arch, Harriet felt magic tingle on her skin—and before her eyes, the street swelled and parted like a pattern in a kaleidoscope, the Muggle outlets and lanes getting shoved apart from one another as tall, stately buildings crowded into place, cobbled stones rolling out like a carpet, a wide canal fringed in grass going right down the middle. Chestnut trees sprung from the earth, rising higher and higher until the whole of the new, revealed district fell under the shade of those bare, winter branches.

Harriet gawked like a shameless tourist at the narrow little borough that had just appeared, turning around to look at the arch behind her. It was as if they’d entered some kind of parallel realm only magical beings could see, and Harriet watched with amusement as the Muggles bounced off the invisible walls and walked around the buildings. Those witches and wizards exiting the settlement got frustrated by the oblivious people bumping into them.

“What is this place?” Harriet asked, glancing up at Perenelle. She smiled.

“Ze call it The Garden. It’s the second-largest Wizarding commune in France, the bigger one being Paris—but I have always been fond of zis one. It is very charming.”

Harriet could see that; it reminded her of Diagon Alley in some ways, except the buildings stood up a tad straighter, cleaner, their deportment and displays more subtle in their design. It was also more extensive and, from what she could tell, contained a greater mix of residential and commercial buildings, some witches or wizards sitting out on their balconies to enjoy a late morning meal, others out peddling their wares. Two-wheeled carts propelled themselves along the road, carrying passengers reading the paper or chatting with one another, and at the end of the row waited a tall, black building that looked something like a stable, the horses inside the stalls ranging from small to absolutely mammoth in size—all of them winged. Signs above the stalls listed different prices and cities; the largest, palomino-looking horses had places farther east posted; Harriet noticed the word Bantiaumyrddin written above one of the middling gray steeds. As she stared, a man got into a carriage connected to one of the horses—and it took off like a Muggle aeroplane.

“‘Arriet, zis way.”

Startled, Harriet returned to her group, Perenelle taking her hand so she didn’t wander off again as they crossed the canal on a stone bridge. Their first stop was a magical tailor, a skinny bloke with a thin mustache and too much product in his hair who all but bent over backward to serve the Flamels, though Harriet swore he looked at her and Elara like they were strange, grubby little English urchins someone had plucked off the streets. When they left the shop, Harriet had on a sage blouse and a charcoal pleated skirt, golden threads of ivy growing and shifting from the stitches of her collar. Elara had clothes similar to what she usually wore—a white shirt, black skirt, black robes with silver fastenings. Harriet had to admit she felt better, being out of her night things, now properly washed and dressed.

Mrs. Flamel led them to a patisserie after that, and Harriet ate far too many delicate, sweet pastries, her appetite returning with a vengeance after they were seated at a table outside in the sunshine and the last vestiges of the night’s tension began to bleed away. Even Mr. Flamel appeared more himself after a few cups of coffee, relaxing into his chair, not seeming to mind the overlarge snake looped about his shoulders who kept stealing petit fours from his plate. Perenelle looked a bit more dubious about Livi, and Harriet quietly reminded her familiar to be on his best behavior.

After eating, Mr. Flamel pressed a purse of golden Bezants into Elara’s hand and allowed them to explore on their own.

“Stay together, oui? Meet back here in a few hours.”

“Yes, sir.”

“‘Arriet, take your cloak. It gets cold quickly zis close to the mountains.”

“Okay.”

Harriet grabbed said cloak from the back of her chair and ran off with Elara, slowing into a walk when they reached the grass by the canal, and both witches paused to glance into the clear water below.

“A strange turn of our holiday, isn’t it?” Elara said as if commenting on the weather.

Harriet guffawed. “Definitely. Merlin, I can’t believe we’re all the way in bloody France now—speaking of which, we need to go to a stationery shop.” At Elara’s curious look, Harriet explained. “Hermione has the Marauder’s Map and will see we’re not there anymore. We need to write to her as soon as we can so she doesn’t panic.”

They didn’t find a stationery shop, but they did find the post office, the old witch behind the counter looking on with interest as they paid for the parchment but then used Hugh instead of an owl to send the missive. That finished, they set out to explore The Garden proper. It seemed to go on forever—much farther than they’d be able to venture in few hours, side streets splintering away from the main boulevard, an actual forest and immaculate flower garden located smack in the middle of the district proper. At one point, the canal returned to the River Garonne, and both Harriet and Elara failed to make sense of how magic managed to redirect the Muggle boats. It was fascinating.

Despite the welcome distraction of being away from Hogwarts, their problems continued to lurk in the back of their minds; even here, the occasional poster of Sirius Black’s mugshot glared from an alley wall, and the sight of him made Harriet’s blood boil.

On one of the little side streets, Harriet stumbled upon a shop with curious glass spheres in the display, the name “Verre de Verid” neatly stenciled on the facia. Inside she found row upon row of cluttered shelves burdened with glass pieces—some decorative, some practical, some magical, and some not. Sunlight came through the front window and shone through a spinning mobile of clear lenses, the light revealing moving images of landscapes and scenery that reflected over the walls and floor. Harriet didn’t think much of them at first, until she came back around to the stand, picking one of the loose lenses up from its box. It was smaller than her palm, slightly convex, and encircled in a slim brass ring.

C’est interesting, non?” the proprietor asked, his English sparse and his accent thick as molasses. “It works wiz, ah, une copie? Zis vélin here.”

He showed her a book of bound vellum—familiar vellum, the kind that came from a magical creature she didn’t know, the kind she’d seen on Rowena Ravenclaw’s desk—and copied onto the vellums were the various scenes she could see recreated in the glass. Harriet held the clear lens in her hand, thumb tracing the brass edge warmed by her skin, and she considered it for a moment longer before making a decision. She left with three of the lenses carefully folded into a soft cloth and bag, shrunken in her cloak pocket, joined by a roll of vellum.

“You have a look about you that says you’re planning something neither me nor Hermione will very much like.”

Harriet stuck out her tongue. “You’ll just have to wait and see.”

They returned to the Flamels, who didn’t look as if they’d left the patisserie at all in the intervening hours, though Mr. Flamel had swapped coffee for wine and his pipe, Perenelle reading the local paper. He looked up as they approached. “Ready to leave?”

“Yes, sir.”

The four of them departed, Mr. Flamel Side-Along Apparating Harriet and Elara somewhere else—somewhere much colder and more drafty. Gone white as a ghost, Elara dropped his arm and sicked up in the nearest bush, Perenelle rushing over to tuck back her hair and rub her back. Even Harriet, who was much less prone to queasiness, felt lightheaded and wobbly.

“It is because of the altitude,” Mr. Flamel explained as he patted her arm. “We are not terribly far from ze Jardin, but we are much higher in the mountains now.”

The Flamels’ French chateau proved much grander and more sprawling than their more humble home in Trefhud, and yet Harriet needed only a brief tour of the property to understand neither Nicolas nor Perenelle had made much use of the house in recent years. A veneer of neglect and age hung about the place, and under the crisp, winter snow, it just seemed…tired, drowsy. She sometimes wondered what happened to magical properties that got abandoned, and Harriet thought they became something like that chateau; preserved, but eerie, empty in a way that couldn’t be quantified by the number of people or things inside its rooms. Overall, despite receiving her own room and enjoying the space to roam, Harriet much preferred the house in Devonshire.

As the sun dipped into the rocky white peaks of the Pyrenees, they enjoyed supper in the kitchen, the environment there more congenial than it would be in the formal dining room. Bigsby puttered about, muttering lovingly to the dishes he set out before he beat a quick retreat to goodness knows where. Harriet would never get used to the eccentricities of house-elves. Both she and Elara had tried to get Kreacher to eat at the table with them—and then he’d threatened to disembowel them in their sleep if they ever tried again.

“Is there a reason you’re in France at this time of year?” Elara asked. She wasn’t a numpty; like Harriet, she probably realized the locale seemed an odd choice to winter in, no matter its inherent grandeur and beauty.

“Business, I fear,” Mr. Flamel responded, ladling English stew into a wooden bowl, passing it to Harriet. “Some things are best to not put off, oui? Procrastinating is a terrible habit.”

Whatever business the Flamels had, he didn’t specify, but Harriet assumed they’d either find out during their stay or it wasn’t for them to know. They ate their meal, chattering on about school and projects and their interests—always avoiding any touchy topics, never once mentioning Sirius Black or the person who’d tried to attack them in the dormitory. It confused Harriet because Mr. Flamel had never been one to shy away from difficult conversations, always ready to lend his advice and wisdom to whatever problem she presented him. It was later, after Elara had gone on to bed and Harriet had lingered in the kitchen to help Bigsby clean up the dishes, when she discovered the reason behind his reticence.

Bigsby shooed her from the room once she’d rinsed the last plate, and Harriet went gladly enough, more tired than she wanted to admit and ready to fall into her pillow. The Flamels had retired to the lounge, the door left slightly ajar, and as Harriet crossed the thin stripe of yellow light piercing the hall’s shadows, she heard raised voices coming from inside.

“—iz untenable, Nicolas! Idiotie. I do not know what Albus is thinking.”

She paused and, against her better judgment, leaned closer to listen. Harriet couldn’t see either Nicolas or Perenelle, but she could hear them well enough, their conversation joined by the slow, somber crackling of a lit fire.

“Ah, Perenelle,” Mr. Flamel sighed, voice muffled as if he’d dragged his hand over his face. “You know it iz not Albus’ fault—.”

Non? I do not care. I do not seek to place blame—il n'est pas utile!” Perenelle huffed, throwing herself into a chair. “Ze are children! And ze crimes committed against them! Abuse, Nicolas! Abuse! Poisoned, and harassed, and—and torturé.” She said the word like it was a vile, wretched thing. It angered Harriet because she certainly hadn’t told the Flamels about—that. “Pas de famille! What madness grips Poudlard!

“I know, ma moitié.”

Do you?”

“It is dark times for everyone; it is felt here, too, not just in England. Not just in Poudlard.”

“And I am to satisfy myself with that, am I?” Perenelle shifted and rattled off a string of agitated French. “They should go to Beauxbatons. It would take but a word, and Olympe would take zem gladly. Brilliant, beautiful girls they are.”

Mr. Flamel snorted, sounding defeated. “Zey do not speak French, my love.”

Et c’est important? They could learn! They could learn much more if they were not constantly afraid for their lives!”

“We discussed this in the summer. It would do no good.”

Glass clattered on wood like a cup being set down too hard. “‘Ow can you say that?”

“I know you are upset, but—.”

Oui, I am upset! You are dragged out of bed before the dawn because a—a monster has crept into their chambre, and you expect me to not be upset? Mon Dieu, Nicolas—in zer room! ‘Ow can you say that?”

“Because ze danger does not exist in Poudlard alone; it exists in ‘Arriet, and so long as some piece of Tom Riddle keeps breathing, she will be in danger. No matter where she goes.”

“We will take zem in.”

“We cannot.”

Why?”

“Because it would not be fair.” The first brush of anger entered Mr. Flamel’s tone, and Harriet shifted in discomfort, shocked. “We cannot uproot their lives like zis, Perenelle! It would not be fair to them. Not…not when there is so little left. Le moissonneur réclame son dû.”

Harriet could discern no further conversation after that, only a soft, hopeless muttering of French that had her heart clenching in sadness. She quietly departed from the hall, heading up the steps to her own room past Elara’s, letting the door come closed behind her. Bigsby had made up the big bed in fresh linens, and the smell of lilac filled the air, the hearth dark but for the smoldering of low, burnt-out coals. The curtains remained wide, revealing the white, somnolent valley sprawled out beneath the cliffs the chateau perched upon, and as Harriet stood there taking in the view, she allowed herself to think on what had happened the night before.

Somebody—a man—had been in her bedroom, and she didn’t know how she felt about that. Bad, of course, but beyond that, Harriet had a certain disquiet in her middle, an unease that stemmed from thinking about a person standing over her while she slept unawares and not knowing what they were doing. It was one of those subjects her mind shied away from—but even Aunt Petunia, as much as she despised Harriet—had drilled into her skull all the stories about nasty perverts and predators, and how Harriet needed to stay away from strangers who tried to lure her off. She hated that the thought of returning home to her dormitory now made her uncomfortable.

Listening to the Flamels argue had made her uncomfortable, too.

What had happened scared her, more so than the vague notion of a serial killer possibly wanting to murder her—whether that killer be Black or Voldemort. Because while that was a scary thing to consider, this person had been in her room, present and there, and she didn’t know why.

Harriet didn’t have Hermione’s knack for visualizing and articulating problems, but she was far from an idiot. Something about the situation didn’t make sense; Black was mad by all accounts, had taken a knife to the Fat Lady guarding Gryffindor Tower like a raving loony. It was all—bold, crazed, but the person who’d been in the dormitory? He’d snuck in—and Merlin be damned, Harriet had no bloody clue how he’d managed that—had somehow gotten into the room, had surprised Livius, had known about her Horned Serpent in the first place, and had moved as if to pull the curtains, ostensibly to attack Harriet while she slept. If she were to place herself in the shoes of a madman, Harriet wouldn’t have bothered with any of that. She would have caught the linens on fire or something.

It was Sirius Black…wasn’t it?

The moon rose higher and shed its light on the valley below. For a long while, Harriet remained at the window and stared out at the cold, barren wilderness. She could still hear Mr. Flamel’s quiet, broken words in her ears, and Harriet thought she might hear them for years to come.


A/N: Y’know, my original intention was to have the Flamels be much more minor in their roles. Oops.

Flamel: “….what are you hiding under your cloak?”

Perenelle: “………”

Flamel: “……you can’t kidnap the children.”

Perenelle: “You are literally no fun.”

Chapter 132: a happy thought

Chapter Text

cxxxii. a happy thought

 

 

Passing by Harriet’s nightstand, Elara came to a sudden halt.

“Harriet.”

“Hmm?” the shorter witch acknowledged.

“Why am I counting three snakes here?”

Harriet pulled her head out of her trunk to look at Elara and then at the three snakes curled around the magically heated stone now residing on the nightstand. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

“About that.” She pointed a finger at the banana-colored creature sitting between Kevin and Rick. It was bigger than the other two and appeared more like a small constrictor than a viper or a grass snake.

“I’ve always had three snakes.”

“Yes, three snakes in total—and now you’ve four in total, including the monster you keep under your bed.”

“Hmm, I don’t know. I think you miscounted.”

“You cheeky thing.” Elara sighed, allowing the curious yellow snake to inspect her fingers, though she kept her hand well away from Kevin, the lousy little biter. “What’s his name?”

“…Howard.”

“Let me guess; you sneaked him off the table at Yule?”

“…maybe.”

“How’d you manage that? I didn’t see—and Snape didn’t throw a fit, so I imagine he didn’t see either.”

Harriet found the shoe she sought and shoved her foot into it, rising to brush the dust from the seat of her trousers. “If I could sneak food off the table before Dudley’s piggy little eyes spotted it, getting a snake past Snape is no problem.” She fixed her hair back from her face in a lopsided knot, coming over to pet her growing menagerie of creepy critters. “D’you want to hold him? He’s much friendlier than the others, I promise.”

Elara didn’t really wish to hold the snake, but she accepted it when Harriet gently tipped Howard into her cupped hands, surprised to find it pleasantly warm and pliant, his tiny pink tongue flicking in her direction.

“Hermione’s going to have kittens,” she said as they left the bedroom, the sound of the heavy door shutting echoing in the long, barren corridor. Elara held Howard close to her middle, and he didn’t struggle, remaining still. “She already couldn’t believe Mr. Flamel got you that dead crow pet last summer.”

“First of all, Hugh’s not a pet. I don’t even have to feed him!”

“I’ve seen you give him treats before.”

“Well, yes. Of course I have to give him treats. Don’t be silly.”

“Yes, pardon me for being silly. How preposterous; of course the dead crow needs treats.”

They climbed the stairs, footsteps snapping against the bare stone, sunlight pouring in through the chateau’s wide windows. The snow on the grounds had thinned somewhat, but the wind had picked up in its stead, and Elara knew even the best Warming Charms would be hard-pressed to keep out the chill.

There was a dueling hall on the third floor, or what had been a dueling hall in the past, now reduced to a simple, narrow room with a large hearth on either end, marks on the floor where a platform used to be, the walls mottled with old battle scars. It was a bit drafty and cool, but it warmed quickly when they moved wood from a rack and lit a fire. Mr. Flamel had shown it to them on their first afternoon there, a knowing tip to his smile as he watched Harriet inspect the room.

They chatted about nothing consequential, Elara sitting on the window sill nearest the hearth, legs stretched and crossed at the ankles, while Harriet rolled up the sleeves of her buttoned shirt. Elara had slept poorly the last two nights with the Flamels, and given the dark smudges under Harriet’s green eyes, she assumed the other witch hadn’t slept well either. There was a nervous, bothered energy about her that she tried very hard to cover up.

Harriet pursed her lips, tapping her wand against her open palm as she focused on the far wall. She moved her arm in a practiced motion and gave the wand a small, sharp flick at the end. “Expecto Patronum!

Nothing happened.

“Bollucks.”

Elara allowed Howard to fall through her hands to settle on her lap, the dozy snake content to coil up upon himself in the slight dip formed by her legs. He was rather cute, not that Elara would say so to Harriet. God forbid she encouraged her animal hoarding. “Is that the incantation for the Patronus, then?”

“Yeah, according to Snape.” Harriet grimaced and closed her eyes, then tried the incantation again. Nothing occurred. “He said I need to have a ‘happy thought.’”

Elara blinked—as it occurred to her that she’d seen Snape cast the Patronus at least twice, once in their first year, and again last summer, which meant the bleak, miserable wizard had happy thoughts. It was…odd to consider, but Snape was nothing if not odd. She’d been under the impression that Dark wizards could not cast the Patronus; Harriet had said as much after her run-in with Slytherin, and Snape’s words at the end of their second year had intimated his own connection to the Dark Arts.

Maybe that wasn’t a proper Patronus? Elara considered, running one finger over Howard’s long back, tracing his meandering coils. Or he is not as Dark as Slytherin. Interesting.

Harriet sighed, then stretched, Elara grimacing at the loud popping of her spine. She dropped into a dueling stance, fired two hexes at the far wall, twisted, and threw a third. Elara had always admired Harriet’s grace with spell-casting, but her ability truly shone in Defense, lacking the hesitancy Elara saw in others and in herself. Hermione usually mastered a spell first in their trio—but that was through research, studying, and compiled knowledge, whereas Harriet simply relied on instinct and the ‘feel’ of an incantation, as she put it. Elara knew it infuriated Hermione to no end.

Closing her eyes, Harriet took a deep breath, then another. In a softer voice, she said, “Expecto Patronum.

A silver mist warbled from the end of her wand, there and gone, fast a summer rain shower, and Harriet gasped when it vanished, shaking herself from head to foot. Color flushed her cheeks, and sweat began to build at her temples.

“That was something,” Elara commented, petting Howard. He licked her finger. “What was your happy thought, then?”

“I—the first time I flew,” Harriet responded. She cleared her throat and appeared somewhat disoriented, casting puzzled looks at the wand in her hand. “Back in first year. Seemed a happy enough moment to think about.”

“You need something more substantial, apparently.”

Harriet dragged a hand through her mussed fringe. “But that’s the thing; I don’t know how Snape—or anyone else, I guess—does it. I don’t…understand what he meant by happy. Well, his exact words were ‘the encapsulation of sheer, unfettered joy,’” Harriet made a passable attempt of mimicking Snape’s deep, drawling baritone. “Every time I think I might know what he means, that I might have a good thought, I just—I remember shite attached to it, and nothing seems as happy as it did before.”

“Maybe you need more than one thought, something like a compilation of those smaller instances running together to prolong the feeling.”

“I’m not sure. I don’t know if I can do it—and really, I’m more worried about what happens when we have to go back. Will I have to ride the carriage past that bloody Dementor again? That’s a nightmare waiting to happen.” Harriet exhaled through her nose, frustrated. “Bugger it. Wanna duel?”

“No.”

“Aw, why not?”

“I don’t want to get dirty.”

“Why would you get dirty?”

“Because, you always end up cursing me off my feet when we practice.”

“See, that just means you need more practice, not less.”

“No.”

Harriet got a mischievous look about her, and Elara pointed her wand at the other witch in warning. Huffing, Harriet finally turned to the wall again and commenced practicing on her own, which lasted until she grew bored and began experimenting. She kept on testing the elasticity of different spells on the stone until one bounced back right into her face, resulting in a pair of broken glasses and a spectacular bloody nose. Setting Howard aside, Elara rushed to get one of the adults from downstairs and returned with Mr. Flamel.

“There, now,” the wizard said as he set Harriet’s nose and siphoned the blood from her shirt. “No more of zat. We have somewhere to be this evening, and the black eyes might be a little much, oui?”

“Where are we going?” Elara asked as Mr. Flamel repaired Harriet’s glasses and returned them to their perch on the girl’s face. Despite fixing her nose, Harriet would definitely have black eyes later.

“Beauxbatons,” Mr. Flamel replied, casual as could be. Both Elara and Harriet gawked.

“Wait—what, the school? Beauxbatons?”

“Yes. Perenelle and I have—well, you know, business with their Board, and so we have been invited to dinner.” He patted Harriet’s head. “Zer won’t be much time for exploring, but it should be fun, yes?”

 

xXx

 

At precisely seven o’clock that evening, Elara drank half of an antiemetic potion and took the Floo with Perenelle to the Headmistress’ office at Beauxbatons. The Headmistress herself—a towering woman named Madame Maxime who clearly had giant parentage—was there to greet them, vigorously shaking Mr. Flamel’s hand as they spoke in rapid French.

“And ‘ere we have Harriet—.” Mr. Flamel touched Harriet’s shoulder, the short witch doing an amiable job of not gawking at the woman’s incredible height. Perenelle had spent an hour wrangling her hair into a neat French plait, but one curl had already managed to escape, standing up atop her head like a cowlick. “And this is Elara.”

Bonjour, Headmistress.”

Bonsoir, Madame Maxime.” Elara didn’t miss how Mr. Flamel had failed to give their surnames.

Enchanté de faire votre connaissance,” the Headmistress replied with a polite bow of her head. “Poudlard students, Nicolas? Où les avez-vous trouvés?”

Mr. Flamel chuckled, fond, and smiled. “Ah, it is a long story.”

Both Elara and Harriet remained quiet as they followed Madame Maxime and the Flamels from her office through a portrait into the school beyond.

In some ways, Beauxbatons appeared a lot like Hogwarts. They hadn’t seen the outside of the school, of course, but the halls and corridors looked to be made of the same ancient, dark stone, undoubtedly hewn from the mountains surrounding them, and magic hung thick as mist in the air, chasing a chill down Elara’s spine. Even the view of the grounds appeared something like the highlands of northern Scotland if taken in at certain angles.

The similarities ended there. For want of a better word, Elara simply thought Beauxbatons looked rich. Hogwarts had a storied mien to it, an element of care and practicality carefully etched into the foundations—and that, too, existed here at the French academy, but it hid beneath a very, very thick veneer of gold and marble, crystal and delicate embellishments. Hogwarts had statues of notable alumni made of dark granite, while Beauxbatons had busts and immense, soaring scenes chiseled from limestone limned in silver or bronze or precious, glittering gemstones. Plants had a notable presence here, white-barked trees fashioned to grow in the middle of the wide corridors, baby’s breath and angel’s trumpets hanging from glass planters on the walls, the staircases made grand and sweeping into spirals like those of a nautilus shell. Where Hogwarts would use torches, Beauxbatons had quartz chandeliers and rune-lamps—and Elara would eat her hat if this place had anything comparable to the dark, damp dungeons back home.

She didn’t like it.

Elara couldn’t say why, exactly, and she wasn’t usually at a loss for words. Beauxbatons did not lack for beauty or sheer, impressive drama, but something of its grandeur felt frivolous to her. The magic got lost somewhere in the pomp, and it didn’t call to Elara, not the way Hogwarts did with its long, dusty corridors, brooding ghosts, and ancient mysteries, a rightness that resonated in her bones. Maybe she simply wasn’t used to the magic here, out of tune like a violin with its strings drawn too tight. Elara felt quite out of place—which was ridiculous, and the idea almost had her laughing when she considered her own vast fortune interned in the vaults below London. Elara—and Harriet, for that matter—were probably two of the most well-off witches at Hogwarts or magical Britain, and still, they resembled paupers when confronted with the vastness of Beauxbatons’ wealth.

The school’s Dining Chamber continued the theme of garrulous glamour, the largest chandelier Elara had ever seen hanging from the gilded ceiling’s middle. The students that remained for break sat dispersed among a few dozen circular tables draped in white cloth, their school uniforms colored a pale, sky-blue, all of them chatting over their suppers, snatches of French and Spanish and German reaching Elara’s ears. Each table bore an ice sculpture, the frozen shapes gleaming like beings carved from pure diamond, and from somewhere in the room lilted an infernal melody that set Elara’s teeth on edge, not liking the feeling of unseen eyes pressing against her back.

A soft snort dragged her attention back to earth, and Elara met Harriet’s amused look. “What is it?”

“D’you remember when Hermione told us Flamel attended the Académie de Magie Beauxbâtons and said he was its biggest patron?”

“Yes, I believe so. Why?”

“It never occurred to me how big of a patron a man who could turn anything to gold actually was.”

Ah, Elara thought, looking at the Dining Chamber in a new light, wondering what it had appeared like back when Mr. Flamel was a boy and the Philosopher’s Stone was still a distant dream. Probably a lot less gaudy. One of their history books had made a passing remark on Nicolas Flamel once unbalancing the French economy some centuries ago, and Elara caught the wizard’s almost sheepish look when he glanced in their direction.

Like at Hogwarts, the staff ate in the same room as their students, but instead of a dais, the staff table resided on an upper balcony, given an unrivaled view of the tables below and the mountains outside the tall, statuesque windows. The Flamels were well-liked, received with cheers, applause, and kissed cheeks once they cleared the top of the steps leading to the balcony, Elara and Harriet briefly introduced and then summarily dismissed as uninteresting English girls. That suited them just fine, as they couldn’t make sense of anything being said among the adults. The Beauxbatons students had risen to their feet as soon as they entered the chamber, and only once Madame Maxime took her place at the long table’s head did they drop into their chairs again.

Seated at the other end of the table between Perenelle and Mr. Flamel, Elara placed her gloved hands together in her lap, and Harriet fidgeted with her black dress robes, discomfited by the presence of so many strangers. New dishes appeared before them, some kind of garnished soup steaming in front of Elara, though her stomach flip-flopped about when she thought about having to Floo back to the chateau later in the evening.

“Nicolas, adopted some strays, have you?” a short, plump wizard with a black goatee and a Spanish accent asked Mr. Flamel.

Non, non, Maxwell. ‘Arriet and Elara are simply staying with us for their holiday before returning to their studies.”

The wizard grunted in acknowledgment, inspecting the two witches. “Hogwarts students, are you?”

Elara nodded. “Yes, sir.”

“How is old Albus doing? Haven’t heard from him recently.”

“Headmaster Dumbledore is well, as far as we know.”

“We should be seeing ‘im zis summer,” Madame Maxime commented, having heard their brief conversation. “Pour les arrangements du Tournoi.”

“Ah, of course….”

Elara’s jaw ticked, finding their sudden switch out of English rather rude, all things considered. She did wonder what “Tourney arrangements” Professor Dumbledore would be assisting with and whether or not she and Harriet were meant to be privy to that information. Her face remained passive as she spooned soup into her mouth. It tasted of onions and cheese.

As dinner commenced, Elara moved food around on her plate without eating it, more interested in reading the dynamic in the room, which circulated around Mr. and Mrs. Flamel. There was respect in abundance and a certain sense of sycophancy, mainly from a witch and a wizard who sat nearest Mr. Flamel, the pair overly perfumed and wearing too much jewelry. Elara hadn’t caught their names and didn’t wish to know; she rightly assumed they must head Beauxbatons’ Board of Governors, and if there was one person the Board wanted to keep happy, it would be the man who must have financed half of the school’s renovations.

The meal wound down, the professors and staff either taking their leave or remaining to smoke or drink and chat. The smell began to agitate Elara’s allergies, so their sudden polite dismissal from the table to go explore the garden couldn’t have come at a better time. Besides, Harriet appeared dreadfully bored and was prone to the worst kind of mischief when bored. That Maxwell wizard might end up wearing his bouillabaisse as a hat if he wasn’t careful.

They rose from their chairs, and Perenelle took Harriet gently by the wrist before she could dash off and tugged her closer.

“Do not wander too far,” she said, fastening the silver clasp on Harriet’s cloak shut. “Stay to ze jardin, and stay together, oui?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Elara appreciated the motherly sentiment behind Perenelle’s warning, and yet it also amused her, because Harriet might have only been thirteen, but she’d toured the English countryside on her own and had stood against a furious Basilisk larger than a bus; getting lost in Beauxbatons was minor in comparison.

The two Slytherin witches climbed down the stairs and departed through the wide double doors opening directly into what Elara gathered was loosely called “the garden.” It was a garden, perfectly flat and manicured, enclosed in tidy, clipped hedges, though it extended far into the distance and around the building, seeming more and more like a park the longer Elara studied it in the moonlight. She and Harriet finally managed to get a glimpse of Beauxbatons itself, and it glittered like an open orange, bright and glistening with light, more like a palace than a castle.

Elara saw Harriet staring at the single, rounded tower at the palace’s edge, the square windows hooded by stone gables and carved leaves. An outer colonnade stood silhouetted against the night, braziers blazing from atop their stone tops. Beyond that, the tip of a fountain could be seen over the rolling foliage, lit by magic illumination glinting off the golden spigot.

“It’s hard to believe this is a school,” Harriet commented, and Elara scoffed.

“It’s very ostentatious.”

“Oh, Hermione would love it. She goes on about the art museums her parents used to take her to when she was younger, and that’s exactly what this place reminds me of. ‘Course, I’ve never been to a museum. I was supposed to go for a school trip in primary, but Dudley tore up my homework, and I wasn’t allowed after that.” Harriet turned her speculative gaze to the distance again, the skin about her eyes slightly puffy and darkened from that morning. She frowned.

“Is something the matter?”

“No. Not really.”

“You’ve been preoccupied. Is it about what happened at Hogwarts?”

“I—no. Not directly, anyway.” Harriet shuffled her feet, and they came to a stop at the row’s end, the gravel path splintering in a multitude of other directions across the flattened grounds. Faeries lived in the hedges and giggled when they got caught staring, whisking themselves off deeper into the leaves. “I overheard the Flamels say something the other night that’s given me a bit to think about.”

“Was it something bad?”

Harriet shook her head, opened her mouth, then shut it again, conflicting emotions warring on her tired face. “No. It was just—no, never mind.”

They continued walking, Harriet forcing new enthusiasm for the garden that Elara did her best to mirror, thinking on what the Flamels could have possibly said to disquiet Harriet. Lost to her ruminations, Elara barely noted when they descended a set of wide steps bracketing a terrace until the moonlight faded in favor of torches, and Harriet made a soft, appreciative sound.

“It’s a cave,” she noted as they followed the steps down to a vast, echoing antechamber, stalagmites taller than Elara reaching for the rising ceiling. The stone was a pale, buttery yellow, shot through with darker veins of brown and black, and somewhere in the dark echoed the methodical dripping of running water. “Oh, hey, look. There’s paintings.”

Elara followed Harriet toward the paintings in question, the inner wall of the cave covered in ancient and, in some cases, very strange pictographs, a thick shield of magic laid over the space to prevent anyone from touching the surface. Their footsteps echoed as they moved deeper, studying the progression, Harriet commenting on the odd symbols that looked like runes.

“Well, it’s not anything we’ve seen in Ancient Runes so far,” she said, squinting. Elara shook her head.

“It could just be Muggle cave drawings. It’s not necessarily magical.”

“Yeah, but that’d make it even harder to know, wouldn’t it? Everything Muggle and magical used to be a lot more entwined before the International Statute of Secrecy cut a line between the two. That’s why we see the Elder Futhark in both Muggle and magical societies.”

“True.” They came to a narrower passage, and Elara took in the images on the opposing wall, a great herd of winged steeds flying over a forest. Or maybe they were bulls coming over short, spiked mountains, she wasn’t sure. “You could probably ask Mr. Flamel what it used to be like, considering he was born long before the Statue came into place.”

“I have actually asked him before. He said he used to teach Alchemy to the Muggles at Oxford.” Harriet brought her nose closer to the stone. “Magic and the mundane used to work together, but Mr. Flamel says that even though they’re separate now, they still come around to the same ideas eventually. He reckons we’re just taking different roads to the same destinations.”

“Hmm.”

Their wandering brought them through the passage down another flight of steps hinging in upon themselves at sharp, right angles, and Elara started to question whether or not they were allowed to be here. No signs had barred their entrance, and given the wards and railing, some form of visitation was expected here. They came unto an underground chamber—and Elara stopped when she realized the rectangular niches lining the outer walls held bare bones and sarcophagi. There were long benches and a small theatre where classes were undoubtedly conducted, though what courses could be taught here, Elara did not want to guess.

Harriet needed only glance once in Elara’s direction to read her mood and turn them back toward the stairs. They did not speak for several minutes, not until the theatre and the dead were far behind them.

“D’you ever think about where magic came from?” Harriet asked as they climbed. “Or about the kind of stuff even magic can’t explain?”

“How do you mean?”

Shrugging one shoulder, Harriet looked down, and Elara couldn’t quite read her expression in the dark. “I’m not sure myself, to be honest. Magic can account for things that science can’t, right? And there’s also stuff science can explain that the Wizarding world doesn’t recognize or think of.”

“Yes, that’s true.”

“And then there’s things that defy both.”

“Such as…?”

Harriet stopped at the top of the steps and lifted her head, glancing at Elara, then away, the torchlight reflecting off her glasses. “Like where witches and wizards came from. Or how in the bloody hell Slytherin and Tom Riddle and Gaunt are the same, but not the same, person.” She fidgeted. “Or, maybe, how a shadow could move on its own.”

Elara’s brows pulled together as she stared at her god-sister, wondering how the conversation had turned to such a peculiar topic. A shadow moving on its own? Elara hadn’t heard of that before, but then she’d never seen cave paintings or a catacomb until this night, either. “Well, while we might not have an answer to those questions,” she began slowly, working through her thoughts. “It doesn’t negate the existence of the answers. You can never find your socks, and yet they always turn up.”

“Usually in Livi’s nest.”

“Usually in Livi’s nest, yes.” She grinned. “There’s a reason for all things, even if it isn’t readily apparent.”

Harriet made a thoughtful noise, seeming to agree. She studied the wall—and then pointed at one of the painted figures. “I like this one best,” she announced with an air of finality. “Because he looks like he’s flipping the bird to that bloke over there.”

“Harriet.”

“What? Look, he’s got way too many horses, and so this guy over here is proper brassed off about it.”

Elara shook her head in exasperation, and Harriet laughed, the sound loud and unrestrained—which was undoubtedly the reason why they missed the approach of footsteps coming out of the darkness until the intruder lit their wand and startled a pair of yelps from the both of them.

Silver gleamed. The air in Elara’s lungs caught and rushed up her throat and through her mouth, a dizziness so profound overcoming her, Elara could have sworn she’d been trapped spinning in a Floo. A witch dressed in the Beauxbatons uniform stood not a full meter from them, her unbound hair falling in artful silver curls past her shoulders—a light seeming to emit not only from her wand, but also from the girl herself, her dark blue eyes heavy with disdain. Elara couldn’t move, couldn’t—breathe really, heat crawling up from her robes’ collar to paint her face bright red.

Unaffected, Harriet recovered from the surprise and said, “Erm, who’re you?”

One blonde brow quirked. “I am Fleur, a Délégué ‘ere at Beauxbatons,” she sniffed, looking the pair of them up and down, gaze lingering overlong on the Black pin on Elara’s robes. “Vous n’êtes pas autorisé à être ici.”

“We, um, don’t speak French,” Harriet responded, wrong-footed by the witch’s cool tone. “Er—nous ne p-parle? Parle pas français?

Her muddled French earned her another haughty sniff, all while Elara tried and failed to dislodge her tongue from the roof of her mouth. “Hmph. I said you are not allowed to be ‘ere,” the witch—Fleur—repeated. “Ze catacombs are interdites. Madame et Monsieur Flamel are looking pour you.”

“Oh, I hadn’t realized we’d been gone that long—Elara, are you all right?”

“Yes,” Elara coughed. “I—yes, perfectly fine.”

Harriet didn’t believe her and gave her a long, dubious look, but Fleur quickly grew impatient with them both and flipped her hair, striding back the way she’d come. “Se hâter, faire vite.”

Dazed, Elara walked—and shook herself, sinking her teeth into the inside of her cheek with nearly enough force to draw blood. The smell of apricots muddled the wet, decrepit odor of the cave, and it loosened Elara’s breath, though it did little to relieve the knot in her middle. She didn’t much like apricots, but in that instant, she found she rather enjoyed them.

By the time they reached the Dining Chamber again, Elara had forgotten all about the catacombs, the stench of bone dust, or Harriet’s rather cryptic comments about magic, Tom Riddle, or shadows that moved on their own. The strange, beautiful witch disappeared as quickly as she’d come, and Elara’s attention lingered on the doorway, a delicate pink color in her normally pale face. Neither she nor the Flamels, now deep in their cups, saw the shadow that lingered too long to be natural, that clung too close and stretched too far from Harriet’s small footsteps.

The younger witch noticed, sighed, and said nothing at all.


A/N:

Fleur: “Hello.”

Elara: *Barry White intensifies*

Harriet: “Where in the hell is that music coming from?”

Chapter 133: mably the good elf

Chapter Text

cxxxiii. mably the good elf

 

 

After much deliberation, it was decided on the last night of their holiday that Harriet and Elara would take the train back to Hogwarts—though Harriet would bypass the gate and the Dementor posted there by Flooing into the Headmaster’s office from the hearth in the Three Broomsticks. It meant waking at an indecent hour to catch the emerald train back to the Platform Seven and One-Quarter, Mr. Flamel going with them to ensure they made it onto the Hogwarts Express. They had time for a quick breakfast at the Leaky Cauldron, Harriet blearily stirring far too much brown sugar into her porridge, then they returned to Kings Cross, and it was time to depart.

Mr. Flamel surprised Harriet when he bent at the waist to embrace her, the shoulder of his robes smelling of pipe smoke and salt, the clamor of the platform dimmed by the arm wrapped about her shoulders. “Be safe, petit oiseau,” he whispered.

“I will.”

“Be mindful of your surroundings. Keep your wand with you, and write your letters.”

“I will.”

His grip tightened. “Do not worry so about other things. They do not matter. Only you and yours. Comprenez vous?”

“Yes, I promise.”

He released her. “Then off you go.”

Harriet boarded the scarlet train just as the whistle began to blow and great white plumes came issuing from the engine. She settled in a crowded compartment with Elara, Hermione, Draco Malfoy, and his malcontents, the blond boy making his surprise at their presence plain.

“Didn’t you both stay at Hogwarts?”

Elara answered him, but Harriet didn’t hear; she leaned closer to the window, peering through the crowd to find the alchemist in his brown robes waiting on the platform still, and when he raised his hand in salutation, Harriet did the same. The trained pushed itself into motion, and the station disappeared.

Harriet didn’t move for several minutes, not seeing the Muggle streets as they flashed by or the whirling, incandescent glimmer of the wards surrounding the tracks.

“Are you all right?” Hermione asked.

Harriet sat back on the bench and turned away from the window, smiling. “Yes,” she answered, “I’m fine.”

If anyone noticed how tightly she held her hands together, how they shook, no one chose to say a thing.

 

xXx

 

Hermione was miffed with Harriet and Elara. She was miffed for the entire train ride, the feast, and throughout their first day back in classes. Harriet knew Hermione had been genuinely frightened and worried, that’d she spent enough of her own holiday consulting the Marauder’s Map to check up on them—but that didn’t stop jealousy from rearing its head when she learned where Harriet and Elara had spent the last week of break.

“Beauxbatons,” she muttered under her breath for the thousandth time, flipping through a tome with a bit too much fervor, the sound echoing in the Aerie’s strange, muffled halls. “Beauxbatons. You went to Beauxbatons!”

“Just the once. Hermione, it really wasn’t that big of deal—.”

The frazzled witch shut the book and slotted it back into its space on the shelf, checking the spine of the one next to it before taking it down. “It is, though!” She hopped off the rolling ladder and stomped back into the lounge where the Founders’ portraits resided. Neither Salazar nor Rowena were present at the moment, a black dog sprawled on one of the winged armchairs, Elara either too tired or bored to continue perusing the volumes Hermione dropped on the table. “They don’t just let students from others schools go wandering about their halls! Durmstrang won’t even allow outsiders to know where their school is!”

“Er, well, we weren’t exactly allowed to go inspect things—.”

Hermione huffed as if this was the worst crime of all. “You ate dinner there—dinner! Sitting by Master Maxwell Henchizo, one of the world’s most renown Arithmancy scholars—.”

“Honestly, he was a bit of a berk—.”

“And you don’t understand how rare that chance is! You’re friends with Nicolas Flamel, for Merlin’s sake! He’s a legend the world over, and you once hexed him off a dock!”

“He’s just a person like any other, Hermione.” Harriet felt a mite peeved with her best friend. This was part of what made Hermione a Slytherin, whether she recognized it or not: her drive to take advantage of opportunities, to recognize others by their achievements and skills and to make connections. “I did get you those glass lenses while we were in France.”

Some of the frustration went out of Hermione’s expression as she glanced at the lenses gently set on cloth in the table’s middle. “Yes, yes you did,” Hermione said. “That was very thoughtful and just what we needed for the Protean Charm. Oh, I’m sorry for being so intolerable, Harriet. I’ve been all out of sorts, thinking about how I left things with my parents—.”

“I know,” Harriet soothed, sitting down next to Hermione on the dusty sofa. “I know, it’s okay.”

“And I can’t stop fretting over what happened to the two of you in the dormitory over the break. I could hardly stand to sleep there last night—.”

“Dumbledore pulled us aside and said Snape added a new ward to the door. It only lets in the witches of our year and a handful of adults.”

“That’s something, I suppose.” Hermione released a harried breath and pushed the cloud of her hair back from her face. “It’s all so mad, isn’t it? The Ministry has barely said a word on Black, and they’ve made no headway at all into catching Greyback—but I read in the Muggle paper about a man who appeared to have been mauled by a wolf, left in the street for all to see! It coincided with the last full moon and was in Banffshire. That’s not terribly far away.”

Harriet patted her arm despite her own stomach twisting. “But there’s no reason for him to come here.”

“But that’s the thing; he’s not of his right mind, Harriet, neither him nor Black. The Ministry inspections of Azkaban are confidential, naturally, but rumors get around in the gossip columns, and apparently, Greyback hasn’t been wholly lucid for years. He doesn’t need a reason for anything he does.” Her gaze lingered on the French lenses, the Marauder’s Map, and the pages of Harriet’s careful drawings. She kept fiddling with a thin, gold chain hidden under the collar of her shirt.

Harriet decided they needed a change of subject. Talking about escaped werewolves in the Aerie gave her the creeps. “You know, you could write a letter to Mr. Flamel, if you wanted,” she said, trying to cheer her friend up. “You could ask him all the questions you want, then, and I know he’d be pleased to meet you.”

“Oh, I couldn’t possibly,” Hermione rejected, stuttering. “No, I couldn’t take up his time like that!”

“Then give me a list of your questions and I’ll send it. Honestly, he loves answering questions about magic.”

A small woof brought their attention to the armchair as Elara startled herself out of her own dreams and sat up, ears swiveling as she blinked at them and then the carriage clock on the mantel. She changed forms—only, her leg didn’t quite have enough space, and her shin slammed into the table’s edge, the items on top of it jumping in the air. “Hell and damnation!” Elara gasped, paling. “That hurt!

“Are you okay?”

“Fine,” she coughed, still rubbing at the injured spot. “What’s more important—can’t either of you tell time?” She pointed at the clock. “It’s past curfew!”

Harriet gaped. “We missed supper?”

“Supper?!” Hermione squawked, snatching up her satchel and shoving her things into it once more. “Supper?! Harriet, if we don’t get back into the dorms, Professor Slytherin is going to murder us!”

“He’s going to murder us anyway. He knows when people cross the barrier into the common room.”

“Oh, that’s a myth the older students tell! He doesn’t really know.” Hermione didn’t look convinced. If anything, she looked more frazzled than ever, and Elara had a definite limp when she stood and grabbed her own bag. They hurried to find a Moon Mirror out of the Aerie—but Harriet hadn’t been kidding with her dejection over missing dinner. She’d spent much of the morning outside, running to burn off nervous anxiety, so she’d skipped breakfast and had only picked over her lunch. She was starving.

They exited into the outer corridor beyond the Aerie, stopping at the portrait of the shepherdess and her gaggle of honking geese, knowing that beyond that point, they’d be fair game for any of the patrolling professors. Harriet could see night beyond the windows now, and it made her shoulders feel heavy, having not realized how much time had passed while they researched and chatted in the Aerie.

“Could we say we got locked inside the library?”

“We’ve used that excuse half a dozen times by now. Not even Sprout will buy it.”

Harriet reached into her empty pocket. “Shit. Hermione, do you have the Marauder’s Map?”

“No, I left it on the table. Don’t look at me like that, I didn’t realize we’d need it!”

“Should I go back for it?”

“I—no, don’t be silly. Let’s just be quick about it, shall we?”

Gathering her resolve, Hermione crossed the invisible boundary, and Harriet and Elara fell into step behind her. They’d gone perhaps a full meter before a door creaked open on ancient hinges and a squealing green blur slammed into Hermione’s legs, taking them out from under her.

“Ah!” Harriet crumpled under Hermione’s weight, and though Elara managed to dodge Harriet’s failing arms, she tripped on her robes and still landed on her backside with a yelp. The green blur resolved itself into a house-elf, who jumped on Hermione’s knees and positively trembled from head to foot.

“Miss Herme-ninny, Miss Herme-ninny!” he chirped, high voice bouncing in the stone hall. “It is Dobby, Miss Herme-ninny! Dobby is so happy to see you again!”

“D-Dobby?” Hermione asked, a bit dazed by her sudden collision with the floor. She sat up and stared at the creature, wincing at the volume of his squeals. “Dobby, what on earth are you doing here?”

“Dobby is working here, Miss Herme-ninny!” The elf stopped bouncing to puff out his skinny chest and gesture at the badge pinned to his toga. The clean white toga appeared to have been a pillowcase in a former life, and the Hogwarts crest had been sewn into place above a little pocket. He had on a pair of meticulously cleaned Quidditch gloves. “After Dobby is leaving the Malfoys, he came to Hogwarts! Mr. Headmaster Dumblydore is paying Dobby a Galleon a week and a day off every month!”

“A—a Galleon?!” Hermione was aghast. “Dobby, just because you left the Malfoys doesn’t mean you have to settle for such a low stipend!”

The house-elf calmed somewhat, ears drooping, and he fixed Hermione with a serious look. “Dobby is very proud of his wages, Miss Herme-ninny! Mr. Headmaster Dumblydore offered Dobby ten Galleons a week and weekends off, but Dobby isn’t wanting that at all!”

“But—.”

“Dobby likes being free,” the elf asserted. “But Dobby likes work! And he is liking having a big home to take care of.”

Hermione had more to say, her mouth pursed in a dangerous line too much like McGonagall’s, but she reigned herself in and exhaled. “So long as that’s what you want,” she muttered. “Don’t settle for anything less, Dobby.”

“No, Miss!” He cheered—too loudly in Harriet’s opinion, and she peeked toward the thicker shadows, swearing she’d hex Snape if he popped out of nowhere and scared the life out of her again.

“Er, Hermione?”

“Yes?”

“Who is this, exactly?”

“Oh!” the witch exclaimed, blushing. “Oh, I’m sorry, Dobby, how rude of me. These are my friends Harriet Potter and Elara Black. Harriet, Elara, this is Dobby.”

“Hello!”

“Hullo, Dobby.”

Elara grunted, still miffed at having been thrown to the floor. “How did you two come to be acquainted?”

Hermione’s embarrassed blush deepened. “I, erm, may have had a hand in freeing him? He used to belong to the Malfoys.”

“But this is a secret Dobby isn’t telling! Miss Herme-ninny could be in trouble!”

Elara looked between the two still sitting on the floor. “For goodness’ sake,” she finally said, “Hermione, don’t ever try to free Kreacher.”

“What? How could you say that?! He’s a living, sentient being and deserves freedom—.”

“The last time a Black house-elf was let go, my great-aunt Lucretia got stabbed apparently. Kreacher would literally burn down the house with us and himself inside. You can’t be flippant with a house-elf’s life, Hermione. I’m quite serious about this.”

“I—.” Grinding her teeth, Hermione shooed Dobby back a step so she could stand, accepting Harriet’s hand in getting up. “I think you’re wrong, but yes, I hear you. I wouldn’t do anything rash—and I’ve never met Kreacher, I’ll have you know.”

“Be thankful for that. I have yet to break him of the habit of calling Harriet an ‘it’.”

Harriet’s stomach chose that moment to announce its displeasure, the resulting growl nearly as loud as Dobby’s blathering. It was a wonder no professors or prefects had come upon them yet with how much noise they were making. “Sorry.”

“Is Miss Harry Potter hungry?”

“A bit, yeah. Wait, Miss what—?

“Dobby can take you to the kitchens!” the house-elf hollered, hopping from one foot to the other. “He can lead you there, past mean Mr. Filch and his nasty cat. He’ll be here soon and Dobby wanted to tell you!”

The mere mention of the crotchety caretaker had the three witches scrambling to gather their things and chase Dobby away from the library, the clatter of their footsteps ringing loud and incriminating in the enclosed space. The house-elf—either through magic or instinct—knew exactly when to change passages and showed the trio various odd shortcuts behind tapestries or statues, leading them ever downward. They reached the dungeons finally, but instead of heading off toward the lower stairwell where the Slytherins resided, Dobby elected to take a higher corridor, this one well-lit and limned with bright torches. Most of the portraits seemed to be of food for some reason or another, and Harriet could only look on with confusion as Dobby stopped in front of a picture depicting a large fruit bowl.

“You have to be tickling the pear!” Dobby explained with an excited head bob.

Exchanging glances, Hermione reached up to tickle the green pear resting in the silver bowl—and it giggled, wiggling under her persistent fingers until a doorknob appeared. Hermione took the knob in hand, twisted, and the portrait fell inward.

Dozens of large, ogling eyes swiveled in their direction as the three witches stepped through the revealed entrance and froze, the heavenly smell of leftovers making Harriet drool. It seemed silly after spending nearly three years in the castle that she hadn’t considered how many house-elves must live there with them; she knew of them in the abstract, having had Rikkety feed them at Grimmauld in the summers, but she’d never considered how the classrooms and common room stayed so tidy, how their laundry got washed, little tears hemmed and darned, her shoes always neatly placed by her nightstand in the morning. Guilt swelled and dimmed Harriet’s hunger.

“Is the Misses needing anything?” one of the house-elves asked, hopping down from her wooden stool. It seemed most of the elves were enjoying an evening break, it being after supper but too early to go clean the common rooms, though a few congregated about counters and chilled drawers, preparing food to be made in the morning. There were walls of old-fashioned ovens carefully tended, large open hearths, great crates of picked vegetables, and dozens upon dozens of tiny little shoes on a wooden rack, some still dotted with mud or snow. Four replicas of the House tables stretched across the middle of the room, and Harriet wondered if they were directly under the Great Hall here.

Dobby bulled his way in front of them, puffing himself up with inexplicable pride. Harriet noted a couple of the elves grimaced at his presence. “Miss Harry Potter is hungry!” he announced.

A sudden flurry of movement overtook them, Harriet cursing under her breath as tiny hands pushed and shoved her over to one of the tables—the Hufflepuff replica. Hermione was forced onto the bench across from her, her face gone red and apocalyptic. A teetering stack of sandwiches slid into place between them.

“This is slave labor,” Hermione hissed, her hair seeming to swell under the force of her indignation. “How can Hogwarts condone this?! How can anyone?!”

Elara took a seat next to her. “It’s not slave labor. No, thank you—,” she added to a house-elf trying to push a tureen of potatoes toward her. “Tea would be lovely, though.”

The house-elf jumped in recognition—and Hermione glared. “Explain yourself.”

“Hogwarts belongs to the house-elves just as much as it belongs to the wizards. Morse-so, even.” She accepted a steaming cup of Chamomile tea with another word of thanks. “What would you do, Hermione? Would you have them leave their home?”

“I would have them fairly compensated for their work!” She crossed her arms and refused to so much as glance at the saucers and plates of edible treats being piled on the table. “I would have them demand wages and equal rights and to be treated fairly!”

“And if that’s not what they want?”

Hermione narrowed her eyes. Harriet considered taking the platter of sandwiches and making a run for the dormitory, Professor Slytherin be damned. She hated when her friends bickered. “’Birds born in a cage think flying is an illness.’”

“Don’t presume to lecture me.” Elara sipped her tea, brow furrowed. “I am not advocating for cruelty; having been raised in it, I can assure you being struck and beaten with a cane is a miserable experience I would wish on only the most perverse of souls. You simply shouldn’t assume you know what’s best for house-elves or any other magical being because you think they’re downtrodden or lesser. They don’t view themselves as lesser, and they shouldn’t. Half the wars we’ve had against the goblin nation can be traced back to the wizards attempting to exert their will over them.”

“This is different.”

“Is it?”

Yes,” Hermione snapped, turning her glower onto Harriet for a moment when the shorter witch dared reach for a goblet of pumpkin juice. “I’m disappointed in you, Elara Black!”

“I—.”

“…Elara Black?”

The dry, reedy voice of one of the house-elves cut across their conversation—or, well, their argument—and the three witches turned to look at an elf peering up into Elara’s face. She was old, given the abundant wrinkles on her squashed face and the cataracts forming on her bulbous eyes. Uncertain, Elara said, “Yes, I’m Elara…?”

The elf burst into tears.

“See, now look what you’ve done!” Hermione gasped. “You’ve made her cry!”

“I didn’t mean to!” Elara rushed to find her handkerchief and turn on the bench, facing the elf. “I’m terribly sorry, I—.”

The elf accepted the handkerchief and dabbed at her wet eyes. “You is kind,” she warbled. “Like Miss Marlene.”

Elara stiffened. “Pardon?”

“Miss Elara isn’t recognizing Mably, but Mably knows Miss Elara.” The house-elf—Mably—smiled, holding the damp handkerchief close to her chest. “Mably knew Miss Elara when she was just a baby! I is missing Miss Marlene very much. Mably was a McKinnon elf, before. Many years ago now.”

“A McKinnon elf?” The question came out soft, breathless. Harriet and Hermione glanced at one another, tense, while most of the other house-elves begun to shuffle off toward their own tasks. Only Dobby remained, standing close to Hermione’s side. Past discussions had revealed how very little Elara knew about the matriarchal side of her family; the McKinnons had all perished in the war, and even those friends of Marlene that Elara had learned of—namely Lily Potter and Alice Longbottom—had passed on. “And you…knew my mother? Marlene McKinnon?”

“I is knowing Miss Marlene her whole life. Mably was there when Miss Marlene was born.” Mably blew her nose again, and when Elara gave the bench next to her an uncertain pat, the house-elf surprised Harriet by actually taking a seat. “You is looking a lot like Mr. Sirius, Miss, but I see Miss Marlene in you, too!”

The mention of Sirius Black had Elara stiffening again, and in the bright glow of the cooking fire, hate flashed through her colorless eyes like a knife in the dark.

“I is being there when Miss Elara was born, too!” Mably patted Elara’s clenched fist. “Mably watched Miss Elara after she came to live at the manor. Mr. Sirius left her with Miss Marlene to keep safe. There was many bad wizards in those days. He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named was everywhere, and Mr. Sirius was scared.”

Harriet blinked, wiping her mouth of crumbs. That’s…odd. Worse than odd, it doesn’t make sense.

“Mably,” Elara said, her voice still soft but now insistent, intense. “Mably, if I was left with Marlene—how did I end up at the—the orphanage? The Muggle orphanage?”

The old house-elf wrung her hands. “Mably took you there, Miss Elara.”

Elara stared. Somewhere deeper in the kitchen, a glass shattered, and an elf sighed.

“Mably is a good house-elf, the best! She served the Noble House of McKinnon and did exactly what Miss Marlene told her to do. Miss Marlene was worried—she did not trust the rat-man. No, no, not at all!” Mably gave her head a vigorous shake, ears flapping. “Miss Marlene had a plan, a just-in-case plan. When the bad wizards came to the manor, Mably was to take Miss Elara to the Muggle place! It had to be secret, secret! So the rat-man wouldn’t know, so no one would know! Miss Marlene was supposed to go after Miss Elara, but—.” The hand wringing increased, silver tears beading in the corner of Mably’s milky eyes. “Miss Marlene couldn’t leave. The bad wizards changed the wards. Only Mably could leave, and when Mably came back for Miss Marlene—there was no more manor. There was being only fire, and no Miss Marlene.”

Silence followed Mably’s story, the kind of silence that came upon a person in a wave, roaring in their ears until the whole world seemed leagues and leagues away. Elara was upset; Harriet couldn’t see much of her face, but she could see how hard her shoulders shook with restrained emotion.

“I is not knowing what to do. Mr. Sirius said not to go to the Black house no more, to not talk to Kreacher. Miss Marlene only said to take Miss Elara to the Muggle place. They took care of babies there, and it was secret. Safe from the rat-man. Mably had no home. No family. I came to Hogwarts, it being where a lot of homeless elves go.” Mably finally sensed something was amiss with Elara and hesitated, tiny hand touching her arm. “Is Miss Elara okay?” A pause. “Is Mably a good elf? Did she do the right thing for Miss Elara?”

For a long moment, Elara didn’t speak. Had she, Harriet was certain she would have shaken herself to pieces, a sob escaping on a choked breath before she covered her mouth and jerked her head away from her friends, hiding the tears. “You did brilliantly, Mably,” she managed. “You saved my life. My mum would have been proud.”

Mably smiled.

As Elara continued to cry silent, angry tears and the house-elf sat gently patting her hand, Harriet couldn’t help but think of what Mably had said. She gazed toward the fire and felt the heat of it against her face, a yawn building in her chest, her eyes dry and tired behind her spectacles.

Rat-man, the elf had said—and Livius had called the intruder in their dormitory the rat one, hadn’t he? The coincidence there seemed too big to ignore, but what was the correlation? Was that Sirius Black? What did it mean?

Who is the rat-man?


 

A/N: 

The quote, “Birds born in a cage think flying is an illness” is by Alejandro Jodorowsky.

Dobby: “Ah, yes, the witch I hold in highest regards and must greet most respectfully.”

Also Dobby: *b o d y s l a m*

Chapter 134: blood and ginger fur

Chapter Text

cxxxiv. blood and ginger fur

 

 

January gave way to February in its usual, ailing way, the final, straggling bits of foliage and life succumbing to the harshest depths of winter’s grasp. In Minerva’s honest opinion, it was the worst time of year, and not one she thought anyone should have to suffer through in the bleeding wilds of the frozen highlands. In her thirty-seven years of teaching at Hogwarts, she must have submitted half a dozen petitions to the Board requesting the summer and winter terms be switched—but the stuffy toffs on the Board couldn’t be bothered to give up their summer vacations to ease the burden of actually living in the blighted tundra from November to March.

This year proved particular in its brutality. The Dementors swarmed their borders in excess and drove sleet through the air, the blasted, malingering monsters coming up on the unawares in Hogsmeade or on the road whenever the fancy took them. Pomona had needed to spend an afternoon with Poppy after a run-in with the beasts on her way to get a pint at Rosmerta’s, and Trelawney had come running back bawling her eyes out after trying to go to Puddifoot’s for an order of tea leaves. Personally, Minerva thought it more likely the brainless fraud had seen a paper sack in the wind and panicked, but her incompetence didn’t negate the inarguable horridness of the Dementors’ presence.

Minerva sighed, watching the ice strike against the windows. She might not be terribly old for a witch, but she was by no means young, and the cold sank into her bones something fierce. Poppy had run out of the camphor potion she preferred, having to treat more than one spot of frostbite on the Quidditch players determined to practice in the abysmal weather. Frowning, Minerva side-eyed Severus, wondering if she could guilt him into making more.

The Potions Master sat more or less slumped in his chair, elbows propped on the armrests as he glared out across the hall of whispering students. Given it was a mixed group of Gryffindors and Slytherins of various years meant to be quietly studying, Minerva thought whispering was excellent behavior. She’d had to rise more than once from the High Table to chastise the Weasley twins and their classmates, but otherwise, the study hall had been simple enough to manage—boring even. Minerva almost wished someone would set off a Dungbomb to give her something to do besides grouse about the miserable weather.

Severus continued to sit still and solemn, deep shadows forming under his dark eyes. His glower remained on Remus for the most part, who made steady progress up and down the row, pausing every now and then to assist a student with a question. Several times Minerva witnessed him turning to look at the Slytherin table—at the trio of Slytherin witches who got into far too much trouble for their own good. Miss Weasley sat with them as well, and the four of them had their heads bent close in rapid conversation.

Something glittered.

“Severus,” Minerva said, squinting. “What is it that Miss Potter and Miss Granger are doing?”

He stirred and inclined his head toward her to indicate he was listening.

“They have some kind of glass lens. Do you know what it is?” Potter had the lens in hand, etching runes along the brass edge with a knife from her Potions kit, stopping to consult her friends and the book open in front of her.

Severus shrugged.

“You’re being intolerable, I hope you know.”

“Minerva, if I bothered myself every time Potter and her little gang did, said, or picked up anything they shouldn’t, I’d have died of an aneurysm before the end of her first year. If they’re not in immediate danger of having their faces blown off, I do not care.”

“Well, I see you’re in a mood.” Minerva crossed her arms, lips pursed, and Severus ignored her. Lyla Muldoon, one of the Slytherin prefects, came forward to ask him a question regarding a rather finicky potion, and though Minerva gave the conversation half of her attention, she couldn’t follow the deeper complexities, having never been an exceptional potioneer herself. Her eye roved the hall and, once more, saw Remus lift his head and glance toward Harriet and her friends.

Why does he keep doing that?

One of the doors leading into the hall opened, and Slytherin came swanning in, his expression placid and rather bored as he came up the aisle. Severus stiffened next to her and sat up in his seat, dismissing Muldoon before the Defense instructor stepped onto the dais and approached the table. By all rights, it should have been Slytherin sitting with her minding his charges this afternoon, not that Minerva was complaining. His red eyes cut toward Severus with unmistakable menace, and rage prickled in Minerva’s chest when Severus reacted by bowing his head. Oh, it was all very subtle; she doubted either wizard even noticed it, but Minerva did, the smallest of flinches tipping Snape’s chin ever so slightly toward his chest.

Slytherin flicked a bit of folded parchment onto the table before Severus, and he snatched hold of it, declining to open it in the hall. “I require that potion by the morning.”

A muscle flexed in Severus’ jaw. “Of course.”

Slytherin smiled at him and at Minerva—more a baring of sharp, white teeth than anything, like a fox with a rabbit caught in his jaws. He departed in that same quiet and off-putting manner of his, gliding down along the row where his Slytherins sat—hesitating when passed Potter’s back. The girl had her head down, nose in a book—but Minerva saw how the items in front of the trio had been hastily shuffled the moment Slytherin entered the Great Hall. The wizard stopped for only a second, not speaking, then vanished the way he’d come.

Snape slumped into his seat again, scowling.

Minerva couldn’t fathom why Severus gave his allegiance to the Dark Lord when he appeared so unfathomably exhausted at times like this. No, that wasn’t the truth; she did understand, after a fashion, because when she’d learned Severus Snape had become a Death Eater, Minerva…hadn’t recognized the name.

She remembered the day, sitting alone with Albus in his office with the purple eaves of twilight settling on the grounds, and the Headmaster told her Severus Snape was a Death Eater—a Death Eater now under his thumb, working for the Order. Albus hadn’t liked him then and neither had Minerva, because she couldn’t even conjure up a face to pair with the name; years later, Minerva realized Albus hadn’t trusted the boy, not as he did now, and it was only when he came to work at Hogwarts that she remembered who he was. Snape had been an odd, mistrustful child, shabby and as sour as a kicked Kneazle—and for all that he loomed dark and thunderous in the present, he’d left little impression during his school days. He’d been a background caricature in an overwhelming diorama of pure-blood sycophancy, a lackey who’d done little more than hex Minerva’s Gryffindors bloody and try her patience with his condescending attitude.

Death Eaters were not as plentiful or as easy to spot as the Ministry propaganda in those days led the public to believe. Oh, it’d been utter bedlam, friends and neighbors and family members turning on one another, certain one or the other had knelt to You-Know-Who, and while Dark sympathizers and agents had been everywhere, Minerva understood that Death Eaters, specifically, were an inner-cadre chosen by Tom Riddle himself, and they weren’t thick on the ground. The Order spent many nights formulating speculative lists on their identities—and not once had the name Severus Snape come up.

It was ironic, Minerva thought, how little they all knew of one another. Professors were human, fallible; they had favorites. Snape had been an intractable Slytherin boy quick to spit vitriol and retreat—a nobody. Minerva’s favorites had been James and Lily—Remus, Peter, and…Sirius. They’d been so kind, so likable, and they’d used magic in such wondrous ways, whereas Severus and his ilk levered it like a bullwhip, every lesson with those future Dark followers like trudging uphill through the mud. Twenty years ago, Minerva had been so confident of her worldview, so sure those of her House were better, would know better than boys like Severus Snape. More the fool her.

After Black’s betrayal, Minerva forced herself to look, to read the stories and the obituaries and the arrest logs—because Black hadn’t been alone. He hadn’t been a sole outlier in his deceit. She forced herself to learn and recognize the names of every Gryffindor who’d taken the same cowardly path and had been indicted as sympathizers or worse. She studied the names of those Slytherins who’d been murdered or forced from the country because they wouldn’t bow to You-Know-Who. Her perception of the world shuddered and bent under the knowledge of her own partisan behavior as Minerva realized the children she’d loved best of all had betrayed them. Betrayed her.

She’d looked on in shock and horror as Severus Snape entered the Great Hall the morning after he lost his eye, sat down, and kept working. Minerva hadn’t known him well then, hadn’t trusted him, and still he’d shown more backbone and wherewithal than she herself could have mustered.

So, Minerva both did and didn’t understand why Severus had fallen in with Tom Riddle. He’d been a rude, sharp-tongued youth, and only You-Know-Who had been smart enough to look beyond that and find something more in the young man. Minerva knew Severus would be furious if he discovered how she pitied him, because though she recognized he’d not been a child when he made his choice and so should reap the consequences, had he really had another option? Or had people like Minerva, with her inattention and disregard, taken that choice from him?

She didn’t know. How many others had she failed over the years?

Minerva rose and left the table, descending among the students in a bid to quiet her unhelpful maundering. She cycled through her Gryffindors first, and most had the good sense to hide their Quidditch magazines and Witch Weekly rags before she passed them by. The majority of the Slytherins had actual classwork before them, making good use of the study period, and Potter pulled her book on runes over that glass lens when Minerva neared. The Transfiguration mistress snorted as she held out her hand, palm up.

“What have you there, Miss Potter?”

“Er, nothing, ma’am?”

“Let me see it.”

Shifting, the girl eventually removed the lens from under the book and placed it in Minerva’s hand. It weighed less than a Galleon, but the magic in it had a palpable weight to it, Minerva’s brow rising as she brought the lens nearer her eye and witnessed how the magic within glittered in blue fractals against the candlelight. Lovely. She’d thought it was perhaps a prank contraption from the village—not that Potter, Granger, or Black were much for pranking—or maybe a toy of some sort. A cursory inspection showed a considerable amount of Charms inlaid into the glass, anchored with runes carefully marked around the outside. Not a toy, then. Bathsheda and Filius would certainly be fascinated, if only because its purpose wasn’t evident despite the magic humming against her skin.

“What is this?”

“It’s nothing, professor.”

Minerva gave the girl a withering look, red darkening Potter’s cheeks.

“Well, not anything yet, I guess. It’s just a trinket.”

It wasn’t, obviously, but Minerva could find nothing Dark, dangerous, or disruptive about the object, so she handed it back to Potter. “Interesting work, Miss Potter. I do hope to see that same kind of effort reflected in your Transfiguration homework, yes?”

Miss Potter stuttered, and Miss Black ducked her head to hide her grin. Minerva turned and straightened as she felt Remus approach, their History of Magic instructor smiling as he came over to see what had grabbed Minerva’s interest. Minerva returned his smile—if tight tight-lipped and stiff, the motion not reaching her eyes. She’d always been fond of him, he was such a good, studious lad, and yet, though she trusted Albus with her life, she couldn’t say the same for Remus. She had never and would never hold his lycanthropy against him, but it stood to reason the poor boy could be susceptible to the Dark Lord’s silver tongue. Blind faith in her Gryffindors had killed Lily, James, and Peter, and it had doomed an entire House to Voldemort’s tender mercies.

“Everything all right?” he asked.

“Perfectly fine, Remus.”

“Actually, Professors,” Miss Granger interrupted, shuffling through her parchment and books. “May I ask a question? Have either of you ever come across this spell?”

She held up a sheet of her careful handwriting for their inspection, Minerva adjusting her spectacles as she read. “Proteus Memoro? No, I can’t say I’ve heard of that particular iteration of the Protean Charm.”

Remus squinted at the page, then at the girls, an uncertain suspicion lurking in his eyes. “It’s a very old version of the Charm, used by the magical philosophers of Greece. They were said to be just as verbose as their Muggle counterparts and prone to forgetting what they’d said. Proteus Memoro recalled memories into print.” He handed the sheet back to Miss Granger. “If you’re interested in learning more, I’m sure Madam Pince has a book on Grecian Charms somewhere in the library.”

Miss Granger grinned. “Thanks, Professor!”

Now Minerva really wanted to know what mischief they meant to get into, poking about ancient magic practiced by old bampots, and she wondered if Severus had a point about worrying himself right into an early grave if he cared to take note of everything the children did.

“They always come up with the oddest questions,” Remus commented as they walked back toward the staff table. “Filius was telling me just the other day how Miss Potter seemed rather insistent on him teaching her the circumdo incantation.”

Circumdo?” Minerva frowned. “That’s just a baseline ward. A bit beyond a third-year perhaps, but simple enough.”

“She was most interested in how it would interact with a tying of inguz and laguz.”

Puzzled, Minerva paused, glancing at the girls again. Inguz and laguz represented seed and water, respectively, and if paired together, they formed an anchor and a conduit. Home and nourishment, intuition and flexibility—or, in a basic sense, stability and movement. It was an odd choice for circumdo, given one most often wanted protections affixed to the ward, not an inherent mobility that would allow the ward to yield to other magic and pop like a soap bubble. What on earth? “They’re going to turn my hair gray, mark my words.”

Remus chuckled.

It was then that the door to the hall came open again, and Minerva half-expected to see Slytherin’s smarmy mug rejoin them once more—but the boy coming inside was shorter and much redder, Ronald Weasley’s face flushed enough to match his tousled hair. Longbottom had reported his absence at the beginning of the study period; Mr. Weasley had come down with a rather convenient stomachache he showed no sign of now as he marched into the room dragging…a bedsheet.

“Granger!” he shouted.

Minerva heard herself groan. “What now?”

Heads swiveled to stare at Weasley as he strode right over to Miss Granger, who blinked at him in apparent confusion, her work forgotten. “…yes?”

He brandished the sheet at her, seeming oblivious to Minerva and Remus’ approach. She couldn’t hear him, but Minerva knew Severus would have left the table as well. “Look! Look at this!”

“It—it’s a sheet?”

“Blood! There’s blood on it! And hair!” He brandished a handful of short, ginger fluff, practically spitting in his fury. “Scabbers is gone, and there’s blood on my sheets and hair from your bloody familiar, Granger!”

“I—.”

“He’s DEAD! Dead because of you!”

Potter had quite enough of the youngest Weasley boy screaming at her friend and decided to speak up. “Fuck off, Weasley.”

The profanity shook Minerva from her surprise. “Detention,” she said on reflex, and when the girl gaped at her in shock, Minerva forced steel into her tone. “I have warned you again and again about your foul language, Miss Potter, and I am tired of hearing it. Now, Mr. Weasley, what is the meaning of this?”

He jabbed a shaking hand at Miss Granger. “She lets her mangy cat into the tower and he has it out for Scabbers! He killed Scabbers!”

“I don’t let Crookshanks do anything, Ronald!”

“Your stupid animal killed my familiar!”

By now, Fred and George Weasley had made their way over, and the latter placed a hand on Mr. Weasley’s shoulder. “Ron, mate, you should probably calm down a bit.”

“You’re causin’ a scene.”

“Scabbers was old as dust, and Granger isn’t the only one with a ginger cat….”

“Indeed,” Severus sneered, sweeping forward, arms crossed against his broad chest. “I believe Mr. Weasley has earned himself a detention as well, don’t you agree, Professor McGonagall?”

Ronald balked. “That’s—that’s not fair! Sir!”

“Oh? Then perhaps you should think twice before throwing a fit and dragging your sheet about the castle like an insolent child who’s wet the bed.” Snickering echoed through the hall. “Quiet! Your study period has not ended.” When no one moved, Severus’ temper snapped, and he whirled on the ogling students. “Get back to work!”

Heads lowered toward the tables.

Pinching the bridge of her nose in frustration, Minerva turned from the fuming Potions Master and addressed the youngest male Weasley. “He is correct, Mr. Weasley. Throwing needless accusations at another student and causing such a ruckus deserves detention, not to mention skipping your lessons when you’re perfectly well enough to come stomping down here in a strop. I will see what we can do about searching for your—Scabbers, was it?”

The boy sniffled. “Yes, Professor. He’s my rat.”

Privately, Minerva considered it a miracle the creature hadn’t died earlier; smaller prey animals, toads and mice and such, usually didn’t last long in a castle full of cats and owls. Or—and now her attention slid to Potter, the girl pouting as she scribbled with her quill—snakes. She said none of this to the poor lad, of course, and decided to send him off with his brothers to Poppy for a Calming Draught. Miss Granger looked close to tears, mortified by Weasley screaming in such a public venue, so Minerva dismissed her and her friends as well, if only to rid herself of the headache.

Merlin have mercy and spare me the migraine this evening.

She nearly ran into Remus as she returned to her seat, the wizard watching the doors with a contemplative expression she didn’t much care to consider at the moment. Whatever it was, it would have to wait. She should not have wished something more eventful to happen.

After a time spent silent and stewing, the hall more subdued after the Potions Master’s outburst, Minerva glanced again at Severus, at the sharp lines of his profile and the curtain of his untidy hair. He glared at the back of Remus’ head. “Hypothetically speaking,” she proposed. “Why would you tie inguz and laguz to a plain circumdo?”

Severus scoffed. “I wouldn’t. The ward would collapse like wet tissue paper.”

“Yes, that’s my assumption as well. But if you were to do it anyway?”

Irritated, Snape’s glare move to her—and then his black eyes shifted, sharp and flat in the candlelight, something unfathomable stirring in that thick skull of his. Then, he smiled—a snide twist of his mouth Minerva knew always meant bad things for her—and he settled into his chair, a hand on his chin.

She was not pleased. “You know the answer, don’t you?”

“Perhaps.”

“You’re not not going to tell me, are you? You bastard.”

“Information, Minerva. It’s all about information.”

 


A/N:

Minerva: “Why did I dislike you so much as a student?”

Severus: “Hag.”

Minerva: “Oh. That’s why.”

Chapter 135: tracks in the snow

Chapter Text

cxxxv. tracks in the snow

 

 

The sound of running water echoed beneath the cold planks of the covered bridge, and Harriet leaned against the railing to look below.

Ice clinging to the cliffs clogged much of the inlet, but a measure of dark water still fed into the lake, and Harriet lifted her head, gaze trailing the hard, glinting surface toward the horizon, where the frozen lake disappeared into the fog and trees and mountains. The world was quiet but for that distant gurgle below; even the wind died down, the sky thick with clouds yet otherwise still, thick swathes of gray and black limned in violet like a bruise.

Kevin and Rick shifted inside her collar, Rick slithering out and over the edge, hissing that Kevin was insufferable for his poor choice of favorite snacks. Seeing as she knew both of their favorite snacks changed daily, if not hourly, Harriet thought Rick was being rather rude and finicky. He poked about her hat’s flap over her ear, and she nudged him back down.

Quit it,” she hissed.

She continued across the bridge, the cold air sharp in her lungs and against her face, her nose bright red. In one of her mitten-clad hands, the glass lens hummed and sparkled, warm to the touch but not, thankfully, bursting into flames. Blue lights played through the glass, there and gone, chasing circles about the brass lip.

The grass surrounding the Sundial Garden squished under her shoes as Harriet climbed the hill, gasping, feeling warm under two jumpers, her robes, and her cloak. Though lunch loomed just an hour or so away, the sky hadn’t brightened much from its pre-dawn gloom, and Harriet glanced toward the castle at her back, the stone seeming much darker than usual with the white snow resting on the grounds, huddled against the foundations in fat, lumpy mounds. Hermione and Elara were both in Arithmancy, and much of the school remained quiet and undisturbed, everyone in class or tucked away in their common rooms—not bandying about in the snow.

Harriet snorted as she perched on one of the stones, wincing at the cold seeping into her trousers, and removed a lopsided roll from her pocket, tearing off a piece to stuff in her mouth. Chewing, she surveyed the land and the castle, the sharp cut of the cliffs and the choppier hills rolling down across the school’s flank, the Whomping Willow swaying far off in the distance. She set the lens on her knee, and it continued to hum, waiting, while Harriet let her mind wander and consider different things.

Mably had taken to smothering Elara in that oddly endearing house-elf way of hers. She never showed herself—which Hermione called an abhorrently cruel learned behavior—but food and convenient cups of tea kept appearing around Elara. The tea was made exactly to her liking—way too bitter and strong for human consumption, and other Slytherins snickered whenever Elara looked down at an inexplicable pastry like it might grow legs and attack her face. Her shoes were always clean, her blankets warmed, her study carrel tidy, her favorite soaps and products kept fresh and full in their washroom. Elara grew increasingly flustered, unable to rebuff the house-elf, and Hermione kept huffing and muttering under her breath.

Harriet tried questioning Mably about the ‘rat-man,’ but she either didn’t know the man’s name or had such an abhorrence for it, she couldn’t say it. Harriet had discovered the fastest way to get a hundred house-elves to scream was to utter the name “Voldemort” on accident, so she assumed the ‘rat-man’ had become an unkind sobriquet Mably used to lessen her own trauma and fear of the person she believed responsible for Marlene McKinnon’s death. She wouldn’t speak much on Sirius Black, mood darkening when Harriet asked about him, but despite her distaste, Mably still addressed him as “Mr. Sirius.

Does that mean the ‘rat-man’ is different from Livi’s ‘rat one’? Harriet pondered, sighing. The man in the dormitory had to be Sirius Black. No one else would have any reason to bother me or Elara—unless it was some kind of random bloody pervert. Hell. She wrinkled her nose and reached her free hand up into her collar, touching one of the snakes. But if the man in the dorm was Sirius Black, then he wasn’t the man Mably spoke of—and yet everyone seems to believe Black had something to do with the McKinnon fire. This is confusing.

The magic humming in the lens began to calm, and Harriet redirected her attention, using her teeth to remove one mitten so she could hold the device in her bare hand. The brass had become so cold it stung her fingers, but the glass itself remained pleasantly warm to the touch. Holding the lens up closer to her eye, she gave it a light tap with her wand, saying, “Show me,” as clearly as she could around a mouthful of cotton.

Blue light again swirled in the glass, expanding outward, seeming to catch and gleam on the distant silhouette of the castle. Harriet’s careful print appeared in blue, a straight line connecting the words ‘Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry’ to the largest turret. Harriet gave the lens another tap, and the magic shivered, glittering, ‘Hogwarts’ disappearing in place of more lines connecting labels like ‘West Tower,’ ‘Astronomy Tower,’ and ‘Herbology Courtyard.’ She noted that some of the lines weren’t coming through as they should; the one over the Whomping Willow kept flickering, and when Harriet concentrated on it, a series of nervous question marks percolated over its top. Harriet intoned a low, thoughtful sound.

It’ll be dead useful when it’s finished and working properly, she thought, lowering the lens again. It had taken considerable effort on all their parts to get it to this point; Harriet original initiative of making the Moon Mirror map had piqued Hermione’s curiosity, and Professor Dumbledore’s subsequent delivery of The Proteus Indices and The Jargogle Jargon of Charms had sparked a greater creation and interest in cartography and magical indexing. Hermione took one glimpse at the finicky magic inlaid in the Marauder’s Map and fell in love—but it remained to be said that the Marauder’s Map wasn’t theirs, and it lacked depth after Harriet’s research and exploration had uncovered so much more of the school.

The device began as a desire to understand or mimic the Marauder’s Map, to find, field, and display information for their convenience, and Harriet’s purchase of the lenses and special vellum in Verre de Verid proved a fortunate find. Information written on the vellum displayed itself on the glass, and a proper application of a circumdo ward upon the lens—joined with a Homonculous Charm—recorded information from the area the lens passed through to be printed on the vellum. Binding Proteus Memoro and Proteus Imito Alterius kept the information orderly and quiet until it was called for while also mimicking gathered knowledge from one lens to the other two. Specific runes—like laguz and inguz—changed the porosity of the cirmundo ward so it could, as Hermione explained it, absorb information as if through magical osmosis. Harriet had spent weeks redrawing her Moon Map, the Marauder’s Map, and Hogwarts’ original architectural blueprints onto the replicating vellum sheets securely hidden the Aerie’s depths. Elara and Hermione checked and rechecked how the Charms relayed into one another, testing their ideas on paper before moving to glass. They copied their school notes onto pieces of the spelled vellum, and that information, too, hid somewhere in the deceptively simple glass.

Dozens of other smaller Charms went into the creation, things meant to recognize shapes, Elara’s dubious research on blood magic helping link their own perception and recognition to the lens’ knowledge. Harriet hadn’t much like the idea of that first, but Elara had pointed out how the Diadem—before Tom Riddle somehow defiled it—had worked on a similar concept, and further conversation with Rowena Ravenclaw had allayed her fears. Hermione itched to get her hands on the Sorting Hat to figure out how it read minds and if that magic could further their efforts in their own creation.

“The Hat must be an absolute trove of lost magical knowledge. It was made by Godric Gryffindor himself!”

“Yeah, and nicking the Hat could get us expelled, y’know.”

“Just think of the possibilities, though.”

“Who are you, and what have you done with Hermione Granger?”

The lens wasn’t perfect, as evidenced by the panicked question marks over the Whomping Willow, and other areas of the grounds remained murky and undefined. Harriet struggled with the runes still, Mr. Flamel and Professor Babbling both answering her list of questions with thick books she’d yet to slog through. Elara’s addition of blood magic had incurred an odd reaction somewhere in their magic, resulting in mysterious languages and thoughts written in indecipherable characters blooming on the glass for no reason, then dwindling away. Hermione had warned them against accessing the map feature itself, saying her own attempt to do so had set her bed curtains on fire. Pansy complained about the smell for days.

“Is it because I haven’t gotten closer than a few dozen meters to it?” Harriet wondered aloud, lowering the lens, mitten still caught between her teeth. “Or because we haven’t studied Whomping Willows yet in Herbology?”

She looked out over the lake, and again, the magic picked up only the vaguest landmarks, absolutely nothing beyond the bounds of Hogwarts’ wards displaying itself. The permeable nature of the circumdo ward meant it could mingle with the school’s wards to an extent, and Hermione worried the lens’ efficacy would diminish when they returned to London and could no longer augment their scope to such a degree. Only time—and a spot of experimentation—would tell.

Twisting on her seat, Harriet turned the lens toward the towering, aged stones at her back, and the title “Sundial Garden” came through just fine, joined by a brief addendum on Hermione’s notes concerning the history of the spot. Harriet concentrated so hard on the magic before her, she didn’t notice the eyes watching her from the trees until the creature stepped forward.

Startled, Harriet spat the mitten from her mouth and rose to her feet, her wand coming into her hand almost faster than she could consider it. A dog had come out of the underbrush—or, at least, Harriet thought it a dog. It stood nearly to her chest in height, black fur matted and tangled, two silver eyes like glinting Sickles focused on her face. She grimaced. Truth be told, Harriet didn’t care overly much for dogs; Uncle Vernon’s sister, Marge, had had a vicious bulldog named Ripper who would chase Harriet relentlessly, sinking his teeth into her ankles whenever he could. This dog made no move toward her, but she didn’t lower her wand.

“Erm, hullo?” she said, hesitating before giving the creature a look through the glass lens. All she received were more confused blue question marks, so Harriet grunted and stowed the lens away in her pocket. “…good boy?”

The dog’s tail wagged and it—he—woofed at her, edging closer. He didn’t seem aggressive, having none of that trembling, irritated energy Ripper used to exude, so Harriet lowered her wand but kept it out, letting the dog closer. He was bigger than she thought, his paws as large as her hands, his long fur a wild tangle of muck, leaves, and spots of snow.

“Where’d you come from?” she asked, extending one cautious, mitten-covered hand for his inspection. Elated, the dog butted his nose under her fingers, encouraging Harriet to pet his head. “Well, you’re certainly friendly, and given how bloody wretched the weather has been, you must have an owner somewhere.” She smoothed her fingers over his piqued ear and against the fur of his neck, searching for a collar. A musty odor filled her nose. “Oof, bloody hell, you’re smelly.”

The dog whined.

“Don’t look at me! You’re the numpty who’s run off from home.” Was he from the village? Harriet didn’t know if any of the creatures dwelling in the forest kept dogs, but Hogsmeade was a long way off, on the other side of the lake and grounds. Had he gotten lost? His ribs shone through his patchy fur, and Harriet scratched behind his ears, frowning. Poor thing. She knew what it was like to be that skinny and hungry.

After some thought, Harriet decided to take him to Hagrid, who’d most likely know if one of the villagers had lost their pet or could care for him. Maybe Fang could use a friend. “Come along, then.”

The dog peered at her and didn’t move, content to be petted and have his head itched.

“Oh—here.” Harriet stuck her hand into her pocket, finding the extra roll she’d nibbled on. “Have this.”

He snatched up the bread, Harriet stepping back from his sudden voracity. “I don’t think I have anything else,” she muttered when the dog finished the roll in three seconds, looking at her with beseeching eyes. “I’m sorry. I just have sweets. Hermione says I have a fast metabolism, so I carry extra snacks for when I get hungry, else I get headaches. She reckons it has something to do with my magic. Why am I telling you this?” She rubbed her face. “Spending too much bloody time talking to my snakes….”

Harriet started off toward the bridge, waiting to see if the dog would follow or if he’d run off on his own again. He hesitated—and instead of coming right after her, he first lumbered over the stone she’d been perched on and picked up her forgotten mitten. “Thanks,” Harriet said as she accepted it, covering up her cold hand again. “You’re awfully well-trained. Someone has got to be missing you.”

Again, the dog whined, head hung low as he bumped against her side. Harriet gave him another consoling pat, then headed toward the covered bridge.

Initially, the dog was reluctant to follow, hedging about a few meters behind her, tense and sniffing the air, though Harriet’s persistence in pausing to wait seemed to win him over. He strolled at her side, butting his head against her arm until she rested her hand against his back. She shivered when the breeze began to rise.

“Must be nice to have a fur coat. It’s freezing out here.”

The dog barked, tail thumping against her back. She led them along the path bordering the outer cliff, crossing near the Whomping Willow as the trail wended down toward the route linking the Quidditch pitch and the castle’s main courtyard. Harriet stopped to survey the Willow through her lens, trying to get a better read on it, and the dog watched her, head tipped as if curious. Harriet returned the lens to her pocket, and they continued on.

“I guess a fur coat isn’t everything, though. If I were a dog, I’d much rather be at home, eating my supper. Or maybe sleeping in front of a nice fire.” A thought occurred to her. “Maybe that’s why Elara always passes out by the hearth in the Aerie—.”

Under her hand, the dog’s body tensed, and he stopped walking. Harriet withdrew, worried he’d changed his mind and had decided to take a bite out of her after all, but the dog didn’t growl or bark or make any move at all. He stared at Harriet with those wide, colorless eyes reflecting the gray sky above them, the Willow’s looming shape overhead almost too close for comfort. Harriet stared at him in turn, fingering the wand tucked into her pocket. Familiarity prickled through her the more she studied the creature, and Harriet realized Elara’s Animagus form resembled him somewhat, if better groomed and considerably smaller, with a patch of white on her chest. This dog must be the same breed—a black Kugsha, Hermione had said after researching it, or perhaps a variation of wolf. But the dog couldn’t be a wolf; there were no wolves in Scotland.

“Miss Potter!”

Harriet blinked and turned her eyes toward the sound. The grass rustled, bending under shifting weight, and when Harriet glanced down, she saw nothing but paw prints trailing her steps through the snow.

“Miss Potter?” Professor Sprout finished descending the sloped hill, huffing a bit from the exertion, her face concerned. “What on earth are you doing out here?”

“There was—.” She turned in place, scouring the landscape from the bare trail ahead to the roots of the swaying Willow, but there was nothing to be seen. “…a dog.”

“A dog?” Sprout asked, puzzled.

“Yeah. He was right here, but I guess he ran off again. He looked terribly hungry.”

“Poor fellow. I’ll have a word with Hagrid to keep an eye out for him. But goodness me, you silly girl, what are you up to? It’s a miracle you haven’t fallen into a drift and frozen yourself solid.”

Harriet scowled, her cold cheeks flushing, and Professor Spout covered her mouth to hide her laughter. “I’m not that short, Professor.”

“Of course not, dear. All the same, it’d be best to get you back inside. It’s not safe to go wandering about on your own.”

“I was being safe. I didn’t go far.”

“Even so.” Professor Sprout patted her arm. “Back to the castle with you. It’ll be lunch soon.”

The grip on her shoulder ushered Harriet toward the school once more, falling into step beside the Head of Hufflepuff, and yet she couldn’t help but glance behind herself one last time, searching, finding no sign of the mysterious canine. The Whomping Willow continued to sway, branches waving back and forth, but whether in greeting or goodbye, Harriet didn’t know.

 

 


 

A/N: A rather short, transitional chapter. I know some people were hoping Mably would have more information to give, but I find house-elves are terribly imprecise or unclear sometimes, especially if they’re holding on to their master’s wishes/commands. For instance, in canon, I don’t think Dobby ever called Hermione by name, and he referred to Ron as Harry’s “Wheezy.” And it may even be that Marlene never told her Peter’s name; maybe she only referenced him or her mistrust in him. Even if she had the name, I don’t know if she’d be able to properly convey the idea of him being an Animagus to the girls, especially considering when we say “That person’s a rat,” we don’t literally mean it. Anyway….

Headline: Sirius almost gets added to Harriet’s menagerie, three tiny witches invent bootleg Google, Elara accidentally creates window into the thoughts of Old Gods, and Hermione conspires to kidnap the Sorting Hat.

Chapter 136: jupiter's chosen

Chapter Text

cxxxvi. jupiter’s chosen

 

The black dog scratched through the leaves at the forest’s edge and sighed when his pawing turned up nothing useful.

Of course, he thought, bitterness warring with the hunger in his middle as he sank onto his haunches and laid himself down. The old leaves caught and tangled in his long strands of black fur, but he was more comfortable here, shielded from the snow and hidden from view. Of course, there’s nothing to bloody eat. I’ll have to forage through the bins in Hogsmeade, if I can find any about. Trips to the village had to be spare, lest he tempt fate and get caught, and though scavaging animal carcasses was hardly better than eating rubbish, both beat the food in Azkaban.

The dog peeked up through the spindly branches at the looming castle in the distance and thought of the food served inside, the great feasts laid out by the house-elves every morning, afternoon, and night.

His thoughts inevitably turned back to the rat, and Sirius Black rose, growling.

Peter Pettigrew, that sodding piece of Thestral shit. He paced through the underbrush, paying no attention to the gorse grabbing at his body, the faint howl of memories rattling about his scattered head. Fallen boughs snapped and creaked under his weight. He thought about the rat more and more, until rage festered with the bitterness and the hunger, his lips pulled back over sharp teeth. He swiped his claws at the dead foliage.

How DARE he? How COULD he? What kind of coward lives life as a fucking rat? Oh, he knew Peter came off as harmless enough; he had the mien of a soft-hearted Hufflepuff, watery-eyed and feeble-mouthed, timid and tentative and round-shouldered like a lamb, but Peter had always been shrewd and quick when need be. He was patient and could endure, just like he’d endure the gentle teasing of his friends all through school. When had the descent begun, Sirius wondered? When they were lads? Did he or James or Remus say something that planted the seeds of hatred in Peter’s heart? When did it happen?

Or did you simply grasp at the opportunity, rat? he sneered. I don’t know what’s worse; plotting their deaths or simply throwing them away without a thought.

Peter was soft and quiet and not very handsome. People had never thought or expected much of him—but Sirius knew better. Sirius knew. He was fucking dangerous. Gryffindor courage could translate into an unrestrained daring, the kind that crossed lines of morality even Slytherins couldn’t fathom, because that’s what Gryffindors did. They checked barriers, pushed boundaries, and in a gutless bottom-feeder like Peter Pettigrew, that meant unpredictability. Backed into a corner, Peter wouldn’t hesitate to blow up half the children in the school if it meant he could escape, and all it would take was one mistake on Peter’s behalf. Or Sirius’. One moment of sloppiness. He’d kill the entire Weasley family. He’d hurt Harriet—and Sirius couldn’t bear it if anything happened to that girl. It would kill him.

How had life with the Muggles treated her? Did she enjoy living there? He knew Hagrid had taken Harriet to her relatives on Dumbledore’s orders—right after the half-giant smacked Snape so hard the greasy git hit the ground bloody and unconscious, an image Sirius would cherish until his dying day. Little Harriet should have gone to him, to Sirius, but he couldn’t—he had no right. He couldn’t fail Lily and James worse than he had already had. He’d already lost one daughter.

Sirius took a shaky breath and lowered his muzzle, shivering, letting the memories roll off him.

Whenever the Dementors made their rounds in Azkaban, Sirius used to sink into the mire of his own worse memories, and he’d remember the sight of the cottage in Godric’s Hollow blown to bits, or he’d smell the odor of burnt flesh at the McKinnon house, hear the investigator say “No survivors” without inflection, see Remus’ scrunched face and his cracked voice shouting, “How could you do this?!

Don’t think about it, he ordered himself, giving his head a hard shake, though the depression lingered with substantial weight. That was the problem with Dementors; they didn’t just make you miserable, then drift away. No, they gouged out all sensations of happiness, thrashed your whole way of thinking until you became your own Dementor. Sirius no longer needed those hovering, ghoulish fucks flying around him to feel miserable because he did it to himself now.

He forgot he didn’t have hands for a moment and clawed at his head, scratching his nose, wanting to tear himself to pieces just to be rid of the unending torment and the irritating bite of fleas. He’d almost take Dementors over the bloody fleas. Almost.

Not until I find him. Not until I find Peter, that fuck, that—that—.

A noise brought Sirius’ head up, his paw hitting the ground again with a thump, ears swiveling forward to chase the sound. Given the weather and time of day, no one should be about, not that Sirius dared wander too close to the castle in the middle of the afternoon. He’d watched Hagrid putter around his garden in the morning, digging out weeds to apply mulch and prep it for the spring before he returned to his hut, so Sirius knew it wasn’t the groundskeeper. Wary, he kept his body low to the ground and crept closer to the line where the trees thinned and faded into grass, peering through the brown, winter brush.

The Sundial Garden loomed more ghoulish than usual in the sickly weather, great, colorless stone risen from the earth, exuding an almost pungent taste of old magic like bitter sea salt and dirt. Sirius scanned the area, nose working against the odor, and spotted a girl just on the cusp of the hill, sitting on the broken rocks. Sirius’ breath caught.

Harriet.

She’d appeared from nowhere like a fae thing pulled out of the ether, dropped among the stones and dolmens older than Hogwarts itself. Sirius had only ever seen his goddaughter at a distance—playing Quidditch, running on that old track cutting close to the lakeshore—but here, she lingered no more than a few feet from him, playing with a curious toy ring or bauble. She didn’t look much like Lily or James if he were to tell the honest truth. James had been everything one might expect from an old pure-blood House’s scion—good-looking, confident, and invariably well-dressed, while Lily had been unbearably prim and neat and pretty, comfortably middle-class. Harriet looked as if she’d had a row with a laundry basket and lost, wearing two thick, knitted jumpers, mud on her robes’ hem, a pricey black cloak thrown over the top that accentuated all her rough edges. The gold of her spectacles’ frames flashed in the weak light, her green eyes narrowed in thought, part of her fringe sticking straight up in direct defiance of gravity. Someone had tamed the rest of her untidy hair into a plait.

At once, Sirius was excited and—and angry, furious because what in the fuck were they thinking, allowing Harriet to wander so far on her own? With the Dementors out in force, with Peter—.

I’ll kill him, he howled, lip curling over canine teeth. I’ll kill him, I’ll kill the rat bastard before he touches one fucking hair on her head—.

He didn’t realize he’d come out of the woods, not until Harriet shot to her feet, wand in hand, trained on him.

Shite.

“Erm, hullo?” she said, voice uncertain and fidgety, though the aim of her wand remained unflinchingly rigid. Sirius spared the toy in her other hand a thought, but like a lot of things in his head, it pinged about and failed to find purchase, his attention honed on her presence, on the wand pointed toward his face. They surveyed one another for several wary, tense moments. “…good boy?”

Sirius wagged his tag and approached, and when she extended one hand toward him, he wanted that touch more than anything—no, not anything, not more than he wanted to shift forms and embrace his goddaughter for the first time in nearly twelve years. Where had the years gone? They seemed to disappear in a second—or an eon—in the Dementors’ loving care, and James’ girl was thirteen, looking at him with suspicion, dressed in Slytherin green. Slytherin green. Merlin help him.

Harriet fidgeted and patted about his neck, fussing as she nattered and mumbled. “Oh—here.” She reached into her cloak, and Sirius’ stomach growled when she pulled out a squished bread roll. “Have this.”

He snatched the bread from her and could have groaned at the wonderful, starchy flavor and baked crust. The taste of pocket fuzz mingled in there, too, but Sirius didn’t care. His goddaughter held up empty hands when he finished, and he sighed, wanting more. Just find the rat, he retorted to himself. Find the rat, and then—.

“I don’t think I have anything else. I’m sorry. I just have sweets. Hermione says I have a fast metabolism, so I carry extra snacks for when I get hungry, else I get headaches. She reckons it has something to do with my magic. Why am I telling you this?” Harriet rubbed her face, her right-hand bare, fingers pink and chapped from the cold. Sirius spotted the glove on the ground. “Spending too much bloody time talking to my snakes….”

Snakes? What ruddy snakes?

Harriet coaxed him from the Garden and over the covered bridge despite his reservations. The forest didn’t loop into this section of the grounds, the only possible vantage for escape provided by the cliffs, rocks, and the tunnel under the Whomping Willow, if he could manage it. Sirius bumped into Harriet as they walked, savoring the affectionate way she scratched his ears, knowing he’d have to run from her soon, that he might never have the chance to approach her again. Pain lurched in his gut.

She’s a weird kid, he thought the longer Harriet spoke. She jumped from topic to topic and never finished an idea, unaffected by the lack of conversation partner or the growing chill burdening the wind. She looked at Hogwarts with wonder and curiosity, tracing the high walls and towers with her eyes. James would have loved her. Sirius already did.

They came under the arms of the Willow, too far for it to react, but close enough for the branches to tense, the bark creaking and groaning as it contracted like living flesh. Sirius hated that nasty, bludgeoning tree, but Remus had confessed a certain fondness for it. It was his tree, after all.

“I guess a fur coat isn’t everything, though. If I were a dog, I’d much rather be at home, eating my supper.” Harriet had that odd toy in hand again, peeking at the Willow through the glass, flickers of blue filtering by the bronze rim. She tucked it back into her pocket. “Or maybe sleeping in front of a nice fire. Maybe that’s why Elara always passes out by the hearth in the Aerie—.”

Sirius stopped, paws digging into the cold, solid earth. It seemed to heave underneath him.

What did she just say?

He stared at Harriet, and she at him, an intense roar building in his ears. Had he been a man, cold sweat would have formed and dripped from his skin.

He had to be hearing things. He had—it couldn’t—!

“There were no survivors, Mr. Black.” Ashes on his hands like the fingerprints of angry, grasping ghosts—.

How could you have done this?” Remus cried. “How could you? She’s dead, Marlene’s dead! Elara’s—.”

“No survivors.”

“—dead!”

Harriet Potter stared at him with Lily’s green eyes. He couldn’t breathe.

When he sensed someone coming down the hill and Harriet turned her head to answer their call, Sirius lurched into motion and ran for the tunnel under the Willow. He did not look back.

 

x X x

 

Sirius Black was not a man who believed in coincidences.

He had been, before. Before the war, before Azkaban. He’d relished in his devil-may-care, laissez-faire attitude, riding Muggle motorbikes and smoking their cheap cigarettes, indulging in flings with girls and boys before deciding he liked the taste of monogamy best of all. But then people started dying—dying faster—and suddenly, the enticing glimmer of bachelorhood didn’t shine quite so bright, and Sirius embraced the warmth of domesticity.

He blamed coincidences for the faults he refused to acknowledge. It’d been a coincidence that Remus missed class after the full moon. It’d been a coincidence that Regulus started hanging around future Death Eaters—a coincidence for Peter to always been conveniently absent when they needed him most. It took war and imprisonment for Sirius to receive a nice dose of cynicism, and now he didn’t believe in coincidences one fucking bit. It wasn’t a coincidence the rat in the Daily Prophet resembled Peter Pettigrew. It wasn’t a coincidence Greyback, located in the cell across from him, managed to recreate Sirius’ escape—and it wasn’t a coincidence when Harriet Potter chattered on and said the name “Elara.

A mistake, a mistake, a coinc—.

Just a name—but a name chosen and deliberated and argued over, the final choice on a scroll covered in discounted options. Hours and hours of lying on his belly in bed, looking through star charts and family records by candlelight. Long, stressful nights consumed by warfare, staring into the night sky, constellations tripping off his tongue in hushed breaths. Just a name. Aquila, Danica, Lyra, Vega, crossed in slashes, ink dripping on eagle feather quills—.

The weight of a child in his cupped hands, nine months of deliberation.

Elara. Elara Andromeda Black. Jupiter’s moon. He used to repeat it to himself, quietly, like a secret, and then in the grips of madness howled it into the salt-encrusted rocks of Azkaban like the foulest of curses—blaming himself, Marlene, Remus, Peter, God—.

After leaving Harriet, Sirius spent hours in the Shrieking Shack. He didn’t know how long he allowed himself to weep and rage and tear at his own thoughts, replaying Harriet’s words again and again and again, until the syllables stopped making sense and he considered it all a fever dream. Then, Sirius calmed. Flat on his back, staring at the warped, wretched ceiling above him, he whispered, “Elara,” into the dust. His heart thumped against the floorboards.

Harriet knew someone who bore the name of his late daughter. A voice suspiciously like Remus’ reminded Sirius it was within the realm of possibility for a separate Elara to exist. The exact context of the conversation escaped him—something about dogs and hearths and naps—but the name Elara had not been made in error, and if he was construing information right, Harriet was familiar with this person. Friends, even, meaning it had to be a student. It was a Black name, but not one ever used in the family before; Merlin knows he went through the annals three times over, determined his kid wouldn’t share a moniker with one of his cross-eyed, inbred cousins. Yet, it was a Black name—just as the Lestranges used avians, and the Malfoys favored Romans. Elara, Elara, Jupiter’s moon.

It could be a Muggle-born, or it might not. It could be a coincidence—but Sirius did not believe in those.

He had to see with his own eyes, just once, just once—.

Learning Harriet’s schedule proved harder than Sirius expected it to be, and not only because he was a wanted felon who couldn’t access the castle’s interior without excessive risk. He simply couldn’t figure out how she got around! Holy Helga, Sirius regretted his temper toward her minders, because Harriet seemed to vanish and reappear on a bloody whim, navigating the castle with ease, passing through all those niches and secret places the Marauder’s spent years searching for as if she’d always known they were there! He kept following her, kept chasing, kept pressing his luck despite knowing every step he took closer to her meant dipping into the gaze of those who’d see him drawn and quartered and Kissed if they had a choice. Twice he had to hide from old McGonagall and Flitwick in a convenient broom cupboard.

He really missed the Marauder’s Map.

Eventually, Sirius pinned down enough of his goddaughter’s timetable to know she’d be in Herbology in the morning on Tuesday. He settled in the courtyard as a dog to watch the greenhouses, hidden from sight behind a thicket of yew hedges and dormant rose bushes, the thorns catching and tugging his fur. Grunting, Sirius crouched in the bracken, held himself still, and kept to his vigil until the bells rang, and he saw a group of Ravenclaws and Slytherins returning to the castle’s warmth.

He changed forms, back hunched, the roses tearing at his skin, but he could see better as a man than as a dog—and Sirius needed to see. Reckless, reckless. He searched the group, gaze darting from face to face until he found his goddaughter, Harriet chatting with a bushy-haired chit carrying an overstuffed satchel. They bypassed the courtyard, climbing the steps into an outer cloister framing the castle wall, and through the thin pillars, Sirius watched another young witch come up behind the pair. His breath caught even before the trio crossed through the watery sunlight, before the third witch turned her pretty, familiar face toward the light, and those silver eyes flashed—.

Sirius remembered the autumn of 1980. He remembered pumpkin juice and Yorkshire pudding, too many diapers and weddings rushed a bit too quickly thanks to the war tightening around their necks. But it had been a happy time, the happiest in his entire life. In hindsight, it seemed like some sick joke that 1980 would be the year he loved best, while 1981 would be the one to ruin everything.

He remembered visiting the cottage in Godric’s Hollow, orange leaves sticking to his boots, his hands full as he passed through the front door.

“Hey, James!” he called.

That you, Padfoot?

Yeah.” He shut the door behind him just as the other wizard came into view. James’ face broke out in a wide grin as he stashed his wand back into his belt.

And you brought my favorite little goddaughter for a visit! James crowed, and Sirius readjusted the toddler leaning against his chest, drawing her far enough away for her to turn speculative silver eyes from him to James. Did you miss me, hmm?”

“No.”

James gasped, and Sirius laughed, a rough, barking sound as he jostled the girl in his arms, her tiny hands squeezing his fingers for all their worth.

What’s this, then? When did you start talking and giving me back-chat? Who allowed this?”

“She started earlier in the week,Sirius told him, dropping the satchel filled with nappies and clothes on a convenient bench in the foyer. Lily chose that moment to appear from the kitchen, and she flicked her wand to send the bag floating up the stairs.Suddenly it’s ‘no’ this and ‘no’ that—no, no, no. It’s her favorite word.

I bet Remus is pleased. Is he coming later?”

“He should be, and definitely pleased. Isn’t that right, love?”

A tiny nose turned up at him. “No.”

Lily cackled.

Sirius remembered friendship and conversation, supper and maybe a bit too much elf-wine, dozing by the fire. He remembered the weight of two children in his arms, resting on his chest, his daughter and goddaughter—Harriet snuggled into his shoulder, fast asleep, the other awake and staring into the crackling hearth. “Elara,” he’d said, and she’d turned to him. The fire reflected off her pretty eyes—his eyes, those eyes—when she’d smiled.

Elara.

A harsh, keening gasp escaped Sirius, the brambles tight and cutting as they dug into his flesh.

Sirius barely had a chance to notice the shadow moving at his back before the wand was already at his neck, the tip sharp against his pulse. His heart leapt in horror.

“Don’t. Move.”

 


A/N: Elara’s first word was “No,” and absolutely no one was surprised.

Chapter 137: twelve years of ruin

Chapter Text

cxxxvii. twelve years of ruin

 

Twenty minutes after finishing his breakfast tea and a second buttered scone, Remus Lupin stood in a rose garden with his wand pointed at a serial killer.

It was not the way he’d expected his morning to go.

In the dark hours of night when he couldn’t fall asleep, Remus had sat up in bed, staring at the wall or out the window, thinking of all the things he’d say if he ever encountered Sirius Black again. Most of the delusions ended with bloodied knuckles and vivid flashes of green, but more often than not, his ideas existed in the abstract, in a tangle of emotion and pain he could not decipher logic from. There was no coherent speech. Just a lot of screaming.

If he’d come upon Sirius Black a year ago, Remus thought he might have thrown himself at him, not caring at all if the bastard had a wand and if he ended up dead, so long as he got to throw his fist into his face and make him bleed. That had been a year ago though, when Remus had been living in a shoddy Knockturn flat, scraping out a living by part-timing in the Muggle world. Now, in contrast, he had a career and a purpose and a desire to live long enough to teach Harriet and…Elara. To see them grow up and get married if they wanted. To have families or careers or both.

So when he stumbled across a familiar shadow in the dormant rose garden, he didn’t rally or rage; Remus took out his wand, his hand shaking, and put it to the man’s neck.

“Don’t. Move.”

Black stiffened, and aside from the slightest tip of his head, held himself still. Even in the lowlight, Remus thought he looked like hell. Chilblains covered his dirty hands, his hair and beard both a matted, greasy tangle, his skin waxy, sunken, and raw from exposure. His eyes, though, both familiar and dreaded, didn’t look different. They found Remus’ face and widened.

“Remus?” Black rasped. “Wha—Morgana’s knickers, what are you doing here?”

Remus doubled his grip on his wand until his knuckles were white. “I am a professor,” he replied, voice cold and distant in a way that he didn’t feel. A few students were across the courtyard, but they were otherwise alone and obscured from casual observation by the hedges. A mad thought flitted through his head, wondering if he could kill Black there and bury him under the roses—but Remus didn’t want him here, not in any manner whatsoever, not even as a corpse rotting in the ground.

“A professor?” A slow smile spread across Black’s haggard face, his teeth surprisingly clean and white. “Well, holy shit. Who said you can’t teach an old dog new tricks? Congratulations!”

Remus drove the wand a little harder into the man’s neck. At the moment, he felt like a Niffler who’d caught a Thunderbird by the tail; namely, he was uncertain of what to do next. Not summon the Dementors, no. He needed to alert Professor Dumbledore, but that would mean removing his wand from Black’s person.

Stun him, you blundering baboon!

He sucked in a breath to do just that when Black said, “Wait,” and his hands fidgeted. “Wait. Please, Moony—.”

The wand jabbed harder into his pulse.

“Wait, for fuck’s sake, I’m—I’m not here to hurt anyone, I swear—.”

“I’m not inclined to believe you,” Remus retorted through clenched teeth. “Not after you slaughtered twelve Muggles and Peter.”

Like a thundercloud, Black’s expression darkened and twisted, madness nibbling at the edges. “The fucking rat!”

Flames burst from the end of Remus’ wand and Black moved, avoiding the worst of the damage, a wand finding its way into his shaking hand. Remus cursed himself for a fool as he found himself in a standoff with a wizard half tangled in the brambles, a nasty burn descending from his shoulder toward his chest, though his aim remained steady. Like the robes, Remus assumed Black had stolen the wand from somewhere. It wasn’t challenging to find a spare—usually of dubious origins—floating about places like Knockturn Alley. Remus himself had one tucked into the very bottom of his luggage, given to him when he’d had to do some less than legal couriering in his truly desperate years.

“Listen to me—.” Black hissed, eyes darting about as if checking for more wizards lurking in the verge.

“I think not.”

“Will you just—?”

“You’ve said more than enough to me for one lifetime.”

“I wasn’t the Secret Keeper,” the felon rushed to say, burying Remus’ objections. “I wasn’t. I haven’t killed a bloody soul—not yet. I swear it, Remus, I swear it on Elara’s life—.”

The blood drained from Remus’ face. Another unvoiced spell propelled itself from his wand, and Black blocked it, barely, sliding on his knees over the coarse earth. Remus expected return fire, expected for this to ramp up into a violent, fevered duel—but then Black stopped, grimacing, and threw his wand on the ground. Remus stared at it.

“Just listen to me,” Black croaked, hands held up. “For five minutes. If you ever trusted me, you’ll give me just those five minutes to explain myself, then you can call the Headmaster or the Dementors or the whole fucking Ministry for all I care.”

He shouldn’t bother. Remus should ignore him—hex him—and shut the book on this torrid chapter of his meandering life. Sentiment lurched, painful and forbidden, in the deepest recesses of his mind. Dumbledore had given him a reason to exist, a chance at being something more than just a tatty werewolf scrambling about society’s fringe, and if he allowed himself to falter for even five minutes, he would be spitting in the face of everything Dumbledore had done for him.

If you ever trusted me—.

Sickness burned in the back of his throat, his eyes stinging.

I wasn’t the Secret Keeper.

But he was, Remus reminded himself, the memories spiraling against his perception, the low, prickling ache of old hurt at being denied the Secret himself. At not being trusted. Sirius Black had been the Potters’ Secret Keeper. He knew that. He knew it. Then why am I hesitating?

I wasn’t the Secret Keeper.

Hope kissed his heart like the fluttering of moth wings—not as garish as a butterfly, just plain and off-white, more a pest than anything else, and yet delicate and fragile all the same. He should not have hope. More than a dozen bodies slept beneath the earth because of this wizard.

I haven’t killed a bloody soul.

Remus needed to fight. He needed to find the Headmaster, take whatever this lingering emotion was, and relegate it to the past, to the person he was before 1981 tore him to pieces.

I swear it on Elara’ life.

Bristling, Remus Summoned the dropped wand into his hand, resisting the urge to snap it then and there. “Stand up,” he ordered, and slowly, Black did so, wariness plastered to his face. “Turn around and walk ahead of me. If you do something I do not like, I won’t hesitate to curse you in the back.”

Black flashed him a cocky—if strained—grin over his shoulder. “When did I ever do anything you didn’t like—?”

The answering hex caught him high across the shoulders, knocking the wind from his lungs hard enough to force a wheeze from his throat.

“Keep walking.”

He didn’t lead the felon far; the bells for class had rung, but not everyone would be attending or have lectures to teach, so he settled for a narrow, windowless stone passage off the cloister that must have been intended for servants in some bygone age. Remus bolted and warded the door at his back, then slashed his wand at the shuttered vents higher up on the wall. The wood crackled and complained but forced itself up, allowing thin, patchy bars of sunlight inside, illuminating motes of dust and Sirius Black’s hunted expression.

“I wasn’t the Secret Keeper,” Black reiterated, leaning back into the stone wall, his hands still raised.

Remus narrowed his eyes. “You’ve said that. If you’re just going to lie, I can spare you the trouble of spitting nonsense through your teeth for five minutes and call Dumbledore now.”

“I wasn’t the Secret Keeper!” Black snapped, louder.

“They picked you! Dumbledore himself cast the Charm, and unless you expect me to believe the Headmaster has been lying for all these years—?”

“No, he—.” He grunted in his throat and gave his head an agitated scratch. The hope in Remus’ chest began to wither once more. “Yes, Dumbledore cast the spell.”

“Then what—?!

“And every single sodding twat kissing You-Know-Who’s arse knew that, didn’t they? Or at least guessed it. You knew that—you lived it, Moony. Every wizard and witch he had out looking for the Potters was after me.”

Remus hesitated. Sirius had been a primary target of Voldemort for many reasons by late 1980, those reasons not exclusive to the Dark Lord’s hunt for Harriet, and Remus could recall more than one evening in which Sirius stumbled through the front door bloodied and beaten, taken unawares by an impromptu duel in the streets.

“Dumbledore cast the Fidelius Charm and used me as the original Secret Keeper. As far as he knows, I always was. I did a damn good job of it, too, for a few months.” Black dragged a grubby hand over his face. “I told Lily and James—.”

“Don’t say their names. You don’t deserve to—.”

“I told LILY AND JAMES that I would rather die than tell that murdering prick where they and Harriet were hidden,” he shouted. “And I would have! I would have gone to my grave gladly! But they were worried about me getting bloody captured because everyone was on my tail.”

“You cannot force a Keeper to give up a Secret. We learned that in Charms, if you care to remember.”

“Yeah? And how many impossible things d’you think You-Know-Who did before breakfast every morning?” Sirius spat on the floor. “They were worried I’d get captured and he’d manage to circumvent the Charm somehow, so they decided to change the Keeper to someone no one would expect. Lily understood the Charm well enough to know how to change the Keeper without the caster present—not because they didn’t trust Albus, but because the old man had enough targets on his back as it was. Lily wanted to use that—do you remember that ghoulish, greasy creep, Snape? She wanted to use him.” Black sneered, colorless eyes glinting in the dark, and Remus spared a thought for the Potions Master. “James managed to talk her out of it. Not that it did much good, in the end.”

“If you weren’t the Keeper, who do you want me to believe was?”

“Peter.”

Remus couldn’t help himself; he laughed. “Peter? How convenient, then, that he’s too dead to corroborate this—this ridiculous story!”

Black reached for his robes, and Remus’ stance stiffened, another curse lingering on the cusp of his lip. Slowing, Black kept his gaze on Remus but kept sliding his hand into the interior of his dirty robes, withdrawing it just as slowly, revealing a battered bit of newspaper clipping. He held it out to Remus, and Remus Summoned it from him, grimacing.

“What is this?” he demanded, glowering at a black and white photo of a family. He recognized them as the Weasleys after closer inspection, the whole lot of them standing in the foreground before the pyramids in Egypt. Magic crackled over the thin paper, an Impervius Charm laid into it at some point, but constant folding and touch had weathered the edges.

“Look at the boy,” Black seethed. “The boy there, see him? See the rat?”

Remus did not, in fact, see the rat, and needed further coaching to find it perched upon Ronald Weasley’s shoulder. He swallowed.

It…it looks like Peter. But no, it couldn’t be—how long has it been since I saw him last transform? Thirteen? Fourteen?

“It’s a common garden rat. It means nothing.”

“Look at the paw.”

“What?”

“Look at the paw, Remus!” Black made as if to lunge forward, gripped by some sudden mania, and Remus jabbed him right in the burn with his wand, sending the wizard back against the wall once more. Closer scrutiny revealed the rat on Ron’s shoulder was missing a toe.

The only piece of Peter they could recover was a finger. Remus had gone to the funeral—had been the only one there aside from Peter’s poor, distraught mother. He never knew why no one else bothered to come, but then, Peter hadn’t been well-liked. The memory of the coffin holding only one finger being lowered into the earth remained visceral in his nightmares.

“…you can’t be serious.”

Black cackled, throwing his head back. “Funny thing, mate. I’m always serious.”

Remus fancied himself an intelligent man when he wasn’t scratching and biting and howling at the moon, and now pieces of information, half-thought ruminations and theories collaborated during drunken hazes, seemed to align too perfectly in his mind. Twelve years ago, when they told him Peter Pettigrew had died in a blaze of glory after confronting the nefarious Sirius Black, his reaction had been one of uncharitable confusion, because Peter Pettigrew had never confronted anything or anyone in his entire life. Remus had been ashamed of his disbelief, but it didn’t refute the truth of Peter being limp and malleable. When they said Sirius Black had betrayed the Potters, Remus remembered the nights Black came home bloody and wondered, but why did he wait so long? He was Secret Keeper for months! before that question got buried in the grief.

Tiny inconsistencies in the framework of what he believed to be true suddenly resembled fault lines threatening to tumble reality—but did Remus dare believe in this? How could he? It couldn’t be true.

As Remus stood frozen, deliberating, Black turned his attention to the door, and his gaze became inexplicably wistful. “I saw them,” he whispered. “Just for a second. Harriet and—Elara. She’s…alive. I—.”

Rage overcame Remus, burying his befuddled incredulity as he bore his teeth. Red rose from his neck and inched into his face. “No thanks to you.”

Black’s gray eyes tightened. “What the fuck is that supposed to mean, Moony?”

“It means her being alive is no thanks to you! You told me she was dead!”

“I thought she was dead! The Aurors said no one made it out of the fire! You saw the house!”

“She shouldn’t have been in that house to begin with!” Remus fired a Cutting Curse at Black, and the flash of light sliced the arm of his robes, a bright, glinting line of blood splattering the wall behind him as Black swore. “You tell me to trust, and yet you haven’t any clue what that means!”

“Bullshit.”

“Is it? You made an awful lot of plans on your own in those days, it seems, and I heard about none of it.” Remus couldn’t stop his hands from shaking. “You sent my daughter away without telling me! You never trusted me!”

“But that’s the fucking point, isn’t it?!” Black snarled, striking his burnt chest. His face had gone red from the strain of yelling and holding himself upright. “I trusted you! Trusted you with every bleeding inch of my worthless hide, trusted you more than I trusted myself most days—and we couldn’t afford it! Someone was feeding You-Know-Who more and more information every day, his fucking agents tailing me down to the corner market every morning—goddamn it, Remus, I couldn’t trust anyone! I didn’t trust you or James or Lily with her, I—.”

“You trusted Marlene!”

“She was her mother!”

“And I was her father!” Remus roared, sparks erupting from the end of his wand. “Or was that just another joke to you as well?!”

The accusation bounced in the barren, cold room, and Black’s response came low and raspy, whispered through the damning echo. “Don’t you dare,” he said. “Don’t you dare think for one bloody moment, Moony, that anything between us wasn’t real. That I didn’t love you—.”

Remus interrupted the sentiment with a disgusted growl. “You sent her away without a word to me. You took my daughter from me and didn’t say a thing. That is not love.”

Our daughter.” Black looked at him with pale, haunted eyes, then coughed, breathing heavily. “Marlene and her family were going to go under the Fidelius, just like James and Lily. Once that happened, I wouldn’t know where they were—you wouldn’t know, no one would have known. Flitwick was going to cast it but—.” Another hard, dragging breath lifted his sunken chest. “He didn’t get the chance.”

Remus’ fingers tightened around his wand, a terrible ache twisting in his middle. He couldn’t believe him. He shouldn’t. He needed to Stun the bastard before he could say anything else—.

“You ruined my life.”

Black laughed, then coughed again. “Moony, I ruined everything I ever touched.”

“If you had come to me, if you’d said what you meant to do, I would have agreed. To any of it—all of it! About the Secret Keeper, or sending Elara to Marlene under the Fidelius. Did that never occur to you?!”

“How was I supposed to know that? How was I supposed to know you wouldn’t—?!” Sirius stopped and grit his teeth. When he spoke again, he did so with considerable effort devoted to keeping his tone level. “If You-Know-Who had gotten ahold of Elara, I would have given every Knut in the bank, every Galleon to the Black name, to get her back. That was what he wanted. That was what he’d wanted ever since I jerked the estate out from under Walburga and disowned Reg.”

“And you thought I’d try to dissuade you from protecting our daughter?”

“I didn’t know what to think. It’s a fucking failing of mine, innit?” He snorted, a miserable, dejected sound. “We knew someone close to us was a traitor.”

“And you thought it was me.”

Black lifted his gaze to the rafters. Pain filtered across his unhealthy face, and he shut his eyes, still breathing too heavy, blood dripping from his hand. “Why not? It would have been stupid of me not to consider it. You were perfectly placed, trying to recruit other wolves to the Order—how was I to know you hadn’t been recruited in turn?” His chin dropped toward his chest, lip curling in derision. “And you thought I betrayed Lily, James, and Harriet, and killed thirteen people. How’s that for trust, eh?”

Remus took a step back, uncertain what to say in response. He wanted to defend himself, wanted to point out how everyone had believed him a murderer, not just Remus—but then, Remus hadn’t been everyone to Sirius Black, had he? He’d been his lover, his—well, he would have been Sirius’ husband, had the laws and circumstances and prejudices been different. Marlene had been the surrogate for the daughter they wanted to raise together, and yet, when the Aurors took Sirius, when they suspended habeas corpus for the massive influx of Death Eaters and violent sympathizers, Remus hadn’t protested or asked questions. He had, in essence, washed his hands.

He had not trusted his partner, and his partner had not trusted him.

Again, Remus stumbled, his eyes burning. “The war ruined us,” he muttered.

“The war ruined everything, Moony. But there’s one thing I plan to make right.” Black met his gaze and, straightening his shoulders, walked forward. He walked until the tip of Remus’ wand was pressed to his sternum, and Remus could smell the awful state of his breath. He could also see the sincerity blazing in those dreaded gray eyes, the familiar fringe of black lashes, his resolve so bright and vivid it felt almost warm. “It’s been more than five minutes. Make a choice. Go ahead and send me back to Azkaban—but if you do, swear to me you’ll find that fucking rat, Remus. Swear to me you’ll kill Peter for what he’s done to all of us.”

Remus’ hands continued to shake, and his mind whirled, emotion and logic warring together like waves against the rocks, eroding each other piece by piece. All he had was a newspaper clipping and a rat with a missing toe. All he had was the sudden, nebulous belief of something more, something indefinable, and twelve years of grief pressed upon him like the boulder Sisyphus rolled up the mountain. Merlin, the ponderous back and forth of his hope and nihilism clawed at him, agony and anger twisting about his heart.

Make a choice.

And if I choose wrong? He could condemn an innocent man, a man he once loved more than his next breath, a man he’d loved since he’d been little more than a boy, to a fate worse than death. Or, he could be betraying James and Lily, letting them down one last time, dooming their only daughter to a terrible end. He might be the sentimental traitor Snape kept telling him he was.

Or he might not.

Remus held his breath. He opened his mouth—and chose.

 


A/N: So here’s a rough timeline of events to keep things straight (dates are approximate): June,1980 - Snape gives V prophecy. Snape goes to Dumbledore. July, 1980 - Harriet born. November 1980 - Snape swears Unbreakable Vow. December, 1980 - Potters go under Fidelius. Elara sent to Marlene. January, 1981 - McKinnon fire. October, 1981 - Peter becomes Secret Keeper. Potters betrayed.

Sirius: *flirts, makes pun*

Remus: “Is this really how you want to die?”

Chapter 138: the argonauts

Chapter Text

cxxxviii. the argonauts

 

Sunlight on the grass, sparkling in the morning dew. Mountain air in her lungs, the wind whipping by faster and faster as she leaned into the broom’s handle. The smell of pine, green things, and broom polish, pulling up and into the clear sky—.

Harriet sucked in a breath. “Expecto Patronum!

Silver light pooled from the end of her wand to form something reminiscent of a shield, but it dispersed just as quickly as it had appeared, zapping another chunk of the bespectacled witch’s energy. Frustrated, Harriet considered slumping into the lake’s shallows and letting the tide take her out to sea. Or into the Giant Squid’s gullet, whichever happened first. She could live with becoming squid food.

“Harriet,” Hermione hissed. “Stop mucking about and help.”

“I am helping!”

Elara, standing on the shore, snorted.

“Oi, you’re not even in this class. You get no say.”

A small Stinging Hex hit Harriet’s arm, and she almost jumped out of her wellies. “Ouch!”

Hermione slapped another handful of thick, slimy weeds into the canvas sack strapped to her hip and pointed at them. The gesture held more threat than usual, considering she gripped her pruning knife in that hand and looked fed up with their antics. “Will you two behave already? You’re going to get us into trouble!”

Nearby, the Merman set to guard them against grindylows or other malicious water creatures gave them a telling look, then returned to inspecting the rocks for interesting shells.

The third-year Care of Magical Creatures class dotted the shallows all along the lake’s shore, harvesting strands of gillyweed that had matured under the ice as an exercise in interspecies cooperation. Much of the lake remained frozen, and the water was bloody cold, but the shore had thawed and wildlife began to creep back into the world as winter dragged its legs to its end. Most of the class had drifted over to Professor Grubbly-Plank, as Professor Dumbledore had come down with Fawkes and everyone wanted to fawn over the preening bird. The phoenix had taken to stealing from Harriet’s bag and pockets whenever he happened upon her out in the grounds, and so Harriet was decidedly not impressed and grumpy. Fawkes shot the group a smug, avian look as the Boy-Who-Lived praised his plumage, and Harriet hoped the bird got a stomachache from nicking her expensive Honeydukes fudge.

Nudging a stone over with her toe, Harriet eyed the revealed clump of foliage but didn’t spot the tell-tale shimmer of green against the almost black strands that indicated gillyweed. On the beach, Elara had the glass lens in hand and traced Transfiguration constructs over the top of it, the light blazing bright red before it faded and sunk into the glass. She continued to tilt and turn it every so often and angle it just so, looking for the thin, magical meniscus where their Charms meshed together and found their home. Satisfied, she called Harriet’s name and tossed the lens to her.

“Don’t throw it!” Hermione cried.

Harriet jumped to catch it, and water sloshed into her wellies. “Ugh!” she complained, the icy liquid soaking into her trousers. The Warming Charm on the boots did its job, resulting in a murky, uncomfortable soup swimming about her socks. “Great. It has an Unbreaking Charm on it, Hermione. It’s fine.”

“Yes, but not an Unsinking one!”

“…is there such a thing?”

“No!”

Harriet went on to discuss the merits of strapping the lens to a floaty, Hermione growing more and more irked until she realized Harriet wasn’t being serious. By then, Draco Malfoy had decided to abandon Goyle and Crabbe and swan his way over. Really, it was more of a waddle, given the boots, and Harriet rolled her eyes as she tucked the lens away and went back to harvesting gillyweed.

“Granger,” Malfoy said in that supercilious drawl of his, nose up in the air. Harriet had long decided it had to be a pure-blood thing, putting one’s nose up in the air like that. Elara did it too and got teased by Harriet every time. “Are you going to the Quidditch match this weekend?”

Hermione looked as if the git had asked her if she had plans to boil her socks and chew on her hair. “No?” she replied. “Why would I? It’s a perfectly good waste of study time.”

“But—but Slytherin’s playing against Gryffindor again in the qualifiers!” Malfoy balked. Harriet started edging farther along the shore to get away from him, and unfortunately, Hermione took this as a cue to follow, the blond menace trailing after. “Where’s your House pride?!”

“In my academics—where yours should be as well, unless you want your father to go into another strop.”

The skin of Malfoy’s ears, already pink from the cold, darkened. “You won’t go because Potter’s not playing anymore!”

“That does factor into my reticence, yes. That, and Quidditch is dreadfully boring.”

“It’s not boring!”

Malfoy kept on with his whinging, and despite the distance Harriet tried to put between them, he followed Hermione like a bad smell, arguing the merits of attending Quidditch and ignoring her studies for at least one afternoon. Usually, Harriet wouldn’t have disagreed with what Malfoy was saying, but she found herself disinclined to give the ponce or Marcus Flint’s team of arseholes an ounce of her consideration, so when he continued droning on at some volume much too close to her ears, Harriet snatched a frog from the lakebed and dropped it on his head.

He shrieked, possibly from the frigid liquid trickling through his blond hair, then shrieked again when the frog leaped for the water, leaving grubby footprints on his brow. “Potter! You nasty little beast—.”

Harriet cackled as she shook sediment from her gloves.

“Where did you find that frog?” Hermione asked, puzzled, staring at the ripples where the amphibian had disappeared.

“Over there.”

“Strange. I would have thought they’d be hibernating still.”

“I manifested it through sheer force of w—.”

Mud struck the side of her face, cutting off Harriet’s remark, and she sputtered, spitting out grit. Malfoy sneered as he bent to wash his hands off. Bastard. Dripping muck, Harriet narrowed her eyes and pointed her wand at him. Malfoy glared.

“Do it, and I’ll tell Snape.”

“You’re such a tattle-tale.”

“He’ll have you scrubbing the Floo with your toothbrush for a week.”

“Berk.” Harriet lowered her wand—and jabbed it at his boots. “Finite Incantatem.”

“What—?” Malfoy looked down, confused, then sucked in a startled breath as the Warming Charm failed and the cold seeped in, blanketing his legs. “Ah!”

Malfoy ran for the shore, and Harriet allowed herself a smug smile, ignoring the glop sliding into her collar. Hermione covered a laugh with a slight cough and pretended to look for more gillyweed.

“Are you pleased with yourself? He’s going to be insufferable.”

“Yes, I’m satisfied.”

“He’s going to write his mother, and she’s going to tell you off.”

“I’ll send Mrs. Malfoy a frog too, just for her trouble.”

Eventually, with begrudging assistance from an irritated Elara, Malfoy stomped back into the water, and Harriet sighed, concentrating on her task. She just wanted to finish up so she could go inside and take a nice hot shower.

The tide swelled and sloshed against the sand, threatening to rise over the cusp of her boots again. Letting out an exasperated breath, it hung by her mouth in a paltry, pale haze, and she scratched at the mud on her skin, muttering about Malfoy being a prat. They were getting rather far from the class and their Mer chaperon now, and Harriet picked her way among the rocks, wanting to find one last clump to see if they could be excused. She stepped around an overgrown crowberry bush, turning where the shore jutted out and curved in on itself, forming a natural jetty—.

A gasp escaped Harriet before she fully comprehended what she was looking at. Her boot caught on the rocks, sending her tumbling, the jagged peaks abrading her palms through the gloves. “Hell!”

“Harriet! Are you all right—?!”

Hermione came to a sudden stop when she spotted what Harriet had and shrieked. Malfoy screamed as well—with considerable volume and length, his voice echoing across the water. Elara turned heel and vomited her breakfast in the nearest bush.

It was a centaur. A very, very dead centaur.

At first, Harriet didn’t understand the whole of it, and she thought it was an ugly plant or weird rock formation—until her brain realized there was a human torso buoying up from the black silt. Time in the frigid water had leached the original color his skin held, leaving it as pale as a rotten fish’s belly, his cloudy eyes staring unseeing into the gray sky above. Huge claw marks tore across his equine belly, pieces meant to go unseen exposed to the daylight, little fish having come to settle among the milk-white bones and tangled seaweed.

Harriet thought she might be sick, and she cried out when a hand gripped her the arm and hoisted her upright with surprising strength. Professor Dumbledore had joined her in the rocks, heedless of the cold water soaking into his robes, his blue eyes sharp and alert as he studied the centaur. “Are you well, Harriet?”

“Y-yes, sir. I’m okay.”

He nodded, then sighed as he looked again at the dead creature washed ashore, Fawkes warbling on his shoulder. Professor Grubbly-Plank arrived and jolted, placing a hand over her heart as she whispered, “Merlin have mercy.”

“We will have to send word to Magorian and the herd,” Professor Dumbledore said, his tone calm and level. “Wilhelmina, please see the students back into the castle. I believe Mr. Malfoy could also do with a Calming Draught.” Hermione had dragged Draco back to the shore and did her level best to get him and Elara upright, the latter pale and shaken after getting sick. Professor Grubbly-Plank moved into action, shooing those curious students who’d gotten closer, the Merpeople gathered together, talking in that harsh, guttural screech of theirs.

“Professor Dumbledore?” Harriet asked. She trembled, her hands aching inside the stiff gloves. “What could have done something like this?”

The Headmaster didn’t answer immediately, his fingers tightening against her arm. “Nothing good, my dear girl,” he admitted. “Nothing good at all. Let’s get you back inside.”

 

x X x

 

News of the dead centaur didn’t filter far in Hogwarts, surprisingly; no one aside from Harriet, her friends, and Malfoy had seen him, and they weren’t inclined to give a description. Those who’d been in the class with them asked questions, but Harriet only shook her head or shrugged, refusing to provide further explanation. The Headmaster thought it best to excuse them from classes for the rest of the day, and Harriet almost wished he hadn’t; the image of the body drifting in the shallows took up permanent residence behind her eyelids, and she could have used the distraction. She and her friends skipped lunch without a word shared between them.

“It had to have been Fenrir Greyback,” Hermione announced, resolute, her fingers working along Crookshanks’ back. They sat together in what had become their favorite place in the Aerie, the lounge with the Founders’ portraits, though they’d shifted the furniture about to better suit their needs. A large table resided near the hearth now, and around it, they’d placed three comfortable wingchairs. The Aerie could still be a creepy and oppressively silent space, but Harriet thought the arrangement was far better than fighting for a good table in the library, and it spared them from Malfoy’s persistent nagging.

“The full moon was a fortnight ago. That’s when I would guess that poor centaur lost his life. The Prophet has reported almost nothing on Greyback—no sightings, not like with Black. But I told you before, he isn’t far from here,” Hermione continued. “And either the school is making a concerted effort to keep it quiet, or the Ministry is, because it’s technically their fault Greyback and Black are loose in the first place, so any potential repercussions of their actions reflect on the Ministry. Of course, I’m mostly surprised they haven’t tried to use rumors of their presence to drag Dumbledore or Slytherin in for inquiry again, as they did last year. Although, the Board has a lot of power in such matters, and a few seats changed over the summer—.”

Harriet listened to Hermione’s theorizing with half an ear, leaning her chin on her scraped palm as she stared into the fire she’d lit in the hearth. Livi hissed on the floor, his nose butting against her ankle, the whisper of his tongue felt against her skin. “The loud one isss noisssy.

“Hmm,” Harriet whispered, trying to pull her mind away from the morning’s gruesome imagery. It stuck like old gum despite her revulsion, and she didn’t know why. She’d seen a lot of things working with potion ingredients, gross things, and she’d been in the presence of two dead bodies before—Quirrel’s and that wizard who’d come into her tent. Something about this was different. Maybe it was the…decay, the thoughtlessness of it. He’d been attacked—murdered—in the dark and must have fallen into the lake, forgotten under the ice until it started to peel away like some sick wrapping paper. The callous loss and disregard of a person’s life upset her.

Across the table, Elara had the lens in hand again. She consulted an open text, then drew a sigil with the tip of her wand, the blazing orange light blending with the fire’s soft flickering.

Fenrir Greyback. Harriet couldn’t say if Hermione’s hypothesis was correct; she didn’t know what a bloody werewolf attack looked like after all, Slytherin having glossed over that chapter of their instruction because he couldn’t bring in a real werewolf to terrorize them. Other creatures lurked in the Forbidden Forest, dark creatures forced into its depths as the rest of the world modernized—or creatures who’d always been there, beasts born when the forest was young, claiming that bit of the realm as their own. Every teacher in the school drummed it into their skulls that the forest was dangerous for a reason.

Had Greyback killed the centaur? Maybe. Just maybe.

Livi raised himself higher on Harriet’s knees, glaring at Hermione. “Too noisssy.” He wished to nap, obviously, but Hermione’s nervous prattling had been going on for some time now and didn’t have an end in sight. Harriet addressed her familiar without looking at him.

She doesn’t mean to be. She’s just scared.”

Livi’s head swayed, his tongue flickering again. “The loud one isss ssscared?

We’re all scared. There’s people out there who want—and would—hurt us. It’s scary.

The serpent stared, coils tightening about the chair’s legs. “I would protect the Misstresss and her loud one. Sssuch petty things to fear.” He hissed and bared his fangs. “I would bitesss it!

Harriet touched his scales, fingertips roving higher toward the gem atop his skull. “I know you would.” But would she let him? Her eyes strayed to the crack in his horn and the scar upon his face, Tom Riddle’s lingering gifts, and the thought of putting Livius between herself and something as dangerous as a werewolf turned Harriet’s insides. Her familiar was not a convenient, venomous shield. She’d never forgive herself if she got him injured again.

Elara stopped her work and once more inspected the lens, just as she had out at the lake. “Here. That should fix the Transfiguration issues interfering with the Protean Charm.”

Hermione stopped muttering to herself, her gaze sharpening. “How did you fix it?”

“I divided the Transformation from the ward; adjusting the size kept fluctuating the scope of the ward and the information the Protean Charm was trying to interpret, causing it to—.”

“—overheat,” Hermione finished. “Brilliant, Elara! Why didn’t I consider that?”

Brow raised, Elara said, “Because you get fixated on the bigger picture and muddy the details,” as she slid the lens across the table’s cluttered top. Hermione caught it, peeved, but didn’t deny the other witch’s assertion. Harriet nudged Livi off her knees and came around to Hermione’s side, watching as she withdrew her wand and aimed it at the lens. “The map should work properly now—or not catch fire, at the very least.”

“I think the Aerie’s seen enough fire to last a lifetime.”

“Ha, ha. Very funny.” Biting her lip, Hermione tapped the lens and incanted their chosen passphrase, “Non Ducor Duco.

Harriet held her breath, expecting another eyebrow-singeing burst of flame, but instead the lens shifted, growing from the size of a Galleon to a tea saucer, blue light flittering like butterfly wings toward the bronze rim. Harriet leaned over her friend’s shoulder and her grumpy feline to read the letters blossoming to life—.

“’The Argonauts’ Atlas?’” she said, smirking. “You named it? Like the Marauder’s Map? I thought you thought the Marauders and their mischief were silly?”

Pink invaded Hermione’s cheeks, and she gave Crookshanks’ ears a self-conscious rub. The cat purred. “They are silly,” she grumbled. “But all great inventions need a good name. The Argonauts were—.”

“—a group of adventurers who sailed on the Argo with Jason in search of the Golden Fleece, yeah. It’s a good name.” Both Elara and Hermione looked at Harriet with shocked expressions, and she huffed, offended. “What? You know I like to read.”

“Yes, but sometimes we forget.”

“Bloody rude.”

“Don’t be upset, Harriet; we don’t mean anything by it.” Hermione plucked the lens—the Atlas—up from the table and tested the temperature, one fingertip gently prodding the glass. “Here, look. It’s working.”

Still feeling stung, Harriet accepted the proffered olive branch and took the Atlas. The letters had long since faded, replaced by the ghostly image of a room’s outline etched and copied in Harriet’s own hand, and there in the ‘Aerie Portrait Room’s’ center lingered the names Harriet Potter, Elara Black, and Hermione Granger. Her own name flickered like a light bulb, then steadied. The area beyond their sanctuary remained indistinct, blurred by the Aerie’s obfuscating magics.

“Tell it to show you a part of the castle where you’ve taken it before.”

Harriet thought for a moment. “Show me: Slytherin common room.”

The image blurred, replaced by another outline, this one more complex, tiny labels bearing the titles of the different corridors and dormitories branching from their common room’s main floor, names fading in and out of definition as they entered and exited the Atlas’ purview.

“Eventually, it should be able to show people when asked, so long as they’re somewhere the lens has been before, but for right now—.” Hermione lifted one shoulder and dropped it, still stroking Crookshanks. “I haven’t figured out the proper Charms to index how the Atlas should search for a specific, moving person instead of stationary, pinned labels, and if I ask Professor Flitwick anymore pointed questions, he’s going to think I’m trying to stalk someone, I swear.”

Elara snorted and made no effort to hide her amusement. Harriet walked over to her, handing off the Atlas, and Elara called out a few places, testing the needed volume of her voice. At one point, she asked for a room the Atlas hadn’t been—Professor Burbage’s Office—and the Atlas hummed, growing hot like a stubborn, confused child about to throw a tantrum. She quickly called for the Aerie Portrait Room again, and it quieted. “How do you close it?”

Finite. With your wand.”

“And that won’t cancel the other spells?”

“No. Harriet’s runes anchored them—which, in retrospect, proves what a fool I am. Of course the Transformation would be impaired if it was tied to the anchored circumdo ward; I didn’t give it any room to breathe, for goodness’ sake! What was I thinking…?”

Harriet and Elara shared a look as Elara tapped the Atlas with her wand, saying, “Finite.” The light blinked out, and the lens shrunk back into its typical size, deceptively simple in appearance. “Go on. Take that one.”

“Really?”

“Yes. I need to fix the other two lenses later.”

Taking the Atlas, Harriet rubbed her thumb over the faultless glass. “The Argonauts, huh?” she said, grinning. “Does that mean—?”

“No, you can’t give us nicknames.”

“You ruin all of my fun.”

Harriet pocketed the Atlas and returned to her chair, pulling Livi into her lap. Hermione returned to her private Greyback paranoia, and Elara turned into her Animagus form, finding a nice spot by the hearth to nap. Tracing her fingers over Livi’s scales once more, Harriet thought about that strange dog in the forest and wondered.

 

x X x

 

Later, in the dead of night, with the sound of slumbering dormmates surrounding her, Harriet laid in bed and held the Atlas above her head. The blue light glinted off her spectacles as she studied her own name and watched it fade.

The nameless centaur inhabited her dreams, wilting chrysanthemums sprouting between the white bones of his ribs. No matter how hard she tried to listen, Harriet couldn’t hear what he was trying to tell her.

 


A/N: “Non Ducor Duco” - I am not led; I lead.

Chapter 139: futile

Chapter Text

cxxxix. futile

 

Sirius Black sat on the stone floor with a fire at his back, contemplating the possibility of dying from overeating treacle tart. Patting his middle, mouth tasting of golden syrup, he decided it wouldn’t be the worst way to go.

The door opened, stiff iron hinges grating and groaning from the cold, and Sirius held himself wire-tight for a breath, then relaxed when Remus’ familiar smell met his nose. The other man reentered his quarters, pulling off his hat, his eyes darting first to the table, then to Sirius sprawled by the hearth.

“Do I even want to ask why you’re eating on the floor?”

Sirius stabbed a flake of crust and put it in his mouth, biting down on the tines of the fork. “It would look strange if someone suddenly came in and found a dog at the table.”

Remus scoffed, tugging off his cloak. “No one is going to come in here.”

“Now isn’t the time to get cocky, Moony. I didn’t escape that hellhole just to get caught out by an eager house-elf.”

Sitting on the edge of the tidy bed, Remus muttered something under his breath and balanced his elbows on his knees, slumping with exhaustion, the moon beyond the curtained window swelling more with each passing night. Sirius studied him, staring with the same intensity he’d revisited often these last few days shut tight in the other wizard’s quarters. The space didn’t lend itself toward any kind of communal living, but Sirius had spent twelve years in a cell no bigger than a closet; the luxury of having a window and a dedicated loo was a decadent novelty.

He’d been away from Remus for longer than he’d known him, the whole of his twenties spent crouching in the dark, battling his terrors—and from the look of things, Sirius’ erstwhile love hadn’t fared much better. Gray limned his rumpled hair, and different scars decorated his face—different, not new, the color gone dark red with age, never reaching that soft, off-white of a healed wound.

Sirius had caught one glimpse of himself in the loo mirror and hadn’t looked again.

“The house-elves don’t come in here,” Remus explained, rubbing at his eyes. “I don’t want there to be any accidents when I curl up in here during the full moon.”

“What, here? You don’t use the Shack?”

“I haven’t the need to. The Wolfsbane Potion allows me to keep my mind during the transformation.”

Sirius whistled, then chewed another piece of tart. “I’ve never heard of that. The Wolfsbane Potion? Is that something new?”

“It was developed while you were—away.” Remus cleared his throat. “It’s not common. The ingredients are worth more than I am, and it’s apparently a very challenging recipe. I’m fortunate Snape agreed to brew it for me.”

The fork clattered onto the plate. “Snape? As in Snivellus Snape?”

“Yes.”

“Godric’s great gonads, Moony! Are you trying to be fucking poisoned?!”

“Sirius—.”

“Is—is he here? Is that sneering arsehole here, at Hogwarts? Jesus, I thought he’d have his own cell in Azkaban by now. Has Dumbledore gone senile or what—?”

Sirius!

The volume of Remus’ voice cut Sirius’ furious rambling short, and the Animagus stared at him, Remus’ jaw tight and his eyes fever bright. “I know you’ve been…gone for a long time,” he said through clenched teeth. “But things are not as they were before. Hogwarts, Dumbledore, Snape—us. We are not like we were before.”

A phantom pain floated through Sirius’ chest. He knew that. He did.

“This isn’t some fun adventure or sneaking out of the dorms past curfew to cause a spot of mischief.”

“Of course it isn’t,” Sirius snapped. “I didn’t—.”

“The situation in Hogwarts is more fraught than either you or I fully know. The world didn’t pull itself back together while you were shut away, Sirius—it’s never mended, and we’re no longer children who have the luxury of sniping at one another for the sheer thrill. We didn’t win when You-Know-Who fell. There is no winning. So, for the love of Merlin, shut up.”

Remus rose from the bed and stalked to the window, the flat of his palm coming out to slap the stone sash as if he really wished to punch the glass. Sirius’ eyes followed him as he leaned against the fire-warmed wall, biting back the need to argue. Arguing was a novelty. The only people he’d had to talk to for years had been Death Eaters—and that hadn’t been talking, more screaming and shouting and revising his gutter-mouth.

When his temper cooled, Remus said, “I still think you should reconsider, and we should go to Dumbledore.”

“No,” Sirius barked, his response automatic. “No.”

“Sirius—.”

“You’re the one who wants to talk about not being children anymore, Moony. This isn’t some afternoon lark—this is murder. We’re planning murder. We can’t go to Dumbledore with this. If he believes me, and that’s a big if, he’ll want to bring the rat in. He’ll either stop us or send us to bloody Azkaban, and I’m prepared to go back, I’m prepared to rot—but not before I fucking kill Pettigrew. We can’t go to the Headmaster.”

Remus shut his eyes, the lines deepening around his eyes and temples. Sirius knew he was struggling; Moony had always been a swot, intent upon the rules, though not without his reasons. He’d lived his entire life as a werewolf and had always been afraid of it being held against him. Sirius didn’t doubt his friend’s conviction in their goal—only his stomach and conscience. Sirius had already spent twelve years in prison for the death of a man he fully intended to reap.

“The game will have started by now,” Remus said, gaze fixed on the horizon, as if he could see the Quidditch pitch far out in the distance. He couldn’t, but it settled his mind and his warbling nerves. “I saw the rest of the staff out before doubling back. Dumbledore’s down there as well.”

“About time.” Sirius reached into his robes and felt for the folded parchment stashed there beside the newspaper clipping. “I’ve got the passwords for the entire week to get past that barmy knight.”

Remus turned. “Where on earth did you get those?”

A roguish grin curled over Sirius’ mouth. “A cat.”

“…a cat.”

“A kneazle, if we want to get technical. Clever little bugger nicked the list off some poor first-year.”

Remus frowned as Sirius got to his feet. “This kneazle wouldn’t happen to be ginger, would it?”

“Yes? How’d you know?”

Snorting in disbelief, Remus shook his head. “When all is said and done, it appears we’ll owe Ron Weasley an apology. Miss Granger’s familiar apparently does have it out for his pet rat.”

“Miss Granger? Is that who owns that great ginger furball?”

“Yes.” Remus paused, eyes sliding toward Sirius, mischief glinting in their depths for the first time since their reacquaintance. “Hermione. She’s best friends with Harriet and Elara.”

A pleased sound escaped Sirius, joy warming his middle. “Well, girl has good taste in friends, obviously.”

Remus rolled his eyes. “This might be pointless. This excursion. Mr. Weasley is under the assumption his rat is dead.”

“We won’t know until we look, eh? Peter isn’t dead and you know it.” The warm feeling sat odd and incongruous next to Sirius’ misery and hatred, not lasting long under the weight of what he must do. He looked down at his wand—a wand—and the parchment, both clasped tight in white-knuckled fists. “I need to get going.”

“I’m going with you.”

“Like hell,” Sirius barked, grabbing Remus by the wrist. The other wizard jerked away from his touch, and Sirius averted his eyes, his face warm. “You don’t have a plausible reason to go poking about the tower. If you get caught—.”

“And it’d be better if you did?”

“Yeah.”

“Don’t be ridiculous.”

“I’m never ridiculous, always Sirius,” the Animagus replied, though his brittle smile did little to alleviate the tense atmosphere. “Listen. If you get caught snooping about, you could lose your job. Hell, we’d both be out of a place to stay, wouldn’t we? If I get caught—well, I’m just some poor wayward dog.”

“And you don’t think people would find that suspicious?”

“Well, sure. But I’ve gotten out of tighter spots in the past. So long as the blame doesn’t come back to you, it’s fine, Moony.”

Remus took a minute to absorb this information, and Sirius couldn’t help but watch the familiar way his eyes moved—even if those eyes refused to glance in his direction. “You may have a point,” he conceded. “But I’m still going to escort you as close to the tower as I can.” Before Sirius could argue, he added, “Not all of the staff attend Quidditch matches—Filch is about somewhere, and a few of auxiliary professors. Gryffindor Tower will be empty, however, given it’s an important match for them.”

Sirius couldn’t fault Remus’ logic—he never could, really, never in their boyhood years—and so he relented with a slight grunt, reaching out to touch Remus’ hand. He couldn’t help himself. It’d been so long since he’d touched or been touched by anyone, and though he’d delighted in the feel of Harriet’s mittened fingers petting his ears and fur, that hadn’t presented the same tangibility as touching Remus did. The skin under his fingertips was warm—so warm—the skin delicate over the gentle protrusion of bones, and Sirius inhaled as he brushed the rougher scarring on Remus’ knuckles.

Neither wizard moved, staring at Sirius’ hand on Remus’—until Remus cleared his throat and went for the door. Sirius didn’t protest. Instead, he gripped hold of the magic inside of him to change forms and followed. His paw continued to tingle.

As expected, the corridors were near empty, the rapid shuffle of their feet and paws echoing against the cold stone walls as they hurried along. The daylight spilling through the windows filled Sirius with a sense of urgency—and dread, the pressure of discovery like the weight of a hippogriff’s stare on the back of his neck. “At times like this, I miss our old map,” Remus commented, voice almost too soft for Sirius’ ears. “I looked for it, of course. I checked Filch’s office, but he probably destroyed it long ago.”

Sirius growled. Rotten old sod.

Noise ahead of them drew the pair of wizards to a stop, and Remus opened an empty classroom, shooing Sirius inside before locking the door. The sound of shoes and conversation approached, and Sirius listened closely as he crouched in the dark and waited for them to pass by.

“Hello, you three,” Remus said, muffled by the barrier between them. “Why aren’t you at the Quidditch game?”

There came a distinctly annoyed huff in answer, followed by a girl saying, “Don’t mind her, Professor Lupin, she’s still upset.”

“I’m not upset!” said Harriet. Harriet!

“Definitely upset,” came a third, amused voice.

“Are you all right, Harriet?” Remus interjected into the building argument. “It’s perfectly okay to be unhappy about not being able to play.”

Sirius’ goddaughter grumbled in reply, and feet slapped on the stone floor as someone stomped away. “Sorry, Professor. We really should—.”

“Go ahead, don’t mind me. I hope she feels better in time.”

“I hope so, too….”

The two other students retreated, and Sirius changed forms, using his wand to slap a Disillusionment Charm over himself as Remus eased the door open once more. Sirius pushed by him, earning a soft sound of exclamation, but his attention fully centered on the pair of retreating back hurrying down the corridor until they vanished out of sight. Elara. His heart thumped loud and fast in his chest as Sirius wondered which of the voices he’d heard belonged to her. And the other witch? Granger, Remus said?

“What are you doing?” Remus hissed.

“Why isn’t she playing Quidditch?” Sirius asked. He’d seen his goddaughter fly, had seen how she took to the air with such ease, just like James, despite the green and silver on her robes—.

“No one on staff is entirely sure. It’s apparently down to some inner Slytherin House politics.”

“That’s bloody ridiculous!”

“What’s bloody ridiculous is having this conversation now of all times! Hurry, Padfoot!”

A fumbling grip on his invisible wrist yanked Sirius into motion, and he stuck close to Remus’ tread, masking the rippling lines of his illusion with the other man’s shadow. Not that it mattered; they encountered no one else on their journey up through the galleries, even the portraits sparing the lone History of Magic professor little attention. At the corridor just out of sight of what should have been the Fat Lady’s portrait had Sirius not taken a knife to the canvas in a moment of frustration, the pair of wizards stopped and held their breath, listening. The parchment felt sticky in Sirius’ thin hand.

“Go,” Remus whispered, face stony and immobile. “I’ll attempt to delay anyone coming this way.”

“Stay out of trouble, Moony.”

Sirius strode past the wizard, coming into the corridor proper, the muted thump of his feet audible in the otherwise silent passage. He paused in front of the snoring knight guarding the common room and, glancing around, gave the frame a single, firm smack.

“Eh?!” the knight yelped, visor clapping down over his eyes. In the background, his fat pony looked up from grazing, then went right back to it. “Who’s there? Show thyself, knave!”

“Haberdashery,” Sirius retorted.

“What?! Oof—!” The portrait swung forward with force, jostling its resident, and Sirius clamored through the revealed entrance, shaking with expectation.

The common room hadn’t changed much since Sirius last saw it so many years ago. The furniture had shifted about and gained a few new scars, but the chairs and couches were the same, the carpet the same, the drapes over the windows familiar in a way that caused Sirius’ heart to ache. The mixture of smells burned in his nose—old shoes and perfume, broom polish and oxidized cauldron, sugary sweets and wood smoke. Someone had left their homework on a table, ink dripping from an untended quill, and a Fanged Frisbee snarled from beneath an ottoman by the hearth.

How many times had he envisioned this room during the darkest days of his imprisonment? How many hours had he spent curled up as a dog, placing himself there with the people he’d loved best in this world? So many of them gone, so many dead—.

It was all his fault, all Peter’s fault—.

“Where are you, you son of a bitch?” Sirius breathed, knuckles tightening around his wand.

He stormed up the steps to the boys’ dormitory, pausing only long enough outside the door to the third-years’ room to make certain none of the lads were there. He eased inside, a growl trapped in his throat, and locked the door behind him, sealing it against any bloody rodents trying to escape. “Come out and play, you little rat….”

Sirius tried going through the room without disturbing anything, intent on leaving as little sign of his presence as possible despite the room already being in an abysmal state. The longer he searched, however, the angrier he grew, and soon he’d torn the hangings from the Weasley boy’s bed and had upended someone’s trunk. He changed into a dog and felt madness ride him, claws in his mind digging deep as he snarled and tore through sheets and blankets and clothes. Where, where, where—?

He was out the door and into the next room before he had time to give it another thought, tearing through the trunks and bedding, gritting his teeth hard enough to shatter diamonds. Unbearable desperation welled in his chest like a firestorm when Sirius realized the rat wasn’t there. What had Remus said? The boy—the Weasley lad, thought the rat dead? But no—an Animagus doesn’t stay an Animagus when it dies, Gamp’s law coming into play, the natural state of being overcoming the broken magic—.

Where, where, where—?

Peter Pettigrew’s dead body hadn’t suddenly shown up in the school, so the bastard wasn’t dead, and he wouldn’t run. He didn’t have anywhere to go, and Peter might have been a coward, but he wasn’t stupid enough to abandon the Wizarding world and strand himself without news. He was here, somewhere, somewhere—.

The sound of voices stopped Sirius’ mad, pillaging quest, and he looked up from where he’d been ransacking the common room, upending couch cushions and chairs. Chatter neared the covered portrait—student chatter, and with a yelp, Sirius realized he’d been here for far too long, had raided half the bloody tower without a single thing to show for it, and the sun beyond the windows had lowered considerably toward the thicket of trees—.

Laughter and singing grew in volume—chants of “Longbottom! Longbottom!” echoing until they morphed into a confusing roar. The portrait came open, the cacophony pouring in like the morning tide, and Sirius darted across the common room as a dog, whimpering at the stinging burn on his elbows and arms as he slid on the rug. A shadowed alcove adjoined the main floor—and through it a portrait and a door waited, both of which Sirius had seen open often enough when his Head of House came storming in from her office to tell her unruly lot of Gryffindors to shut up and go to bed.

“Hey—what happened in here?”

“What a mess!”

“The party hasn’t even started—!”

“Oi, mate, are those your textbooks? What’re they doing down here—?”

Sirius transformed and remained crouched, easing his foot through and over the raised threshold of the thistle meadow painting, listening to the growing alarm of the Gryffindors. In their haste to check their own belongings, none gave the second entrance any thought, and Sirius was quick to unlock the door at his back and retreat. He backed inside, and when the door closed with a soft, discreet click, he released a gusty sigh.

A noise behind him had Sirius whipping around with his wand raised.

Minerva McGonagall stood at the side of her desk, the candles not yet flared, staring at him as if she’d seen a ghost—her pointed hat splattered in red and gold confetti, the witch in the middle of shedding her outer cloak. Sirius’ Disillusionment Charm had fallen off ages ago, and he knew—without a doubt—McGonagall would have had him dead upon the floor if her arms hadn’t been trapped behind her back by her own bunched sleeves.

Sirius thanked Merlin for small miracles.

He gave her a cheeky grin. “Sorry, Professor.”

McGonagall swore, going for her wand, and Sirius shouted, “Stupefy!” The red light barely had a chance to fade before he bolted for the office door, running for his life.

 


 

A/N: Someone asked how many more chapters for PoA; about 15? It’ll probably be less than that, but we’ll see.

If Sirius had any interest in justice or the law, he wouldn’t have gone off to kill Pettigrew in the first place; he typifies that more impulsive, Gryffindor recklessness, and I think Remus is just angry and disillusioned enough with the system to go along with him.

Sirius: “Stupid Snivellus Snape. Zero stars, would not recommend.”

Remus: “Be quiet, he’ll hear you.”

Snape, somewhere in the dungeons: “Someone’s talking JUNK.”

Chapter 140: suspicion

Chapter Text

cxl. suspicion

 

“—trashed the entire common room—.”

“—attacked McGonagall, left her there in her office—!”

“—was searching for Longbottom—.”

“—they barely escaped a serial killer—!”

“—could have murdered them!”

The gossip rippled throughout the Great Hall, hopping from student to student, House to House, and Elara could feel their eyes burning against the nape of her neck, heavy with condemnation. She tried to ignore it, but Harriet kept hissing and sneering at anyone who lingered too long in their presence.

“Bugger off, Wattle,” the bespectacled witch spat at the seventh year Gryffindor who’d come to stand by their table. He scowled as he bent forward, resting his hand on the table’s edge, and Elara’s eye twitched as the heat of him came too close to her side. His cologne stank.

“I don’t think so, Potter,” Walter Wattle retorted. “Black here needs to answer for the solid crystal chess set her daddy smashed on my bloody floor!”

Elara refused to rise to his bait or respond to his tone, concentrating instead on her cold lunch. She’d picked the pudding to shreds.

“Are you listening to me, Black?”

“Not really, no.”

He made as if to grab her arm, to bully her into looking up at him as the oldest, meanest residents of St. Giles’ used to do—but Harriet had her wand out and pointed at him, hidden from the High Table by a carafe of pumpkin juice. Wattle stopped.

“Put that away before you get hurt.”

“Leave her alone. She has nothing to do with Sirius Black and no one gives a shite about anything of yours that was broken.”

“You’re a right little thug, Potter. I’m not talking to you.”

“Doesn’t matter. I’m talking to you, and I’m saying go away.”

The staff might not be able to hear what was being said, but they were by no means blind to the situation; Elara was only surprised it was Slytherin himself and not Professor Snape who disembarked from his table and came upon them.

“Find your seat, Mr. Wattle,” he said, shooing the taller young man away from them. He narrowed his red eyes across the table at Harriet. “Put that away, Potter.”

Elara almost laughed, given the irony of Professor Slytherin repeating what Wattle had snapped—but the cold disdain dripping from his voice did not lend itself to any kind of humor, and Harriet quickly tucked her wand away. Elara caught the flash of Kevin’s scales tightly wrapped around her covered wrist.

“Idle threats are for Muggles, Potter. If you mean to use your wand, you’d best do so, lest I take it from you next time.”

Their Defense instructor left then, returning the dais and the High Table set upon it, curious Slytherins glancing between his back and the trio of grim-faced third years. Elara wished she could bring herself to curse.

“You need to leave it alone, Harriet.”

Harriet scowled. “I won’t, not if they keep harassing you like this.” Her green eyes flicked toward the Gryffindors at Elara’s back, then toward the staff, an empty seat at Dumbledore’s side where McGonagall usually sat. The Headmaster had reported she was fine, that she’d only been Stunned and bumped her head, but the Transfiguration Mistress had spent the last two days in the care of Madam Pomfrey and Professor Snape to make certain she hadn’t been cursed with anything Dark while unconscious.

Elara’s stomach twisted, bile burning the back of her throat. She wrote letters to McGonagall every week, talking about school or Transfiguration or—at the professor’s insistence—her feelings and time at the orphanage. Sometimes, if she couldn’t confess an emotion to Hermione or Harriet, she wrote it down and put it in the post, and though it sometimes didn’t solve things, Elara begrudgingly admitted unburdening herself to someone older, wiser, and more knowledgeable had an ameliorative effect. McGonagall couldn’t always fix a problem and didn’t always give perfect advice, but she listened and didn’t judge.

That Sirius Black, her father, had attacked the witch she’d come to view as a mentor, rankled Elara’s heart.

What did he mean by wrecking Gryffindor Tower? she pondered. Most everyone had asked themselves the same question, but no one had a proper answer and Elara thought it might be best to assume Black had gone round the twist. He was clever enough to figure out the password to get by the portrait, but what for? To trash the rooms and toss a few trunks? Elara was only a third year, and yet even she knew a few curses off the top of her head that could be applied to a bed or possession to harm someone. He hadn’t waited for the Boy Who Lived; Black sought to escape as soon as the Gryffindors returned.

What is the point of that? Elara stared down at her congealing lunch, ignoring the whispers. Why cause all this panic and go through so much effort? Why risk getting caught? He didn’t even steal anything.

The sound of suspicious, caustic voices kept needling, and Elara finally set her fork aside, unable to eat anything else. “I’m going to History.”

Harriet and Hermione quickly scrapped their own meals and grabbed their satchels, following Elara from the table and out of the Great Hall. They waited in the corridor outside the classroom for Professor Lupin and the rest of the students, Harriet muttering something sharp under her breath about Walter Wattle and Professor Slytherin that Elara didn’t listen to. It was probably inflammatory. She held her bag close to her side and took a low, calming breath.

Class commenced soon enough. Elara did her best to take notes despite her anxious, wayward thoughts, watching Professor Lupin as he slowly paced before the blackboard. The wizard looked awful, and Elara theorized it wouldn’t be long before he needed to miss another day of lessons and rest. No one knew what afflicted him, but the Wizarding world wasn’t without its illnesses, auto-immune diseases and hereditary, blood-born weaknesses magic couldn’t cure. What kind of life had Lupin lived before arriving at Hogwarts? Given his facial scarring, Elara wagered it’d been violent.

The period had almost come to an end when the Auror arrived. Elara should have taken Lupin’s topic of witch-hunts as an ill-portent.

“‘Scuse me, Professor,” the dark-eyed wizard said as he stepped through the door without so much as a knock. Heads swiveled at the intrusion, Elara’s chest tightening the moment she glimpsed his maroon robes. “I’m here to borrow Elara Black.”

Professor Lupin straightened from where he’d bent by his desk, making a notation on his lecture notes. His hand flinched around the worn quill. “You’re interrupting my class. What is this about?”

“Ministry business.” The Auror bared his teeth in the rictus of a smile. “I’ll be needing the girl now, not later.”

Murmuring arose as eyes cut to Elara, and she had the mad wish of someone—anyone—standing up and taking credit for her name. No one did, of course, and so Elara gathered her things and slipped them into her bag. Setting his lecture aside, Professor Lupin followed Elara to the waiting Auror.

“Where are you taking her?”

“Never you mind.” He opened the door wider—and when she spotted the second, taller Auror standing in the hall, Elara froze. The first Auror gripped her by the arm to propel her from the room.

“You can’t just remove her from class!” Hermione cried. Elara twisted to look behind her, heart rate spiking, the Auror’s hand heavy and implacable.

“Miss Granger, Miss Potter, please return to your seats. I will—.”

Whatever Professor Lupin would or wouldn’t do, Elara didn’t hear, as the Auror escorted her into the corridor and the door banged shut behind them. The echo of it merged with the steady march of boots on the stone, and Elara’s breath hitched.

Father Phillips had his hand tight on her arm, her tired questions going unasked, her bare feet scraping the floor.

Elara stumbled, dragging her heels.

“No need for that,” the Auror said, fingers pinching. “We’re just going to have a nice, friendly chat, Miss Black. Won’t take more than a minute, if you cooperate. It’s nice to get out of class early, isn’t it?”

No, it isn’t.

She didn’t know the room they took her to, only that it was passably clean and empty aside from a single chair and the wash of sunlight coming through the bare window.

The iron key twisted in the thick wooden door’s lock, the door Elara had never been inside before, revealing the stone bunker beyond, cracks liming the blocking, candles bracketed to the walls. It must have been there since the war. There sat a lone, narrow bed inside, one with no mattress or linens, only a thin mat and restraints trailing from the metal posts like snake tongues—.

Her chest ached as if she’d swallowed a balloon and it had expanded unbidden in her throat, choking off her airway. She jerked against the man’s hand again, and he released her, though the firm gesture toward the single chair told her he wasn’t above assisting her if she refused. Elara sank into it, clutching her satchel against her middle. Sweat built on the nape of her neck and dripped along her spine. The second Auror stood at the door, blocking escape.

“Who are you?” she demanded, voice thinner and weaker than she wanted. “What is this about?”

He refused her his name. “Surely you’re aware of the recent situation here at the school, Miss Black?”

She opened her mouth, then closed it. “I—don’t know what you’re referring to.”

The Aurors exchanged looks, the first sneering, running a hand along the scruff decorating his weak jaw. Both had the look of ragged, ill-bred men dressed in fine clothes; Elara couldn’t stop her gaze from returning to the golden pin on his lapel, a simple eye encircled by the slithering coils of a gilded ouroboros.

“I’m talking about your father, girl. Sirius Black, and his repeated incursions into this fine establishment.”

Elara clenched her teeth. “I don’t know anything about that.”

“No? Are you certain?”

“Yes.”

“There’s no need to lie, Elara. We know someone in the school has to be assisting Black. Circumstances being what they are, the Ministry is prepared to mitigate consequences in considering your sentence.”

They spoke as if the decision had already been made, and that frightened Elara all the more. “I—I haven’t done anything wrong!

“Of course not,” he soothed, smirking, as if speaking to a much younger child. “Not from your perspective, I imagine.”

The sweat had begun to stick her blouse to her back. “You can’t—you can’t just pull me out of class and question me like this! I don’t have anything to do with Sirius Black!”

“Usually, you’d be correct, Elara—.”

Stop calling me that!”

Elara,” the Auror repeated, mouth lingering on the last syllable. “But you’re an emancipated minor, which in the eyes of the Ministry means you can be questioned and interrogated without the presence of a guardian.” He smiled. “Not that this is an interrogation.”

“Isn’t it?” she snapped.

“Not yet.”

Elara’s breath came shorter still, her nails bending under the force she exerted in gripping her canvas satchel.

“Now, Elara, let’s be friends. Things are looking a bit grim for you at the moment—.”

“I don’t know anything about Sirius Black!”

“But you do, don’t you? You’re his daughter, and any good pure-blood girl always listens to her father, convict or no.”

Elara was going to be sick. She tried to remain calm, but visions of enclosed rooms and handcuffs and burning metal prickled along her thoughts and made her eyes burn. The Auror leaned forward, and Elara realized how far she’d slumped back in the chair to get away from him.

“We’ll have to return you to the Aurory for proper questioning,” he said, his tone disappointed. “Unless…there’s another student with connections to Black you think we should interview instead?”

Elara stared, and the Auror leaned in as if telling her a secret. His tongue flicked out over his lower lip, and he had the air of a predator about to go for the kill.

“His goddaughter, maybe? Miss Potter. Tell us, Elara, have you seen Miss Potter acting oddly? Do you believe she’s in collusion with Black? If you did, we’d have to take her to the Aurory in your stead….”

Brow furrowing, Elara puzzled over the wizard’s reasoning—and then jolted in her seat, eyes widening. The pin on the man’s lapel stirred a memory in the back of her mind—a similar pin on the black, bespoke robes of a red-eyed monster standing at the foot of Luna Lovegood’s infirmary bed. The MinisterThe Minister wants Harriet. He had for some time, hadn’t he? Since the end of their first year—since he sent out wizards to find her in the summer, when she’d be most vulnerable and unaware, and Elara remembered how he’d stared when they crossed paths in the hospital wing.

Hermione had told them the Minister approached her at the Malfoys’ over Yule break, and he’d been most interested in their presumed friendship. The Minister—and the Aurors—had no legal recourse to question or possibly remove Harriet as they could Elara, whose emancipation had come around to bite her squarely on the backside. However, if they had judicial cause or due evidence, perhaps provided by a guilty student wanting to escape her own persecution, the Aurors could take Harriet from Hogwarts before alerting her hypothetical guardians.

Elara weighed the pros and cons of spitting in the nameless wizard’s face and decided against it. Her answer came out hard and cold despite the fear souring her stomach. “My apologies, sir. I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she said.

Whether or not the Aurors intended to make good on their threats to remove her from the school, she never found out, as the door came open—slamming into the second, silent Auror’s back—and Headmaster Dumbledore stood at the threshold. Behind him, Professor Lupin lingered, panting as if he’d run the whole breadth of the castle.

“Good afternoon, gentlemen,” Professor Dumbledore said, his tone polite but sharp and unfriendly. “Do forgive my intrusion, but I must ask for this interview to come to an end.”

“Now, see here, Headmaster—.”

“As an Auror, you have full authority to interrogate an emancipated student without legal counsel or their guardian present, but as Headmaster, I am well within my rights to cut said interrogation short and to deny any forthcoming attempts to remove Miss Black from my institution. You can find all this information in the school’s bylaws, if you care to look—and in those same bylaws, you might be curious to find it is illegal to enter Hogwarts without first acquiring my permission or acknowledgment. I’m certain that slipped your mind. Miss Black—.”

Headmaster Dumbledore gestured her forward, his blue eyes intent, and Elara bolted from the chair, narrowly avoiding a collision with the second Auror as she squeezed out of the room.

“Come with me, Ela—Miss Black,” Professor Lupin told her, and Elara was shaken enough by the confrontation that she didn’t protest and didn’t look at the Headmaster again as he proceeded to argue with the Aurors. She just wanted to be away from that place, away from those men, as quickly as she could, and so she fell into step behind her History of Magic instructor, concentrating on the frayed threading of his collar as if her life depended on it.

His classroom was empty when they reached it. “Did—is lecture over?”

“I dismissed everyone early,” Professor Lupin explained, shutting the door. “Come through to my office and have a cup of tea. You’re shaking. Do you need Madam Pomfrey?”

“No,” Elara rejected, her response immediate. She squeezed her hands together with enough force to make her knuckles pop, the sound ghoulish in the otherwise quiet lecture hall. “No.”

Seeming to understand her desire for silence, Professor Lupin brought her to his bare, rather utilitarian office, and settled her in the stiff visitor’s chair. She barely heard him order tea from a house-elf, and when he pressed a cup into her fingers, Elara jolted and would have spilled it on herself if he hadn’t held it steady. “Careful.”

Distracted, Elara nodded, concentrating on forcing even breaths in through her nose and out through her mouth, the porcelain cup chattering against its saucer. The tea tasted of chamomile and stung on her lips.

She went to place the cup on the edge of the professor’s desk, and the rising bruises formed by strong, unrelenting fingers on her arm throbbed in time with her pulse. Elara barely had time to drop the cup and saucer before she fell to her knees and vomited in the dustbin.

“I’m sorry,” she gasped, snatching a handkerchief from her pocket as Professor Lupin knelt by her, one tentative hand resting on her shoulder. “I’m really sorry.” Tears and snot and sick made a mess of her crimson face, and Elara held in a sob, feeling disgusting. Weak.

“It’s okay, Miss Black.”

“I expected it to happen eventually,” she hiccuped, trying to breathe. “I don’t understand what’s wrong with me. I knew they’d want to question me one day about him, if I’d been in contact or knew anything, and I don’t—!”

“Shh, just take a moment and collect yourself,” the professor said, taking his hand from her person, though he remained crouched next to her. He Vanished the mess in the bin without comment. “Intellectually admitting to the likelihood of an event does not mean we are necessarily prepared for it to happen, nor does it make it less harrowing. They had no right to pull you from class or to suspect you of any wrongdoing.”

“They wanted Harriet,” she confessed before she could think better of it.

Professor Lupin frowned, confused. “Why?”

Elara shook her head and refused to say more.

A scrabbling noise at the second door adjoining the office startled them both, and Lupin swore aloud when it opened and admitted what Elara at first thought was a small bear. She yelped as the barreling ball of black fur collided with her—and a wet tongue struck her cheek.

Is—that’s a dog.

“S—Pad—Stop!” Professor Lupin sputtered in bursts and starts, wrapping an arm around the dog’s chest to haul him back. A plaintive whine came from the creature, its—his—gray eyes intent on Elara, pulling against Lupin’s hold. “I’m terribly sorry about him, the monstrous beast. He’s horridly behaved—!

The dog lurched again, ducking the professor’s grip, his wet nose snuffling Elara’s tear-streaked cheek and neck and hands. He insisted on her petting him, and only when she had his head carefully cradled in her hands did the dog sit down. Elara returned to her chair, and he followed, muzzle balanced on her knees as his shaggy tail wagged back and forth.

“He’s—friendly?” she commented, unsure, and the dog woofed in confirmation.

“Overly so,” Professor Lupin said. He dropped into his padded chair behind the desk, though his attention didn’t stray from his dog, hands tight on the armrests. “If he’s bothering you, he can go back to his room.”

Elara shook her head, passing her fingers gently over the dog’s soft ears. “No, he’s fine.” She usually refrained from touching living creatures; her unnatural predilection for killing plants made her nervous it might happen if she was holding someone’s pet or familiar. It was reaffirming, however, to have the warm, comforting weight leaning against her legs, and without her knowing it, Elara’s breathing had evened, though she continued to sniffle and occasionally shake.

Several minutes passed, during which Elara did nothing more than pet Professor Lupin’s dog and the wizard watched her do so. The dog brought one paw up to rest on her knee, and Elara didn’t mind the dusty print left behind.

“Thank you for retrieving the Headmaster,” she told the professor after a time. “I appreciate it.”

Professor Lupin shook his head and sighed. “I’m sorry I couldn’t stop them from taking you.” In an undertone, he added, “I’m sorry about a lot of things.”

The dog whimpered and licked the back of Elara’s hand.

“Professor Dumbledore will have seen the Aurors off the premises by now. You’d best go find Miss Potter and Miss Granger; they were worried.”

For the first time all day, Elara smiled, a slight upturning of her lips as she considered the witches she thought of as her family. “I know. Thank you again for your help.”

“You’re quite welcome.”

Elara rose, gathered her satchel and her handkerchief, and departed. Had she thought to turn around, she would have seen a second wizard where there’d once been a dog, watching her leave with grief pouring from his gray eyes.

 

 

 

A/N: Hermione figured out Lupin was a werewolf in canon because he missed class around the full moon. Simple fix? Miss an additional day or two at other, random times in the month. Snape also wasn’t around to assign that werewolf essay, and because he can’t bring in a live one to terrify his students, Slytherin glossed over the lesson.

Elara: “I’m EMANCIP—.”

Auror: “Uno-reverse.”

Elara: *horrified gasp*

Chapter 141: burn the witch

Chapter Text

cxli. burn the witch

 

Days came and went with no further sign of Sirius Black. Again, it seemed the madman had simply vanished into thin air.

March trickled into April, and with it came the first budding growth of the new spring. Practice exams were proctored, and most of the student body elected to stay in the castle for the Ostara hols despite the danger. Even Harriet and her friends found themselves too busy with studying to fret overly much about Dark wizards or Dementors or whatever new, pressing catastrophe waited on the horizon. For a time, life felt almost normal.

Whenever she happened to gaze out the window and spot the new, fragile leaves in the distant forest, Harriet’s thoughts turned toward the encroaching summer holidays, and she wondered where she would go. With Black still on the loose, Grimmauld Place would be barred to both Harriet and Elara, and though Harriet really wished to return to Trefhud, she wasn’t sure if they could. The Flamels had their own business to attend to, business which didn’t much allow for the presence and rearing of teenage witches. Mr. Flamel ended each of his letters entreating her to be safe and to write if she needed help, but Harriet’s definition of help had never been firm.

Help, she thought, doesn’t include being a boarding house.

Elara didn’t want them to return to London unless they could hide behind the Black wards; she hadn’t told Harriet and Hermione exactly what the Aurors had said to her the day they removed her from History of Magic, but she intimated Gaunt’s continued curiosity with Harriet and what had occurred before the Mirror of Erised almost two years ago. Harriet didn’t know where Selwyn had disappeared to, but she hoped he fell into a bloody oubliette for telling Gaunt about her—and for traumatizing poor Luna.

The low groan of distant thunder brought Harriet back to the present, and she tore her attention away from the curtained window, blinking against the subtle sting of incense and chimney smoke. Most everyone else in the Divinations classroom had their heads down or their chins cradled in folded hands, staring with bland, dozing expressions into the smooth glass of their crystal balls. The coming storm had the room more humid than ever, and the thick malaise left many of them dazed, tired, and irritable in equal measures. Elara had long since succumbed to the Antihistamine Potion she drank before every class, snoring into her open textbook, and Hermione’s hair had swelled to new limits, crackling with energy spurred by her nerves and irritation. She had limited patience for any kind of idle activity, and for Hermione, Divinations was the epitome of idle, uninspired, and dull.

“Ridiculous,” the witch muttered as she thumbed through the text with enough force to crinkle the pages, snarling at the crystal ball. Harriet noticed the dark smudges under Hermione’s eyes and wondered, not for the first time, what had her friend so frazzled and exhausted. Naturally, Harriet had asked several times, and always Hermione sidestepped the questions or gave bland reassurances. Harriet would press the issue only so far as Hermione would allow, but she didn’t think that everything was perfectly fine for a second. Hermione kept something secret, and though Harriet wished she’d confide in them, she remained quiet.

Again, Hermione huffed, gnashing her teeth, and Harriet forced a breath through her nose, glaring at the crystal ball. She’d tried to do what Professor Trelawney said, tried clearing her mind and allowing whatever visions were meant to manifest to do their thing, but it gave her a headache and made her eyes itch. Harriet acknowledged there had to be a trick to it, or a talent she simply didn’t possess—because though Trelawney might be a bloody fraud, Divinations hadn’t come into existence overnight. There was magic in it, somewhere. Harriet wished she could find it, if only for the benefit of her marks.

Movement in the periphery of her vision had Harriet quickly nudging Elara under the table, the other witch sitting up just as Professor Trelawney came fluttering over. Her shawl glittered like a beetle’s shell in the firelight.

“And how are you progressing here, my dears?”

“Erm, great, Professor?” Harriet answered, Hermione refusing to look up from the abused textbook, Elara blinking like an owl who’d crashed into a window.

“And what have you Seen so far?”

“Oh, uhh….” Trailing off, Harriet kicked someone—anyone—under the table, trying to get them to respond, but neither of her friends opened their mouths, leaving the poor girl to blurt out the first thing that came to mind. “There’s a, er, great evil approaching? Something sinister. Really bad, ma’am.” She waved her hand over the ball for emphasis as Trelawney leaned forward with interest. The only thing the Divinations professor ever wanted to hear was doom and gloom—especially if that doom and gloom centered around Neville, so Harriet took that idea and ran with it. “A shadowy danger is coming closer, but I can’t quite tell what it is.”

“Is there any more, Miss Potter? Search within yourself….”

Harriet moved her hand to her brow and scrunched her face as if concentrating very hard. “I think…I think Longbottom might be in danger, Professor.” In danger of being crushed under his bloody ego, maybe.

“Yes, yes, I have often come to the same conclusion when I consult my Inner Eye about the poor boy!”

“I See…teeth, and fur, and—.”

“Go on.”

“I think…I think there’s some kind of dog—.”

“A Grim, my dear?!”

Harriet faked a gasp. “I think so, Professor!”

Professor Trelawney made serious, appreciative comments, to all of which Harriet nodded in earnest, pretending the Prat Who Lived was cursed or doomed or just plain unlucky. She hoped to make enough of a positive impression for Trelawney to move on and give them full marks for the day—but it seemed Hermione had reached her limit of ridiculousness because she scoffed loud and hard, not disguising her disdain when Trelawney stopped to look at her. The older witch swayed ever so slightly, and the bangles on her wrists chattered together like anxious teeth. The odor of cooking sherry wafted past Harriet’s nose.

“Anything to add, Miss Granger?”

Hermione rolled her eyes. “Oh, please. Everything she said is nonsense,” she retorted, several of the neighboring tables stirring from their own gazing to stare at her. Harriet didn’t have a good feeling about this. “It isn’t magic or divination; it’s a simple deduction, or logical reasoning. Not even that; it’s common sense, a guess based on recent events.”

“Is that so?” Trelawney replied after a beat, her skinny nose rising in the air. “Tell me, then, Miss Granger, what it is you See in the crystal ball.”

A muscle ticked in Hermione’s clenched jaw. “Nothing.”

“Nothing?”

Nothing.”

Trelawney sniffed and waved a hand. “Very tragic, yes, but not surprising. I’m terribly sorry, poor girl, but Divinations is a magical art, a subject requiring brilliance and talent beyond the mundane realm. It requires intuition, and for some, it is sadly beyond their ability to reach into the unknown and pull it unto themselves. They lack ability, and will always be—.” Trelawney sniffed again. “Ordinary.”

That was too much for Hermione to take. At once, her spine stiffened as if she’d been Petrified, and she slammed Unfogging the Future shut, leaving it there upon the table as she stood. Electricity crackled about her frazzled hair again, and—without another word to the professor or her friends—she shouldered her satchel and shoved the crystal ball from its faceted plinth. The ball didn’t break when it fell, but it struck the floorboards with a sound like a gunshot, the whole of the class jumping in their seats as Professor Trelawney and Hermione glowered at one another.

Hermione’s lip curled. “The only person lacking ability here is you.”

If Professor Trelawney had anything to say to that, she never got the chance to respond, as Hermione flounced away, flung open the trapdoor, and disappeared down the ladder. The whispering began immediately, no one quite able to believe what they’d just witnessed. Trelawney snapped at them all to continue their gazing, not sparing Harriet or Elara another thought as she stomped—looking nothing more than a furious, stung Kneazle—and threw herself into her favorite poofy armchair.

Elara bent to heft the crystal ball from the floor and reseat it upon the short plinth while Harriet picked up Hermione’s abandoned textbook. She blinked and took a breath of perfumed air.

“What in the hell just happened?”

 

x X x

 

Unfortunately, the pair didn’t get the chance to find the answer to that question until much later, as Hermione skipped lunch entirely and refused to say anything in Charms regarding the subject. It was only once they entered History of Magic that the proverbial steam seemed to have built enough pressure for Hermione to hiss imprecations against Trelawney and her class, snapping her quill clean in half, splattering her notes in ink.

“I’ve already informed Professor Slytherin that I’m dropping Divinations,” Hermione told them as she sought a new quill. “Such a waste of my time. Arithmancy is by far superior in both its practicality and its ability to provide proper predictions—.”

Hermione,” Harriet needled, keeping her voice low as Professor Lupin lectured. Poor bloke looked done in and ready to drop, his voice heavy and weary as he spoke and paced. He had to know Harriet and her friends weren’t paying attention, but he gave no effort into corralling them, seeming more interested in the bright, bursting color of the sunset coming down upon the forest outside the window. Sandwiched between the dark morass of clouds and the bleak grounds, the light looking like fire blazing across the horizon. “You went to Slytherin and dropped a class now?”

“Yes. During lunch.”

“How are you alive? Bloody hell.”

Hermione grimaced and fiddled with the white collar of her uniform. “He wasn’t pleased, not at all. Usually, a Muggle-born would need written consent from their guardian to drop a subject, but apparently Professor Slytherin cares so little for Lucius Malfoy, he had no desire to write him.” The first sign of unease broke through Hermione’s frustration, and she shifted in her seat. “He did say something a bit—odd, however.”

“What?”

“Well, when I told him I thought Divinations was a stupid, pointless waste of my time, he smirked like he does and mentioned that Divinations was a worthless study, but Trelawney has her uses.”

Harriet questioned what their Defense instructor could mean by that. Truly, she thought Hermione had a point about the class being worthless, but the assignments were simple enough to pass with full marks, and sometimes Harriet appreciated the easy Outstanding. Why would Slytherin think Trelawney had her uses?

“Honestly, I think he just wanted me out of his office. He doesn’t—.” Hermione’s voice dropped, her eyelids flickering. “He obviously doesn’t like Muggle-borns.”

A flash of bitter memories thrashed in Harriet’s head, the Basilisk’s writhing body, its eel-like head, Tom Riddle’s sinister laughter. “No,” she agreed, softly. “No, he does not.”

They returned their attention to their classwork, though Elara made snide, irritated comments, and Hermione broke two more quills. Elara liked Divinations—not so much Trelawney or the potion-induced haze she experienced each time she was forced to dose herself before class, but she genuinely found the subject fascinating and disliked Hermione’s constant maligning of it. Eventually, Hermione got dragged into a whispered conversation with Malfoy, who wanted to know exactly what happened in Divinations, while Elara propped her head against her folded arm, watching their professor move and speak.

Harriet also watched Professor Lupin’s anxious, exhausted pacing. Outside, the pale shadow of the full moon rode the mountain’s edge, looming just out of sight.

“In 1597, we see the publication of the Muggle book Daemonolgie, which King James used to fuel the hunts that would plague North Berwick and all of Scotland for the following two hundred years,” he recited, arms folded behind his back, hands twitching. “The capture, torture, and subsequent deaths of many untrained students and apprentices during those initial years led Hogwarts’ Headmistress, Dame Antonia Creaseworthy, to open the school to year-round boarding, both for the children and their families. It isn’t the first time Hogwarts served as an asylum—many taking refuge during the height of the Bubonic Plague in the mid-fourteenth century—but the event would later serve as another stepping for the Statute of Secrecy to be born in the proceeding years.”

Professor Lupin paused again at the window. “Indeed, Hogwarts has often been seen as a refuge in times of crises. Parents and activists had begun lobbying Headmaster Dumbledore to follow Headmistress Creaseworthy’s example when the height of the Wizarding War threatened the lives of many students. In the end, such action proved unnecessary.” He turned. “The correlation there, class, is drawn between three forms of catastrophe. After all, many historians believe You-Know-Who’s war was simply another kind of witch-burning.”

The bell rang. Harriet looked up from her unconvincing doodle of Tom Riddle getting burnt at the stake and sighed, crumpling the otherwise empty parchment. Everyone made quick work of stuffing their things into their bags, chattering loudly, excited for dinner. If anyone had ever deserved to be caught by a mob of furious Muggles, it was Voldemort—but, then again, it was the kind of paranoia bred by the witch-hunts that helped feed the Dark Lord’s anti-Muggle rhetoric. Harriet despised how powerless the cyclical nature of history made her feel.

“I want two feet written on Headmistress Creaseworthy and the North Berwick witch-trials, due Monday!” Professor Lupin called over the noise. “Don’t forget! Class dismissed!”

Harriet slung her satchel onto her shoulder, yawning, and followed Elara out the door with Hermione just behind her. “I’m exhausted,” she mumbled. The day had started with Defense, a tiring burden at the best of times, and Hermione’s blow-up in Divinations had been more trying than she would have guessed.

“You were up too late, reading that silly book.”

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is not a silly book!”

“It’s silly if it keeps you up past midnight.”

“Hmph.”

“Take a nap after dinner. We have Astronomy tonight.”

“Ugh. D’you think Professor Sinistra will mind if I don’t show up and sleep instead?”

“Yes, I do believe she would mind—.” Elara glanced over her shoulder, and in doing so, happened to look past Harriet toward Hermione—or where Hermione should have been. “Hermione?”

Puzzled, Harriet glanced about, but Hermione wasn’t following her any longer, nor did was she in the corridor behind them. The only person remaining was Susan Bones from Hufflepuff, who smiled slightly when Elara and Harriet blinked at her, and then quickly scuttled away, unnerved by their confused looks. “Where did—?”

Suddenly, Hermione came dashing up the corridor in front of them, passing poor Susan in a blinding rush. She looked positively mad, her hair tangled and damp, her jumper spotted with water and mud, torn along the hem, and there was—.

“Hermione!” Harriet gasped, overcoming her shock. “What happened?! Is that—? There’s blood on your face!”

“It’s nothing. Everything’s perfectly fine,” she said in a voice that conveyed how perfectly not fine everything was. It cracked and warbled, raspy as if she’d been running. “I—I got caught up for a moment.”

“Where did you go? You were just there a moment ago—.”

“Listen,” Hermione insisted, interrupting Harriet’s confused babbling. She took hold of their arms and tugged them close as if to whisper a secret, and when Harriet inhaled, she could smell rain and earth. “I think—it’s very important for you to go to the Sundial Garden. Right now, please.”

“Right—? It’s getting late, though. We’re not meant to be out on the grounds past nightfall.”

Hermione doubled her grip, causing Harriet to wince and Elara to yank herself free, furious at the rising bruising coming up on her marked wrist. “Listen! We must go to the Sundial Garden. Right now! We must!

“…okay?” Harriet didn’t understand what Hermione was on about, but her intensity was not to be questioned. Perhaps, if they hurried, they could make it out to the Garden and back before anyone took notice of their absence. She doubted it, however; Harriet could feel the imminent lecture coming upon her like a storm cloud, and she swore Hermione wouldn’t hear the end of it if she landed another week-long stint of Snape’s detentions. “Okay, Hermione, we’ll go there—and then maybe we should pop by the hospital wing just to make sure—?”

“I need to—I forgot something in Professor Lupin’s classroom.” Hermione broke off, dropping her arms back down. She rounded her shoulders and swallowed. “Go on. Meet me in the entrance hall, will you?”

“Hermione—.”

Before Harriet could protest, the frazzled witch had already bolted off along the hall, leaving Harriet and Elara to stand there alone, befuddled and slightly bruised from their friend’s manhandling. Harriet released a loud, annoyed grunt. “What is with her today? She’s gone barmy.”

“I’m not sure. She’s been more stressed than usual these past few weeks—months, really. Maybe we should find Snape. Or Pomfrey.”

“Maybe. Let’s go see what she’s on about.”

They encountered no one they knew on their way downstairs, a few upperclassmen still dotting the passages as they meandered off toward the Great Hall or their common rooms. Harriet expected Hermione to catch up with them, and yet she never did; instead, Elara and Harriet descended the marble steps and found Hermione already waiting for them by the open doors to the Great Hall, her face clean and her clothes tidy, her bulging book bag hanging from her drooping shoulder.

Where had the blood gone? The water?

“There are you are,” Hermione said with an exasperated twist of her mouth. “I thought you’d gone and gotten lost.”

It didn’t make sense. Harriet looked at her, brow scrunched, then at the stairs, attempting to puzzle out how in the world Hermione Granger had managed to beat them there. They each had their own lens of the Argonaut’s Atlas, of course, but no matter how many times she reevaluated the route in her head, Harriet knew Hermione would have had to take the stairs or used the Moon Mirror, which would have deposited her in the dungeons. They would have arrived at the same time.

“Are you ready for dinner?”

“Ready for—? Hermione!”

The bushy-haired witch blinked, startled. “What is it?”

“You just now told us you wanted to go to the Sundial Garden!”

“I did?”

Harriet decided Hermione needed to be dragged to the infirmary if she wanted to go or not. Her best friend had been remarkably more scatterbrained of late, and Harriet worried she’d been hit with a curse of some kind. She remembered Ginny Weasley wandering about in a daze last year and how Riddle had boasted about cursing the poor girl to get her out of his way.

However, rather than question them further, Hermione cleared her throat and said, “Oh. Right—the Sundial Garden. Of course! We should get going, then.”

“Maybe we should have Madam Pomfrey take a look at you, first. You’re acting peculiar.”

“I’m fine, Harriet. If I said we need to be at the Sundial Garden, then that’s where we need to be.”

Harriet scoffed. The trio tromped out of the school and into the brilliant, orange light straining through the forest’s spindly fingers, turning their path to the long trail looping about the castle toward the cliffs and Garden. Clouds overhead threatened to thicken and descend, smudging the sky. They had to run at one point, spotting Professor Sprout departing the greenhouses on her way to the Great Hall, and they sprinted up the path leading toward the Quidditch pitch and the Whomping Willow. By the time they passed both and reached the covered bridge, the air had gained a palpable chill, and the sun passed below the trees, grotty pines casting the whole of the grounds in their reaching shadows. Harriet wished they’d thought to grab their cloaks from the dormitory.

“This is all very strange, Hermione,” Elara commented as they came out from under the bridge’s eave. Going by her tone, she’d long since passed from bemused to annoyed, her breathing uneven from running. The wind burned against their uncovered ears. “Are you going to tell us what the point of all this is?”

“I’m…not entirely sure.”

Elara stopped, robes eddying about her legs. “What.”

“I—.” Hermione held up her hands, mouth pressed in a firm line as Elara’s eyes glittered with anger. “I know it’s odd. I’ll explain later, I guess it’s inevitable now, but if I told you we needed to be here, then we need to be here.”

“This is ridiculous.”

“I know.”

They continued to bicker, and Harriet—tired and chilled—meandered away from the pair, finding a perch on one of the ancient, fallen plinths. The cold bit against her bare knees, and the first unwelcome droplets of rain peppered her spectacles, the moisture sliding from the Charmed glass. The night came fast now, like the Hogwarts Express barreling closer and closer to its last station, the stars and moon making their final ascent. Again the wind rose and seemed to howl.

Harriet didn’t hear the footsteps in the dead grass, and didn’t feel the weight of beady eyes on her back. She never saw the curse coming.

 


A/N: I didn’t have Trelawney give the prophecy about Peter. It’s entirely possible she still did, but Harriet wasn’t there to hear it. If a Seer says a prophecy to an empty room, is it real?

It honestly bugs me that the canon lore makes light of the witch-hunts. Thousands and thousands of people were tortured and brutalized, and the idea that real witches and wizards just cast some Charms and laughed about it was kind of offensive, ngl.

Hermione: [appears in inexplicable, impossible places]

Harriet: “I know this is a magic castle, but how.”

Elara: “I’m not even going to question it at this point.”

Chapter 142: the madman cometh

Chapter Text

cxlii. the madman cometh

 

When the final student departed, eager for dinner and a respite from lectures, Remus breathed a heavy, lingering sigh of relief.

“Thank Merlin,” he muttered to the empty room, dropping into the cushioned chair behind his desk. A wave of his wand cleaned the blackboard, leaving white streaks behind, and Remus sighed again, louder, propping his head on the chair’s back. He could still read the odd word here and there in the streaks—words like “devilry,” “fire,” and “inquisition.” Grimacing, he made an effort to clean the board once more, then set his wand on the desk, allowing his eyes to close.

I’ll just rest here for the moment….

The day had been just as long for Remus as it had been for his pupils—if not longer, his thoughts dominated by the slow rise of the lunar sphere and his curse’s coming encumbrance. He had revisions to teach, homework to grade, essays to read, and yet Remus had the energy for none of it. If he drank anymore Revitalizing Solution, he’d most likely boil his liver.

Something collided with the office door, noisy paws scratching at the wood. Remus’ eyes popped open.

“For Merlin’s sake, Padfoot,” he hissed under his breath. “Just come in!”

The scratching ceased, silence pervading before a small click sounded, and a black nose nudged the door inward, admitting the silver-eyed Grim. Sirius padded closer to the desk, and Remus suppressed the reflex to reach out and run his hand over the dog’s mussed fur. They weren’t that familiar with each other. Not anymore.

The dog went to the window Remus visited not a minute before, and he looked out upon the grounds, probably not seeing much of anything from his lower vantage. He turned to him, and Remus could practically feel his desire to change forms, like an itch prickling under the skin, needing to be released. Sirius wagged his tail in agitation.

“You’re going to have to wait until tomorrow to talk,” Remus said in an undertone, conscious of the portraits on the far wall and the ghosts that could come haring through whenever they chose. “There isn’t much time left in the day, and I’m unfortunately knackered.”

Sirius huffed, then huffed again, a low, grating growl of irritation—or maybe impatience. For a man who’d spent twelve years in Azkaban, biding his time, Sirius had little patience now that he was out and close to his goal.

“Don’t look at me like that.”

He sat, growled again.

“We have time,” Remus reiterated, tapping his finger on the armrest of his chair. “Time enough to formulate our plans properly. If we fail to find him before the term ends—we’ll not stop searching. He’ll have nowhere else to go but back with the Weasleys if he means to stay kept and relatively in the know. He won’t stay here—no, the risk of discovery is too great around wizards of Dumbledore’s caliber, and there isn’t a reliable source of news, not like he could find with a Wizarding family.” Remus stopped tapping and instead rubbed at his tired, lined face. “I could, perhaps, make a house call during the summer. I never knew Molly and Arthur Weasley well, but they were connected to the Order, and being a professor to several of their children could grant me the leeway to arrange a visit. If we can ascertain Peter’s presence.”

Sirius’ lip curled over sharp, white teeth.

“No, I don’t like it either.” Remus tipped his head back again, the ribbed ceiling above dark and gloomy where the final light of day couldn’t reach. “It’s dangerous. He’s dangerous—strange, how all these years later I can see it for the first time.” Peter had been a boy of average talent and middling personality, but what Remus and the others had mistaken for loyalty was nothing more than sycophancy. He’d related to him the most in their school days—both unpopular children clinging to the magnanimous friendships of their charismatic peers—but Peter had been quick to cut contact with Remus after school, after the war heated up and the werewolf ceased to have relevance in his limited social sphere.

At the time, Remus had thought the fault lay with him; that Pettigrew had grown wise, had seen the monster finally, and decided he wanted nothing to do with him, but no. It was nothing quite so personal. Remus simply ceased to have a purpose for Pettigrew, and so he was cut free like so much unneeded ballast.

“We could wait until after the summer,” Remus mused, Sirius already shaking his head. “There is the chance that he’d run, yes, but we can’t allow ourselves to act rashly. He’ll hurt the Weasleys—or anyone, really—if it suits his needs.”

Sirius nodded, snorted, and lowered his muzzle.

Tired and sore, Remus let his mind wander over various ideas and strategies until the door into his classroom sailed open a few minutes later. He expected to see the dark, looming shape of the Potions Master—and if he’d retained an iota of common sense, he would have sent Sirius back to his quarters, Merlin forbid he and Snivellous ever met again—but the person stepping inside wasn’t Snape. It was Hermione Granger.

“Miss Granger? Did you forget something—?” Remus’ voice failed him when he looked at his student and found her disheveled, out of breath, and bloodied. She had leaves in her wild hair and dirt upon her torn stockings. He rose from his chair. “Hermione, are you all right?!”

Hermione’s tongue flashed across her lower lip as she gathered her thoughts, her hand still pressed to the open door. “Professor—you must come quickly to the Sundial Garden.”

“What—?”

“It’s Harriet!” For the briefest of instances, he imagined her brown eyes had darted toward Sirius, who stood frozen at the window. “It’s Harriet; she’s in danger. Really, you must come quickly, Professor Lupin! Someone’s taken her—!”

The girl had just enough time to throw herself out of the way as the enormous black dog went barreling past her, Remus jolting forward in horror, his chest tight. “Padfoot, no!” he yelled, but he’d gone on ahead, and Remus had no choice but to sprint after him, snatching hold of his wand from the desk a bare second before he ran by Miss Granger. He expected her to follow, though when he glanced behind himself, he didn’t see the young Slytherin witch, and so assumed she’d gone to get the Headmaster. He didn’t know. He didn’t understand what was happening—only that he needed to stop Sirius before he did something stupid.

Sirius ran far faster on four legs than Remus did on two, and he thanked small mercies for it being dinner time, no one lingering about to see the black Grim bounding through the school’s corridors. Remus clutched a stitch in his side as he took the stairs two at a time, knees protesting, his body a solid, exhausted ache begging to be put out of its misery—and yet still he ran, feet pounding along the stone passages as he grit his teeth and bore the pain of it. He didn’t take the route leading toward the entrance hall, instead opting to use the rear exit opening onto the shaded courtyard. The cold slammed into his heaving lungs, and nascent rain touched his sweating face.

Ahead of him, Sirius scaled the path leading to the cliffs and the covered bridge, a flash of black fur in the drab, wilted grass.

“Padfoot, stop!”

Remus vaulted the courtyard’s barrier, catching himself on the rocks, the overgrown hedges snagging and tearing at his worn teaching robes. Grunting, Remus let the foliage have them, yanking his arms free of the cloth so he could keep running. His heart felt fit to burst as he ascended the hill, chasing the paw prints pressed into the clay and mud. He slipped, slamming his knee into the earth, swallowing the howl building in his throat. It threatened to give out on him, and still, Remus persevered. He made it across the bridge.

Harriet!” someone yelled.

Harriet, where are you?!

Remus stopped, clutching at the end of the wooden railing as he choked and wheezed. “Miss—Miss Granger?!” he shouted.

It couldn’t be, and yet there she was, standing with Elara among the dolmens and ancient plinths, her clothing in good repair once more, her face unbloodied, if pale and frightened. They had their wands in hand.

Something wasn’t right.

Miss Granger couldn’t have overcome him; Remus may not be a star Quidditch athlete, but the idea of a thirteen-year-old witch passing him at a flat sprint wasn’t feasible, which meant the girl in his classroom—the one who’d sent him and Sirius out here with her carefully worded plea—wasn’t Hermione Granger. Dread prickled the hair on the back of Remus’ neck.

Polyjuice? Imperius?

“Professor!” Hermione cried, rushing over to him, her school satchel resting forgotten in the weeds. Elara’s had been dropped next to it—and a third was thrown aside as if left in a hurry. “Professor, Harriet’s gone missing! And a dog just—.”

“Yes—you came to tell me that, just now, in my classroom,” he replied, swallowing the need to cough, to argue. He needed to find the Headmaster—no! He needed to find Harriet. Where was Harriet? “What on earth are you three doing out here at this time of day? It’s not safe!”

“What?” Elara demanded, the tight constraints of her hair coming undone in the rising wind. “What do you mean she told you? Hermione, what is going on?

Hermione chewed on her lower lip. “I—I don’t know!”

“You’re the one who told us to come out here! And now Harriet’s gone!”

“I don’t know!” she sobbed. “This isn’t—this isn’t how it’s supposed to work! There’s never meant to be any contact! No influence! Why is this happening? Why would I do this?!”

“We need to get you back to the castle,” Remus said, ignoring the bewildering comment for now. This situation did not sit right with him, a strange conundrum of coincidences better left to more capable wizards to solve. Goddamn it, Sirius, he thought, scanning the area for signs of the Animagus, but Sirius had taken flight into the Forbidden Forest.

“No!” Miss Granger blurted. “Harriet was just here! Sitting right there! She didn’t just dissolve into midair! Someone—someone must have taken her!”

Remus’ heart jumped into his throat. Pettigrew? No, no, don’t let it be him—.

“Listen to me. You both must return to the castle—.”

Elara yanked herself from his reaching hand, his fingers grazing her sleeve. Scowling, she dashed for the tree line. “Elara, stop!” She heard him, of course, but took no heed of his words, vanishing into the woods with Miss Granger quick to chase after her. “Come back!”

His voice echoed in cruel irony—come back, come back, come back—as Remus ran into the underbrush, his trembling hands slick with perspiration and mud. “Elara!”

Elara, Elara, Elara.

Neither girl appeared, both already consumed by the swelling copse of shadow and night, the smell of broken pine in his nose, burning in his wet eyes. He could hear their voices still, tumbling like the low thunder of the spring storm, Harriet, Harriet, Harriet!

Did Pettigrew have her? Had Sirius reached them?

Left without recourse, Remus steeled himself and plunged into the dark.

 

x X x

 

Not ten minutes after man and dog sprinted from the classroom, Severus Snape stepped inside, cradling a smoking goblet between his pale hands.

He paused when he spotted no one waiting for him, then exhaled a short, noisy breath through his hooked nose. He approached the office’s entrance, intent on bludgeoning his knuckles against the wood barrier until Lupin accounted for himself—when a single sheet of unfurled parchment upon the desk caught his attention, the red lettering large and glinting in the final sprigs of daylight coming through the open window. The ink was as fresh as newly spilled blood.

LUPIN AT SUNDIAL GARDEN. STUDENTS IN DANGER. COME IMMEDIATELY.

His breath left his lungs in a low, broken hiss, his fingers tightening around the silver goblet. The liquid quivered, ripples like fault-lines growing and growing as black eyes widened and desperate fury mounted.

It didn’t matter where the note had come from. It didn’t matter who had known Snape would come, or that he would see the hasty, familiar writing. All that mattered was the undrunk libation of Wolfsbane Potion clutched in his grip and the threatening rise of the full moon making for its celestial summit.

That fucking fool!

Snape turned heel—and ran.

 

x X x

 

Monstrous feet beat against the cold earth, the trees trembling beneath his weight. Already he felt the moon upon his, golden eyes glinting in the silver light pouring between the black branches overhead. Soon, soon.

The wind shifted, and he inhaled a new scent.

Too many teeth, like broken glass from a shattered window, gleamed in the dark, and he smiled, the adulation of a mad, slavering beast.

It’s been so long since I’ve tasted young flesh.

 

x X x

 

Somewhere in the Forbidden Forest, Harriet Potter woke with a startled, terrified gasp.

 

Chapter 143: traitors in the moonlight

Chapter Text

cxliii. traitors in the moonlight

 

Four-year-old Harriet Potter grabbed her aunt’s skirts and dragged her feet as they neared the cupboard door.

“No, no, no,” she begged through broken, shuddering tears. “Please, Aunt Petunia, please! Don’t make me go!”

Harriet dropped her weight to break Petunia’s grip and earned a sharp, irritated tug for the attempt. Petunia’s cruel fingers tightened and would leave little bruises behind by the morning. “Stop that,” she ordered, heedless of Harriet’s tears or her terror. “You’re to go to your room and be quiet! Quit your hysterics!”

“Please, Aunt Petunia!” The cupboard waited, door opening, the interior swallowed by the thick shadows formed in the hall’s bleak, cutting light. “There’s a monster in there! I don’t wanna go!”

Harriet was a small girl made thin as a bird from too many missed meals—freaks who can’t finish their chores don’t get supper—so even a woman as slight as Petunia Dursley could lift her by the elbows and swing her forward. Harriet cried when the door swung shut, screamed her aunt’s name until her throat burned. “Please!

The latch slid home, and the vent opened, bars of yellow light slashing across Harriet’s blurry eyes. “There’s no such thing as monsters,” Aunt Petunia hissed before storming off.

But there were. As Harriet hugged her bony knees to her chest and sobbed, she knew the monster was in the dark with her; she’d seen it moving, staring, had felt its attention lingering like a bad spot of sunburn. “Go away,” she whispered through her fear. “Go away, go away.”

The monster didn’t go away. It stayed there in the closed, dusty dark, a palpable presence like a spare bottle of floor cleaner or another spider hiding in the risers, too many eyes looking from too many directions. Harriet could see it—he, maybe—moving, the shape of skinny, masculine fingers splayed in the vent’s broken light, and suddenly those fingers disappeared, replaced by different silhouettes, birds and horses and butterflies, little stick-men and castles and long, flying dragons. Little Harriet stared, first in terror, then in wonder, as the monster in the boot cupboard made shadow puppets on the wall, and her fear subsided inch by inch.

She was still frightened; perhaps she’d always be a bit fearful, as all people were wont to be in the face of the unknown, but her trembling ceased, and her tears dried as she watched the shadows play. She startled when she felt the presence at her side but didn’t pull away. She didn’t flinch when her scar itched and crawled like it was trying to run away off of her flesh. Sometimes Harriet wanted to escape herself too, so she understood.

“Who are you?” she asked the monster. She raised her hand against the light, her shadow just a shadow until it became his, forming a black lily with swaying leaves.

Much later, after the silhouettes blossomed into other flowers that grew and withered and died, after her heavy eyelids closed and she fell asleep huddled against the cold door, Harriet felt a formless mouth by her ear, whispering sounds. Whatever the creature living in the dark with her said, she didn’t understand, the noise of it like nothing she’d ever heard before, both terrible and familiar, like the laughter of a loved one lost a long time ago.

In the morning, she recognized one word he’d said as if it’d always been there in her head. One word, a name.

“Set.

 

x X x

 

The feeling of a shadowy hand reached into Harriet’s chest, wrapped its spindly fingers about her heart—and squeezed.

The pain hit her like an electric shock, wending out from her chest, prickling in her arms and down into her fingertips. Awareness returned all at once rather than in dredges and doses, Harriet’s eyes snapping open to the sight of the forest floor moving beneath her, her glasses hanging on by virtue of the Sticking Charm applied to the temples. It took her a moment to realize the pain in her ribs came from pressure applied by a shoulder rammed into her middle, a shoulder belonging to a man running through the underbrush—or trying to, at the very least. He kept stumbling on the roots.

It took another moment for the Sickle to drop; when Harriet failed to remember how she’d gotten here, when it finally hit her that she was slung over a strange wizard’s shoulder being towed into the trees, she gave a shout and thrashed, slinging her elbow at the back of his head. The blow missed, as the wizard startled when she moved and squealed, dropping her. Harriet landed hard on her side, right on the ribs Riddle had broken last year, the ones that would never be quite as strong as they were supposed to be, and the sting of impact took her breath away. Leaves crackled under heavy shoes, and Harriet rolled, dizzy and breathless, coming to a stop on her knees. The wizard had a wand out and pointed at her—but the instant Harriet turned her own on him, he faltered.

“W-who are you?” she demanded, stuttering despite herself. If someone had told her that morning she would be picked up and carted off by a stranger, Harriet would’ve bet money on the culprit being Sirius Black—but the stooped man didn’t resemble the escaped convict at all. He had dark, watery eyes and the build of a person who’d lost considerable weight in a short amount of time. His dated attire hung loose on his shabby frame, his narrow face waxy and unclean with patchy blond hair atop his head. His beady eyes darted toward Harriet’s wand, and she doubled her grip.

Barely a moment passed, but it was enough time for him to come to a decision. “D-dear Harriet!” he squeaked in an unctuous tone, forcing a crooked smile. “You’ve grown so much, and look so alike James and Lily!”

“Who in the hell are you?!” Harriet yelled, alarmed by his apparent knowledge of her person. He still had his wand out, but Harriet believed—or at least hoped—she could disarm him before he could hurt her. “What do you want with me?” A terrible thought occurred to her. “Did the Ministry send you?”

“The M-Ministry? No, no, of course not! This might sound odd, but I—I was a good friend of your parents, Harriet! A very good friend!”

“What does that have to do with anything?”

“I—I came to help you! To rescue you! At great cost to myself.”

Harriet didn’t believe that for an instant. She didn’t know where in the forest they were, but if any kind of rescue had been underway, the bloke would be running toward Hogwarts—toward Dumbledore—and not away. “Pull the other one,” she snarled. Her heart—sore in her chest from Set’s phantom touch—thumped with fright. “Where—what happened to Elara and Hermione? What did you do to them?”

The man’s face twitched, a full spasm that started around his eyes and ended with his mouth, like a person controlling a sneeze. “I didn’t mean to startle you! I—we had to get away from there! Those people weren’t your friends, Harriet, not anymore!” When she said nothing and didn’t curse him, the wizard took the opportunity to rush on. “You’ve got to understand! He’s got them all Confunded! Or under the Imperius. We can’t trust anyone there, not while he’s got them in his control—!”

In his enthusiasm, the wizard had lifted his wand—and Harriet immediately sent a Stinging Jinx at his legs, forcing the hand lower again. She didn’t attack him because she didn’t know the spells to incapacitate a person, not when she’d have to turn her back to run, and because—well, Hermione had been acting quite odd, this entire impromptu trip considerably strange and suspicious. Had she been cursed? Was it Sirius Black, and did this wizard know something about it?

Before Harriet could question him further, a snarling roar ripped through the forest, and Harriet threw a shield on instinct, protecting the terrified wizard from a seething beast of a creature leaping out of the bracken. The dog collided with the shield and bounced toward Harriet, sending her scuttling backward on her rear as the wizard raised his wand—.

And the dog disappeared, a ragged man taking his place, wand already held in a shaking fist. “Expelliarmus!”

The first wizard’s wand jumped from his loose fingers, struck the ground, and disappeared in the abundant debris. The newcomer grinned—a savage, victorious expression that only broke when familiar silver eyes drifted from the terrified wizard to Harriet, frozen in panic. “Sorry, kid,” he rasped. “Accio!

He tried to Summon her wand—but the Charmed silver on her wrist, the Honor Among Thieves enchantment, kept Harriet’s salvation in her hand, thank you, Hermione—and Harriet retorted, “Expelliarmus!” His wand fell and bounced—Harriet snatching it up before he could think to move.

She knew who he was. She’d seen enough Daily Prophets with his picture to recognize Sirius Black anywhere. If anything, he looked less horrific in person, cleaner and better fed, but no less weathered, his stare as fearsome as a Basilisk’s.

“Quickly, Harriet!” the first wizard screamed, a manic gleam in his beady eyes. He jabbed a stubby finger at Black. “Quickly, kill him! Kill him before he kills us!”

“I’m not bloody killing anyone!” She breathed in too fast, her side aching. Harriet didn’t know who to point her wand at—Black, ostensibly, but he hadn’t been the one dragging her off into the night after knocking her out. He’s an Animagus, she thought, taking in Black’s harsh, solemn features, the intensity of his shadowed gaze not unlike his daughter’s. And he—he tried to attack that bloke. Is that wizard right? Is Black going to kill us both? “What is going on here?!”

“Harriet.” Again Black’s voice rasped like loose scree, and he cleared his throat, never fully taking his eyes off the unknown man. “Give me my wand. Let me end this.”

Harriet had no bloody intention of letting him end anything, especially if that something was her.

“He killed your parents, Harriet! You must stop him!”

The squealing tenor of the wizard’s words sent Black into a frenzy, and it was only Harriet’s wavering aim between the pair that kept the taller, thinner man from attacking. “You dare speak to her, you rancid piece of shite?! How dare you! I’ll rip your buggering head off, Pettigrew—!”

Pettigrew?

The name rang a bell, but Harriet didn’t have time to consider where she’d heard it before. She managed to get her feet under her despite her nerves and frightened breathing. What could she do? Attack Black? With what? How? She didn’t know the right spells, and the words jumbled in her brain—and if she managed to knock him back and run, which way? Where was the damn school?

“Harriet.” Again the bastard spoke, and he sounded like Uncle Vernon did when being stern with Dudley—fond but irritated, his patience wearing thin. He had his hand held out, palm up, dirt under his fingernails. “Give me my wand.”

Don’t do it!

“Shut the fuck up!” Black bellowed, baring his teeth at Pettigrew. “You’ll get yours in a minute, rat bastard. Where were you taking her, Peter? Huh? Where were you going?”

“Away f-from you! Harriet, please—!”

Don’t speak to her!

More footsteps approached in the bracken, their heads turning toward the sound. Harriet recognized the shape coming through the gloom and bolted, calling, “Professor!” as she grasped Lupin’s sleeve, and he reached out to steady her. “It’s Sirius Black! We need—.”

His arm twisted, and his hand struck faster than Livi could, snatching both wands from her fist. He let out a rough, pained breath.

“Wh—?!”

“Forgive me, Harriet. Petrificus Totalus.

Harriet’s arms snapped to her side, and her legs came together, her eyes wide in shock. Lupin made as if to grab her as she toppled—but Pettigrew shrieked and dove for the trees, Lupin’s quickly diverting his attention to throw another curse at him. “Incarcerous!” Black cords burst into life and bound themselves around the pudgy wizard. He hit the dirt with a grunt. “Watch him, Sirius! For Merlin’s sake….”

Harriet smacked a thick root face first and busted her nose.

“Fuckin’ hell, Moony! Is she all right?”

Kneeling, Lupin dragged her onto her back, and though Harriet couldn’t see his face very well in the thickening dark, she glowered up at him, putting every ounce of hate and betrayal into her gaze. They shouldn’t have trusted him. The moment he confessed to knowing Sirius Black, Harriet and her friends should have known he was their enemy; after all, Lupin wouldn’t be the first professor to try to kill her, but maybe he’d be the first to succeed.

Episkey,” he muttered with something like remorse, and Harriet felt her busted nose slip into place, blood still dripping on her face and down the back of her throat. It was a disgusting sensation. Lupin made as if to touch her, then changed his mind and stood, leaving Harriet there as he turned instead to Black and Pettigrew. He held out Black’s wand. “We haven’t much time. I managed to divert her friends in the woods, but they’ll manage to find their way here eventually.”

“What’d you do?”

“I had to Confund them. I didn’t have a chance to try anything else after I caught up to the pair.”

Black took his wand with a sigh. “Stupefy!” he said, and a red light collided with the wriggling, moaning wizard on the forest floor, rendering him still. “You should let me handle this, Remus. Go back to the castle with Harriet and Elara. She doesn’t need to see this.”

Professor Lupin studied him and then Harriet, his gaze lingering for a long while on her paralyzed form. “No—you’re right. But she’s already seen too much.”

“Can you Obliviate her?”

“I’ve never tried before.”

Harriet’s breaths came in shocked, furious gusts through her nostrils, her heart racing in terror as the two wizards discussed her. They were going to kill the third one—she knew that, knew it—but a colder part of Harriet willed them to get it over with, to do it and let her go, so she could flee to her friends and take them away from here. What had Lupin done to them? How could she be so stupid as to let herself get taken without a fight?

Black approached her, and Harriet struggled with everything she had against the magic holding her, fighting to do anything, even if it was just moving a finger or a bloody toe. Black looked haggard and—sad, she’d say, if she’d thought a madman capable of being sad. He was an Animagus. A dog—one that, Harriet realized, she’d seen before, the same one she’d tried to lead back to Hagrid and had spent a pleasant hour nattering on to. How could that be possible? Why hadn’t he hurt her then?

He reached to grab her, to maybe pick her up or turn her away—when a blinding streak of red light flew out of the trees, sending Sirius Black crashing into the foliage some several meters back, his head cracking hard against a trunk. Lupin gasped, a sound like a whip following, and he was on his knees, clawing at a thick rope tightening around his neck like a boa constrictor.

That was when Severus Snape came oozing out of the darkness, pale and looming, his robes somehow darker than the night surrounding them. If he had any pithy quips or exclamations to give, he stayed silent, Harriet able to see the way his body shook with rage from where she laid in the bushes. He held his wand in his left hand—knuckles white as bone, sweat gleaming on his dark brow—and he used his right arm to brace a goblet of all things against his chest as if unable to hold it. Snape swooped into the semi-clearing of tramped down plants and kicked Lupin—hard—in the gut, forcing him to his back. He knelt with one knee on the other man’s chest, and Lupin wheezed for every breath, his face as red as a Gryffindor flag.

“Drink it,” Snape hissed, grappling with the goblet until he had the rim rammed to Lupin’s mouth. Whatever it held had been Charmed not to spill, or else it would have been all over the wizard’s face. “Drink it now, or I’ll kill you where you lay, wolf. Don’t try me!”

Lupin gasped as the ropes relinquished themselves, and he clutched at the smoking goblet, swilling the liquid inside until it dribbled past his lips and he choked. Snape threw the empty goblet—and Lupin lashed out, shoving at the Potions Master, though Snape simply bore down harder, a nasty sneer twisting his mouth.

“Two more for Azkaban, I believe,” Snape said in a deadly whisper. “I hope the Dementors have a nice Kiss for the both of you. Though I personally believe the best part will be telling Albus Dumbledore I told you so.

“Severus,” Lupin grated, fumbling for his wand. Harriet’s was next to it, fallen in the weeds. “Be rational. Listen, it’s not—.”

Snape twisted his wand in a wordless spell, and the ropes grasped tighter to the man’s neck. “Rational? No, I don’t think I will.”

“He’s not—.”

The rope tightened farther still.

Unbeknown to the pair of wizards, Black had reappeared in his dog form, stalking through the thickets with his lip curled back over devilish teeth, mad eyes locked on Snape. A thrill of terror went through Harriet as she watched the horrid beast come closer and closer on silent paws—until the magic holding her broke like snapping twine, and Harriet ran, the gorse tearing at her bare knees, her arms out-flung to collide with Snape’s back. He toppled—and Sirius Black’s snarling jaws missed his throat by mere inches. Snape fired a spell wild into the trees, and something exploded in the distance.

“He’s an Animagus, Professor!” Harriet gasped, fingers curling into the wool of his robes. “He’s—.”

Coming to his feet, Snape swept Harriet behind himself as Black resumed his human shape, looking as savage as he had before, hair and robes unkempt, malice dripping from his glower like poisoned ichor. Lupin had found his wand and risen upright, the severed bits of rope falling from beneath his collar. “Get away from my goddaughter, you Death Eater filth!”

“As the cauldron said to the kettle,” Snape spat. “Doing a bit of service for your Lord, Black? A dog Animagus. I should have known. You always were a simpering bitch—.”

“Get bent, Snivellous!”

“I can’t say I’m interested, dog.”

Black growled—actually growled, the sound tearing out of him like something living—and only Lupin’s hand on his arm stopped him from throwing himself at the Potions Master. “Stop this,” Lupin coughed, the skin of his neck bright red with forming bruises. “This isn’t what it looks like, Severus!”

“Oh? Isn’t it? To me, it appears you’ve reconnected with your old school friend—just as I warned Dumbledore you would do.”

No. For Merlin’s sake, can’t you put aside senseless boyhood grudges for one blasted minute and listen?!”

It was the wrong thing to say; Harriet knew it, could sense Snape go as rigid as a metal spring about to launch itself, and despite her confusion, Harriet felt frightened for Professor Lupin and Black. She didn’t want to imagine what Snape could do when he was really brassed off.

Cloying magic thickened the air. She had to do something—say something.

“That bloke on the ground there,” Harriet muttered as she gestured past Snape at the wizard still unconscious in the leaves. Snape jerked his head half a millimeter to the side to indicate he heard her. “He carted me off out here, tried to convince me he was helping. He said—.”

“It’s Pettigrew,” Lupin interjected, bending slightly to pluck Harriet’s wand from the dirt. Neither he nor Black dropped their attention from Snape, and the Potions Master kept himself ready. The History instructor held out the wand, handle first, and Snape Summoned it, not allowing Harriet by him. He shoved the wand into her hand, his fingers cold as ice where they brushed against her own.

“Pettigrew is dead.”

“Open your eyes, man! He’s not dead—he’s right there!”

Whether or not Snape had any interest in opening his eyes, they didn’t find out, as another fizzling streak of red darted from the forest, a high, girlish voice shouting, “Expelliarmus!” Black lost his wand and fell, cursing, as Snape and Lupin whipped around. Snape’s right hand gripped Harriet’s arm, holding her back.

Elara and Hermione stumbled out of the trees into the dappled moonlight coming through the canopy, the pair both disheveled and scratched, Hermione’s face bloodied as if she’d fallen. “Professor Snape!” she shouted in relief. She stepped as if to run to him, then thought better of it, seeing as how she’d have to pass close to the others. She pointed at Lupin. “Watch out, Professor! He’s a werewolf—!”

Snape scoffed. “I’m aware, Miss Granger, seeing as I brew his Wolfsbane Potion every month.”

“It took me so long to figure it out! The missing days, the weakness—.”

“Granger—.”

“But then I smelled the Wolfsbane on him and—.”

“Shut up, you insufferable twit, and get over here!” Snape thundered, Harriet flinching from the shock of his rumbling voice passing through her. Werewolf?! Lupin was a werewolf?! And the potion—had that been what Snape forced down his throat? What did it do? “You as well, Miss Black!”

Elara didn’t respond.

Black!

Elara stood still as stone, the wind caught in her robes, in the wild, loose strands of her hair, her attention centered on one person in particular in that clearing. Sirius Black stared back at his daughter with a fragile, hopeful smile on his scruffy face—a smile Elara did not return. She did not smile, or blink, or seem to breathe. From where she stood, Harriet could see the fury glint in her friend’s colorless eyes like fire on a naked blade, a wave of anger so unspeakably cold and fathomless, it reached into Harriet’s heart like Set’s careless hand and squeezed.

Elara’s hand remained steady as she lifted her wand.

Harriet didn’t have to ask the question to know Elara Black was going to kill her father.

 


A/N:

Everyone: “Remus is the responsible one!”

Remus: [forgets potion, loses children in the woods, drops child on her face]

Everyone: “So responsible.”

Chapter 144: these violent delights

Chapter Text

cxliv. these violent delights

 

Elara had imagined any future reunion with her father going much different than this.

Most of her more violent ruminations had been allocated to the summer, when the fear and anger and uncertainty had been fresh, when she and Harriet had been forced from their home—and those thoughts hadn’t been more than manifestations of need, like the desire to rip a knife out of one’s skin after being stabbed. She’d simply wanted him gone and had not cared for how it came about.

Sometimes she’d thought about spitting on him if he was ever caught and the Aurors allowed her in the same room, though that had an inevitable drama and personal touch Elara didn’t much fancy. Some part of her did relish the idea of behaving so incredibly uncouth, though. Usually, she tried not to consider her father at all, because doing so bred a fit of cold, unspeakable anger in her heart, a feeling that set the lamps to trembling and sowed magic into her palms like fine, dewy sweat. The rest of the world shrunk in her awareness until only her and the anger existed—her, the anger, and her hand upon her wand.

She remembered Mr. Ollivander’s trembling fingers when he gave that wand to her. She remembered, with no small amount of guilt and shame, the secret kernel of joy that had arisen in answer to his fear. It had felt good to not be the one afraid for once.

Elara had never thought her theoretical meeting with Sirius Black would be like this, four wizards and three witches in a forest, one man bound on the ground, Elara flushed with exertion after running through the trees. Her wand was aimed at the man’s heart. It’d be easy. The most challenging part would be choosing which spell to use.

Heat swelled in her veins, a feeling like the comforting arms of a friend around her shoulders—like Harriet or Hermione embracing her, a hand against her arm, a steady, welcomed presence.

You know the words, she thought, white noise filling her ears like sticky toffee. She did know the words. Her fingers twitched with the need to retrace them as she had so many times inside that little emerald book, the image of flaming creatures spiraling below her touch, a flicker of sparks glittering in her eyes. Black was talking, mouthing slowly, hand held out in a soothing gesture, and Snape shouted, sneering, but she couldn’t hear any of it. The leaves at her feet curled in upon themselves and smoked.

You know the words.

She remembered. She remembered the magic passing through her arm, into her wand, the cresting flames, the power of it—the screaming howls of hellfire devouring the Basilisk, and Elara had wanted it to take her too, to consume her so she could become part of that blinding, addictive magic.

Then, as if from a great distance, she remembered the charred flesh of her hand, the phantom ache of it even now pulsing in time with her racing heart. She remembered the smoke, the incendiary bite at her heels, all sense of power lost to the terror, the horror of the screaming morass. She remembered a pale, tortured Harriet fainting against the Potions Master after he used his wand to swallow the Fiendfyre whole.

Harriet and Hermione. Harriet and Hermione are here, I can’t—.

Elara forced herself to swallow. Her dry throat bobbed with her uneven breathing, and her tongue felt like a crispy bit of charcoal lodged in her mouth. Her hearing returned, though her pulse continued to thump like a snare drum below every begrudging word and whisper.

“You cursed us,” she said to Lupin, though she didn’t look away from Black, didn’t lower her wand. “With a Confundus Charm.”

The man had the grace to wince. “Yes. You wouldn’t return to the castle as I instructed.”

“A very Gryffindor sentiment; hex first, question later,” Elara spat. Black’s eyes widened. “Thank you, Professor, for leaving us to get lost in this wretched place, in the dark, just so you could meet your friend here. If not for that misfired explosion, I don’t think we’d have found our way out until dawn.”

“Elara—.”

That came from Black, who earned a sudden Cutting Charm to the cheek. The spell was slight, meant for slicing plants in Herbology or thin bits of cloth, but it was enough to give the man a nasty scratch. Elara didn’t even realize she’d said the incantation. Sparks dripped from her wand’s tip like rain off a roof’s eave.

“For fuck’s sake,” Black hissed, holding his sleeve to his face. “I’m not here to hurt you! Never! I’d never hurt you, or Harriet, or—listen to me! The only person who has to die tonight is that bastard there!”

He pointed at the man on the ground, and Elara gave him a single look over, not recognizing him.

“It’s Peter Pettigrew,” Lupin jumped in to explain. His nervous gaze flicked from Elara to Snape, who’d remained suspiciously silent on the other side of the small clearing. He had one hand behind himself, restraining Harriet, and the other hand—of course—held his wand. Over the years, Elara had witnessed various emotions in the wizard, veils so thin and paltry they hardly qualified as emotions at all. He was often more irritated than not, annoyed, frustrated, and sometimes he still looked at Harriet in a manner that Elara didn’t fully understand, like a glass vase on the edge of a counter, though she’d never figured out why. At the moment, Snape simply looked hateful—spite and bitterness and loathing pouring from the man in veritable rivers. Harriet peeked around his arm before he shoved her back again.

Hermione scoffed. “That can’t be Pettigrew,” she said with all the haughtiness she employed in the classroom, if a bit more caustic in their current, precarious situation. “He killed Pettigrew and twelve defenseless Muggles!”

She jabbed a finger at Black, who scowled and shook his head. “I haven’t killed anyone,” he asserted before his gray eyes roved to the Stunned wizard. “Not yet.”

“Sirius, wait.”

Black didn’t want to wait. No, given the fierce, incredulous look he threw Lupin, Black had absolutely no intention of listening.

“We haven’t much time for pleasantries, but they deserve to know. They deserve the truth.”

“And what about what I deserve, Moony? Twelve years I’ve waited, twelve years in Azkaban!”

Pettigrew—if it was indeed Pettigrew—chose that moment to stir, a weak rustle against the weeds that would have gone unremarked if Snape had stiffened like a large bird of prey spotting its dinner. Pettigrew laid quite still after waking as if pretending to still be Stunned—and then he disappeared, gone in a soundless pop of magic. Elara jerked back, startled, knocking into Hermione. Professor Lupin took a breath and incanted, “Homorphus!

Suddenly, Pettigrew reappeared some feet away, looking shocked—or maybe devastated.

“Going somewhere, Peter?!” Black snarled, grabbing the pudgy wizard by the shoulders, yanking him back into the clearing proper. He threw him against a convenient log, and once more the conjured ropes of a Binding Charm twisted around him, pressing the man into the rotten wood at his back.

“How—how did he do that?” Hermione asked, voice uncertain. “He doesn’t have his wand.”

“He’s an Animagus like me. We learned when we were kids—me, him, and Harriet’s dad, James,” Sirius told her with a friendly, roguish smile. Elara wanted to kick his teeth in. “Except he’s a rat, and not just in the metaphoric sense. Very small, very easy to miss if you’re not looking for him. Isn’t that right, Peter?”

The man shook his head—hard, uncoordinated jerks as if trying to dislodge something from his face. Sweat beaded and dripped from his temples despite the chill air and coming rain. “I don’t—I don’t—!”

“I recognized him from a picture in the Prophet last summer. It’s hard as backward broom riding to get news in Azkaban, but fate finally threw this dog a bloody bone; I spotted him as a rat, perched on the shoulder of the Weasley boy on their trip in Egypt.” Black leaned closer to Pettigrew, leering. “Hope you enjoyed your final holiday.”

Hermione looked at Elara, and they shared the same thought. “Scabbers,” the first breathed, the second clenching her jaw. “Ron’s familiar. He’s—he’s been in the family for years now, apparently. He’s been living as a rat with the Weasleys. Why would you do that if you’ve been alive this whole time? Why not come forward?”

“Because of him!” Pettigrew—and Elara acknowledged it had to be Pettigrew, seeing as the fool didn’t refute his identity—shrieked, glaring daggers at Black because he couldn’t point. “He tried to kill m-me! I knew he’d come back to finish the job! I—I was afraid for my life! Can’t you see that? He’s mad!”

Elara liked to believe herself a rational girl, capable of logic and reason even when frightened or angry; she exerted considerable effort in maintaining order in her life wherever she could, and it tempered her anxiety, made all the small things that infuriated her less challenging. She hated her father with untenable acrimony that could put the Devil to shame—and yet, Elara pushed the red, pulsating infection of her anger aside to look at reality. An innocent man did not spend twelve years living as a rat. Not when his enemy was supposedly sealed away in the most secure Wizarding prison in the world.

“Black was in Azkaban,” Elara pointed out coolly. “And no person had ever escaped Azkaban before. You had no reason to assume him capable of it.”

“I knew he would! I knew it! He learned all kinds of Dark magic, taught to him by his family and the Dark Lord—.”

Snape twitched.

The siren song in the back of Elara’s head threatened to drown out the world again, and so Elara concentrated on the feel on Hermione’s fingers on her arm, on her friend’s rapid, frightened breathing. It grounded her. “His family? You mean my family? I can assure you there’s no Dark magic in the Black libraries capable of breaking a man out of that prison. I’m only a child, and yet I still know the Aurory offers Witness Protection, just like the Muggles,” Elara spat. “Why did you decide living as a rat was better than being relocated? Because you weren’t afraid of Sirius Black. Not while he was in prison. We’re not idiots.”

Black barked a laugh, smiling at her, and Elara scowled.

“She’s got you figured out, Wormtail. You’re frightened of more than just little old me.”

“I don’t understand,” Hermione confessed, still holding on to Elara as she peered at Pettigrew, and he peered back, eyes darting from face to face. “How is he alive?”

“Because he’s a little fucking sneak,” Black snarled. He grabbed Pettigrew’s hair and jerked his head to the side. “Tell them how you did it. Tell them how you cut off your own finger and killed twelve innocent people to get away from me!”

“No! I didn’t! I w-wouldn’t—!”

“Tell them why I was there! Tell them how you betrayed James and Lily and ran from your retribution, you conniving little—.”

“Sirius.”

Black’s grip on Pettigrew’s hair had pulled the man’s head to a dangerous angle, and only Lupin’s stern reprimand stopped him from breaking his neck.

“There is the problem of you being the Potters’ Secret Keeper, Black,” Snape said, and though his lip curled with his usual derision, a darker sentiment lurked in his calculating gaze. Behind him, Harriet had been strangely silent, and Elara thought Snape might’ve cursed her. “You were the only person capable of giving their Secret away. Dumbledore himself cast the Fidelius.”

Snarling, Black spat on the earth at Snape’s feet, coming dangerously close to spitting on the wizard’s dragonhide boots. “Shows what you know, Snivellous,” the convict retorted.

“A decision was made to switch Keepers,” Lupin explained, eying the malicious cant of Snape’s expression, seeming to understand the Potions Master was at the limits of his patience. How well does Lupin know Snape? Elara wondered, brow furrowed. Did they…go to school together? It would explain the juvenile nickname. It didn’t surprise Elara in the slightest that her father would come up with something like that. “Apparently, James and Lily thought Peter unassuming enough to escape You-Know-Who’s attention, and they decided to switch Keepers. The parameters of the spell allowed a witch of Lily’s ability to do so.”

“Nobody escapes the Dark Lord’s attention.” Snape’s eyes dropped to Pettigrew, calculating, Pettigrew sniveling and wriggling against the ropes.

“D-don’t listen to them!” he whimpered. “They—they’re lying! They’re Death Eaters, and he’s—he’s a werewolf!”

The reminder sent Snape back another step, Harriet straining against his hold, red in the face.

“They’re going to kill me! Please!”

The sight of a man begging for his very life should have moved something in Elara. The revelation of Black not betraying the Potters should have shaken her—and yet, Elara felt detached from the scene, subsumed by the resentment, the revulsion, her disregard for all three of the men gathered in the clearing. Snape too, to be perfectly honest. She didn’t care if Pettigrew begged; he deserved to die like the rest.

“Elara!” Pettigrew wailed, startling her. His sweat had progressed into the collar of his shirt, sticking it to his throat. “Please, Elara, sweet girl, think of your mother! She wouldn’t have wanted them to do this to me—!”

Quick as a blink, Black struck Pettigrew across the face with a closed fist, and Lupin grappled with the back of his robes to drag him away. “Don’t speak to her! Marlene couldn’t stand the sight of you!”

Anger flushed Pettigrew’s face, and for the first time, Elara realized the emotion fit him better than the heavy sobs or blithering rambles. She didn’t have a spotless intuition when it came to people’s behavior, but their words—Elara had spent so many years of her life reading, the Matron’s stern glower on the back of her neck, cane tapping an uneven rhythm on the floor. The words that came flying out of Pettigrew’s gaping mouth fit him in a way the sniveling obeisance didn’t.

“She loved me!” he raged. “She loved me, and it’s you who couldn’t stand it!”

“Oh, for Merlin’s sake!” Black started to laugh, that same cackling, sawing chortle he’d used before. “You’re just as delusional as ever! Still pining after her. She never loved you!”

Peter’s wet eyes gleamed like fish bellies in a grubby river. Ugly, Elara thought. He was ugly, and not because of how he appeared, but because of the twisted need in his face, the sickness of it. He was a man who’d been a rat for twelve years. Surely a person such as that couldn’t be sane. “She loved me until you—you twisted her with your perversions! The pair of you!”

Lupin stiffened, and Black began to growl in warning. “Shut the fuck up.”

“Sick,” Peter hissed through blocky, yellow teeth. “She d-deserved so much more than your perverted arrangement. I needed her, and you took her away!”

“Is that what it was all about in the end?” Black demanded, voice echoing in the trees, the storm thickening. Magic thrummed in the earth, the touch of it familiar, a pantomime of her own shivering in her soles. “Because she rejected you? You killed Lily and James because Marlene thought you were a sorry little creep? You—.” Pausing, Black’s mocking grin slipped, his eyes widening as the pieces of an unforeseen puzzle clicked into place one by one. “It was you, wasn’t it?” He whispered. “It was you.”

Pettigrew’s shoulders rose toward his ears.

You and—and your Death Eater pals! You started the fire! HOW COULD YOU?! Let me go, Remus, I swear to God—!”

Lupin had to lock his arms around Black’s to hold him back, and Snape jabbed his wand to stop Pettigrew from changing again.

“You started the fire.”

Mably the house-elf gazed up at her with sorrow glimmering in her overlarge eyes. “There was being only fire, and no Miss Marlene.

Miss Marlene was worried—she did not trust the rat-man.”

“She did not trust the rat-man.”

Elara almost dropped her wand.

The white noise returned as she stepped forward, and the dead leaves smoldered again.

“Elara,” Black said when he spotted her, ceasing his struggles. “Elara, sweetheart, move away from—.”

“Keep my name out of your filthy mouth,” she responded, heart heavy and thick in her throat as she addressed her father for the first time. Black flinched as if she’d physically struck him. “You think this changes anything?”

He looked at Lupin, his bewilderment clear, Pettigrew and his sniveling forgotten for the moment. “Doesn’t it?” he asked in a voice much softer than anything he’d used before. “I’m not—I never hurt anyone, Elara, I never—.”

She seethed, hating him, despising him, wanting him to hurt—. “How perfectly ignorant,” Elara said, turning her head away. “You never hurt anybody? No? What about those you were responsible for? Twelve years in Azkaban, and you think you’re innocent? Just because you didn’t finish the murder you set out to commit? You made your decision when you left your goddaughter behind in the hands of those wretched Muggles just to satiate your own selfish revenge!”

Color leached from Black’s already pallid face. “What—?”

“Ten years in a cupboard, living off table scraps. That’s what you condemned her to.” Harriet shook her head, wanting Elara to stop, but she couldn’t. She couldn’t. “Ten years of listening to her Muggle relatives call her a freak and a disappointment and a burden, and you dare complain about being thrown into Azkaban for a choice you made?”

A wild burst of energy broke Snape’s silencing spell, and Harriet hissed, “Stop it! Don’t tell them that stuff! Gerroff me, Snape—.”

Elara spoke over her, her voice trembling like a snapped violin string. “Ten years I spent in the orphanage, ten years of pity and scorn and being raised like the Devil’s spawn. Ten years of taking their punishments because I thought there was something wrong with me!” She was screaming now, throat tight, eyes burning. “Look at what they did to me! Look at what you did—.” She tore at her collar with one hand, not caring that the buttons snapped or how her nails clawed at her own skin, not stopping until her neck was bare as she never allowed it to be, revealing the twisted, raised scarring of a crucifix branded into the flesh below the hollow of her throat. “Ten years of the cane, and their exorcism—.” She couldn’t breathe. She was going to be sick if she continued. “You stand there and claim you never hurt anybody, and what? Expect me to embrace you? Expect me to—fucking forgive you? For your negligence? Your selfishness?!”

Sirius Black stared at her, open-mouthed and wordless. Unmoving. Worthless.

Elara reined in her emotions, ignoring how they rattled about in her chest like a Boggart loose in a trunk. “No,” she said, quieter now, colder. “No, you made your decision. And I made mine. You’re just as guilty as he is.”

Black’s quivering hand reached for her, and Elara slapped it away, raising her wand to point between Pettigrew’s brows. He watched the tip of it, horrified, as the shadow of flames glowed on his sweaty face, waiting to be released. Needing to be released.

“No, Elara—!”

“Cease this immediately, Miss Black—!”

Hermione yanked on her arm. “You can’t do this!” she said, hushed and urgent, breath buffeting Elara’s cold ear. “You can’t!”

“Watch me.”

“Think about Harriet,” Hermione demanded, the words piercing the magic’s incessant urging like ice along her spine. “You’re being selfish if you do this. She needs you. We need you, Elara, don’t do this to us. We love you too much to let you go.”

God, but she wanted them to. The Fiendfyre wanted out—the Dark magic grasped her like a Devil’s Snare, the vine twisting about her wrist, her hand, wanting to pull it in the right direction, and the more Elara resisted, the harsher its caress became.

Let me go, let them burn for what they did—.

No, Elara told herself. No.

A stiff breeze knocked the foliage and brought with it the smell of decaying things, snow mold and new growth, a spring on the brink of rebirth. Pettigrew stank. She could smell the fear on him.

The silence mounted, and Harriet shattered it with a harsh breath. The irritation in her beloved voice steadied Elara, and finally, her wand lowered. “I want to know what in the fuck he was doing in the dorm!” she said, yelping when Snape yanked her back by the hood of her robes. “Stop it! He was the bastard who attacked Livius! The “rat one!” I want to know why, and where he thought he was bloody taking me!”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about!” Pettigrew lied, never taking his eyes off Elara or her wand. Good. “I was trying to save you! I would never—.”

“I know where you were taking her.”

Snape’s voice stuck Pettigrew’s jaws shut like one of Hagrid’s rock cakes. It came out in a frigid drawl, a suitable baritone to match the hell simmering in his black gaze. He had a tight grip on Harriet still, but he was otherwise languid, relaxed—like a snake ready to strike, waiting for the perfect moment.

“S-shut up, Snivellous!”

“Lupin,” Snape said. “Let the dog go and make yourself useful before you need to scurry off into the forest. Release his arm. The left one.”

Everyone exchanged puzzled glances, everyone aside from Pettigrew, that is. The rat sucked in a subtle, panicked breath and thrashed against his bindings.

“Why?”

“Just do as you’re told, for once in your miserable, flea-bitten life.”

Hesitating, Lupin nonetheless bent to the bound wizard and released his left arm, forcing Pettigrew to hold it out before himself despite his struggling. Snape looked down his hooked nose from his towering height and flicked his wand, just once, slashing the sleeve. They stared at the pale flesh revealed underneath, wondering what the Potions Master was on about—and then Snape waved his hand. Pettigrew’s skin rippled.

“Oh, Peter,” Lupin breathed with genuine grief as the pale red tattoo blazed in the rising moon. The serpent wreathed about the skull stretched its inked coils and bared poisonous fangs. It was dreadful.

“Wh-what is that?” Harriet asked, glancing up at Snape. He didn’t acknowledge her; his attention remained upon the tattoo, looking for all the world like a man who’d seen the most vile thing in his life.

“It is His insignia. His Dark Mark,” he explained, lips parting. “Pity the dog seems to be telling the truth. Pettigrew is a Death Eater.”

Pettigrew shouted, “NO!” spittle flying, legs flailing in meek, futile kicks. “No, I-I would never! Never!”

“The proof is in the flesh, as they say. Don’t be a coward now, Pettigrew; you’ve already bartered your soul, after all.”

“You’re a l-liar, Snape! A liar, a liar!

“I know where you were taking the girl. I know why you lived as a rat for all these years—aside from the obvious character improvement.” Snape leaned forward ever so slightly, not far, just enough for every syllable coming from him to land like thrown knives. “Because you were there in eighty-one. You were the one who sent him to Godric’s Hollow, and oh, you know his followers aren’t likely to forgive that, aren’t you? They might not know the truth of things, but you do. And He does. I know what you want the girl for. You’re a pathetic parasite and always have been, a leech attaching himself to stronger, more competent wizards—and the only wizard who could protect you from your old pal Sirius Black is the Dark Lord. You were going to bring him Potter like a party favor.”

Pettigrew didn’t deny it. Again, his beady eyes gleamed with greed, with frustration, like a petulant child caught out after curfew. Caught out and denied what he wanted.

Of everything she’d heard this night, that made Elara hate Pettigrew the most. He’d tried to steal Harriet away like a thief in the night, tried to hand over a child’s life for his own, and it made Elara sick to her bones to think of what might have happened to her god-sister.

“You can’t—you can’t kill him.”

All eyes flew to Harriet. As if sensing Pettigrew’s malice, she’d stopped resisting Snape and now stood in his shadow, his arm in front of her, but still she spoke with grim determination.

“Harriet,” Black croaked. “Harriet, please. Listen to Snape—shite, I hope I never have to say that again. He killed your mum and dad. He killed Marlene. He meant to have you killed. He doesn’t deserve to live! He’s not even human!”

“Maybe not,” she acceded. She sounded scared but certain. “But my friends and I don’t deserve to be accessories to his murder, and if we walked away now, that’s exactly what we’d be. I don’t know you, Mr. Black. I don’t know if I’d care to, but Elara doesn’t deserve the blame of your crimes. She doesn’t deserve the shadow of that—shite hanging over her for the rest of her life.” Harriet squared her shoulders. “Take Pettigrew to the Headmaster. Let the truth come out.”

“No!” Pettigrew shrieked. Black kicked him in the chest, cursing.

“He needs to die!”

“Take him to the Headmaster,” Harriet reasserted. “Think of somebody else for once and do the right thing instead of what you want.”

Again, Black cursed, and he squeezed his eyes shut as if experiencing terrible pain.

“Fine,” the wizard finally grated, unhappy. He glanced at Elara, and she recoiled, earning a soft, hurt sigh. “Fine. You’re right, damn it all. Hand him over to Dumbledore.”

“Joy,” Snape drawled. “I assume that task will fall to me.”

“What, can’t handle a walk up some steps now, eh Snape? Living in Dumbledore’s pocket making you soft?” He goaded the Potions Master, the other wizard not responding—and Elara believed it had everything to do with the witch sheltered behind him and nothing to do with his own preservation. Snape in a temper was never a fun thing to witness for anyone in his immediate vicinity.

“We—.”

As the white light of the moon breached the canopy, piercing the clouds and spilling upon them, Professor Lupin lurched, a ghastly groan escaping his stricken mouth. Snape reared back.

“Get away from here, Lupin,” he demanded, eyes widening. “Even with the Wolfsbane, you’re still dangerous to those around you—.”

“I can’t—!” Lupin fell, grunting, and Elara watched with horror as the bones of his arched spine stretched and elongated, rippling like ocean waves under the thin fabric of his shirt. The howl that fell from him echoed with the ghoulish snap of bone.

Good God.

“Black, kill Pettigrew! We’re out of time!”

Buggering hell! where’s my wand—?!”

Something shattered in the dark, branches breaking, Hermione screaming in fright as the trees bent and something came barreling toward them. Elara saw only a silhouette of it, a menacing shape painted in white, monochrome bursts of light—gray fur, arching ribs, reaching claws. It came upon them like some horrific beast from a fairy tale, some unholy terror found and chosen from someone’s worst nightmares. It rose nearly three meters in height,its breaths cutting through serrated teeth in clouds of white steam curling over a distorted face. Golden eyes swept the small glade—and landed upon Harriet, the smallest of them, staring in mute terror at the hellish beast in their midsts.

It was a werewolf—not one like Professor Lupin, not one who fought his curse, who kept it close to his breast, curling it in upon himself until the wolf was a pale, hungry shadow of itself. No, this was a werewolf who embraced the magic, who took the curse into his heart with naked, gleeful savagery. Suddenly, Elara knew where she’d seen him before.

Fenrir Greyback howled.

A flicker of movement caught her eye, and Peter Pettigrew turned into a rat, scurrying for the forest, the blurred shape of Black’s dog flinging himself at Greyback, canine growls renting the air. Elara saw Pettigrew fleeing, the tangle of loose ropes left limp on the log—and she grappled with the magic within herself. Not the Dark magic of Fiendfyre, but the magic that allowed her to drop onto all fours as a dog, snarling.

“Elara—!”

She ignored the voice, threw herself forward, and gave chase.

 


 

A/N: As I understood it, the Dark Mark was not common knowledge in canon. Seems absurd to me when everyone and their mother knows about it, as it’d be a nice, convenient way to point out a Death Eater, wouldn’t it? Another point; no, Elara doesn’t know the Killing Curse. Even if she knew the incantation, she doesn’t know how to cast it, and as I’ve mentioned before, I dislike when it’s used excessively, like some deus ex machina “why doesn’t everyone just use the Killing Curse all the time” crap. As we saw in XCV: A Traitor’s Fate, even Snape, as dark as he is, struggles with casting it. It’s not an easy spell.

Sirius: “What about what I deserve?”

Elara: “A quick punch to the face?”

Sirius: “What?”

Elara: “What?”

There’s a Discord server now where you can stay up to date on chapter releases and join the CDT community! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

 

 

Chapter 145: have violent ends

Chapter Text

cxlv. have violent ends

 

One afternoon in Defense, while Professor Slytherin had enjoyed himself by unleashing a baby Quintaped upon the Gryffindors of the class, Harriet had flipped through their textbook in search of something to divert her attention. The Gryffindors had shrieked and yelped, and occasional spellfire had splattered against the opposite wall, but Harriet had kept her head down and her shoulders hunched on the off-chance Slytherin wouldn’t call on her to get involved.

The chapter she’d settled upon had been one Slytherin only had them skim as an out-of-class exercise. Werewolf—Lycanthropy. The chapter speculated on the origins of lycanthropy, detailing the myth of Lycaon, the son of Pelasgus, and the prospective hand of the gods in creating a curse that had never been cured. Some sources said it was man-made, bred in cauldrons and blood on a solstice night, and others claimed it was a gift of the Sidhe twisted beyond its purpose. Whatever its beginning, lycanthropy had been plaguing the Wizarding world for countless centuries.

The illustrations had been what caught Harriet’s eye. They depicted the wolf-men in various stages of transformation—detailed anatomical drawings that could have only been rendered after dissecting a dead lycanthrope, which made Harriet more than a tad sick. The teeth had been as big as her fingers, the claws like kitchen knives, the warped, grotesque form caught halfway between person and beast. At the time, she’d flipped through the pages, glassy-eyed and spooked, thinking that such a fearful creature simply couldn’t exist.

Seeing the real thing, Harriet decided the illustrations had been tame in comparison.

The werewolf stood as tall as a Muggle lorry, his fur wet and white in the moonlight, bristling along the hulking shoulders, his muscles bulging and ill-sized on his thin frame. The teeth—Harriet could never have imagined teeth like those belonging in a human’s head, crooked and sharp, crowded in an elongated jaw, barely masked by a quivering lip. His tongue flashed against those teeth and lips, slick with hungry spit.

Yellow eyes honed in upon her—and the werewolf lunged.

If Sirius Black hadn’t changed into his Animagus form and jumped the monster, Snape and Harriet would have been little more than pancakes crushed into the drooping ferns. As it was, the ghost of claws skirted the edge of the Potions Master’s cloak, and Snape threw himself backward, taking Harriet with him. His elbow collided with her chest, and Harriet wheezed, the breath knocked out of her, nearly dropping her wand in the mayhem. She had to lower her head and, for a second, lost sight of her friends.

Professor Lupin growled and leaped on the other werewolf’s back—but Lupin’s form was half the size of the other wolf’s, frail and nearly hairless, the remnants of his robes hanging off his twitching limbs. Harriet looked for Hermione and Elara, not finding them, calling their names, and her feet abruptly left the ground. Snape’s arm locked around her middle, and they plunged into the dark, the clearing vanishing behind the crowded trees.

“Wait! Elara and Hermione are back there!” she cried, kicking, and Snape dropped her. They didn’t pause for long, as he snatched hold of her wrist in an iron grip, and they ran full tilt into the forest. “Snape!”

“Black has them! Greyback is going to follow us! Move, girl!”

The snarling ratcheted higher—and then cut off with a whimper, a howl, and pounding paws trembling in the earth, coming closer.

Oh my god, Harriet thought. Oh my god, Lupin!.

Snape whipped about and thrust his wand toward the ground at their heels. “Torsit!” he snapped, and a blue streak of light spread out in a single wave. The forest floor shook and burst as the roots and smaller foliage began to writhe, grasping and tangling everything in their limited reach. Suddenly, he was there—Greyback—a darker, growling silhouette against the brighter moonlight, and he ducked a second spell fired in his direction. He roared as the weeds tugged at his limbs, slowing him down.

They ran—heedless of the obstacles in their path, the rocks and the roots and the fallen logs, scrambling up a steep incline, Harriet bloodying her hands as she stumbled and gasped. Snape yanked her upright, and they paused at the top of the hill for a breath. Snape’s lungs sounded like a pair of bellows working at full capacity. “Contero!” he snarled, and the hill shifted, the handholds melting into dust, the surface of it bubbling as it turned into slick scree. That didn’t stop Greyback from trying to bound up it. Harriet would’ve expected something as large as him to move with less alacrity, to lumber like a bear or a troll—but apparently, werewolves had all the bloody speed and grace of a cat because Greyback threw himself at a convenient tree, claws digging in, and jumped through the air.

He’s fast—!

Finestra Ossium!

Snape’s curse hit the werewolf, throwing him back down into the loose, tumbling rocks, but it didn’t appear to have much effect—not that they stayed to inspect him. Snape’s hand grappled for Harriet’s wrist again, and they bolted from the hill’s crest along the far slope, sliding on the wet leaves, the rain thickening on their shoulders, dragging through their hair. Twice Snape paused, his cloak whipping about him like a bad omen, and he hurled magic in their wake—first an obfuscating haze of murky darkness, and then a glittering, transparent shroud. Harriet almost touched it, entranced, and she gathered that was the point when Snape snatched her away and she caught a glimpse of something like a golden Lethifold churning in the glimmering sparkles.

Still the howling persisted and gave chase.

If he’s after us, then he’s not after my friends, Harriet told herself in a moment of fearful desolation, listening to the snarling coming closer and closer with every passing minute. Merlin, I hope they ran for Hogwarts.

The forest leveled, the trees older, farther apart, the air colder, sharper. Snape threw his arm out with a grunt, hard like a whip, and a silent spell burst from his wand’s end. The red light clipped into the base of a tree, and it exploded, wood chips soaring through the air, fire sparking and immolating the tree’s innards in a brief haze of red. Then, Snape pushed with his free hand—and Harriet could feel the implacable force of wandless magic weighing on her shoulders as the massive, looming tree teetered in the desired direction.

“That won’t buy us much time,” he panted. “Run, quickly.”

The sound of branches breaking sounded off like firecrackers—crack! Crack! Crack! The imminent fall held itself in Harriet’s straining lungs like her breath, waiting even as she ran with the professor until finally it hit the earth and the tremor almost knocked her down. A rush of displaced air scattered dead leaves and debris, small twigs and bits of bark scratching her legs. The howls at their back drifted farther to Harriet’s left—and Snape jerked her toward the right.

Point Me, Hogwarts,” he hissed at his wand balanced flat upon his hand—and the tip rotated, pointing left. Snape grunted, gripped the wand, and continued right.

“Wh-where are we going?” Harriet asked, because if Greyback was between them and the school, what in the hell were they going to do? What spells worked against werewolves?!

“We need to reach the edge of the wards,” Snape retorted, swiping his wet hair from his face, breathing hard. Something on one of the tree trunks caught his attention, and his black eyes narrowed as he held himself still. Harriet looked at the white, gossamer strands as well, wondering what they were, thinking they looked an awful lot like—.

Above, a heinous hissing rattled the leaves, and Harriet startled, jerking back to peer up into the many, shining eyes of a spider the size of a small horse skittering down the bole of a tree. She shrieked.

Sectumsempra!

A flash of white cleaved the spider in half, and it screamed as it fell, hitting the ground with a wet, disgusting thud.

“What in the hell is that?!” Harriet cried. “Nobody ever said the forest had spiders like that in it! Merlin’s beard!”

The spider’s legs curled and twitched. “Bloody Acromantulas!” Snape seethed, the knuckles of his wand hand as white as bone. Blood welled and dripped from his brow where he’d been struck by a stray branch, and Harriet couldn’t stop staring at it, the red bright and garish against the wizard’s monochromatic profile. “Expecto Patronum!

Silver mist issued from the wand and then vanished, gone as if it’d never been.

“FUCK!”

The exclamation startled Harriet badly enough for her to stumble, and Snape pinched the bridge of his nose, grimacing. His hand trembled.

A growl ripped through the underbrush, and the figure crouching there charged. Snape’s eyes went wide, and Harriet slammed into his side, clutched under his arm, blinded by the wide panel of his robes sweeping around her body. The werewolf hit them with all the strength of a hundred Knockback Jinxes, and Harriet thought this was it, they were bloody dog food, the wolf’s mutated maw gripping her shoulder, the hot breath seeping through the threads—but the teeth couldn’t pierce Snape’s robes. Nor could the claws digging into her side.

Half a second passed, the breath crushed from Snape’s lungs, but he had enough time to jab his wand toward Greyback’s face and wheeze, “Expulso Maxima!

The spell sucked the oxygen from the air, choking Harriet hidden under the failing robes—and then it triggered, the resulting explosion flinging the werewolf back, throwing them hard into the ground. They rolled once, and Snape leaped to his feet, gasping, his wand dancing with startling precision despite the blood smeared on his face and werewolf saliva dripping on his filthy robes. “Incarcerous Herbivicus!

Roots broke through the dirt, the ground crumbling under Greyback’s weight as he was lashed down, and he unleashed a bestial roar. He braced his paws and lurched, the trees groaning, leaning closer.

“Behind me, Potter!”

Harriet dashed to do as Snape said, holding her own wand, feeling utterly incompetent. She couldn’t match his speed, his knowledge, the utter breadth of spellwork his skill encompassed—and still the werewolf persisted, his bleak teeth bared, just waiting to devour them whole. Do something! she screamed at herself, chest rising and falling, watching as the roots tore free one by one like weeds she used to pull in Aunt Petunia’s garden. She pressed her fingers into Snape’s back, and it wasn’t just his hands shaking; his entire body quivered from head to foot.

He was afraid. Severus Snape, the dreaded bat of the dungeons, was terrified.

Avada Kedavra!

Green light blazed to life, brilliant and eerie, and Harriet’s hand jerked against Snape as the backlash of foul, fetid magic swirled through him and into her. It burned the pads of her fingers. The spell struck Greyback in the chest and seemed to crawl over him like sickly pond algae, crackling in his fur. It dispersed in a noxious, electric haze, leaving the werewolf disoriented but not defeated. He lunged against his bonds, and—.

Snap! Snap!

The roots began to break in earnest, whipping outward, clipping both Harriet and Snape. The latter went down on one knee, clutching his abused ribs, and Harriet fumbled for her wand.

Duro!” she incanted, breathless, and the roots began to morph into hard, unyielding stone. Too soon, however, the stone buckled, flaking in jagged pieces, and Greyback had his yellow, piercing stare fixed upon her as he clawed at the earth to get free.

I’m going to be eaten by a bloody werewolf!

“Run, Harriet!”

Her body jerked on instinct, turning to the waiting trees—but when Snape didn’t follow, Harriet skidded to a halt. “Professor!”

“Run, you little fool!”

Snape stood with his wand extended, torn robes eddying about his ankles—not a dueling pose, not what Harriet had seen him use against Lockhart, but similar enough, his face set in an intense, determined grimace. Before him, the massive wolf-man shuddered and heaved, the stone roots splintering faster and faster. Greyback cackled.

Sectumsempra!

Harriet tracked the motion of Snape’s hand, his wand held like a sword, slashing, and a red gash appeared on Greyback’s chest, reaching for his throat. It wasn’t enough; the werewolf’s arm broke free, claw’s lashing out, swinging for Snape’s head—.

Protego Tria!” Harriet’s knees shuddered when her shield absorbed the blow, but she pushed forward, mimicking the motion of Snape’s hand. “Sectumsempra!

The magic stung and prickled in her fingers, then through her wrists, as if she’d swung and wielded the blade herself. Greyback roared as the spell caught him in the eye, vivid blood spilling forth in a gushing wave. He staggered, and the weakening roots grappled for his legs again.

“Hurry, Professor!”

She didn’t wait for Snape this time, sprinting into the distance with no sense of direction, but she sensed him behind her, his exhausted footsteps mirroring her own. The landscape changed; where there’d been dirt and leaves now resided mud and a thickening mire of still water reflecting the sparse moonlight, rocks and stone slouching forth, the ancient pines entangling about the solid protrusions and blunt tors. Harriet’s feet slapped through the puddles, the frigid liquid seeping through her socks and shoes. Snape followed with less grace, his breath coming in jagged fits and bursts.

He faltered.

“Professor—.”

“Keep going.”

“But—.”

“Goddamn it, Potter, if I fall, keep going!

They stumbled over smooth stones and climbed through the open mouth of a ravine, Harriet hoping to escape Greyback’s notice here. Every step reverberated in the confined space and bounced in her ears, competing with the heavy thud of her heartbeat. The cliffs rose above their heads, and suddenly—.

Dead end.

The ravine came to a halt in a collapsed pile of boulders, a thin rivulet sneaking beneath the load, but nothing more. Snape swore and wheeled about, searching for an escape route—but Greyback had found them, his lumbering shape at the ravine’s start, peering through the crevasse with wicked delight. Only one yellow eye remained, and the other dripped red beads like pomegranate seeds.

Panting, Snape grabbed a rock, hefting it in his hand. “Argento Ferro.” The rock Transfigured itself into a crude sword, the metal dull and porous, and Snape threw it into the air. “Oppugno!

Like an arrow loosed from a bow, the sword launched itself forward—and Greyback lurched to the side, the sword sailing by him, the werewolf’s lips curling ever wider over his feral teeth.

Snape found another loose stone, formed another sword. His hands continued to shake and shake.

Then, as Harriet scoured her brain for another spell, the strangest thing happened.

An explosion lit up Greyback’s side, the orange light searing in Harriet’s retinas, and the werewolf yelp, slipping on the silt-covered rocks. The odor of singed fur met Harriet’s nose as the smoke cleared, then Greyback turned, snarling, and bounded off toward the spell’s origin.

For a moment, neither Harriet nor Snape dared to move. Greyback’s crashing gait diminished into the distance.

“There’s—there’s somebody else out there?” she croaked, hardly daring to believe—and yet she recognized the tell-tale signs of a powerful Blasting Curse. Snape had to recognize it too.

“It appears that way—until they become fodder for Greyback,” the Potions Master agreed, not sounding pleased, though his shoulders dipped in evident relief. He flicked his wand at the ravine’s side, chanting, and the earth slowly formed a lopsided set of crude steps leading to the cliff’s top. “Up, now. We cannot be far from the edge of the wards. I will Apparate us back to the gates and alert the Headmaster.”

“What about Sirius? And Lupin?” Harriet asked as she climbed. Her wet foot slipped, and Snape caught it, pushing her higher. “Won’t they be in trouble?”

“Don’t be daft,” he snarled. “Or did you forget about your little friends being out there still? I could care less what happens to Sirius Black or Remus fucking Lupin. Hurry, Potter!”

Harriet threaded her hands through the lower branches of a prickly bush and hauled herself onto flat land, Snape pulling himself up after her. He wavered when he straightened as if experiencing a vicious case of vertigo, and Harriet saw him blink rapidly, dispelling whatever dark spots had popped into his vision. She’d never witnessed someone cast fierce magic like he had, especially not in so many consecutive bursts. The Potions Master had to be exhausted.

No sign of their savior lingered in the surrounding woods. Harriet searched for them, ears peeled, listening for any sign of Greyback’s dreaded return, but all she heard was the gentle trickling of the strangled creek in the ravine below and her own pulse in her ears.

Recovering for whatever bout of momentary weakness had gripped him, Snape grabbed Harriet by the arm and marched her forward, setting a punishing pace through the bracken and gorse. Neither wanted to linger lest Greyback returned, or some other unsavory forest dweller came upon them.

“D’you see what happened to Hermione? Elara? I—.”

“Black had Granger. I do not know where Miss Black ran off to—.” His face tightened, eyes gleaming with displeasure. “An Animagus, is she? An unregistered one.”

Shite.

“I dunno what you’re talking about.”

“You wouldn’t, would you?” he sneered, fingers tightening. Harriet had enough bruises to last a lifetime, but she was so overcome with relief, she didn’t much care if he gave her another one. “If I discover you’ve taken any part of her idiocy, there will be hell to pay, girl. Do you understand me?”

Harriet would serve a thousand detentions without a single complaint if it meant she and her friends got out of the horrid forest alive tonight. “Okay.”

They came upon a glade, dormant heather still drab and colorless from the winter frost, though the ground evened under their feet, and Snape somehow managed to find a hidden reserve of energy to propel her forward at greater speed. “We are nearly there. The boundary is marked with plinths, but I will sense when we pass from the wards regardless. You will report directly to the hospital wing.”

“But—.”

“Do not even think of arguing with me!”

“I—.” Harriet slowed; the cold had been nipping at her skin all night, but now the gentle mouthing grew more intense, each pinprick of rain against her neck drilling forth like the point of a dagger searching for blood. Her stomach churned, chills racing along her spine. She knew this sensation. She’d felt it before, in the sky, before she plummeted from the sky. “Snape!”

Oh no, oh no—.

“How difficult is it to follow a single directive—?”

The Potions Master realized the Dementors had arrived after Harriet did; he released her, and Harriet sagged, anchorless, the cloaked monsters descending from above. They swept like falling sheets of darkness, as if the space between stars had pried itself free of the night to come and smother them both.

Already Harriet could hear the echoes of voices long dead, those hated, beloved voices that would never, ever speak to her in anything but their death-throes.

Run, Lily! Go, I’ll hold him off!

She could feel her wand in her hand, but it seemed to Harriet a strange, purposeless shape, a worthless bit of warm wood clasped by frozen, unmoving fingers. There were so many of them. They had come upon them so quickly.

No, please, not Harriet—take me instead!

The forest floor rose to meet her, knees folding, breathing in the odor of broken grass and earth and dead, dying things.

Stand aside, foolish girl, stand aside—.”

The Dementors spiraled closer and closer, tightening like the coils of a great snake slowly squeezing the breath from the world.

Kill me instead! Not Harriet, not my Harriet!

“No,” Snape moaned, and Harriet blinked, the wizard driven to his knees at her side, head bowed, his hair a black, wavering curtain as dark as the Dementors’ cloaks. He leaned over her with one arm braced on the ground, the other lifted as if to ward the creatures off.

She knew the spell. She knew the spell! She had to try! “Expecto—,” Harriet mouthed, numb lips attempting to form the right sounds. “Ex—Expecto—!

No, no, no…I’m so sorry, Lily, please, please—.”

One of the Dementors threaded its dry, scabbed fingers through Snape’s hair and jerked his head back. Snape stared at it, expression blank, eyes wide, unseeing. It breathed in—and its chest rattled, Harriet’s despair clouding every sense but her compounding terror.

The Dementor lowered its hood. The revealed face—or lack thereof—would haunt Harriet’s nightmares, the gaping, lipless maw rippling as it fed upon their hopes and dreams.

Give her to me, Snivellus!

“No,” Snape repeated, louder, angrier. “I said no!

You’ll have to take her from my cold, dead hands, you fucking TRAITOR.

His arm rose, black wand clenched in a white fist, a ferocious look on his face. “EXPECTO PATRONUM!

Silver light shredded through the darkness hovering upon the glade, and Harriet watched as a shimmering shape erupted from Snape’s wand, barreling into the Dementors looming upon them like hungry vultures. The Dementors screamed, and the light vibrated, brighter than moonlight, more precious than spun platinum, sparkling whorls pulsing with pure feelings of joy and happiness. The magic hummed in her chest, in her heart. More than anything else in the world, Harriet wanted to touch it, to draw it into herself and banish the barren ruination of loneliness etched into her bones.

The great, flickering wings of the spectral phoenix spread wide, and it chased the fleeing Dementors towards the heavens like a shooting star. It took with it its light, and Harriet once more felt the hard ground under her, the unbearable chill of the Dementors’ presence sinking into her skin one last time.

He cast a Patronus, Harriet thought, dazed. It’s…beautiful.

The last thing she heard was Snape’s voice, murmuring, “I’m so sorry, Lily.” He stared toward the night sky and did not blink from the feel of the rain on his upturned face. “I’m so sorry.”

 

x X x

 

Elara ran as fast as her four paws would carry her.

Behind her, the snarling and snapping and baying dwindled, chased by the thrash of leaves and crunching mulch. “Elara!” echoed, but it too faded, gone before Elara could register what it meant, where she was going, what she was doing. Pettigrew’s smell filled her nose. It was the stink of fear and desperation.

She went after the rat like a loosed hound, jumping over downed branches and lifted roots, ignoring how she skinned her elbows when she stumbled and tripped. Faster, she urged herself, chasing the cretin’s skinny tail. Wormtail, Black had called him. How apropos.

When her prey vanished from view, Elara stopped running and transformed, sucking in lungfuls of needed air. She searched the weeds, kicking through a yew bush with her wand drawn, still sparking. Where did he go? she raged. Where did he—?

A shadow shifted, beady eyes glinting, and a heavy branch collided with the back of Elara’s head. She hit the dirt and knew no more.

 


A/N: It’s my headcanon that werewolves are resistant to magic; it’s part of the reason they’re so feared, beyond their ability to spread their curse.

Excuse the long note, but I’m going to answer the question before it gets asked: why did I change Snape’s Patronus? According to Pottermore “the form of a Patronus may change…due to bereavement, falling in love, or profound shifts in a person’s character.” I know everyone always says Snape’s Patronus is a doe because he loved Lily, but I believe it’s because of that first option, “bereavement.” In this AU, his Patronus has grown less cohesive over the year as his grief has lessened. If you remember from way back in CH 5 (v. bind thy hands), CDT!Snape already had Lily’s forgiveness, so long as he swore to always protect her daughter if she could not. His guilt is not as poignant and powerful as it is in canon. Protecting Harriet over the years has helped him heal, and his Patronus has become something new, for reasons we’ll discover in a later chapter. No, it didn’t change because he loves Harriet, because he doesn’t. Thank you for coming to my TED talk.

Snape: [internal screaming]

A wild werewolf appears!

Snape: [external screaming]

He deserves a raise for the things he gets put through.

Chapter 146: in this reality or the next

Chapter Text

cxlvi. in this reality or the next

 

Upon prying her eyes open to the hospital wing’s ceiling, Harriet’s first thought was, Oh, not again.

It wasn’t a secret that she hated the infirmary, that she despaired of finding herself there whenever she looked up and saw the familiar rafters and arched ribbing, the moonlight sitting like a ghost at the tall, unveiled windows. Tonight, the moonlight wasn’t quite so prevalent, a gentle rain pattering on the glass that didn’t match Harriet’s inner turmoil at all. Given how quick her heart was beating, she thought the rain should sound like drums or boots marching on solid stone.

She hated it here.

The ward was dark, but she still wore her filthy school uniform, legs bloody in half a dozen places from running through the wilderness, so Harriet surmised she hadn’t been sprawled there long. Hermione sat on a chair between her bed and the next, where Elara laid, her head wrapped up in thick gauze as she glared across the aisle at the infirmary’s only source of light, a single candle on a nightstand. Harriet jostled her aching body enough to look as well.

“A note, you say?” Professor Dumbledore inquired, sounding as if Snape—half-slumped against his own bed, ragged and soaked to the bone, one arm braced to his injured side like a kicked dog—had just made a fascinating comment.

“Yes,” Snape hissed. “Written in Granger’s hand, waiting on the desk. How it got there, I couldn’t say, seeing as the brat was already in the forest. But, unless Miss Granger is secretly an Olympic sprinter, I fail to see how she covered the distance in such an abbreviated time.”

Dumbledore smirked, his beard giving an uneven twitch when he did so. “No, I don’t believe she is.” Then, the Headmaster sobered, gazing through his half-moon spectacles at the tired, shivering man before him, rainwater still dripping from Snape’s cloak. “I commend you for remembering the Wolfsbane, Severus,” he told Snape with a grim tilt of his head. “I cannot bear to think of how much worse this evening might have been if you had not had the forethought. I will impress upon Remus the severity of his misstep when he is himself once more.”

“I told you,” Snape snarled, voice gone as mean and nasty as a rattlesnake curled up under a rock, ready to strike. “I told you, Dumbledore, I told you having a fucking werewolf in the castle was madness, that he was just as thick as ever with his merry band of fucking thie—ouch! Leave off, woman!”

Madam Pomfrey, who’d been trying to inspect his injuries, startled when Snape smacked her hand from his ribs. “Stop being difficult, Severus! I have other patients to attend to!”

“Then attend to the wretched little blighters and leave me in peace!”

“You’ve three broken ribs, by my guess, and Rowena only knows if any of those gashes are infected. The rest will keep.” Again, Snape shoved her hands away. “Lay down, Professor Snape!”

“Kindly keep your ministrations limited to the sickly and juvenile, Madam!”

“Then it’s a good thing I’m looking at the biggest bloody child in the room at the moment!”

“And what of Greyback?” Dumbledore asked as if Snape and Pomfrey weren’t locked in a furious competition of wills. Harriet thought Pomfrey might actually smack the Potions Master if given half a chance, no matter the blood drying to his face. Snape sniffed, unimpressed, and his gaze rose to Dumbledore.

“I do not know,” he admitted, jaw clenched. “Someone managed to draw him off. One of your agents, then?”

“Perhaps.” Dumbledore ran his hand through his beard. “I’m certain we’ll discover more in the morning. You should rest now, I think. You’ve expended a great deal of magic and energy tonight. However, the students are safe, and there is nothing more to do at the moment.”

“What are you going to do with Black?” Snape demanded, ignoring the Headmaster’s platitudes.

“He’s being held in the dungeons until he can be remanded into Ministry custody for trial.”

Trial?” Snape’s tone went quiet, soft as a whisper, and Harriet knew from experience his temper was about to erupt. “He gets a trial after terrorizing a school full of children for a year—stalking students, trespassing, attempting murder on the grounds? He’ll get off, won’t he? I’m not surprised. All is forgiven for one of your golden Gryffindors, the return of the blessed son to your saintly fold.” His volume rose. “Why is it that nothing Black does reaps repercussions? Nothing any of them ever did earned more than a slap on the wrist from you or McGonagall or fucking Horace or any of you!”

“Now, Severus—.”

“But if he’d been a nasty little Slytherin, you’d have never forgiven him. Slytherins don’t get forgiven for their mistakes, do they?! No, no worthless, scrawny Slytherin boys growing up with too much Dark magic in a poor milltown would ever earn your forgiveness. If I’d tried to feed him to a werewolf, I wouldn’t have been swatted on the nose and sent off to my gilded tower; you would have chucked me to the Dementors right off, boy or no! You’d have seen me in Azkaban much faster than the first time around!”

Harriet didn’t have a bloody clue what Snape was on about, but the man was spitting mad, lurching off the bed he’d been slumped against to stand eye to eye with Dumbledore, breathing as hard as he had while running from Greyback. That couldn’t be good for his ribs.

“You know that isn’t true, Severus,” Dumbledore said, gentle and calm, not blinking or lowering his gaze. “You’re injured and need to calm yourself. The magic you used to tonight—.”

“Is the only reason I’m still breathing!

“A very good thing indeed, something I and many others are grateful for, but those spells are not without their considerable drawbacks. You know this. You must rest.”

“Don’t—.”

“Here—.” Pomfrey jostled Snape’s unsteady hand and forced his long, skinny fingers around a tumbler. “It’s Firewhiskey.”

But it wasn’t Firewhiskey; Harriet had seen the witch take a vial of purple liquid, hold it out of sight, and Charm the vial into a glass, then the potion into a clear, amber substance that looked like Firewhiskey, at least from a distance. Snape drank it, maybe because he was angry or upset and didn’t notice the discrepancies, maybe because he didn’t care—but as soon as the disguised potion hit his tongue and he swallowed on reflex, Snape dropped the glass. It shattered on the flagstone. His eyes widened, and his head swiveled to fix Pomfrey with an inky, incredulous stare.

“You dosed me,” he said, the anger beginning to billow, red blotches creeping up from his robes’ confining collar. “How dare—!”

Then, Snape went out like a blown candle, Dumbledore catching him before he could hit the floor with surprising strength for a man of his age with only one arm. Pomfrey snorted.

“As if I’d give one of my patients Firewhiskey,” she muttered, assisting Dumbledore with levering Snape into the bed proper. “The stubborn boy’s going to be as mad a wet kneazle in the morning, you mark my words. Werewolves, Albus? What is this world coming to?”

“I’ll leave Severus to your estimable case, Poppy,” Dumbledore said, neatly side-stepping Pomfrey’s remarks. She huffed, turning her back, and started to wave her wand over the Potions Master’s limp form before the Headmaster snapped the privacy curtains shut, hiding them from view. He retrieved his own wand and chanted under his breath, a thin line of blue runes briefly flaring to life on the floor around the curtains before dissipating. Professor Dumbledore raised his head. “Good evening, girls.”

“Er, good evening, Professor Dumbledore?” It came out like a question, and the Headmaster chuckled.

“It appears the three of you have had a rather adventurous night. Again.”

“You could say that, sir.” Harriet rubbed at her brow and glanced at her friends, Hermione fidgeting with her hands, Elara staring at Snape’s curtains with a blank, distant expression. “What happened after we got separated? I don’t really remember much after the Dementors showed up.”

Hermione managed to pry her hands apart, but Harriet could see the anxiety in her face still, the uneasy set of her shoulders. “Nothing too terribly exciting happened to us in comparison,” she said. “Mr. Black, he—well, after he attacked Greyback, Professor Lupin intervened, and Mr. Black came back to me. By that point, someone had run off on her own—.” She glared at Elara, who looked up at the ceiling, feigning interest in a cobweb up there. “And we hadn’t a clue where she’d gone, and Professor Snape had taken you into the woods alone. Greyback hurt Professor Lupin, and then he chased after you.”

“Is Professor Lupin okay?” Harriet remembered that haunting yowl in the forest just before Greyback’s loping footsteps had started.

“He should be? We obviously couldn’t do anything for him, not when—well. Mr. Black checked on him and thought it was just a broken leg and a few deep cuts. Madam Pomfrey will have to look him over in the morning.” Hermione sighed, brow furrowed in thought. “Afterward, Mr. Black tried to follow Greyback—and you and Professor Snape, but you’d already gotten so far, too far for him to chase. He came back for me, and we went looking for Elara.”

The witch in question exhaled, a harsh, cutting noise, crossing her arms over her chest. Harriet noticed her collar, with its buttons torn, gaped enough for the scar below her throat to be visible. “Pettigrew bashed my head in and stole my wand.”

Harriet gasped.

“Mr. Black and I found her,” Hermione rushed on to explain. “And he carried her back to the castle, where he—.”

“Turned himself in to me,” Professor Dumbledore interjected with a smile, nodding toward Hermione. “And told me his harrowing story, as he should have done from the very beginning, but Sirius has always had a rebellious spirit. It can be quite inconveniencing sometimes, but alas, perhaps it is my failing for not better earning his trust.”

Elara’s eye twitched.

“What about Pettigrew? Did he get away?” Elara’s scowl darkened to something near apocalyptic. “So that’s a yes. What does this mean for Sirius?”

“Nothing good, I’d think,” Hermione replied with a frown.

“Now, I wouldn’t worry too quickly, Miss Granger,” Professor Dumbledore said. “There is some hope for Mr. Black’s recompense still, if you know where to look.” Poking about the pockets of his cerulean robes, the Headmaster hummed a bit—then produced a jam jar that should not have fit so seamlessly into any article of clothing, and inside the jam jar laid a familiar, Stunned rat.

None of the three witches gathered in the dim infirmary had a single word to say, struck dumb by the bizarre sight of their Headmaster holding a rat in a jar like some bizarre kind of fruit preserve.

“But how?” Hermione rasped. “Where—? Were you in the forest, sir? Did you know what was happening?”

“No, Miss Granger, I did not. I had no foresight of the events that occurred this evening. As for where I procured Mr. Pettigrew here, you handed him to me about five minutes before I strode into the ward.”

Harriet waited for the other foot to drop, for whatever missing link of information she didn’t have to reveal itself, but as Professor Dumbledore and Hermione shared a single, knowing look, Harriet and Elara simply gaped, befuddled.

“I…I understand, Professor,” Hermione said, grimacing.

“I’m sure you do.” Shuffling again, Professor Dumbledore dropped Pettigrew into his pocket and instead withdrew a rather handsome pocket-watch, opening it to study its face. “It is precisely nine thirty-two at the moment. About four and half turns should do it, my dear, but you don’t have time to spare, I fear. The limit is five.”

“I know, sir.”

“Good, good.” He found a lemon sherbet packet in his robes and popped one candy into his mouth. Nothing made any sense at all to Harriet, and all she could concentrate on was those silly candies, like the ones she saw once in a dream. Was she dreaming now? It would explain why Harriet felt so adrift in the conversation. “Now, I’m going to step past that curtain and speak with Madam Pomfrey. She and I will be preoccupied for, oh, let’s say, twenty minutes?”

“Okay, sir.”

“See you soon.”

With that, Professor Dumbledore parted the curtains around Snape’s bed just enough to slip inside, then shut them tight once more. Harriet rounded on Hermione the moment their dotty Headmaster was out of sight—but Elara was faster, leaping out of her bed, heedless of her wounded head.

“Hermione, what in God’s name is going on?” she demanded, a hot flush overtaking her pale face as she loomed over the shorter witch and swayed. “Damaged brain or no, I remember perfectly well that you were the one who sent us out to the Sundial Garden after class! And then Professor Lupin said you sent him after us, which is absurd, considering you were standing next to me the entire time! Now Dumbledore tells us you caught Pettigrew, when there’s no possible way you could have while you were there with Black!”

Holding up a hand, Hermione drew in a calming breath. “I’ll explain—I will, I promise! But please, sit down. Please.” Elara sat, grumbling, but still, she sat, and Hermione gave her a weak smile she did not return. “It all begins with this, I suppose.”

Hermione unbuttoned the top of her rumped blouse and drew out a gleaming chain, hanging from the end of which was a strange, golden device. Harriet leaned closer to inspect it and saw a tiny hourglass encircled by several rings like an astrolabe, and on each ring were a series of numbers, all of it pinned into place with a slender dial at the top.

Elara recognized it first and let out a sound of disgust. “Is that a Time-Turner?”

“How on earth do you know that?”

“The Blacks helped invent them,” Elara retorted, lips pursed. “My family has dotted the Department of Mysteries and the Ministry for decades. Of course they have—tight-fisted, scheming supremacists that they were. My—our—.” She shot a glance at Harriet. “Great-great grandfather, Cygnus Black, not the one I met, left behind old partial sketches of them, and they’re framed in the trophy room. I didn’t know they actually existed.”

“Lovely,” Hermione snarked. “Secrets of the universe, sitting about gathering dust in your china hutch.” She shook her head. “This is how I’ve been managing my schedule this year, what with all my extra classes. I know you’ve noticed the books and discrepancies before.”

Harriet asked, “What does it do?” and then groaned at her own stupidity. “I’m guessing it turns time, but how exactly? And bloody why? Do you go forward or back or—?”

“I’m not sure how it operates, exactly. It only goes backward; if it’s possible to move forward through time, no one’s told me anything about it, and I doubt anyone would. Professor McGonagall handed it to me at the beginning of the year as part of a new, experimental program the Ministry wished to test out.”

“And they decided to test it on a third-year?” Elara demanded.

“They’re probably not going to test it on anyone now, not after what I’ve apparently used it for.” Hermione dropped the Time-Turner, letting it hang against her middle, and rubbed her cheeks. “It only goes back five hours—that’s what Professor Dumbledore was talking about, with the turns. The dial is respective to the hours. I don’t have much time to explain, but try to imagine a length of yarn with a knot at the end, and from the knot splinters all the individual threads.”

“…all right.”

“The yarn is—time, basically. The timeline. And the knot represents a choice, or an action, or—any kind of change, really. Time prefers stasis, and with every eventuality attempts to return to perfect balance, but the endless incidentals—anyway. Every individual thread sprouting from the knot is a consequence of that change. Magical theorists assume these threads comprise different realities. You could say the continuity of the universe is a giant blanket and all realities are just another stitch within it.”

Harriet scrunched her nose but thought she had a basic understanding of what Hermione said. Time travel had been in Dudley’s favorite sci-fi programs, and when Harriet had listened to them from the cupboard’s vent, she’d heard them speak about multiverses and time travel and whatnot. It was at that point Dudley usually flipped the channel, bored by the theory. “But how’d you come to be in the History of Magic corridor? And how come you told us to go to the Sundial Garden? If you can—go back in time, then wouldn’t you tell us not to go there? Warn us away?”

Sighing, Hermione admitted, “I don’t know.”

“What d’you mean?”

“Exactly that. I don’t know.”

“But what if you used it to go back this time and tell us to bugger off to dinner instead? I don’t want to get kidnapped by Wormtail again! Or—for the first time?”

“I can’t. That’s not what happened.”

“But—.”

Hermione stood, frustration rolling off her. “Terrible, terrible things happen to those who mess with time, Harriet! It isn’t a question of why or if I want to; it’s a question of whether or not making such a decision would inexplicably unravel our very beings in the timeline’s effort to contain paradoxes. It could spiral into an irrevocable helix of time-turning fallacies—or we could get stuck with the proverbial chicken or the egg problem.” Hermione scratched her scalp. “Logic dictates that at the beginning of this stream, there was a version of us that went to the Sundial Garden unprompted. Whatever time travel occurred in answer to that reality has been self-replicating—meaning I have to go back in time to send myself back in time in the first place.”

“Theoretically, then,” Elara said, arms crossed. “If you chose to shatter the hourglass, would you not be making a decision that branches away from the faceted realities of yourself? There would still be a Hermione who went back in time who existed in this reality, if only briefly, but she would be from a reality—what? Once removed from this one? One loop before in the knitting of the giant, universal scarf?”

“It’s possible,” Hermione agreed, sounding tired and, for once, reticent to debate her point. “Or I may shatter this reality, shatter us. Time and existence are very tenuous things, Elara, and Merlin knows, it’s magic. Very old, and very temperamental magic. This is why I am not supposed to impart knowledge of the future to myself. It introduces a paradox the universe will do whatever it can to fix.”

She held the little hourglass again, and it glittered in the weak, warbling candlelight. Harriet found it deceptively pretty for something with the potential to ruin so many lives.

“So I could choose to not go back, yes. I could attempt to break the cycle,” Hermione muttered, cradling the device in her palm. “But I’m not going to. I don’t want to take the chance. I’m going to return, tell us to go to the Sundial Garden, send Lupin after us, and apparently leave a note for Snape.” She blew air through her lips, and when she continued, she sounded more like herself, more determined and strong. “And then capture Pettigrew, however I manage that.” With that decided, Hermione lifted the Time-Turner and began to spin the rings.

“Wh—! Wait—! Hold on a minute there!” Harriet scrambled to her feet—and promptly landed on her face, her leg asleep from sitting on it for so long. She got upright under her own power and straightened her torn, muddied skirt. “I’m going with you.”

“No, you’re not. I just told you—.”

“You’ve no evidence to show that I didn’t go back,” Harriet pointed out, reaching to crook a finger under the skinny chain and give it a gentle tug, pulling more from Hermione’s collar. “I could have been there the entire time, out of sight. So budge up and put that around my neck. I’m not letting you go back to that forest on your own.”

Hermione studied her friend, brown eyes flicking back and forth before she decided the effort of trying to dissuade Harriet wasn’t worth it. Harriet wouldn’t change her mind on this. The whole blather about time travel sounded like utter tosh to her, the kind of fickle nonsense Trelawney went on and one about, and if Hermione meant to go back out into the Forbidden Forest with two bloody werewolves and a desperate serial murderer on the loose, she was going too.

On the bed, Elara touched her bandages and frowned, eyes on her knees. “I can barely sit up without getting dizzy. I…can’t come with you,” she mumbled, frustration thick on her tongue. “I almost wish you’d let it go, let Pettigrew go, just so Black would go back to prison, and things could be as they were. I don’t…I don’t want things to change.”

Harriet reached for her hand, took it in her own, and squeezed. Elara’s fingers were ice-cold. Truth be told, Harriet didn’t much want things to change either, not if it meant upending what semblance of peace and normality she and Elara had forged in Grimmauld Place, but Pettigrew didn’t deserve freedom, and Black didn’t deserve prison. “You’d never forgive yourself.”

“Perhaps.” Elara blinked, eyes sliding closed as she held Harriet’s hand and took comfort from her warmth. “And I do want Pettigrew to pay for what he’s done.” She opened her eyes again and looked at Hermione. “Do give that jar a few shakes for me before handing it off to Dumbledore, will you?”

Hermione grinned—a wicked, mischievous thing that usually meant she was planning something terrible. “It’s a promise.”

Nodding, Elara released them, and Harriet crowded close to Hermione, the Time-Turner’s chain cool against her neck as it settled into place.

“Ready?”

“As I’ll ever be.”

Hermione turned the dials, gently, carefully, snapping each into place one by one as the light kept on sparkling in the glass and Harriet watched the sand spiral. Then, without warning, Hermione clicked the dial into place, and they disappeared.


 

A/N:

Dumbledore, holding up cake: “You’ve done a great job, here’s your reward.”

Snape: “Why is there a Chiclet on it?”

Dumbledore: “That’s the best part! You can choose between a nap or an hour of TV! Which do you want?”

Snape, sobbing: “The nap.”

Chapter 147: once more unto the breach

Chapter Text

cxlvii. once more unto the breach

 

The first time Hermione used the Time-Turner, she was not proud to admit she got sick.

The device didn’t cause anything to move, precisely, but the world blurred about the edges like ink smudged on parchment, or a whirling, Impressionistic painting made of shifting shadows and pulsing lights. Using it now, if she strained her eyes, she could see people moving in reverse, students passing in and out of the ward, Madam Pomfrey bustling about. Snape stumbled in and dropped Harriet onto her bed, Elara and Hermione arriving with Dumbledore and Mr. Black before that, though the infirmary remained primarily quiet aside from their presence. The sunlight grew in the windows, slanting higher and higher up the walls as the evening clouds thinned and the moon vanished into the daylight.

Steam lifted off the hourglass as the five-hour mark approached, and it became more and more unstable. The rings under Hermione’s fingers felt like a hot mug after boiling water was poured into it, steadily heating until it threatened to burn.

It stopped all at once, no bothering to slow down or inch closer, just a sudden snick as the dial stopped winding and the world solidified. Colors bloomed and burst in Hermione’s eyes, and she knew Harriet saw them too, given how the shorter witch swayed and blinked, gone pale as new snow. She ducked out from under the Time-Turner’s chain and gripped her bruised knees.

Hermione inspected the infirmary, ensuring they hadn’t landed where someone could see them, and then she checked the time while Harriet gulped. They had ten minutes before History of Magic let out.

“Harriet,” Hermione urged, tugging on her skinny arm. “We need to hurry. We can’t stay here.”

“Okay, okay. Just let me—.” Harriet forced her fingers under her glasses to rub her eyes, standing up. “So that’s time travel? Can’t say I like it—at all, in fact. Morgana’s knickers, when do all the colors stop smearing like that?”

Harriet—.”

“Okay, ‘m fine. Where to?”

Hermione knitted the scene together in her mind again, forcing sense out of the mishmash she’d made of time when she’d gone barreling through it. “I need to go to the History of Magic hall. That’s where you saw me, yes? Then, I need to send Professor Lupin and Mr. Black out after you, and then I must leave a note for Snape.”

“And what about me?”

“I—the jar. Go to the kitchens and get a jar from the house-elves. And your Invisibility Cloak from the dorms.”

“It doesn’t do anything against Snape.”

“No, but it works plenty well enough against everyone else. We’ll meet at the covered bridge—and Harriet?” She paused, reaching out for the other witch, pulling her into her arms so they could hug each other. She could feel the rainwater still trapped in Harriet’s robes, the moisture tepid, sweat clinging to her messy hair. Hermione breathed in and could smell something herbal on her too, something not from the forest. Snape, she remembered, seeing the Potions Master holding up Harriet’s pale, limp form again. For a moment, Hermione had thought her dead.

She let go, and they hurried out of the ward, skirting by Madam Pomfrey’s office on silent, tired feet. Hermione had grown accustomed to the sudden, seemingly inexplicable extra hours in her schedule, but she imagined Harriet must be feeling something like Muggle jet lag. By all rights, she needed to be in a bed, recovering from her mad plight through the woods and her encounter with the Dementors—and Hermione hadn’t missed the connotations in Headmaster Dumbledore and Snape’s conversation. The professor had been using Dark magic, and coming too close to that wouldn’t help Harriet’s condition at all.

They broke off from one another, sprinting in two different directions, though Hermione kept her pace slow enough to be casual if spotted. There was blood on her face from walking about the forest Confunded, bumbling headlong into trees and bushes and Elara at one point. She wiped at the dried, sticky trails as she hurried, though she knew from her friends’ recollections that they’d still see it when she found them. Hermione was lucky they wouldn’t try to stop her.

They shouldn’t, at least, she reminded herself, mouth set in a rigid grimace. She couldn’t say foreknowledge was comparable to fate, that knowing something should happen meant it would, which was precisely why Professor McGonagall had forbade her from ever giving her past-self future information. The paradoxes it incurred—.

The toe of her shoes caught the lip of a step, and Hermione stumbled, a sharp breath catching in her throat.

“It’s an experiment the Department of Mysteries has agreed to try with the Headmaster and the Board of Governors,” Professor McGonagall said as the last of the chain slipped into Hermione’s trembling hand. “It was agreed to use a younger student to make certain any failures wouldn’t interfere with later O.W.L and N.E.W.T studies. It took quite a bit of cajoling, but you are a perfect candidate, Miss Granger. It’s a lot of responsibility, however, and its usage with be monitored.”

“Yes, Professor.”

Those final words rang in Hermione’s head, and she wondered what the person responsible for monitoring her was thinking as they studied this unsanctioned usage. That she was using the extra time for more studying? Or that she meant to steal precious hours for something more nefarious? Either way, she knew someone from the Department, dressed in their dark, navy robes, would be coming for the Time-Turner soon enough. She wouldn’t be allowed to keep it.

Not that I should be, Hermione told herself as she came closer to her destination. What had she been thinking, doing this to herself? Putting herself and Harriet and Elara in this untenable position where they had to weigh the whims of destiny and decide whether or not to trust the cycle? Somewhere in the unknowable depths of time, Hermione must have been desperate. The first Hermione, the one who bucked the rules and splintered the fabric of reality to make another choice, would have understood how badly everything could turn in an instead. Someone must have died. Elara—or Harriet and Snape, torn to pieces by Greyback—.

The hourglass, tucked into her shirt, settled over her heart like a scalding tongue against her skin, like teeth sinking into flesh—.

“It’s a heavy responsibility,” Professor McGonagall said, tone sharp as she surveyed Hermione over the top of her square spectacles. “I wouldn’t have put forth your name if I didn’t think you capable, however.”

“I’m very grateful for the opportunity, ma’am!”

“You can’t discuss this with Misses Potter and Black, however. It’s important for no one aside from you, myself, and the Headmaster to know.”

Her friends loitered in the hall, Hermione rushing by Susan Bones. Harriet already looked tired; by now, she had to be running on fumes.

“Hermione!” Harriet yelped. “What happened?! Is that—? There’s blood on your face!”

“It’s nothing. Everything’s perfectly fine. I—I got caught up for a moment.” She swallowed, and her throat burned with the beginnings of a cold, raspy and sore and not at all pleasant. Harriet protested her shoddy answer, and Hermione stopped her. “Listen. I think—it’s very important for you to go to the Sundial Garden. Right now, please.”

Merlin, I hope they forgive me for this, she thought as Harriet and Elara, confused and worried, argued with her, and Hermione made her excuses. Regardless of any self-fulfilling, time-traveling prophecies or notions of inevitability, it was Hermione’s choice to send them out there, her choice to send them into the waiting hands of two werewolves and a serial killer, if not the one they were expecting.

She watched them leave from the far end of the hall, just out of sight. Guilt tasted like iron in her mouth.

“It’s the most logical choice,” Hermione reminded herself, wondering if it was a lie, if it was the truth. “It was the best choice. Wasn’t it?”

She’d never know the answer, not in this reality, at any rate.

 

x X x

 

Harriet crouched in the bushes, peeking through the spindly branches curling around the bridges’ slats as she waited for Hermione to appear.

Lupin and Black had already passed—first the dog, then the wizard, pelting along at a much slower clip, clutching a stitch in his side. It was almost funny, but Harriet guessed most anything was funny at this point, that hysterical kind of humor that came hand in hand with exhaustion. The absurdity of sitting outside in the cold, still bleeding and bruised and wet, covered only in her Invisibility Cloak, was more than a bit hilarious.

She turned the glass jar around in her hands, leaving smudged fingerprints. Harriet took out her wand and tapped the glass, muttering, “Simul habere,” to ensure it was Unbreakable. She eyed the lid, considering whether or not she should put an air hole in it, if fucking Pettigrew deserved an air hole, and decided against it. She didn’t know the spell to make the brass lid Unbreakable too, so she didn’t want to ruin the integrity.

Harriet saw Snape before she heard him, and she banged the top of her head on one of the bridge’s supports in her rush to get out of sight. He moved as silent as a wraith over the grounds, but his boots echoed loud on the bridge above, the old wood shifting under his weight as Snape ran.

When Hermione arrived less than a minute later, barely skirting the end of Snape’s billowing cloak, she gasped and all but flung herself into the bushes when she spotted Harriet’s floating head. “I thought I could beat him here!” she squeaked, quickly tucking the Cloak around herself, calming when they both faded into nothing. “I think he saw me but was in such a hurry he didn’t realize it was me and not some other student.”

“If he figures out we time traveled just to go back into the forest, he’ll probably kill us anyway,” Harriet replied with a resigned sigh. “Bloody Pettigrew. Bloody Weasley! How could he have that bastard as a familiar all these years and not realize something was wrong?”

She couldn’t see Hermione, but she felt her shrug, the Cloak tugging on her own shoulders. “Didn’t Fred and George or—someone say it was Percy’s before? Rats are rather innocuous, and Pettigrew was apparently very good at making himself unimportant and unnoticeable. I bet they barely thought about him at all.” Hermione shifted. “He might have used magic to make it so.”

Harriet scoffed. “I should have let Livius eat him.”

“It would have killed him. Animagi return to their normal form when they die. It’s the Fourth Principle of Gamp’s Law, Transfigured matter desires a return to its natural state, and without magic to fuel it—.”

“Yes, Hermione, you’re right,” Harriet grumbled, stalling the nervous lecture. “C’mon, we’re going to have to hurry.”

They darted out from under the bridge and rounded the side, crossing over it with their arms linked together to keep the Cloak over them both. Once they cleared the Sundial Garden, Harriet stopped at the edge of the bracken, where the ferns turned brown and withered from direct contact with the sun, her feet sticking to the mulch like they’d been hexed. They hadn’t, of course. It was just her nerves twisting up inside her belly like living snakes trying to crawl their way out of her mouth, and Harriet grimaced at the imagery, holding her lips shut.

In the distance, she heard her own name, carried so far on the wind, she couldn’t tell which of her friends had said it.

“Harriet?” Hermione asked, shifting her invisible hand down to brush her closed fist. “It’s okay to be afraid. I’m frightened, too.”

But you’re willing to go back in anyway. Harriet would suspect Hermione should have been a Gryffindor if the whole lot of them hadn’t been a bunch of obnoxious fatheads. Harriet didn’t think herself brave; the thought of seeing Fenrir Greyback again made her legs twitch, knees soft as pudding, and her hands were desperately, desperately cold. She remembered going back for Luna in the Aerie, knowing Riddle and the Basilisk waited for them, and how she hadn’t wanted to go, how the deepest parts of herself had begged for a way to escape, to go back to the dorm and bury her head under her pillows.

She wanted to leave it to the adults—to wizards and witches much more powerful than herself—but she knew they weren’t as all-knowing as they seemed. They didn’t have all the answers, either. Not even Dumbledore.

In the distance, a spell went off like a backfiring car, and Harriet thought, Snape, recalling the wild spell he’d thrown at Black and missed.

Hermione tugged on her arm now, breaking leaves under her invisible shoes. “We need to move, Harriet, now—.”

Courage or no, they couldn’t stand there forever.

Together, they breached the Forbidden Forest for the second time that evening, and Harriet wished she was in the infirmary still, getting pestered by Pomfrey. Having the matron nag her into begrudging obedience was preferable to traipsing after a murderer in the growing dark.

“Here,” Hermione whispered as they started to hear voices, the words lost by their proximity. Harriet thought she could spy someone’s back through the foliage. “We can wait here.”

“No,” Harriet murmured, nudging her friend further. “Elara disappears over in this direction—and Greyback comes from somewhere back there. We don’t want to get eaten before he even finds us for the first time.” She paused. “That sounds so bloody odd.”

“Everything about this is odd.” Hermione’s arm brushed hers again, touching the jar. She took it from Harriet, and she heard the pop and scrape of the lid being removed. “Have you enchanted it?”

“Just the glass. I Charmed it Unbreakable.”

“Perfect.”

They made themselves as comfortable as they could in their given circumstances, leaning the backs against a thick trunk, pressed close for what warmth the other provided. The arguing voices in the distance popped at intervals, comforting like a campfire, a reminder they weren’t entirely alone in this dismal place. “I saw an Acromantula out there,” Harriet murmured at length, tentatively looking above them. The tree was empty.

“Oh, Harriet.”

“Snape slashed it in half with a spell I don’t recognize.”

Hermione shifted. “What was it?”

“Something Dark, I think. Everything…everything he used was Dark.”

Hermione said nothing else. At length, Harriet thought to say something else, or to move closer to the voices, to check where the conversation was at—and then she spied the shimmering white pelt of Fenrir Greyback moving through the trees. Both Harriet and Hermione held themselves stiff as boards when the werewolf became visible, and he roved on silent paws, attention centered ahead. Once, he flicked a look in their direction, his nostrils flaring, and Harriet almost expired on the spot.

Look away, look away, look away—. Fear scratched at her thoughts like rot nibbling at the edges of old bread. Please, please—.

The noise from the clearing riled him. Greyback shook his head and loped off.

“Holy cricket,” Hermione breathed, and Harriet reflected the statement, too relieved to do anything more than slump against the tree. “I thought for sure he’d smell us….”

The bark dug into Harriet’s back like fingernails. The pain of it centered her, fighting the coruscating memories stirred by Greyback’s reappearance.

Run, Harriet!

Her hand copied his movement, blood exploding into the night air—.

The whistle of a silver sword flying—.

Harriet pushed more of her weight into the tree, letting the bark scrape her skin, gritting her teeth. She dug her fingers into her thighs.

“There’s—there’s somebody else out there?”

Orange light like Dirigible Plums rising from the earth, brilliant and fleshy and glowing like the sun as the fire burst—.

“It appears that way—until they become fodder for Greyback.”

Her eyes widened to the size of Galleons behind her glasses, and Harriet Potter trembled as a terrible, terrible thought occurred to her.

There’s somebody else out there?”

“It appears that way.

But there wasn’t. There wasn’t. There was only her, and Snape, and—.

Harriet shucked the Invisibility Cloak from her own shoulders and threw the loose fabric over Hermione, who sputtered in surprise. “What in the world are you doing?!”

“I—.” Harriet swallowed, adrenaline singing in her veins, her stomach turning over like a stone. Or a dead fish going belly up in a river. “I have to go.”

“Go?! Go where—?!”

“I’ll explain later! I have to go!”

“Harriet—!”

She avoided Hermione’s grasping fingers and darted away, her wand clasped in a sweaty, frightened hand.

I’ll explain later, she repeated to herself. If I’m not dead.

 

x X x

 

Hermione listened to Harriet’s fading footsteps and groaned.

Why on earth would she do that?! Hermione couldn’t very well follow after her, now could she? “Damn it, Harriet,” Hermione breathed, the curse soft by heartfelt, increasing her worry tenfold. Where could she be going? What had she realized while they’d been hidden there, waiting?

Greyback, Hermione recognized with cold, sinking dread. Professor Snape mentioned something—someone—drawing the werewolf off, and Hermione had been so caught up in her own distraction, her own ruminations concerning the Time-Turner, she hadn’t considered the mysterious savior being anything more than a poor, unfortunate forest-dweller. Naturally, she hadn’t wanted anyone to die—but if her choice was between her best friend and a faceless stranger, Hermione knew exactly which she’d pick, no matter the guilt such a choice bred. Not Harriet. Not her—I won’t allow it.

She plucked herself out of the weeds and started after the shorter witch, but then—.

Something small scurried past her foot. Hermione froze, panicking, and almost tripped when a sizable black dog came running after.

Elara!

Hermione followed, not bothering to cover her footsteps, though she was thankful she needn’t go far. She saw Pettigrew dip through a furrow of yew and change. Being smaller and better acquainted with his Animagus transformation, the wizard maneuvered himself with surprising grace, nearly stumbling into Hermione hidden under the Invisibility Cloak as he dodged back behind an obliging tree and stopped moving. Hermione could hear his course breathing, could smell the sweat wafting from him as she forced herself to hold still and to not hex him in the back.

She didn’t move when Elara changed forms, her transition less seamless, stumbling from one step to the next.

She didn’t move when Pettigrew glanced down and found a dead branch, hefting it up in his grubby hands. Hermione’s hands tightened into fists against her sides when he struck Elara, and she couldn’t stop the small whimper that escaped when the other witch hit the ground.

She’s going to be fine, just wait. Just wait.

Pettigrew didn’t hear her. He stood over the girl with the branch still held, panting, looking down with unveiled malice, like he wanted to strike her again and again. It was a look of upset, and…greed.

“She loved me!” Wormtail raged. “She loved me, and it’s you who couldn’t stand it!”

“Oh, for Merlin’s sake!” Black started to laugh, that same cackling, sawing chortle he’d used before. “You’re just as delusional as ever! Still pining after her. She never loved you!”

He’d loved Marlene McKinnon, Elara’s mum, or so he claimed. He’d certainly wanted her, but Hermione didn’t think it was love, not as she understood it, because she couldn’t fathom a love that would allow a man to set fire to his beloved’s home just because he couldn’t have her.

Pettigrew finally, finally dropped the branch. He stepped by Elara, treading on her fingers as he reached for her wand and tucked it away in his pocket. Then, with a final leer, the wizard turned and changed into a rat.

Hermione bolted forward, wand raised, the Invisibly Cloak falling from her shoulders. The incantation tripped off her tongue in a breathless rush. “Petrificus Totalus!”

For half an instant, she feared she’d missed, that the wizard had dodged the spell—but no, the gray rat simply laid stunned in the bracken, stiff as a board, and Hermione breathed a sigh of relief. I did it. She picked through the brush until she stopped, neatly bent at the waist, and grabbed Pettigrew by the tail. As per Elara’s request, she wasn’t gentle when she shoved him into the jar, and after what she’d just witnessed, Hermione didn’t feel inclined to be so. She screwed the lid closed and raised the jar up so she could see Wormtail, and he could see her.

“Hello, Mr. Pettigrew,” she greeted, lips spreading wide in a smile that was all teeth and no joy. People often liked to make fun of her teeth, and Hermione found she didn’t much care how they appeared in this instance. “I wouldn’t try changing once that Petrificus wears off, not unless you’d like shattering all the bones in your body. The jar is quite Unbreakable.” She trapped the glass, her nail pinging against its side. “Do forgive me if I drop it a few times before I return you to the Headmaster’s care. I’m awfully clumsy after the night I’ve had.”

Grinning still, Hermione tucked the jar under her arm and returned the Invisibility Cloak to its proper place. She eased Elara to her back, smoothing her hair from her face, but she did nothing else; her past-self would be along in a minute to assist her with Mr. Black, meaning Hermione needed to make herself scarce. She tightened her hold on the jar and Cloak, nodding to herself.

Now to find Harriet.

 

x X x

 

Of all the terrible ideas she’d ever conceived, this had to be the very worst one.

She’d been utterly stupid to not realize it from the first, to not see the situation as a whole and consider just who had drawn Greyback off when she and Snape had been pinned down. They’d been deep in the forest, searching for the perimeter of the wards. No one could find them out there—so of course, of course, it had been her. There was no one else it could have been.

Did Dumbledore know? Nobody had said what happened to the werewolf—the Headmaster asking Snape, “And what of Greyback?” which meant he hadn’t been informed. Merlin! What would happen to her? Sanctity of the timeline or no, Dumbledore wouldn’t allow Harriet to go back if it killed her—not unless he wasn’t aware of that little caveat.

Harriet wanted to transcend reality and find the first Harriet who had the wise fucking idea of chasing after a bloody werewolf on her own and choke the life out of her. She wondered if murdering herself at the beginning of this tangential time-loop would shatter time and space as they knew it, throwing them all into a hapless, blank-slate of oblivion—but at least Harriet would be able to say she didn’t decide to taunt a werewolf and hare off through the forest for the second time in one night. Merlin save her.

Maybe it was inevitable, the closing of a cycle, denying Death one too many times and earning the fate she’d flouted the first time she went back in time. There’d be a gross, ironic poetry to dying by a werewolf when saving herself from that very same werewolf, but maybe it was unavoidable. Snape would fucking hate it, but if she could spare his life—.

If I could do just one thing right—.

Snaps and bangs echoed through the dark trees, and Harriet looked up through the thick canopy to see a looming shape swinging close, like a Titan dropped from the sky, her mind not comprehending the sight until—.

“Shit!” Harriet gasped, throwing herself under the cover of a large, sprawling spruce as the massive pine Snape had toppled came falling down. She wasn’t close enough to take the brunt of the impact, but she felt the spray of broken pine needles against her face, the crisp tartness of sap bright on her skin. Birds screamed, thrown from their nests, and somewhere Harriet heard the heinous hissing of one of those monstrous spiders, but she couldn’t see where it came from. She didn’t want to know.

Cursing Snape, Greyback, and herself in equal measures, Harriet coughed against the dust and stepped away from the spruce, stumbling over the limp pine limbs. She studied the landscape and had some passing idea of where Hogwarts laid in perspective to her own position, and so she ran uphill, clamoring up over the rocks to jump as neatly as she could, gaining speed.

Which way? Which way? Where did we run?

Up to higher ground, then down, where the forest was older, where the trees stood in silent sentinel of the dangerous grounds around them—.

What was that spell the Potions Master used? There’d been so many, and half of them had felt like steel against her skin, biting and cold and painful, but the one—.

Gasping for breath, Harriet stopped sprinting, using one hand to balance herself against a tree as she raised her wand. She balanced it on the flat of her palm, uncertain of whether or not she was doing this correctly, and said, “Point Me, Severus Snape!

The wand almost spun right out of her grip, but Harriet kept herself steady and waited. The seconds felt like hours—millennia—until her wand settled, pointing her ahead and slightly to the left. Harriet picked up her feet and ran.

She couldn’t say she was relieved to find Greyback when she finally breached a copse of hawthorn and spotted his haunting figure peering into the ravine. Being relieved would imply latent masochism Harriet did not have, but she did release a loose, shuddering sigh when she found him and realized she wasn’t too late. Her body moved without permission, stepping forward, hips twisting to throw the whole of her weight into her arm’s motion. “Bombarda Maxima!

Harriet couldn’t remember using a spell of that magnitude before, and never directed at another person. Not even against the Basilisk. The magic siphoned energy from her, a palpable flexion in her body like a muscle held too long. Her spine bent, and darkness feathered her vision, but then new light illuminated the forest—the dawn come early—and Greyback howled as the explosion licked up his back in a singeing wave of flame. He turned to her, one yellow eye piercing the returning gloom, and Harriet—exhausted, injured, and plain furious at the situation—raised a two-fingered salute for the werewolf’s benefit and bolted.

His roar rattled her bones.

Harriet was quick. She’d had to be, spending her childhood outrunning Dudley and his budding gang of thugs, chased through playgrounds and parks, back gardens and alleys, skinning her knees and having to get right back up on her feet anyway, lest she wanted to get kicked into the ground. Two years of Quidditch practice and running on the track had refined her skill, making her faster than Professor Snape—faster than a werewolf, or at least she hoped so, because she didn’t dare look back. She didn’t need to see to know Greyback was upon her.

She hurtled a log, feet crashing into a deep puddle, sliding on the wet clay beneath. The ghost of Greyback’s teeth breathed against her robes, the odor of singed fur and ash and blood, coppery and foul, Harriet’s heart caught in her throat, so tight she couldn’t breathe—.

She aimed a Knockback Jinx over her shoulder and heard a thud, a bark, but nothing more than the continued thump of his pursuing paws.

How long could she run? She had to be past the wards by now, but what did that mean for her? Harriet couldn’t Apparate—.

Her feet slid again, coated in slippery mud, and Greyback’s claws caught her hem, slashing it. Harriet screamed.

I’m going to die—!

She threw another spell, Snape’s spell, the one that prickled in her palm and wrist, and Greyback snarled. She ducked a branch, his muzzle colliding with the thick wood, and Harriet used the momentary leeway to tear into an open clearing. The trampled grass whipped against her ankles, the damp ground uneven beneath the coverage, and still Harriet ran, the direct brunt of the moonlight overhead. Greyback howled.

I don’t want to d—!

Her pulse beat like thunder in her ears. It sounded almost like—.

Hooves?

They came down like an angry, rampaging horde, bursting through the forest’s borders in flickers of motion, though Harriet didn’t dare turn her head. Their hooves beat the earth, bows snapping, arrows singing through the night air—and Greyback snarled again, rounding on the furious centaurs chasing him down. Still, Harriet ran until strong hands snatched her by the shoulders and lifted her up, her feet kicking in useless circles to get away.

“Peace,” the centaur who gathered her against his chest said, and Harriet stared into the bluest eyes she’d ever seen, his white-blond hair tangled about his face. She forced herself to breathe, and her frame shook. The arms hooked under her back and knees felt cold after her exertion, her skin sticky with fever and perspiration. “Peace now, child.”

But the centaurs didn’t want peace. They circled the werewolf, arrows peppering his blackened hide, and as Harriet watched, they lifted their spears toward the heavens with warrior cries. The tips had been dipped in something metal, something silver, and they blaze white in the moonlight, sweeping down like shooting stars before they plunged into Greyback and burst through his torso. The werewolf gave one final, shuddering cackle, and then stilled. His bulk slumped beneath rearing legs and triumphant bellows.

Harriet couldn’t look away from the blood that bloomed like red flowers until it bled down into the earth, morphing to cypress leaves, draining into the dirt and clay and broken grass. That one yellow eye still gazed at her, even in death.

Harriet gazed back.


 

A/N:

Harriet: “Ha ha, what kind of idiot would attack a werewolf?”

Harriet: “….”

Harriet: “Oh no.”

Harriet: “Oh nooo.

Chapter 148: protector

Chapter Text

cxlviii. protector

 

“Harriet Potter.”

Harriet heard her name as if from a great distance, or maybe from underwater, her movements sluggish and ungraceful as she stared at the centaur who’d picked her up. He lowered her to the ground again, and she felt the pressure of it under her shoes, staring at Greyback instead. She didn’t know if she felt glad or upset, relieved or angry or just plain sick; it mixed together in her head, in her middle, until she thought she might vomit her guts up and laugh.

“You,” said one of the centaurs in a voice thick with authority, his black hair a wild tangle, Greyback’s blood splattered across his dark, bare chest. Harriet’s eyes followed the glutinous trickle along his torso, and her throat tightened, burning with bile. “You are the one who discovered Actagio in the lake.”

Harriet’s dazed attention slid to the spear he held, blood running from the sharpened tip to his rough knuckles, silver peeking through the ruby red. He had a cut on his leg, near his front hip, shaped like the werewolf’s claws. Harriet guessed he didn’t have to worry about contracting the curse, already being a magical creature.

“I am Magorian, the leader of this herd,” the centaur said, testier than before, miffed by Harriet’s lack of response. Her mouth was as dry as Hagrid’s rock cakes. “Humans are not allowed to trespass on our lands.”

A rumble of agreement went through the gathered centaurs, their hooves pawing at the rumpled earth. Two of the eight present remained next to Greyback—one aiming a spear, the other an arrow—though the werewolf hadn’t moved. No, he stayed limp, white fur speckled in crimson.

Harriet blinked several times and parted her lips. “Sorry,” she managed, voice as small as she felt standing among the towering herd.

“You know she is a child, Magorian,” the blue-eyed centaur said. He had his bow strapped to his back still, his quiver full of feathered arrows. More arrows dotted the earth like perverse flowers sprung up from nothing.

“Not for much longer.” Magorian studied Harriet from his great height, his expression not particularly hostile, but not friendly, either. His bloodied knuckles tightened about his spear, and Harriet had the morbid thought that after killing a monster like Greyback, one scrawny thirteen-year-old wouldn’t prove a challenge for him. “You may pass this once. However, know our leniency is not unending, witch.”

“I-I’ll remember that. Thank you.”

He nodded. “Firenze.” The first centaur stepped forward, Magorian frowning. “Return the human to the school.”

“Of course.” He touched the top of Harriet’s head, there and gone, probably because he would have had to bend to reach her shoulder. “Come, Harriet Potter.”

She went, stumbling, her extremities buzzing and her lungs still tight and aching from her mad dash through the forest, but she stopped to bow to the centaurs once, clumsy and uncertain, yet nonetheless grateful for them saving her life. The centaurs stood, watching her go, and Harriet’s last sight of the trampled clearing was of the proud creatures encircling the shadowed mass of Greyback’s deceased form, spears jutting into the air, the grass black and glistening.

“Girl,” Magorian called. “Tell your Headmaster the beast is dead.”

Then, the scene disappeared. Crickets played from the foliage, Firenze’s hooves making less noise than Harriet’s tired, heavy feet. She was close enough to touch his side if she’d chosen to reach out, and she almost did, frightened by the idea of getting separated and roaming, lost. She looked up at the centaur, and though the moon remained sparse behind the thinning clouds and canopy, he seemed unnaturally bright and clean after everything she’d witnessed. He had not fought Greyback, instead opting to grab her and ensure she’d been taken from the werewolf’s clutches.

“How’d you know my name?” she inquired, clearing her throat.

“I have long followed your story, Harriet Potter,” Firenze replied, brushing aside a low branch, his tone light, casual. “We centaurs study the skies with great interest, and the stars tell us of all that has happened and all that has yet to be. The stories of our fates, including yours, are there for us to discern.”

“Like Divination?”

“Not as you humans understand it, but yes, after a fact.” He paused and turned to her, his head tipped in curiosity, but his face otherwise calm, passive. “I confess, it has always fascinated me, as it has fascinated many of the others. Yours is a destiny made of many trials—of loss, grief, and determination. The weight of our world will come to rest upon your shoulders and upon your choices, Harriet Potter, and the stars have yet to tell us how the tale will end.”

Nothing Harriet thought to say sounded right, so she said nothing at all, feeling like a ghost outside her own skin, like she hadn’t just witnessed a murder—no matter how deserved—that she hadn’t escaped being eaten alive by the tips of her fingers. One might expect being frightened or grabbed or attacked to grow old after a time, but it still scared Harriet just as much as it had the first time, just as much as it had when Vernon struck her, or when she drank poisoned tea, or when Tom Riddle tortured her, or when Professor Quirrell turned her own wand on her. Avada Kedavra. The Killing Curse; Snape used it in the forest tonight, that familiar green light, but Harriet hadn’t realized it at the time.

He could go to Azkaban for that.

“Goddamn it, Potter, if I fall, keep going!”

“I dunno if I believe in destiny,” she told Firenze, peering up through her scuffed spectacles. “I’m just Harriet. That’s all I want to be.”

“You will never be just anything, young witch. Destiny and Death come for us all.”

They continued in silence for a while, and Harriet resisted asking how much farther, if there was a faster way, because her legs felt as if they’d been Transfigured to lead, and she desperately needed rest. Five extra hours to this day felt like a lifetime.

“There is great evil in this world,” Firenze said, soft, like a friend imparting bad news. “And it exists in places we least expect. You will always choose to fight it, Harriet Potter, but you will not always win.”

That shadowy specter of Tom Riddle rose again to chill her heart, and Harriet heard the echo of her own voice asking Professor Dumbledore if Voldemort would return, and the elderly wizard’s reply of “Not today.” Not today meant tomorrow—and tomorrow grew closer and closer all the time, until the memory of their conversation in Dumbledore’s office haunted her waking thoughts.

Not today. Not today.

Something rustled in the underbrush, and Harriet froze, her heart skipping a beat in her sudden fit of nerves. Firenze touched his bow but didn’t draw it, even as the noise moved deliberately in their direction. The bushes shook—and suddenly Hermione’s wild mane burst free of the Invisibility Cloak, followed by her jubilant cry. “Oh, Harriet! You’re all right!”

Harriet breathed. “Bloody hell,” she wheezed, staggering forward into Hermione’s open arms, nearly getting whacked over the head by the jar she carried. “You scared the life out of me.”

Me?! Scaring you?! You ran off without a word! I—.” She glimpsed the centaur waiting behind Harriet and clammed up, her cheeks darkening. “Hello, sir. I’m Hermione Granger.”

Firenze smiled, nodded. “I know.” He didn’t give further explanation. “I am called Firenze.”

“A pleasure to meet you. Thank you for helping Harriet—or, well, I assume you helped.”

Firenze nodded again. “Yes. My herd has been tracking the wolf wizard through our lands these long months, but he has evaded us until now. Harriet Potter proved a worthy distraction so the beast could not flee this time. Actagio has been avenged.”

“How’d you find me?” Harriet interjected, pulling back, though she kept her hands on her friend’s arms. The Invisibility Cloak felt cold under her fingers—no simple feat, considering how frozen her hands had become, both from shock and the rain. She still held her wand, and she feared it’d been permanently welded into her stiff grip. “You didn’t go wandering about, did you?”

Hermione sniffed as if offended by the presumption of her wandering anywhere. Then, in answer, she shifted under the Cloak and revealed the hand not clasped about the jar, Harriet wincing against the sudden, bright blue light in her eyes. She held one of the glass lenses. “Of course not. I used the Atlas.”

“Brilliant.”

Tucking the Atlas away again, the light faded, and so did Hermione’s pleased grin. “What happened out there, Harriet?”

“I—.” Greyback’s phantom weight tugged on the hem of her robes again, choking her, and Harriet rubbed at her sore throat. “I’ll tell you later, okay? I—I really just want to get back to the castle and kip for about a thousand years. D’you get Pettigrew? Is Elara okay?”

“Elara is fine.” Hermione held up the jar and showed the single, unmoving occupant. “Pickled rat, anyone?”

Snorting, Harriet said, “No, thanks. Though I won’t feel so bad gutting them in my detentions after this, I’ll tell you that.”

“I don’t think I will, either.”

Firenze led them forward, and after a time, they came upon a path that better resembled an animal trail than anything made by humans, but it saved Harriet from tripping on the vegetation. Hermione chattered at first, as she was prone to do when nervous, but even she fell silent soon enough. Skittering sounds from above startled Hermione into grabbing Harriet’s free hand, and when Harriet glanced up, she spotted small, blue feathered birds watching them with curiosity. Jobberknolls. If they started to scream, Harriet thought she might cry.

The crawling, frigid cold chased the blue birds away.

“Harriet,” Hermione whispered in warning, fingers clenching hard, Firenze easing his bow free as his tail twitched in agitation. Harriet already recognized what was coming. It was only one Dementor, and it slithered nearer through the trees rather than descending in the veritable horde that had attacked Harriet and Snape before. Had that already happened? Harriet didn’t know, and only the single, gruesome creature floated closer, so she hoped its friends wouldn’t be arriving soon after.

Hermione squeezed her hand.

The Dementor didn’t swoop forward and attack, but it kept on its leisurely, maligning approach, the woods withering around it as the cold bit deep and white mist expelled from Harriet’s lips. Firenze reared, knocking an arrow, but when he fired, it did nothing to deter the Dark creature. Harriet felt outside herself still, numb to the chill, unsurprised by the voices swimming about her throbbing head.

“—Go, I’ll—.”

“—please, not—.”

“—foolish girl—.”

Kill me instead—!”

“I’m so sorry, Lily—.”

That last voice was Snape. She knew it was Snape, but it’d taken her so long to recognize because Harriet had never heard him speak in such a tone before—desolate, aggrieved.

Snape leaned over her, rainwater on his face, starlight from his own Patronus in his eyes. “I’m so sorry, Lily—.”

“What happens if we run?” Hermione hissed at Firenze, and the centaur shook his head.

“It will chase you. It has no interest in me.”

The Dementor curled a hand around the closest tree, and the bark flaked, its skin glistening in the warbling moonlight. Hermione said something to Harriet, but she didn’t hear it, spiraling in her own thoughts like a leaf circling a drain.

Professor Snape looked away, flecks of white snow melting in his limp, black hair. “The Patronus relies entirely on the caster’s emotion, on the encapsulation of sheer, unfettered joy.”

Harriet lifted her arm.

Elara Black stood in an owl shop, dressed in new robes, a small smile on her mouth. “I’m sorry for being rude. I’m Elara—.”

Hermione shrieked as Harriet jumped and threw her arms around her, and they toppled into the snowdrift—.

Shadow puppets roved on the cupboard wall—.

His dark eyes danced as Nicolas Flamel opened the door to his home. “Hello, petit oiseau—.

The Headmaster laughed with open delight as Harriet’s misused Protego Flammae exploded every drink in the Great Hall—.

Harriet sorted through her frayed socks, and Elara looked over, saying without thought, “We’ll go buy more when we go home—.”

Home.

Thoughts of home filled Harriet as she stared the Dementor down, some distant part of her registering that it had risen above her, reaching, Hermione’s hand hot over her own, tugging at her to no avail. Home wasn’t Grimmauld Place, or Trefhud, or even Hogwarts. It definitely wasn’t Privet Drive. Home existed in all those small, involuntary pieces of her heart that people in Harriet’s life managed to accrue. Snape said the Patronus needed joy to be cast, but she’d felt his Patronus, had breathed in the light of it, and had wanted it to remain like star-speckled galaxies in her lungs, and she knew it needed more than a happy memory. It needed Hermione’s lecturing voice in a sun-warm library, Harriet’s head on an open book, Elara’s rare smile, Livi’s coils on her lap, under her hands, the brush of black wool when Snape pulled her from the Fiendfyre, stepped in front of a werewolf, Dumbledore telling her she didn’t have to go back to the Dursleys—.

Harriet grit her teeth. “Expecto Patronum!

The magic breathed through her like a warm summer breeze, pulling, a sore ache rising in her heart as the white light pooled and twisted from the tip of her wand. It wasn’t like Snape’s Patronus; it had none of that fierceness, that blazing, fervent edge, like a chest too full with laughter bubbling and cracking about the edges. Instead, her Patronus was quiet, almost fragile, but lasting—a mischievous hum, the quirk of a lip, less like the stars come down from the heavens and more like a glimmer of moonlight on still waters. The Dementor hissed in pain as the light flared, retreating into the forest again, and the trio watched the Patronus flap about their heads until it came to a stop on Harriet’s shoulder.

“It’s…a crow,” Hermione breathed, her smile spreading as the translucent bird preened. Its feathers gleamed as if dipped in silver gilt, inquisitive beak turning to Harriet’s ear like it had a secret to give.“You did it.”

Harriet touched the crow, and it dispersed, the light dying, though the warmth spilled through her trembling fingers in a welcomed rush. Too quick, the gentle comfort bled to nothing, and Harriet longed for it to return. I did it. I really did it.

Exhaustion rose, quick as Livi after a treat, and Harriet slumped, her knees gone weak and jellied. Firenze caught her under the arms, and before she could register it, she and Hermione were on his back, Hermione holding her upright enough to stay seated. “Centaurs do not bear humans as beasts of burden do,” he told them as he set forth at a decent trot, his hair blowing back in Harriet’s face, the wind cold on her hot brow. “But just this once, I will bear your weight. Because destiny can use extra strength now and again.”

 

x X x

 

Harriet didn’t register much about their return trek from the forest. She remembered sliding from Firenze’s back, his faint voice saying goodbye, Hermione slipping the cool Cloak over their heads. She could recall the murky patter of their footsteps in an empty corridor, Hermione handing the jar off to the Headmaster, and then—.

“Miss Potter? Miss Potter, can you hear me?”

Harriet swayed, and Madam Pomfrey redoubled her grip upon her shaking arm. She looked round to find Dumbledore’s blue eyes, usually so effusive, dim with worry.

She was finally back in the infimary, and her past self—or future self—had gone.

“Greyback’s dead,” she said, Pomfrey gasping, halting her ministrations. Dumbledore looked quite grim, standing there in the dim infirmary, his eyes fixed on Harriet’s own. Something passed between the adults that Harriet was much too exhausted to decipher. “Magorian said to tell you. I don’t think he liked me.”

“Magorian? Yes, he has little love for any humans.”

“Mm.” Harriet blinked. Behind her eyelids, Greyback snarled and snapped, one yellow eye leering like a smoldering sun, white fur painted red. “I cast a Patronus.”

Dumbledore’s gaze softened, something like pride creasing the lines and wrinkles about his eyes. “Did you indeed? That’s extraordinary magic, Harriet.”

“It’s a crow.” Madam Pomfrey urged her to sit on her bed, placing a glass of purple potion in her dirty, scuffed hands. It was the same potion the healer had dosed the Potions Master with. Harriet glanced at the drawn curtains across the aisle. She could hear snoring. How bloody odd. “S’not very impressive. D’you know Professor Snape’s is a phoenix? I saw it.”

Apparently he didn’t know, because Professor Dumbledore’s brow rose, and he touched his mouth, tapping a finger against his lip in thought. “I didn’t,” he admitted, quiet and preoccupied.

“It was beautiful.” She drank the dram of Dreamless Sleep and set the glass aside, her limbs growing heavy. It teetered on the edge before a spell from Dumbledore helped settle it.

“I’m certain it was, dear girl. I’m certain it was.”

She slipped down, the starched sheet rough on her cheek. Harriet breathed in the clean scent—and remembered nothing else.


A/N: I changed Harriet’s Patronus based partly on its symbolism — crows can represent death, magic, mystery, and resourcefulness, while stags represent pride, nobility, and heroism, which aren’t necessarily things I feel Harriet lacks, but I don’t think she has the same connection to James that canon!Harry did. Harry wanted to be like his father and reveled in all the similarities between them, whereas Harriet spends more time considering her mother. I thought about using Lily’s doe, but some of the symbolism (kindness, passivity, grace) didn’t match up and I did not want to use something Snape once had.

Harriet: “Expecto Patronum!”

[Unnamed Goose appears]

Harriet: “I—?”

[Unnamed Goose begins stealing Dementors’ things, honking]

Harriet: “Excellent. My spirit animal.”

Chapter 149: a very long summer

Chapter Text

cxlix. a very long summer

 

By noon the next day, Harriet was ready to leave the infirmary.

Unfortunately, her definition of ready varied from Madam Pomfrey’s, who didn’t deign Harriet’s rather persuasive argument in favor of freedom with so much as a blink of acknowledgment. Instead, she slapped a thick, chunky balm on Harriet’s stinging hands and said, “One foot out of bed, Miss Potter, and you’ll regret it.”

After seeing the witch drug the Potions Master, Harriet didn’t doubt she would.

Snape himself woke sometime before the dawn, before Harriet’s own Dreamless Sleep wore off, as she’d blinked open her eyes to see his curtains across the aisle blasted and torn apart. She stared at the curtains for much of the morning as she sat and spoke with Professor Dumbledore, and she shivered thinking of how bloody furious the wizard must be. She had questions to ask him but didn’t much like her chances of making it out of the encounter intact.

The Headmaster wanted Harriet to outline the previous night’s events to the best of her ability, as she apparently had the best vantage on what had occurred. Elara and Hermione listened as well, until Pomfrey pronounced Hermione fit enough to leave and ordered Elara to rest. Dumbledore remained, and Harriet asked him why any of it had transpired, why they had been the ones needed to go into the forest at all, and he didn’t have a better answer for her than Hermione had.

“Given what I know of your character, and of Miss Black and Miss Granger’s, I can only assume something grave occurred in a timeline very much removed from our own,” he said, leaning back into his chair, his attention centered on the window above Harriet’s head. “Possibly in several timelines. There is much discussion among certain circles of academic society regarding time travel and its validity. There are also questions of morality that come into play, as dynamic shifts in history may possibly improve life in the present, but deny life to others in the future. That is to say, if not for Voldemort and his war, many of your classmates’ parents might not have found each other—even Lily and James may have gone their separate ways, and I would not have the pleasure of sitting here in your lovely company, my dear.”

Harriet frowned, picking at the blanket stretched over her knees, her mood souring as it always did at the mention of the Dark Lord. Would she forfeit being born to give life to all those who suffered because of Voldemort? Most likely, yes, but Harriet knew the theoretical question was a lot more complicated than it seemed. If someone could go back in time and stop everything terrible that had ever happened, it would erase all the good that followed, and it wouldn’t stop bad things from ever happening again, either. It would simply change, and change, in and of itself, had no morality.

“But I digress. It is my belief Mr. Pettigrew must have grown impatient and, dare I say, reckless in his desire to retrieve you for his own amnesty. Perhaps Mr. Black got close to catching him on his next attempt. It doesn’t take an advanced imagination to think students and staff might have been injured in such a confrontation. You and your friends would have sought to rectify the damage. Unfortunately, in attempting to do so, finding a professor—or myself—may have proven more disastrous than intended.”

“So Hermione—or, or whoever started the time loop—sent me away from the castle. I guess werewolves are better than possible student causalities?”

“I cannot say what is better or worse, simply what is, Harriet. I can only be happy an innocent man’s name will be cleared, and no one has suffered any lasting injuries.”

“Except for Fenrir Greyback.”

Dumbledore paused. “Yes, true. That is correct. The loss of life is always a regrettable outcome, but do not mourn the creature felled by the centaurs, Harriet; mourn the innocence he despoiled, mourn for Remus, whose life was ineludibly changed by the curse inflicted upon him, or mourn for the boy who Fenrir Greyback had to have been before he wandered a muddled path. The wizard who attempted to take your life in the Forbidden Forest is not worth your consideration.”

He asked her at one point to cast her Patronus for him, and Harriet did so, finding it both easier and more difficult without a Dementor present. Without the raw adrenaline, she felt a mite foolish waving her wand about in the infirmary, but the emotion was easier to find when the cloaked monster wasn’t trying to suck it out of her. The spectral crow flapped about the ward, much to Dumbledore’s delight, then alighted atop Harriet’s head, the curious warmth of it like a hot breath sinking through her hair before it disappeared.

“That is excellent, Harriet,” the Headmaster said, the Patronus’ final glow twinkling on his half-moon spectacles like starlight disappearing into the dawn. “Exceptional magic! Even grown witches or wizards rarely manage a fully corporeal Patronus.”

Harriet fidgeted with her wand. It didn’t feel impressive to her, not after what she’d witnessed in the Forbidden Forest with hundreds of Dementors bearing down from the sky, Snape’s massive Patronus the only thing between them and certain doom. She shrugged, saying, “I dunno, Professor. It’s not very exciting, is it? It’s just a crow, not—.” Her gaze flicked across the aisle, taking in the torn curtains, the bent rod. “Hermione and Elara said your Patronus is a phoenix too, sir. They saw it at the Quidditch game.”

“It is indeed.”

“Why is that?”

Dumbledore’s hand gave his beard a few idle tugs as he ruminated on the question, the rings on his fingers bright and gold, his robes a soft, summery blue. “There are many reasons one person’s Patronus may match another’s. Some say it means indelible love—yes, yes,” he added when Harriet tried to stifle a giggle, his own lips turning up. “Severus is a fine young man, but I do believe we can safely rule his sudden affection for me out as a possibility.”

“What else could it be, sir?”

“Grief; deep, soul-wrecking grief—and that, too, we can rule out. It is my theory, Harriet, that Professor Snape’s Patronus matching mine has very little to do with me and has everything to do with Severus, with who he is.”

Harriet furrowed her brow. “I don’t understand.”

“No, I don’t expect you or anyone else would. It necessitates a better understanding of our Potions Master’s personality and integrity than most people ever comprehend. You see, Severus and myself are actually quite alike in many regards.”

Blinking, Harriet pictured the dour, black-cloaked figure of Professor Snape and stared blankly at Dumbledore’s robin’s egg blue robes. “You don’t say.”

Professor Dumbledore hid a laugh in a slight cough. “Oh, I don’t think Severus is going to be overcome with a sudden desire to enliven his wardrobe, though I did once see him in a lovely lilac hue after a dubious Colovaria mishap—ah, but that is a story for another time. At the heart of things, Severus and I are…similar, and that fundamental similarity is reflected in the Patronus Charm. The phoenix is a marvelous animal, one that is born again upon its death—a continuous cycle of rebirth, renewal, and redemption, and redemption can be a frightful thing for those who cannot accept it is upon them. The labor of redeeming one’s self is often more comfortable for its necessity than its absence, and condemnation can define a man’s soul. Guilt is a never-ending currency until a man finds his pockets empty and must find another facet of himself to spend.”

“I—I can’t say I know what you mean, Professor.”

He hummed, nodding. “And I believe I have already said too much. We shall simply have to believe in coincidences and their impressive ability to make fools of us all.”

Again Harriet didn’t know what Dumbledore meant by that, not really, but she assumed the conversation was over and he’d prefer for her to not speculate on the issue further. He left soon after, and Harriet wiled the hours away, doing her level best to test Madam Pomfrey’s nerves and escape the ward early. At one point, the graying healer stopped attempting to press another potion on the girl and instead fixed her with an exasperated glare. “You are by far one of my worst patients, Miss Potter,” she said, which Harriet took as a compliment.

Past two in the afternoon, a wizard entered the infirmary—an Auror, given his maroon robes and Ministry crest on his pocket—and Harriet sat up in bed, startling a drowsy Elara from her nap. Every possible thing she’d done wrong in the past twenty-four hours spiraled through her head as the balding wizard walked right past Pomfrey’s office, which didn’t escape the healer’s notice. She clattered out of the room in a fearsome huff.

Excuse you!” she snapped, drawing the Auror short. “What do you think you’re doing, stomping through my ward unannounced?”

He held up his hands and took a step back, surprised by the sudden ire directed at him. Harriet might have been irritating Pomfrey more than she suspected. “I’ve been told to fetch the prisoner’s daughters,” he told Pomfrey. “He wants to see ‘em before he’s taken into Ministry custody.”

“Well, I don’t care what Mr. Black wishes for,” Pomfrey retorted. “These are my patients, and they require rest!”

“His solicitor was clear on what I was supposed to do, ma’am, and I have my orders.”

At the mention of a solicitor, Elara’s eye twitched, her face otherwise hard as stone, and she threw back her blankets, getting to her feet. Harriet scrambled to follow.

“Miss Black—.”

“This won’t take long, Madam Pomfrey,” Elara interrupted, tugging on her robes over her hospital gown, Harriet doing the same. The Auror had the good sense to turn his back.

The healer put up a decent fight but finally relented, if only because a first-year Hufflepuff came into the ward with a bloodied nose, and she couldn’t tend to him and wrangle two tenacious Slytherins at the same time. Harriet and Elara followed the Auror from the infirmary, keeping a proper distance from the stranger as he led them down the stairs, utilizing the lesser passages to avoid students. Given it was a Thursday, there weren’t many out to begin with, most everyone sitting in their classrooms, but those few they did pass cast startled glances toward the pair of bandaged witches trailing an Auror through the castle.

Harriet didn’t want to consider what kind of rumors future speculations might dredge up.

They delved into the dungeons, not as deeply as Harriet had explored before, but deeper than the Slytherin common room, and deep enough for the torches to sputter on and off as they passed each one by. They finally came to a level where the braziers remained lit, and a second Auror sat outside of a room barred by double doors, and as they drew closer, Harriet couldn’t help but gawk. He was the most grisly man she’d ever seen, his face like a half-chiseled statue still waiting for those harsh, uncanny lines to be ground and smoothed, the torchlight unforgiving in how it highlighted the missing chunk of his nose. The scars continued into his dark gray hair, his scalp pockmarked in places, his clipped beard likewise spotty where past wounds had taken the hair. His Auror robes contained more gilt than the first’s, the fabric shimmering with the thickness of inlaid protection spells.

The most startling thing of his countenance was the wide, electric blue eye that spun about his head on its own accord and fixed Harriet with an inert stare.

“This them, boy?” the Auror barked in a voice like churning gravel. The first Auror didn’t strike Harriet as a boy, having to be somewhere near his fifties, but he didn’t protest the address.

“Yes, sir.”

The Auror grunted. “Go in, then,” he told Harriet and Elara. “And be quick about it.”

Harriet and Elara chivvied themselves forward—giving the seated wizard a wide berth—and the doors shut on their own behind them. Inside they found what Harriet thought might be a classroom meant for wandlore, the diagrams and posters on the stone walls lending to that notion, the long tables bearing racks and clamps and chisels where one might place a wand they were studying or crafting. Sirius Black sat on a bench against the far wall nearest the lit hearth, dressed in a pair of clean, serviceable work robes, his long hair marginally groomed and tied behind his head. He was deep in discussion with another wizard, a thin fellow in pinstriped robes, a golden fob hanging from his waistcoat and a plum-colored ribbon pinned to his lapel.

Their conversation ended when the doors shut.

“Ah, Miss Black. It is a pleasure to see you again,” the unknown man said with a short bow of his head. He wore square spectacles and had a neat mustache over a mouth that didn’t seem inclined to smile much.

“Mr. Piers,” Elara acknowledged, a cool thread in her otherwise friendly tone. “I hadn’t realized you’d been called for.”

“Headmaster Dumbledore sent a letter this morning. I am always at the House of Black’s service.”

Sirius Black had smiled at them when they entered and now looked between Elara and the solicitor with a baffled expression. “Hang on. How d’you know one another?” he asked.

Mr. Piers turned to him. “My office and I have been assisting Miss Black with the management of the estate at Mr. Cygnus’ request since his death, sir.”

“Cygnus? OId Uncle Cygnus? He was the one who found you?”

“I found myself,” Elara quipped, as harsh and as quick as a whip. Harriet worried she might start shouting, just as she’d done in the forest, but she held her temper and spoke civilly. For now. “I returned to the family before my first year, after my Hogwarts letter sent me to Diagon Alley and, eventually, Gringotts. There isn’t much more to tell.” Her jaw clenched, eyes fixed on the wall by her father’s head. “I had thought you’d already been remanded into Ministry custody, or I would have sent for Mr. Piers myself, I guess.”

Sirius snorted. “Remanded, but not carted off just yet.”

“Mr. Black is to be taken to the Ministry in London after our meeting,” Mr. Piers added, clearing his throat. “Then he will be placed under house arrest at Grimmauld Place until he can face a proper trial and be exonerated.”

Again, Elara’s eye twitched. The wizards probably didn’t notice, but Harriet read her best friend’s otherwise placid face well; no matter what she said, the idea of Black being exonerated was not a welcome one for Elara. “And when will that be?”

“The estimates I have been given fate the trial for somewhere in the fall, but I think placing certain…pressures in the media about the Ministry’s ineptitude will expedite the process and move the trial to the summer.”

“What kind of pressures?”

“A donation or two. A letter to the editor at the Prophet. Mr. Black’s escape from Azkaban has lessened the Ministry’s popularity in the last year, and the media will be keen to follow the trend by criticizing his unfair treatment to the masses.”

Harriet couldn’t keep quiet any longer. “What—he’s going to be living with us, then?”

Sirius looked to her, his brow raising. “You two are staying at Grimmauld? In that rubbish tip? Who in the hell had that stupid idea?”

Bristling, Elara said, “It’s perfectly adequate,” and Sirius laughed, tossing his head back when he did so.

“Adequate, yeah. Not hardly. Who’s looking after you, then? We’ll be having words.”

“I’m emancipated,” Elara replied. “On Uncle Cygnus’ doing, so I could not be forced back into my prior living situation, nor placed with the Malfoys. I can stay where I please.”

Sirius’ lip curled at the mention of his cousins. “The old sod did something right, then,” he muttered, looking his daughter over as Elara maintained a stiff, unremitting glower with the wall. “That doesn’t explain Harriet. Is she emancipated too?”

“Er.” Harriet fiddled with her glasses and wished Professor Dumbledore would pop up out of a barrel of wooden dowels, brimming with explanations. What could she say? No, don’t worry about it, I’ve got a carousel of guardians caring for me in their free time? Or worse: You see, that bloke you seem to hate, Snape? Yeah, he sleeps in the house with us, just in case it explodes into flames or something.

Mr. Piers cleared his throat again, lacing his hands together. “From what I have been informed, Miss Potter’s guardians are incapable of raising a magical child, and specific situations have prevented her from being passed on—officially—from their care. So, at present, she is still a ward of the Dursleys, if I remember their name correctly.”

“You’re not supposed to know about that,” Harriet blurted, alarmed. “No one’s supposed to know.”

“Not to worry, Miss Potter,” Mr. Piers said, addressing her for the first time. “The Blacks are not the only clients I am obliged to give counsel to. The Advocacy Vow taken by solicitors prevents me from discussing privileged information I am not allowed to impart to outside parties. As such, I cannot report your circumstances to the Ministry.”

Harriet recalled he mentioned Dumbledore’s name, and she turned it over in her head, wondering if the Headmaster had consulted with him before or after she’d been attacked in that tent two years ago. It made sense for Dumbledore to need legal advice, no matter how infallible and wise he seemed on his own, and though she wanted to ask just how much the Headmaster had told Mr. Piers, she stayed quiet.

“Bloody Petunia,” Sirius said, bearing his yellowed teeth, haggard face twisted with hate. “She always treated Lily horrid, jealous cow that she is. Dumbledore should have known better than to leave you with that wretched bitch.”

Harriet colored, and Elara tutted under her breath, her voice almost as snide and menacing as Snape’s when she commented, “Too bad her god-father was otherwise occupied at the time. He would have been able to prevent that.”

For the first time, Sirius’ gaze landed on Elara with something like contempt instead of joy, a slow, simmering anger kindling in their matching silver eyes that Harriet didn’t like.

“So, um, you’re staying with us? At Grimmauld?” she asked, and Sirius forced his attention from his daughter, his smile grim and contrived. “Is—so the Ministry has Pettigrew? I don’t understand why they haven’t let you go, then.”

“Because the Ministry loves its bureaucracy, always has,” he snorted. “They didn’t give a damn when I was just another Death Eater they could lock up to make their quota look better. But, yeah, Harry. I’ll be at Grimmauld. It’ll be great.”

“Harriet,” she corrected, rubbing at the back of her neck. Something had cut her there, and Madam Pomfrey had covered it in an itchy, silver-infused paste to ensure it wouldn’t affect her even if it’d been inflicted by Greyback. “I don’t like going by Harry—and I’m sure it’ll be fun.” She wasn’t sure of that at all, finding the prospect of living with a convict she’d thought was out to get her for much of the year an awkward possibility. Even so, Harriet had gotten used to stranger things before. Living with Snape, for instance. Sometimes it’d been like trying to coexist with an Erumpent ready to go on a rampage at any moment. At least Harriet was willing to give Sirius Black a chance.

Sirius smiled again, and looked younger now, happy, and made a move as if he wanted to embrace her before he thought better of it. Instead, Sirius held out one scrubbed hand, and Harriet came forward to shake it, his callused fingers warm and steady around her own. “I’m looking forward to the summer then, Harriet. There has to be some kind of mischief we can find even while I’m under house arrest.”

Elara rolled her eyes to the ceiling.

“And I don’t know what plans Dumbledore’s made and whatever, but I—I promise I’ll look after you, okay?” Sirius avowed, ignoring his daughter’s less than pleased expression. “I promise I’ll do better. I’ll be better, for both of you.”

“Okay.”

He let go and held his hand out to Elara, who stood further back, unmoving. “Elara,” he called, eyes wide, beseeching, the ghost of desperation pulling at the raspy curl of consonants. Elara stared. “Please.

In the end, she did shake his hand—with the same kind of begrudging acceptance one might use when scooping up dragon-dung to fertilize their garden. Nothing crossed Elara’s face, the emotions too deep for that, and yet her body shifted and jerked in spurts like a wild animal held back by a crumbling chain. Sirius said something to her, something Harriet didn’t hear and Elara didn’t acknowledge. Without another word, she turned on her heels and strode toward the doors. Her abrupt departure startled Harriet into following, and with a final wave tossed over her shoulder, they returned to the corridor outside. Elara didn’t stop to acknowledge the Aurors, and nor did Harriet.

Their slippered footsteps echoed in the empty halls.

“Well, that was…unexpected,” Harriet commented once they’d put an entire floor between themselves and Sirius Black. Elara’s eyes remained fixed straight ahead. “Are you all right?”

“I’m fine.”

“You don’t look fine.”

“I did get bludgeoned over the head by a rat-man, if you remember.” She glanced down at Harriet, who wrinkled her nose at the mention of Pettigrew. Bastard. “I think it’s going to be a very long summer.”

It’ll be bloody awful, won’t it? Harriet’s shoulders sunk, her stride slowing. With those two at each other’s throats, ‘long’ won’t even begin to describe it.

Sighing, they walked together in mutual silence until they passed a familiar office door, and Harriet paused. Beyond it, she heard the shuffle of parchment, the impatient scratch of a quill moving across a page. The sounds stopped when they did, and though the door obscured him, Harriet could feel the weight of his calculating black eyes upon her, alerted by the sudden cessation of their echoing footsteps. He waited.

“Harriet?”

“Go back without me,” she said to Elara. “I have something I need to do.”

The other witch eyed the door with dubious interest. “Are you certain about this?”

She took a breath. “Yes. Go on, I’ll be there soon. Pomfrey would have my head otherwise.”

Hesitant, Elara kept on her way, leaving Harriet in the chilly, torchlit passage outside their Potions Master’s office. Without bothering to knock, Harriet reached out to take the handle—warmed by spells and wards and magic unknown to her—and walked inside.


 

A/N: What I assume Dumbledore is telling Harriet, is that Snape has always done things out of guilt, until he started to do the right thing for the sake of doing the right thing, and it must be terrifying for a man convinced of his own irredeemability to realize his integral character has shifted without his recognition. That’s my thoughts on the matter, anyway.

Dumbledore: “I saw Snape in light purple once.”

Harriet: “…..”

Dumbledore: “I have pictures.”

Harriet: “!!!!!”

Chapter 150: too dire to tell

Chapter Text

cl. too dire to tell

 

Severus Snape always knew he would one day face a reckoning. However, he never expected that reckoning to take the form of a thirteen-year-old girl in an off-white hospital gown.

He didn’t believe in Hell, not really, not any more than any other lapsed Catholic did. In the summers of his youth, his father used to drag him to services, if only to watch his young son squirm in the face of eternal damnation and hellfire. He could still remember the tightness of Tobias’ grip on his shoulder, the smell of cheap Muggle tobacco wafting off his hand, the man squeezing his fingers into his son’s bones when service finally ended and he went off for a drink. Nothing shouted at Severus from the pulpit had ever been more frightening than the reality of his own home, and Hell did not compare to the tortures inflicted by the Dark Lord. Scripture held no relevance for a wizard who’d witnessed the worst of man’s cruelties and had lived to tell the tale.

Still, Severus understood that one day—either before a pair of pearly gates or some other adjudicator of fate—he’d be forced to reveal the truth of himself, if only because he couldn’t contain it any longer. The truth was a festering abscess under his skin, one he left well enough alone, ignoring it even as it poisoned his blood. He knew it’d have to be lanced eventually, and it would spill forth—nasty, vile, and ruining.

Harriet Potter shut the door behind her and stared at him. He saw her throat bob with a nervous gulp.

“By all means, Potter, stroll into my office unannounced. Merlin knows it’d be too much to hope you had the brains or courtesy to knock.” He lifted his quill from his marking, not that he’d been doing anything more than going through the motions, his Occlumency shields as thin as wafer paper and just as flimsy after the day he’d had. The Dreamless Sleep had worn off in the night, and he’d spent the hours before dawn trapped in a facsimile of slumber, too drugged to rise, too haunted by teeth and claws and bloodthirsty howls to rest. He’d been very, very tempted to hex the matron when he’d finally jerked his worthless, trembling hide out of bed that morning, but he’d resisted. He didn’t know why.

Slytherin had been more of a nightmare than usual, demanding an account of things Severus had to piece together from scraps and guesses, lying his arse off to excuse his presence with three Slytherin students inside the Forbidden Forest with a werewolf and Sirius bloody Black. The school had known of Greyback’s residence in the forest for some weeks now and had tightened security, not that the Ministry provided any kind of support in actually killing or capturing the bastard. He’d escaped Slytherin’s lingering interrogation with his limbs intact, but Severus knew retribution would be forthcoming when he least expected it. Nothing satisfied Slytherin more than a judicious application of Crucio when no one could hear the screams.

Severus was exhausted and not at all prepared to deal with the girl.

Potter stood inside the threshold, unmoving as if her courage had been enough to propel her inside but not enough to have her take a seat. The skin of her scrawny arms and neck glistened with oil in the candlelight, and when Severus breathed in, he could smell the Pleomele and Lyre-flower used in Equill-Emollient, an unguent meant to neutralize traces of Dark magic. Pomfrey had applied it most heavily to the girl’s hands, and he knew it was because she’d used his spell, and because she’d been touching him when he’d spoken the Killing Curse. The malignancy of it had brushed against her.

He felt the Unforgiveable still like a chemical burn on his tongue, in his chest. He’d poured his hatred into the incantation—not enough, never enough—and it corroded his very being, a steel brush scraping at his skin, leaving him raw and exposed and bitter.

“What do you want?” he demanded when the girl continued to stay silent.

“You knew my mum,” she said, and Severus stopped breathing.

Silence sat upon the room like doom come to have his harvest, an unearthly hush intruded only by Severus’ rising blood pressure and the vaguest crackle of candle flames atop their wicks. “What?” The word came out in an intense, half-stolen gasp.

“Hermione—.” Potter swallowed and, realizing her back was against the door, forced herself to step forward. “Hermione has this obsession with learning everything she can, y’know? And that includes the references and credentials of all our teachers, including you. So when she found out you’re the youngest Potions Master is England—or Europe, whichever, she had to figure out how old you are, right?” The girl shifted, bringing her injured hands forward to pick at the drying balm. “I didn’t put it together at first, since this was back in first-year and all, but later, I—well, I realized you’d been born the same year as my parents, which means you were in school with them.”

Severus relaxed, if marginally. “And what does that have to do with anything?” he spat, tidying the shoddy essays layered on his cluttered desk, making a go of appearing busy. Sweat built on the nape of his neck and his heart beat too quickly, like he’d stepped out in front of a lorry and had dodged at the last second. “I assume it hasn’t occurred to you that I was in Slytherin, and your saintly parents were Gryffindors. It may have escaped your notice, but the two Houses don’t mingle—.”

“You said her name.”

The parchments crinkled under his tightening fingers. He didn’t have a pithy response for that.

“Er—that night, in eighty-one?” Potter fidgeted when Severus continued to stare, unaware of how such a simple statement had taken the legs out from under such a composed wizard. “When the Dementors get close, I can hear—well. I can hear my dad, and my mum, and Vol—the Dark Lord. I told you about that, but I didn’t—the other voice didn’t come until later. I know that voice; it’s yours. You were there—.”

Stop, stop, STOP—.

Severus remembered the feel of the carpet under his knees, how the debris dug into his flesh, the child wailing, his best friend limp and dea—.

“And Hagrid once mentioned something about taking me from you, that night, that it was a mistake—.” She swallowed again, voice growing raspier with nerves. “I—you were there that night.”

The air thinned, the need to gasp sizzling in his lungs, but Severus didn’t give in, his head spinning. “Does your inane blathering have a purpose?”

Yes!” Potter asserted, hands forming tiny, impotent fists. “You knew my mum. You—you were there at the house. At Godric’s Hollow! I want to know why!”

Sunlight streamed through the window curtains, green where it shone in the garden’s leaves. It fell onto her back, cast a corona of gold over Lily’s auburn hair—.

Will you, Severus, always do you best by her?”

He thought she looked like a wildfire at that moment—.

“So what, girl? I knew where the Potters lived. So what—.”

If the worst should come to pass, will you keep her from danger?

Her hand was soft in his, soft and warm, Severus’ hands always so bloody cold, James Potter standing over them both as the magic wove through the air—.

“I will.”

Potter scoffed. “Dumbledore said they moved there from the Stinchcombe House, and not many people knew that. Only their friends, or people like the Headmaster. Then, the house went under the Fidelius—.

Feminine handwriting swirled across the page. “Albus is due to cast the Fidelius by the week’s end—.”

“So, for you to have—to have been there, that night, you had know them, and to know about the Charm—.”

So this will be the last letter I’ll be able to send until it’s all over—.

He could smell the lilac of her perfume, the parchment worn where he’d flattened the creases so many times before.

“—which means you had to know her!”

“—I’ll see you again on the other side of this, Sev—.”

“You were friends!”

Her signature curled above the end of the parchment. “Love, Lily—.

Severus leaned his hand on the desk, unsure of when he’d stood. Potter stared up at him, a mixture of terror and bravado in her impertinent glower. She didn’t look anything like her mother or her father, and Severus found it easier to fix his gaze on the girl than to look away, to see the candle’s flame so like Lily’s hair in the sunlight, the stone of the dungeon walls, unchanged for centuries, the echoes of laughter chasing—.

Harriet Potter was a wisp of a girl, a motley tapestry of bruises and cuts and Equill-Emollient, her scar rising from the loose shoulder of her robes like a spiderweb, like lightning caught in her skin.

Severus had made that scar. He might not have been responsible for the wound, but he’d been the one to douse the squalling infant in Essence of Dittany, afraid she’d bleed out in her crib with her mother dead on the floor.

“Yes,” he admitted, voice soft as death, said more to himself than to the girl. It cut him, and the wounds bled inwardly, the ghoulish susurrations of a thousand memories denuded into a single, banal utterance. “Yes, we were friends.”

“You never said anything.”

The outrage in her tone kindled his rage. “I don’t answer to you!”

Potter’s brow creased, the brass of her spectacles flashing when she dared take a step closer to the snarling Potions Master. “Why were you apologizing to her?”

Shut up, he begged in his own thoughts. Shut up, shut up! The worst night of his life, and she wanted to pick over it like so much carrion—.

Severus’ hand pressed so hard into the desk, he felt sure he’d find his fingertips embedded into the woodgrain later. “Thirty points from Slytherin. Get out of—I don’t answer to you, Potter!” He could scarcely breathe. He wanted her gone—away, anywhere else, taking with her the unholy morass of memories, the smell of Lyre-flower—.

“But it must have been important—.”

“Forty points!”

“Because you said sorry again when—.”

“You wretched girl—!

“When the Dementors attacked. You said—.”

The image of her body dropped upon the carpet, unmoving, rose unbidden. “I’m so sorry, Lily. I’m so—.”

“I know what I fucking said!” Severus shouted. “Because I killed her!

Potter flinched as if he’d struck her, stumbling on the hem of her dirty school robes. “What? N-no you didn’t,” she asserted as Severus seethed. “It was Voldemort—or Pettigrew—.”

“You never thought to ask why he was there, did you, Potter? No—you asked, but Dumbledore denied his precious would-be Gryffindor the knowledge. Too delicate to know the truth.” Severus latched onto the cold, acerbic sensation churning his guts, if only because it allowed him to breathe through the roiling shame and fear. Dumbledore liked to say confession was good for the soul, that a burden shared was a burden halved—but he didn’t feel less encumbered or free. Instead, Severus felt like a man throwing more dirt onto his own grave. “There was a prophecy. It doesn’t matter what it said, who said it, or if you’re smart enough to comprehend what a prophecy is; there was a prophecy, and that prophecy sent the Dark Lord skipping right to your front door. Sent you and Lily and your arsehole of a father right into his arms. And do you know who delivered that prophecy to the Dark Lord?”

He rounded the desk and paced closer, towering above the girl, Potter’s shoulders rising toward her ears as she shrunk back.

I did, Potter. I did.”

The girl appeared as if she may be sick. “I don’t believe it.”

Believe it, Potter. Because it’s the truth.”

“Why?” she whispered.

Why indeed. Severus had asked himself the same question over and over, from the very day he’d relayed the words to Tom Riddle, and he’d probably ask himself again every day until he finally shuffled off this mortal coil. What an ironic twist of fate that he had no reason for what he’d done, no explanation for the biggest mistake he’d ever committed. Exhaustion, perhaps. The hours he’d spent toiling among Voldemort’s victims, wrist deep in their viscera, had taken their toll, the Dark Lord’s hints of displeasure and impatience becoming more tangible the longer Severus struggled to find his footing. Maybe it had been cowardice.

It hadn’t been malice. Divination was utter rubbish, and Severus had never set store by the moronic mumblings of seers and soothsayers huffing too much incense and other herbal stimulants. He believed nothing of prophecies and destiny, the utter tosh of gullible, near-sighted fools who lived their lives like teenage girls reading horoscopes in the latest issue of Witch Weekly. Merlin help him, how in the fuck was he supposed to guess the Dark Lord would interpret the nattering of Sybil Trelawney as bloody gospel?

Severus hadn’t known he’d go after Lily; he hadn’t known he’d go after anybody, but at the time, he hadn’t cared. He would have done anything to remove the proverbial lash from his back and earn a reprieve, and so he’d repeated the words like a mindless parrot. A greasy snake, hissing in the ear of his master. Just like the Marauders always said he would.

In the end, there was only one answer to Miss Potter’s question. He snatched hold of his left sleeve and yanked it upward, buttons breaking, his cuff-link hitting the flagstones with a sharp ping! Potter glimpsed the pale red tattoo and turned away.

“Look at it,” he ordered. “Look at it, Potter! You wanted to know so badly! I told him because I was a Death Eater! Because it was my job to do so!”

She wouldn’t open her eyes, not until Severus bellowed, “LOOK!” loud enough for the specimen jars to tremble on their shelves, the candles wavering, casting darker shadows as the light died.

“No! Professor Dumbledore wouldn’t—!”

“Dumbledore knows perfectly well what I am! And now you do as well. Now you know I’m the reason she’s dead. I’m the reason—.”

I’m so sorry, Lily—.”

His own fingers scrambled over the Mark, nails scratching at the skin, wanting it out, wanting it gone. Potter stared at it with horror, with revulsion.

Why did I show her? Why did I tell her? Why, why—.

Because Dumbledore had cornered him after his debriefing with Slytherin, when his shields were at their weakest, and the older wizard had looked so fucking proud. Because his Patronus had betrayed him, had become something good, and Severus Snape was not good. He was not a person to be proud of, not someone worthy of gratitude, of lov—.

He was a wizard worth nothing more than the Mark on his arm and the hatred in his heart. He was worth nothing.

His right wrist prickled, and the pain sent a bolt of clarity through Severus’ muddled head like a deluge of ice water. The Vow. Potter felt threatened, threatened by him, her back pressed to the door again and her wide eyes bright with anger and tears.

What have I done?

Severus reeled back and didn’t stop until his leg hit his desk, and he sagged against it, ducking his head so his lank hair swung forward. The Vow stopped aching, but he could hear her heavy breathing, tight and anguished as if she might sob or scream at any second. He deserved her rage. He deserved all of it.

“Go,” Severus told the frightened witch. “Go, now.”

Potter didn’t leave. She sucked in a breath, hiccuped, and said, “I hate you,” the words breaking like fragile baubles shoved from a shelf. “I hate you. How could you tell me that? How could you do that?!”

He lifted his chin but failed to reply, grasping for what mental shields he retained to fix the witch with a cold, unfeeling gaze.

How could you?

When she left, the girl did not rage or shout or go running for Dumbledore’s office. Instead, she left with a gasp, the defeated sound of someone betrayed, and the door shut behind her without a sound. Her departure shook Severus all the more for its gentleness when he’d expected violence. Needed it. Those inward cuts bled with feeling in the face of her quiet animosity. Her apathy.

Severus stared at the place where she’d stood. His eyes remained hooded, unblinking, and his body hunched until he lashed out and threw his red inkwell at the wall, watching the glass shatter. The crimson ink crawled along the stones as if the castle was bleeding—dying—and Severus wanted nothing more than to sink into the crevices and join in on that slow death.

 


A/N: Two chapters left.

Severus: “I faced a werewolf and a hundred dementors. It can’t get worse than that.”

Harriet: [enters room]

Severus: “Never mind.”

Chapter 151: a family's heir

Chapter Text

cli. a family’s heir

 

Remus sat at his desk as he did most mornings, sipping a cup of tea, waiting for his first class of the day to begin.

However, unlike most mornings, today Remus had a sheet of parchment laid before himself, his own tidy copperplate lining the page, and he held his best quill in hand, ready to sign the bottom. He didn’t, though. His hand hovered for long enough that the ink dried on the quill’s tip, and he had to dip it again, only to then Vanish the resulting splotch of ink that appeared when he held the dipped quill above the parchment and didn’t move.

How was one meant to properly resign from the best job they’d ever had? The best job they ever would have?

He had to quit, of course. Dumbledore hadn’t yet come knocking with a dismissal for him, but Remus hoped to preserve some semblance of goodwill with the Headmaster by tendering his resignation without fuss. He’d lied to Albus; he hadn’t told him about Sirius—and Peter—being Animagi, hadn’t told him about Black planning murder, going gallivanting about the school, and he could have inadvertently helped kill everyone in that clearing if Snape hadn’t brought the Wolfsbane.

He’d meant to help. He’d meant to—to do something right, to help Sirius catch Wormtail and avenge poor Lily and James and Marlene. Marlene, whose only mistake in life had been smiling at a pudgy, nervous Peter and sharing the genuine kindness that made her well-liked in the House of Lions and Hogwarts in general. Even the Slytherins of their time had nothing bad to say about her. She’d been an earnest, unfaltering woman and an invaluable friend.

Then, she died in a fire set by a jealous, despicable boy who’d wanted her affection all to himself.

He had to quit. He didn’t deserve to be here.

Remus sighed and set the quill aside on the desk, rubbing at his jaw. His nails worried at the stubble there as he considered his options. A few weeks of the term remained, and he needed to give his final notice to the Headmaster soon, as courtesy would dictate.

I might as well get it over with.

He heaved a sigh—and someone knocked on the office door, three precise, polite raps too soft to be an adult but not soft enough to be a mistake. A student, then. Remus eased an open text over his letter and cleared his throat. “Come in!”

A familiar face crossed the threshold, and Remus smiled in greeting.

“Good morning, El—Miss Black.”

“Good morning, Professor Lupin.” Elara Black approached his desk and smoothed a gloved hand over the front of her blouse, a nervous gesture she repeated once more before seeming to catch it and lower her arm.

A minute of silence passed. “…Can I do something for you?”

“Oh.” Elara stirred, then reached into the inner pocket of her robes, retrieving three bound and folded bits of parchment. “As part of the detainment agreement arranged by Mr. Piers, my father is allowed to send his proxy letters.” She held out the missives to Remus, and he accepted them, his eyes catching on the familiar scrawl wending over the fold. “These are for you. If if you wish to reply, you may do so directly to him. The Ministry prohibits him from using the post but not from accepting it.”

Remus’ thumb brushed the wax seal, a rush of forgotten affection spilling through his veins—affection from another life, he reminded himself, though still unable to banish that lingering fondness. It confused him to no end. Clearing his throat, Remus said, “Thank you,” and tucked the letters away in the top of his desk to be perused later.

Elara didn’t leave. She kept her eyes lowered, staring at the open textbook with an odd intensity Remus couldn’t place. He glanced at the clock on the wall and saw he had a fair bit of time before his first class of the day, but he wondered where Elara was meant to be. He didn’t see her school satchel with her. “You’re not missing class, are you?”

“No.” She shook her head, eyes flicking to his, then away. “This is my free period. Hermione has Care of Magical Creatures, and Harriet is still in the hospital wing.”

“Ah. Is she terrorizing Madam Pomfrey still?”

“For a few more days. The scar on her neck didn’t react well to whatever magic she was exposed to in the forest, so Madam Pomfrey wants her to stay for observation. Naturally, neither of them is pleased.”

Again, the young witch look at him, then dropped her eyes, and Remus considered all that he might have done to put her so ill at ease. Was it because of that night? Because of his lycanthropy? Though it stung him, she would not be the first to become awkward or uncomfortable after learning of his condition—but typically the person would make excuses to flee his presence as soon as possible, not linger overlong for no apparent reason. “Is there anything the matter, Elara?” Remus asked.

“No,” she replied, perhaps a tad too quickly, her hand darting up to tuck a stray hair behind her ear. A singular strand of hair, Remus noted, the rest kept combed and neat as a pin, just like her uniform and the stiff line of buttons marching up the skinny column of her throat. The ghostly memory of the scar marring her chest rose unbidden, and Remus grit his teeth. “I only…Professor, I hope I’m not overstepping by asking you this, but that night, in the forest…Peter Pettigrew seemed to imply….”

Oh. “Yes?”

“Well, he implied you and Sirius Black were….”

“A couple?” Remus said it with casual ease he didn’t feel in the slightest, his throat constricting with the pain of past prejudices and snide, hateful comments. It chaffed like swallowing raw thistle, but it wouldn’t be the first time he’d endured it. “Yes. We were together before his…incarceration.”

Elara’s hands clenched into fists, and her head snapped up, righteous indignation flashing in the depths of her colorless eyes. “So that’s how it was? He was cheating on my mum—?”

No,” Remus said, raising his voice and his hand in tandem. “No. That is not how it was at all.”

“That’s how it seems!”

“How the truth seems and how it actually is differ quite radically at times, Elara. Or did you learn nothing from Peter’s deception?”

She blushed, a faint pink color fading in from her ears. Remus smiled despite the situation, thinking she looked much closer to her age when flustered and peeved. “I…apologize. But I don’t understand.”

Remus nodded as he folded his hands together. “Is it about him and me? Do you…take issue with that?”

“No. At least I—no.” Elara shook her head as if having only come to a decision herself. “The place I was before, they didn’t—they taught us it was wrong, but I disagree with them. It’s no matter to me.” She sniffed and crossed her arms. “Aside from your appalling taste, Professor.”

Her answer startled a laugh from Remus, a weight lifting from his shoulders. “Yes. That’s baffled several people before. Even your godparents, for all that they loved him, couldn’t see what I saw in the man.”

“I would still like an explanation, sir. You have to agree it looks…unseemly from my vantage, and I want to know—.” She hesitated and kneaded her hands together, brow furrowed. “I deserve to know if he was doing right by mother.”

Their opinions on that particular point differed—Remus believing someone’s personal life was personal for a reason, not a matter for others to pick over—but Elara meant no menace, wanting only to defend the honor of the dead woman who’d brought her into this world. Perhaps she did deserve to know, and Remus was prevaricating to protect his own feelings. “There was an…arrangement. It’s a bit of a long story,” he said, casting his mind back through the years.

“I would like to hear it.”

Exhaling, Remus bobbed his head in agreement but decided he didn’t want to sit in this office and have this conversation. “I have a letter to post. Would you care to walk to the Owlery with me?”

“Of course, Professor.”

He shifted the textbook aside and, without ceremony, signed his name to the bottom of the resignation, not giving himself a chance to read it over yet again. Remus quickly rolled the parchment, sealed it, and then headed toward the door. Elara was rather tall for a third-year and managed to match his stride with ease.

“The story begins farther back than one would probably think it should, and I hope you’ll listen to the end.”

“I’ll try, sir.”

Remus sighed. “I’m certain you know your relatives are known to have certain leanings in their political views, a certain mindset that aligned very well with what You-Know-Who believed. Sirius was always the odd one out among the Blacks—the only person of the direct family branch to not be Sorted into Slytherin—not that there’s anything wrong with that!” He rushed to assure the Slytherin girl, whose only reaction was a sharp glance. “By the time Sirius was sixteen, he’d grown increasingly tired of his family’s rhetoric and ran away from home, going to live with the Potters. Walburga and Orion—your grandparents—disowned him, and Sirius was perfectly happy with that at the time.”

Elara’s nose wrinkled—a genteel creasing Remus had seen in pure-bloods like Sirius, or even the Malfoys. “Walburga had a portrait commissioned,” she explained. “She enjoys chastises anyone who passes it.”

Remus huffed and smiled, deciding that yes, that did sound like something Walburga would do. “So Sirius ran away and left his birthright behind. That would have been the end of the story in normal circumstances, as he had no inclination to ever reconnect with his family, even after Hogwarts. However, circumstances were not normal as there was a war on, and people tend to forget that wars, particularly ones as all-consuming as the Wizarding war, cost a great deal of money, regardless of which side of the trench you stood on. Properties needed to be bought and exchanged, Masters paid for the services, bribes given, food and personal income replaced. Even You-Know-Who could only get away with so much violent coercion before he had to supplement his agenda; you cannot maintain the backing of society’s social elite on a pauper’s pension.”

“All stick, no carrot.”

“Hmm?”

Elara lifted her gaze from the stone floor. “It’s—it’s a Muggle expression about needing an adequate balance of reward and punishment.”

“Ah. Yes, that’s one way of looking at it.” They climbed a set of stairs, passing no one during this odd morning hour wherein most students had gone to class or stayed in bed. “In the late seventies, You-Know-Who was bankrolling Masteries and research, ostensibly to form his own contingent of loyal, knowledgeable experts so he could kill the profiteering Masters who were also selling their services to the Order—the people opposing him. Many of the witches and wizards fighting had families who had to quit their jobs—and, well, their resources still had to come from somewhere, so the Order took on the expense and responsibility. Many Aurors and Hit Wizards had to be discreetly bolstered into remaining steadfast; your godfather, James, was an Auror at the time, and several of his coworkers were not as brave or as unyielding as he was. In some cases, it was understandable. The…horrors they were sent out to investigate could turn even the strongest of stomachs, and the Dark wizards they fought only became more skilled and dangerous as the days dragged on. To be frank, many had to be bribed to leave their offices.”

“I can’t say I understand that, fully. It was their job.

“To an extent, yes—but most Aurors in those days had signed on with the expectation of arresting smugglers and thieves, perhaps the odd Dark wizard here or there, dabbling in things they shouldn’t. They hadn’t joined the Aurory knowing they would need to chase terrorists or possibly return to their homes to find their families slaughtered in warning.”

Neither spoke for several minutes, letting the gruesome imagery settle. Remus remembered the stories James had told, and the many hushed arguments of Lily trying to get him to quit.

“The Aurors aside, a lot of money was needed both by You-Know-Who and by the Order. In the center of that contention was the House of Black. When Sirius was disowned, his parents named your uncle Regulus as the heir apparent, and because both Orion and Walburga were in less than perfect health, Regulus became the family proxy. Unknown to Sirius or to anyone else, Regulus had made the decision to pledge himself to You-Know-Who. As a result, it’s believed he became a Death Eater.”

“…and as proxy to the House of Black, this gave the Dark Lord direct access to one of the largest estates in Wizarding Britain.”

Remus nodded. “Exactly. When it became known that the Black coffers were lining You-Know-Who’s pockets, Sirius went back to Walburga and Orion to see what he could do to be reinstated as the heir. Walburga loved Regulus as deeply as she was able, I suppose, but according to Sirius, she and Orion always thought him rather feeble. He was sick quite often in his youth—which factored into the doubt surrounding his allegiance. You-Know-Who doesn’t have a reputation for accepting those he views as physically…limited, but he apparently made exceptions for Regulus. Orion and Walburga were open to allowing Sirius back into the family because, I believe, they worried Regulus wouldn’t be able to continue the line. As it turns out, that suspicion proved correct, as Regulus disappeared not long after Sirius became the family Head.”

They entered the Owlery, greeted by the hooting and fluttering of a hundred birds, the vast majority of which being owls, though from the main level, Remus could look up into the rafters and spot several hawks and eagles, a few cuckoos of various families, and even a green-feathered Augurey asleep in the darkened corner of the rounded wall. The birds nearest them looked down with anticipation. Elara held out her arm, and a large, black eagle owl soared down, alighting on the proffered perch.

“Walburga had….” Remus hedged over his words. “Stipulations she required Sirius to meet in order to be accepted into the family again. He agreed.”

Elara stroked the owl’s glossy plumage, and the bird glared at Remus, displaying its impressive talons in threat. “Why do I think I won’t like where this is going?” she asked in a dry tone.

“Because you’re a bright girl.” Remus shrugged and shook his head. “Sirius was told he needed to marry with the expectation of having an heir. Then, Walburga would reinstate him.”

The girl’s hand stopped stroking the owl; indeed, her whole body went rigid as a pine tree, the owl sensing his mistress’ shift in mood and clacking its beak at Remus. “So…is that all I was? A token to be traded for the Black estate?”

“No, you were not.” Remus spelled one of the stone ledges clean and sat down, his back to the bracing Scottish air. The letter in his pocket crinkled as he crossed his arms. “Never think you were. Whatever you decide to believe of your father, of me, or Marlene, never think you were not wanted, Elara.”

She said nothing, but she did go back to petting the bird, glancing at Remus from the corner of her eye.

“At the time, Sirius and I were very much committed to each other—as committed as law would allow two wizards to be, at any rate, but we both agreed it was imperative to the war effort to remove the Black estate from You-Know-Who’s grasp.” The breeze riffled through Remus’ hair, carrying with it the voices of children in the distance. Elara joined him there at the open arch, her face brightened by the naked sunlight—and free of condemnation or disgust. Remus could have wept. “Marlene had been a good friend of ours for many years. Since Hogwarts. She was the oldest McKinnon child, and like Sirius, came from a traditional pure-blood family that wished to see her married. Her parents pressured her to do so more and more each year, though Marlene wasn’t interested in that kind of commitment. I don’t think she ever saw herself getting married or having children.”

“…so why did she?”

Remus breathed in—the air rank with the smell of so many birds—and he exhaled, loud and tired. “Sirius and I, for obvious reasons, never thought we could have children—but then, Walburga’s demands planted the inclination, and Marlene…. Your mother was a woman who always went above and beyond for her friends, and when Sirius discussed the issue among our trusted acquaintances, she offered to be our surrogate. She would marry Sirius, on paper at the very least, and carry the Black heir. It was mutually beneficial for all those involved; Sirius stopped the Blacks from bankrolling You-Know-Who, Marlene’s family stopped harassing her, and I….”

His words cut off, emotion clouding his voice, and Remus cleared his throat. Elara looked at him, though he could not bring himself to look at her in turn, the weight of her attention like the weight of the sun warming his back.

“And you got a child. You were supposed to be my father, weren’t you?”

“I was, for a time.” Remus choked again. No matter that Elara was alive and well before him, Remus still felt as if his child had vanished, stolen from him. So much of her life had passed already. “A very short time. Until—.”

“The fire.” Resignation burdened Elara’s voice, and she leaned her head toward the owl, letting it rub against her cheek. “That damn fire.”

Remus allowed himself to lean into his hands, to wallow for those brief moments, the truth finally expelled from his lungs like a cough itching inside his chest. Then, he forced himself upright. “I am sorry for everything you endured, Elara. I’m so sorry for not being there, for—.”

“It wasn’t your fault,” the girl replied, almost gruff. “It wasn’t Black’s fault, either, not that I’ll admit as much to him. It was Pettigrew’s—or the Dark Lord’s, or those Death Eaters who attacked Marlene. Did—did my mother want me? You said never planned for children—?”

“Oh, she wanted you very much. She was going to be in your life, though she didn’t share a romantic relationship with your father. Don’t doubt that you were precious to her.”

Elara nodded, lips compressed in a fine line, eyes brighter than they’d been before.

“I hope you’ll forgive Sirius,” Remus added, earning a sharp, displeased sound. “He can be an idiot, yes, but he loves you. He loved you enough to potentially destroy what was between him and me, sending you away without a word. Your safety mattered more to him than anything else in his life.”

“Hmph. We’ll see.” She lifted her arm, and the glowering owl took flight into the rafters once more, disappearing like an angry shadow away from the vivid morning rays. “Thank you for telling me all this, Professor. I appreciate it.”

“You’re welcome.”

Elara brushed her sleeve off and dithered, torn between returning the way they’d come or saying something else. Remus waited, not wishing to move. “You should come to visit,” she said, peering at the older wizard as if judging his reaction. “This summer, I mean. If you like. My idiot father will be at Grimmauld Place, and I’m sure he’ll be more bearable if he has someone else to irritate.”

Grinning, Remus replied, “I might just do that. Thank you, Elara.”

The witch turned to go, though she stopped to say, “Don’t forget to post your letter,” and with an impish smirk horridly reminiscent of Sirius, added, “Remus.”

He watched her leave and touched the letter hidden away in his pocket, feeling the parchment bend under his pressing fingers. He should stand and find a bird to take the notice. He’d been over it a dozen times and had committed a dozen revisions; Remus should stand, find an owl, and finally send it off. It was the right thing to do, the expected thing—but now, Remus did not find himself inclined to do the expected. He didn’t want to think of Knockturn Alley and dead-end Muggle jobs, empty tea-tins, and lonely, lonely days. He wanted to stay.

And so, Remus Lupin left the Owlery behind, an unsent letter still burning a hole in his pocket.

 


A/N: Given Remus and Sirius were together in the early 80s in a fairly closed society, I wager they encountered their share of homophobia and it’s colored how opened or closed they are in discussing their relationship and Marlene’s surrogacy. I write the Wizarding world as reflecting the Muggle one to a certain degree, so I imagine it wasn’t legal for two men to marry in the 80s or 90s. (It wasn’t legal in the UK until the 10s, iirc.)

Me: “I put two chapters left.”

Me: “I forgot to put ‘of PoA.’”

Me: “It’ll be finnne.”

Narrator: “It was not fine.”

Chapter 152: with avarice

Chapter Text

clii. with avarice

 

April slipped into May, and May dwindled into June, and before anyone knew any better, exams had been proctored, and it was time again to say goodbye to Hogwarts.

For Harriet, it was the quietest spring term yet, and she liked it just fine. The Dementors departed at last, and the constant fugue that had hung over the school like a funerary shroud dissolved into the morning mist, laughter returning to the halls, flowers blooming on the grounds, small birds taking refuge in the eaves and cozy crevices of the castle. Without the threat of murderous godfathers or worrying about rat-men sneaking into her dormitory, Harriet and her friends could concentrate on their studies, and they did surprisingly well in their classes, considering the distractions.

An Unspeakable from the Department of Mysteries had appeared and took Hermione’s Time-Turner not two days after the incident with Fenrir Greyback. She didn’t get in trouble; the experiment had taken possible misuse into account, but she was forced to give up several of her overlapping electives.

“Not that it matters,” Hermione had said when she told them over breakfast. “I still have the classes that matter the most to me, and keeping up with all those curriculums was getting tiring.”

Harriet did well overall, but she only scraped by with an ‘Acceptable’ in Astronomy and Divinations. She dithered on whether or not she wanted to continue the latter, having accepted she had no natural inclination for the study. Professor McGonagall had taken her aside to say her ‘Exceeds Expectations’ in Transfiguration had been earned by the thinnest of margins. She’d need further tutoring in the subject over the summer to stay afloat in future lessons.

Speaking of McGonagall, someone had let slip to the professor that Elara had become an Animagus, and she’d dragged the girl into her office by the ear, giving Elara the tongue lashing of a lifetime. A few favors were called from old pupils and friends in the Ministry, and Elara was registered—discreetly—to avoid possible legal repercussions in the future. McGonagall swore Harriet and Hermione off from attempting anything “half as stupid,” and Harriet kept her fingers crossed through the entire lecture.

She hadn’t spoken a word to Snape for the whole term.

Harriet didn’t know what to say to him, if she should say anything at all, and the Potions Master avoided her like she had a meter stick jammed into his ribs. After finishing the practical, she’d been shocked to see the ‘Outstanding’ on her exam, and she wondered if Snape had even looked hers over. He spent as much time as possible with his head turned away from Harriet, like she was something unsightly and unspeakable.

Severus Snape was a Death Eater. That was a fact as indelible as the red mark either burned or inked into his pale skin, the mark that Harriet sometimes saw behind her eyelids when she closed them. He’d forced her to look at it, and now the image persisted like the bubblegum Dudley once stuck in her hair; no matter how she tore or picked or yanked at it, it lingered in tacky little pieces.

Severus Snape was a Death Eater.

Harriet pushed the thought away, trying to block it out along with the memory of his gaunt, furious face and glassy eyes. She wasn’t stupid; Harriet knew what guilt sounded like, and she knew the person responsible for killing her parents was Voldemort—but to what extent was Snape culpable in that? What was she supposed to feel?

When asked—without mentioning Snape’s name—Mr. Flamel told her, “Sometimes you must judge a person by their current actions, not by what they did before. Every man has a past he must live with the best way he can.

But what did that mean for Harriet? Or Snape? The feeling of hurt and betrayal wouldn’t leave all these weeks later, nor would the memory of black wool abrading her cheek, the weight of a solid arm, a presence between herself the open maw of a ravening werewolf.

Because I killed her!”

“Run, Harriet!”

She sighed.

The sun shone bright over the castle’s grounds, students milling about the lake’s shore, playing with the Giant Squid or enjoying a nice kip in the grass, spending the final afternoon before they headed off on the Express free of studying or worries. Harriet enjoyed the sunshine too, but Elara had a final choir practice, and Hermione was visiting with her friends from Ravenclaw, so she’d wandered off on her own—in the company of a few reptilian companions.

Snape’s a berk,” she informed Livi, stroking her fingers over the warm coil draped across her lap, the Horned Serpent protesting when her hand curled into a fist. Kevin, Rick, and Howard chanted “Berk!” and Livi ordered them to be silent. Even the singular mention of the Potions Master smarted, and Harriet shoved the puzzling reaction to the back of her mind, growing flushed and annoyed. I’m not going to think about that Death Eater arsehole. Instead, she spoke to her snakes. “We’re leaving Hogwarts tomorrow. Back to Grimmauld Place.

Sss…the ssstone placcce isss bessst,” Livi objected in long, lazy syllables, basking in the warmth radiating onto the open balcony. It was a narrow rampart on the second floor Charmed to stay hidden from observation, accessible only through a false wall behind a statue of a nameless knight, an area Harriet had learned about from Salazar Slytherin’s journal. She’d added it to the Argonauts’ Atlas, naming it the Redoubt, because she imagined in Slytherin’s time, it was used to keep the entrance below secure. Or to spy. Salazar struck her as the kind of bloke who enjoyed an excellent place to spy from.

Bessst placcce to nap,” Kevin agreed.

Bessst sssnacks,” Rick added—and Howard, who had never known of life outside the castle, blinked at them with curiosity from his spot on Harriet’s bent knee. Harriet broke apart a Licorice Wand and fed him a piece.

The ssstone placcce isss not home?” he inquired, taking the sweet.

It is,” Harriet assured, “But not our only home. We stay somewhere else in the summer.

What isss sssummer?

The hot time,” Livi told the yellow snake, turning himself to come nose to nose with Howard. “We have gone to many placccess. We have ssseen the bitter watersss and the sssun and the placccess where the air isss not sssweet. The Missstress takesss usss with her.

Where is the air not sweet?” Harriet asked.

In the bad placccess.

If you say so.” Harriet bit into the end of the Licorice Wand and cursed under her breath when Kevin sank his tiny teeth into her knuckle, looping himself around her fingers. “Will you stop doing that?” She studied her hand, the scars left by small fangs and spells and minor burns from Potions class. A longer, pink line above her wrist had come from something in the forest.

Kevin bitesss.

“Little blighter. Kevin is a bad snake. Rick is much better behaved.

Rick gloated.

An hour later, Harriet leaned against the parapet, watching the students below filter into the entrance hall and head toward the Leaving Feast, as Harriet herself would do in just a few minutes. She could see Hermione and Elara on the Atlas, waiting for her just outside the Great Hall’s doors. Livi had himself looped about her shoulders, invisible but solid and heavy, grounding, while three snoozing snakes had been sequestered away in her pockets. Breathing in, Harriet crossed her arms and leaned on the embrasure, closing her eyes against the breeze coming off the mountains.

She’d been reticent to return this year and now reticent to leave, uncertain of what waited for her this summer. Harriet knew she’d have to be brave and face it. She wouldn’t be alone, after all.

Harriet opened her eyes—and saw a lone figure approaching the castle.

She didn’t often see Professor Slytherin in the daylight, as he preferred to keep his classroom shuttered and darkened, lit only by guttering candles or torches. He left Hogwarts as any other staff member did, disappearing on a weekend here or there, but Harriet had never witnessed his return as she did now, the wizard walking the path from the far gates to the main doors. His cloak flared out and snapped in the wind, the satin lining glinting blood-red in the light. The lowering sun shone with its full brunt upon him as he stopped walking and raised his head toward the castle’s remarkable face.

He was handsome, she guessed. Handsome—and cruel, and vindictive, prone to throwing children into desks, leaving them bruised, and laughing as Dark creatures lunged at them in his blackened classroom. What thoughts went through his mind when he looked like that? Slytherin stared at Hogwarts with greed—like it was his, like he meant to break it apart and devour it piece by piece as Harriet’s snakes had done to the simple Licorice Wand. He looked up at the school, and Harriet looked down at him from its rampart. Professor Slytherin could not see her, and he did not disguise the blatant avarice in his expression.

His gaze took Hogwarts in one last time before he continued inside.

Harriet remained long after the sweeping tail of his shadow disappeared, then followed the professor into the castle. Slytherin was due to win the House Cup this year. The common room was sure to be loud tonight.

 

x X x

 

The train was only minutes away from rolling into the London station, and Elara had yet to lower the paper.

She’d been glaring at the main article since she bought it off the trolley, and Harriet’s efforts to distract her had gone nowhere at all. The words “Trial for Sirius Black set for July” and “The public calls for exoneration” danced in patterns over a picture snapped of Sirius at the Ministry. Harriet and Hermione sat on the bench across from Elara in their carriage, watching the witch’s face grow grimmer as they neared their destination.

“He’s set to return to Grimmauld Place at the end of the week,” she reported through clenched teeth, Cygnus mirroring her aggravation in his cage next to her. She finally folded the Prophet and tossed it aside, the paper slumping on the seat, then falling to the floor. “Mr. Piers said he was meant to be moved earlier, but they had issues arguing the unrelated charge of his illegal Animagus status.”

“Yeah. Professor Lupin said they finally settled on a bloody outrageous fine.”

“It’s a good thing Professor McGonagall forced you to register now, isn’t it?” Hermione replied with an arched brow and a smug smile. Elara grimaced. “If it gets brought up in the trial somehow, you wouldn’t have escaped prosecution, Elara.”

“I know that. I don’t have to like it, however. I thought for sure McGonagall was going to Transfigure me into something unnatural.”

Harriet would have laughed if she hadn’t thought of the Mandrake leaves waiting in her trunk. She gulped.

“It’s ridiculous they force us to register anyway.”

“It’s ridiculous they make Muggle-borns register, let alone Animagi,” Hermione quipped, her eyes cutting to the window, London’s crowded streets flickering past. She plucked at the hem of her street clothes with nervous, harried gestures, and Harriet took her hand in her own, giving it a squeeze.

“You’ll write as often as you can, right? Tell us if Malfoy’s being a bastard?”

“I will.”

“I’ll harass Mrs. Malfoy to no end if we don’t hear from you.” Hermione scoffed. “I will! I’ll borrow Cygnus and send him—she’ll rue the day. Rue it!”

Hermione scoffed again, rolling her eyes, but she caught Harriet in a hug and pressed the smaller witch close. Her breath puffed against Harriet’s cheek. “I’ll miss you both terribly,” she muttered, sniffling. “Do remember to look after yourselves. Remember to bring your Atlases if you leave the house! It should add wherever you go to the map.”

“We will, Hermione, promise.”

All too soon, the Hogwarts Express entered Kings Cross, and it was time for the three witches to depart the train and officially end their third year of school. Others ran the length of the corridor, eager to start their summers, but the trio of Slytherin girls dawdled for as long as they could, until they were the last to disembark. Then, with her familiar in hand, Hermione followed after Draco Malfoy to find his parents on the platform, leaving Harriet and Elara to drag their trunks toward the Floo.

A familiar black shape waited for them there, Professor Snape unobtrusively leaning against the wall by the hearth with his arms folded and his head bowed, his robes pooling like an ink-puddle about his feet. He didn’t acknowledge Harriet or Elara as they drew level with him, not even when they reached into the communal dish of Floo powder and took a handful. Families and friends chattered and laughed, calling out names of loved ones, paying no mind to the three figures by the open fire.

Elara vanished in a whirl of green flames, calling out, “Grimmauld Place!”

Harriet stepped forward next, breathing in the scent of soot and cinders, and when Snape shifted to place one pale hand on the mantel, she glanced at the impatient Potions Master. For one moment, she met his flat gaze, and then Harriet faced forward, turning away. She threw the glittering powder into the belly of the hearth.

“Grimmauld Place!”

 

-

END PART THREE

-

 


A/N: That’s the end of PoA! I hope you enjoyed it, and GoF should start soon!

There’s a Discord server now where you can stay up to date on chapter releases and join the CDT community! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

 

Chapter 153: homecoming

Chapter Text

4. THE GOBLET OF FIRE

there’s a snake lurking in the grass. - virgil


cliii. homecoming

 

Somewhere among the rolling green hills of the Yorkshire countryside, the village of Little Hangleton lay beneath the buttery shroud of the late afternoon’s sunlight. The shadows grew long with the hour, but the haze and heat glowed yellow and orange with a dint of red leering over the rooftops, the residents content to remain in their homes or at the local pub, tucked away from the humidity and coming hour of night.

Outside of Little Hangleton, where the village ended and the houses gave way to untouched fields, a snake wended through the dry grass.

In height, the grass could have reached the midsection of a grown man, and as such, had no difficulty obscuring the great green serpent slithering through the swaying blades. Its belly was full of rats and other rodents that made their homes in the fields, and it moved with intent, its destination clear in mind as it wended through a corroded gate and by the undisturbed graveyard.

A manor loomed on the highest hill.

It looked a grand place from a distance, a house much larger than any other for miles and miles, but closer inspection revealed its faults. Spots on the roof showed missing shingles, the wood beneath damp with rot, the majority of the windows either shattered by thrown stones or boarded up. The whole of the property had been left to wallow and fester. As the years passed, the gardens had grown haggard and unkempt, hedges and rosebushes reduced to walls of brambles and thorns along the grounds. Rubbish had accrued in the branches, blown in by the wind, left to molder and rot.

The snake paid no mind to any of this. It slipped under the bushes and continued up the drive, making for one of the lower-level windows where the glass had been mostly cleared. No one saw the creature enter the house.

As the sky darkened and the night progressed, if anyone in Little Hangleton had thought to look up at the high hill and see the old manor there, they would have seen firelight gleam in one of the upper windows, the tell-tale flicker of a flame lit in one of the grand old grates. However, no one much bothered to consider the house, and so the fire went unremarked and unnoticed—as did the shadow cast by a man passing through the light’s sullen glare.

In the house, embers popped and smoked in the dust-covered hearth, by which remained an old winged chair, the crushed velvet long since eaten and degenerated by time and insects. Someone sat in the chair’s depths, but they couldn’t be seen from the vantage of the dim fire and deep shadows; their breath, however, came in deep, rattling bursts.

The figure again passed the window—a man, slight in build and average in height, his features hidden in the night and a nondescript black cloak. He set a goblet down upon an aged sideboard and stirred the ashes in the grate with a wave of his wand.

Where is Nagini?” rasped a high, cold voice from the chair.

Wherever she pleases to be,” returned the man, finishing with the fire. He turned instead to the goblet, a thick, pale liquid inside exuding a chilling mist. As with the fire, he stirred it with an idle twitch of his wand, more mist swelling and dribbling over the rim. He held the goblet to an unseen mouth in the chair’s shadows. “Drink.

Silence intruded in the seconds it took for the chair’s occupant to drink, and then the goblet retreated, empty.

We will stay here, for now,” the first voice continued, raspier than before. “It is moderately comfortable, for a Muggle hovel, and with wizards pouring in from every corner of the continent for that wretched Quidditch Cup, security will be heightened immeasurably.” Another bubbling gasp interrupted the speaker. “It would be foolish to move without care.

The man had no response, sitting on the flattened window seat with his arms crossed. Then, a curious movement arrested his body, a sudden twist to his spine jerking his torso to one side, his head bobbing on his neck—and then it ended, the man once more seated with prim posture. Neither made any mention of his visible fit. “Are you so determined, my Lord? To use the Tournament—?

Yes,” snapped the voice. “And I will not be questioned on the matter!

Of course not. But it would be easier to move ahead without bothering to wait.

“I have my reasons. You will respect them, as I have explained already. Do not make Lord Voldemort repeat himself.”

The snake made an appearance then, nudging the ajar door open enough to allow its great body entry into the musty room. It went for the winged chair and encircled the wood legs, raising its green head enough to eye the occupant with scrutiny. Then, hissing, it turned away.

Nagini is right,” spoke the voice with some amusement. “This pitiful, weak form is failing me.

A body shifted, and an arm was held out toward the light—a grotesque arm, the flesh bloated and purple, the fingers like blackened sausages on the end of a limp, puffy hand.

It seems the worthless Muggles in the village will serve a purpose after all.”

One of the fingers broke off and fell, hitting the floor with a dull, echoing thump. The skin sloughed off from the exposed bone, revealing gangrenous tissue beneath, and as the hand flexed, more splits appeared in the decaying limb. The voice began to laugh as the man rose from the window seat with a put upon sigh. He headed for the door.

As you wish.

 

xXx

 

In a dreary London townhouse some two hundred miles away, Harriet Potter woke with a breathless scream on her lips.

She laid on her back in sweat-soaked sheets, trembling despite the heavy humidity saturating the room. The window curtains were peeled back just enough to reveal the electric lights stationed in the park across the road, but the window itself remained shut tight. Above her, too close for comfort, loomed an opaque shadow, and Harriet could do nothing but blink in silent unease as the eyeless form of Set stared into her pale face. Her neck burned as if it’d been scratched open.

What is he doing?

Set leaned closer, soundless as ever, and the young witch held her breath in fear.

Then, the shadow disappeared.

Gasping, Harriet rolled to her feet and disentangled herself from the sticky, clinging sheets. She made a mad dash for the loo when she felt her stomach flip-flop in her middle, and she had just enough time to reach the toilet before she sicked up into it.

Already the images of her nightmare were dissolving, dispelled by the cold bite of the tiles under Harriet’s bare knees—though, somehow, the odor of decomposing flesh remained in her mouth.

“Ugh,” Harriet muttered, swallowing back the bile rising in her throat as she flushed. Her neck kept burning, prickling and stinging as if the area had gone numb and now throbbed with the return of blood. What in the world had she been dreaming about? And what was the matter with Set?

She eyed her murky shadow, and it remained still, unmoving. It did nothing to settle her discomfort.

“Miss Harriet Potter!” Harriet jumped when an elderly house-elf popped up by her elbow. The elf fussed with her tea-towel toga, peering into Harriet’s teary eyes. “Is Miss Harriet Potter well?”

“I’m okay, Mably,” Harriet replied, wiping her mouth. During the year, the old house-elf worked at Hogwarts in the kitchens, but this summer she’d begged Elara to stay at Grimmauld with them so she could look after Marlene McKinnon’s only child, just as the woman would have wanted. Elara had allowed it—if only because the inclusion of another house-elf in their odd little arrangement drove the bitter Black house-elf, Kreacher, absolutely mad.

Speaking of the other witch, Elara appeared in the open doorway, half-asleep and dressed in her nightgown, scrunching her eyes against the light coming off the gas lamp. “What’s the matter?” she grumbled as she blinked and looked Harriet over. “Are you ill?”

Harriet rose onto her woozy feet and shook her head, prompting Elara to reach out and steady her. “No. I just had a weird nightmare. Sorry to wake you.”

“What was it about?”

“I—.” Harriet opened her mouth, then shut it, struggling to grasp the vision that had taken on the quality of a poor cartoon, shapes and colors suggesting forms, but nothing of the content. She thought someone might have been laughing. “Y’know, I can’t seem to remember.”

Elara felt her forehead—then jerked her hand away, nose wrinkled. “You’re covered in sweat.” She went to wash her hands.

“Yeah, thanks for that.”

Mably wrung her spindly hands together. “Should Mably be waking the Master of Potions? He is saying to be woken if anything is the matter!”

“NO,” Harriet retorted—too loud and too quickly, startling both Elara and the elf. “I mean, no thanks, Mably. That won’t be necessary.” Harriet probably wouldn’t go to Snape even if she was on fire. She thought it would serve him right to have to explain her crispy carcass to the headmaster.

Elara was eying her with speculation, so Harriet shooed both her and Mably from the room. “Go away so I can brush my teeth. I’m gonna make myself a pot of tea—.”

“Oh! Mably can do it!”

Too late, the house-elf sprinted off toward the stairs, and Harriet huffed a swear word. She did manage to brush her teeth while Elara waited in the corridor, and then they set off for the kitchen in the basement together, their house slippers shuffling across the dark landings. They found Mably there, manning the kettle, and both witches slumped into chairs by the large table. Mably served them, and Harriet drank with a quiet sigh of thanks. She didn’t know what kind of tea it was. Something Mably herself had blended.

“Is the Misses needing anything else? Maybe something to eat?”

“No thanks, Mably. It’s much too early for that,” Harriet replied, resting her chin on her folded arms. Indeed, when she consulted the old carriage clock on the mantel, they had a few hours yet until dawn. Elara studied the clock, too, and her face took on a hard, unhappy expression as she sipped her tea without bothering to blow away the steam.

He’s set to be here this morning.”

“Mmm,” Harriet acknowledged, because she’d been listening to Elara hiss about her father’s arrival for an entire week now, and the vitriol surrounding Sirius Black had become as comfortable and familiar as a favorite coat. She got up to ferret through the cupboards, looking for a package of biscuits, and Mably proclaimed she would make a batch until Harriet furiously shook her head, thinking of their tetchy house guest and his notorious sense of smell. Elara was watching her as she returned to the table with an ancient tin of digestives.

“What is your issue with Snape?”

Harriet flinched at the casual usage of the Potions Master’s name, and she kept her gaze fixed on the biscuits, sorting out the largest crumbled bits. “I don’t know what you’re on about.”

“All last term, you ignored one another, and all this week, neither of you will sit down to dinner at the same table. I know Hermione and I have asked before, but did something else happen in the forest that night? Something that would cause this sudden antipathy?”

“No,” Harriet replied, which was true enough. Snape had saved her life in the Forbidden Forest—and Harriet, in a roundabout way and by use of a Time-Turner—had saved his. It had been the day after when he’d screamed at her, had confessed to being a Death Eater and playing a part in her parents’ deaths, and Harriet still had no bloody idea what to make of any of it. She’d never been the best at dealing with confrontation, and the undeniable sting of betrayal had yet to abate in its ceaseless nagging inside her chest.

She hadn’t told Hermione and Elara about what he’d said. Not yet.

“Are you certain you’re well?”

“I’m fine, Elara.”

“You’re not going to be if you persist in eating those biscuits from the seventies.”

“Oh, har, har—.” Harriet squinted at the label, having left her glasses in her bedroom, and discovered the smudged expiration date. “Bloody hell.”

The tin found its rightful place in the bin, and Mably fussed over a new pot of tea despite both witches urging her to go back to bed. Neither Harriet nor Elara made a move to find their own, and they whiled away the time discussing nothing important, not mentioning Snape or Sirius, both looking forward to seeing Mr. Flamel next week and wondering when Hermione’s next letter would arrive. Kreacher crept into the room eventually and got into a flaming row with Mably.

“Kreacher is a bad elf!” she hissed from her stool by the hob, where she’d been setting up a pan in preparation of an early breakfast. “He is not being a good help to his Mistress!”

Kreacher snarled from the floor, leering up at the testy McKinnon elf. “Mably is a nosy nuisance. She is not having business in the House of Black!”

“Business! Business! Mably is going where there is need!”

“No need for Mably!”

“Mably is needed because Kreacher is a bad elf! Not taking care of his House!”

Mably threw a wooden spoon at him, and Kreacher gave the stool a half-hearted shove that almost toppled her. She hucked a copper pot next, and it hit the floor with an almighty clang. Harriet stood, ready to tell both elves off—when the door to the potions’ room slammed open, startling Elara into dropping her cup. It shattered in the eerie, stunned silence.

Professor Snape stood in the entrance, one hand pressed to the aforementioned door and the other clutching the wooden frame. His face bore the unmistakable marks of someone having fallen asleep at their desk, cheek cradled in a book, and he stared at the kitchen’s occupants like a surly Dementor woken from his nap. He took one glance at the clock and sucked in a breath, ready to shout their ears off—.

And then he left, darting through the room with some fraction of his usual grace, and they listened to his footsteps pound up the steps until he was out of earshot. Elara lifted a brow as she turned to Harriet.

“That was ‘nothing,’ right?”

Harriet sunk onto her chair again with a sullen huff. “Shut up.”

 

xXx

 

Mably made them a tasty breakfast an hour or so later, sniping with Kreacher the entire time. They eventually started chucking things at one another again, a dozen eggs splattering across the ceiling, Elara and Harriet ducking under the table for cover. McGonagall stepped out of the Floo to find both witches with their arms around an elf, trying to pry the brawling pair apart. Mably burst into tears and had to be calmed down. Kreacher opted to slink out of the room before anyone was any the wiser.

Elara and Harriet got a sound telling off of their own for being up so early, then sent up to their rooms to kip until daylight. Harriet didn’t bother trying to sleep, still unsettled by her unsound dreams, and instead cared for her snakes and picked through her clothes for something to wear. She read a book on Ancient Runes that almost succeeded in sending her back to slumber, but Livi kept up a running commentary, and somewhere overhead, Harriet could hear the floorboards shift and creak under Snape’s pacing feet.

Harriet glowered upwards and hoped he stubbed his toe on something.

Daylight had long since broken when Harriet followed McGonagall’s call back downstairs, Elara seated on one of the bottom steps in the foyer, fighting not to scowl. Curious, Harriet sat with her there, listening to McGonagall converse with whoever stood outside on the stoop.

“Is he here, then?” she asked.

“Yes,” Elara said shortly, folding her arms against her middle. “The Aurors are dropping him off.”

Harriet could hear the gruff voices conversing with the higher, sharper tones of McGonagall until the front door came open proper, spilling sunlight into the usually tomb-dark hallway.

Sirius Black looked better than he had last she saw him—fuller in the face, dressed in a pair of trousers, shirt, and waistcoat that could have passed for Muggle fashion if one didn’t look too closely at the cut and fabric. He had his sleeves rolled up, and one glimpse of the tattoos crookedly inked onto his right forearm sent a shiver through Harriet, her mind flicking back to the memory of Snape baring his Dark Mark.

“Er—it’s great to see you again, Professor McGonagall!” Sirius said to the Transfiguration Mistress, his confusion at her presence apparent. He kept rubbing at his wrists as he came inside, and Harriet guessed the Aurors must have taken off a pair of handcuffs before letting him into the house. The Ministry had opted to keep him in a holding cell in London instead of Azkaban, so he hadn’t gone back to the Dementors, but months of imprisonment had kept him somewhat peaky and pale.

McGonagall pursed her lips. “Yes, Mr. Black. Now that you aren’t hexing me in my own study.”

Black gave an uncomfortable laugh. “Sorry about that.”

She folded her hands together, looking from Sirius to the two witches sitting on the steps. Sirius saw them there as well and brightened, but didn’t move. Elara’s foreboding stare kept him rooted in place. “Well. We’ll all be thrilled to see you get the justice you deserve and be a free man again. In the interim, Albus has asked me to explain the guardianship arranged for the girls and some of the, ah, political climate to you. He planned to greet you himself, but he’s been terribly busy and plans on stopping in later tonight if he can.”

“Guardianship?” Sirius asked, puzzled.

“For Miss Potter, strictly speaking, as Miss Black is emancipated—.” Elara stuck her nose in the air. “—and likes to think she doesn’t need adult supervision.”

“But what’s this about a guardianship? I thought—.” He scratched the back of his head. “I thought it was just us this summer?”

“Not hardly, Black.”

Snape’s voice drifted from the stairwell at Harriet’s back, and neither she nor Elara bothered to look around as his oppressive presence neared. By unspoken agreement, they slid apart to give the wizard enough room to pass and got cuffed in the back of the head by his robes for their trouble. Sirius, meanwhile, looked as if someone had just kicked him in the arse of his trousers.

“What in the fuck is he doing here?!”

“Language, Mr. Black! It is difficult enough trying to break Harriet of the habit without you compounding the issue—!”

Snape sneered as he neared Sirius, his robes cutting a swathe through the dust that had accumulated on the floor over the summer. “Did you really believe that anyone with any sense at all would think to leave you alone with children?” Snape scoffed. “Innocent or not, you’re a convict, Black.”

Sirius shook himself, his hands balling into fists. “And so what? Dumbledore sends you to play babysitter? Nimue’s knickers, the headmaster’s off his head.”

“Possibly. He’s sane enough to recognize your worth, however. Or the distinct lack thereof.”

“Oh, get fucking bent, Snivellous. Do your old pals know you’re spending your summer watching little girls?”

“That is enough,” McGonagall snapped. She stepped between the pair, which Harriet thought a good idea, considering both wizards appeared ready to come to blows. “We do not have time for you two to act on old, boyhood grudges. I do not expect you to be friends, but I expect you to act civilly in this house.” Sirius made to interject, and McGonagall cut across him. “Yes, Mr. Black, I am well aware that this is your home, but if you find yourself unable to accept the Headmaster’s strictures, we will have to remove Harriet from the house.”

“She’s my goddaughter!”

“And the legal ward of two terrible Muggles, direly susceptible to Ministry intervention.” McGonagall exhaled, the lines of her face seeming deeper in the sunlight still coming through the door. She closed it with a wave of her hand, and the lamps on the wall eased into life. “Her safety is imperative and greatly affected by Minister Gaunt’s continued interest in her affairs.”

Sirius resumed glaring at Snape for half a moment, but his interest won out, and he dropped his blatant hostility. “What do you mean? Why would Gaunt be interested in Harry?”

“Harriet,” Harriet and Elara corrected from the stairs.

“Did he not approach you at the Ministry?” Snape asked, his voice cold but also flat and cordial. Harriet wondered how long that would last. “He has not shied away from approaching people he perceives as being close to her in the past.”

“No—well, shite, that’s not true. He tried, but my solicitor prohibited interrogation after the first round of Aurors had their go. No further questions, even from the Minister for fucking Magic himself.”

Snape and McGonagall shared a telling look, one that Sirius didn’t miss.

“Is someone going to tell me what is going on?” he demanded.

“Yes, Mr. Black—Sirius. But the story will take time in its telling, and I am in need of tea. Severus, are you staying?”

The Potions Master’s lip curled. “No. I have spent enough time in this doghouse today.”

“Real clever, Snivellous. D’you stay up at night, thinking up all the rubbish you say during the day?”

Snape didn’t answer. He swept by both Sirius and Professor McGonagall without further acknowledgment and stepped out onto the front porch. The door slammed shut, and a second later, the snap of Disapparition echoed. McGonagall muttered something that sounded like “Stubborn bawbag,” under her breath, then stomped off for the kitchen. Sirius spared the two girls a confused look, then trotted along after her. Harriet considered going as well, but she suddenly found herself much too tired to hear the last three years of her life casually rehashed over a cuppa.

Elara stood. “I’m going to my room.”

“Yeah,” Harriet sighed, nursing a headache. “I am too.”

 


A/N: So I decided not to use creepy baby Voldemort, because I never really understood where that came from, and instead we have shambling horror Voldemort. Nice and gross. Yay!

Sirius: “What a relief to be free!”

McG: “Snape is living in your house.”

Sirius: “Send me back to prison.”

Chapter 154: dark mark

Chapter Text

cliv. dark mark

 

Severus Snape stood in the empty corridor looking out the diamond-paned window toward the lake. He rested his pale, slim hands on the sill and exhaled a weary sigh.

As far as holidays went, this had not been the worst he’d experienced in his recollection, even when forced into close quarters with that muddled dung-brain Sirius Black and his simpering lapdog Lupin. Slytherin was preoccupied with his own ruminations—which would, undoubtedly, prove fucking devastating for Severus somewhere along the line, but at the moment, it provided a brief interlude of relative inactivity for the Potions Master. By all rights, he should be ensconced in Spinner’s End, committed to his private research or reading a good book with something alcoholic in hand, if only for the weekend, but here he was, watching the steady undulations of dark water moving against the shore.

An echo of the girl’s voice came back to him. “I hate you.”

Unsettled, Severus curled his fingers into fists and leaned forward with more weight, his shoulders tense. Pathetic, he sneered at himself, angry that the juvenile ravings of the stupid chit could upset him so. She should hate him. It was no more than what Severus had hoped when he’d started to rant at her, when he’d shown her the Dark Mark. He’d wanted the girl to see him for who he really was and she had; now, she either glared or ignored Severus entirely, like he was a boggart without a dark corner to inhabit.

He’d end up dying for Harriet Potter one of these days. But, in the privacy of his own mind, Severus could admit that decimating what regard and respect she held for him bothered him more than he liked.

The lake rippled, water rolling like flat silk, and Severus sunk into Occlusion, drowning his thoughts one by one in the sleek depths of his mind until he registered nothing but the sunshine’s warmth on his front and the distant call of forest birds. In his head, his shields stretched out indomitable and quiet—a veritable tundra of blank, frozen water and the vague shapes that lurked beneath. Sometimes he mused it would all come bursting out like a brassed-off Kracken one day.

He watched Hagrid stroll across the lawn, Fang loping along at his feet. Two underlings from the Department of Magical Games and Sports chased after him, carrying survey flags and rumpled rolls of parchment.

“Ah, Severus.”

He turned his head enough to spot the Headmaster and McGonagall coming around the corner at the corridor’s end, both wearing light summer cloaks. Recognition flickered over Severus’ face, but he otherwise didn’t acknowledge the pair, his eyes flat and black as unpolished obsidian. Dumbledore studied the younger wizard, a knowing look in his blue eyes, and he frowned.

“Minerva and I are about to attend some maintenance on the wards. Would you like to join us?”

Severus nodded and followed them without objection, if only to give himself something other to think of for a time, allowing his shields to firm and solidify as he concentrated on the repetitive action of walking forward and then following Albus’ back from the castle and into the trees. It should have bothered him more, considering he was taking the same trails he had months before, running for his life from Fenrir Greyback, but the emotion flitted futile and distant, skittering over the surface of his Occlusion.

It doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter.

Being here didn’t feel the same as it had before. Instead of cold and rain-filled, the air was warm, humectant, smelling of earth and sun-baked foliage, Severus raising a hand to shield his eyes against the brilliant light. Minerva and Albus chatted as they walked the dirt path, discussing hedges of all things, and he kept a pace behind them. He turned his ear to the rattling buzz of insects in the underbrush, the reverberating cries of mundane and magical birds too cheerful for his preference.

Run, Harriet!” his memories echoed.

“Professor!”

“Run, you little fool!

“Severus, are you listening?”

He faced forward, finding Albus before him, the older wizard pausing to consider him when their eyes met. “It appears not, Headmaster. Forgive me.”

“That’s quite all right. I was just asking if you’d like to take the line to the lake—but, oh, I think I may need your help over here. My footing isn’t as good as it used to be. Minerva, if you would—?”

McGonagall rolled her eyes at the unsubtle request for privacy and walked off the path toward the lingering shadow of plinths leading down the hill toward the lakeshore. Severus remained with Albus, watching the witch move away before both wizards continued to the nearest iron-gray plinth. Albus gave the intimidating stone a fond pat, and Severus felt a twinge against his awareness as the magic shifted under the Headmaster’s touch, arching like the spine of a persistent feline until the runes glistened against the porous rock. Runes had never been Severus’ best subject, but he could read the general impression written there, symbols shifting and corroding under Albus’ gentle probing.

“This will better accommodate our foreign guests.”

Severus scoffed, crossing his arms over his chest. “Guests. Gaunt’s cloak of international cooperation is thin at best and transparent at worst. The only cooperation he is seeking through this Tournament is to push his own agenda and secure his reelection next year.”

“So we have speculated,” Dumbledore said with a sigh. They moved to the next plinth, stepping carefully through the springy underbrush. “But it does not mean we can’t use the Minister’s plans for the Triwizard Tournament to our own ends. Why, under normal circumstances, I would welcome the chance to interact with old friends and to have our students meet Wizarding children from other cultures.”

“But circumstances are not normal, if such a thing were to exist at all, Headmaster.”

“No, they are not.”

“Gaunt will find the Durmstrang population pliant and best suited to recruitment,” Severus said, voice more bitter and despondent than it had been earlier. “It is a Dark school, more so under Karkaroff than ever before, and the students and their families will be amenable to his agenda. He will bolster his forces with new allies from Scandinavia and Eastern Europe.”

Dumbledore said nothing, and they kept on to the next plinth. “What of Igor? He has avoided pledging loyalties for over a decade now. I am not entirely unconvinced it wasn’t Gaunt’s aim to flush him out into the open with this plan.”

A rude snort left Severus. “Karkaroff has avoided pledging loyalty, as you put it, by pleading ignorance and hiding away at Durmstrang. The school is more remote and thus more safe than Hogwarts.” He flicked a leaf from his buttoned sleeve. “He is a second-string, irrelevant collaborator brought on for his family name, without the grit or ingenuity to last long term under the Dark Lord’s regime. He will avoid Gaunt as he has avoided Slytherin for all these years, though I do not believe he will succeed. His oldest students will be most affected.”

“A coward, then. A shame that Durmstrang has fallen so far as to allow someone without conviction or skill to tend their children.”

“As you say.” Severus exhaled. “And the French, Albus? The Spanish? Gaunt will find them more difficult to woo, but they are not impervious to his silver tongue or influence. At best, we can hope they close their borders against his rising madness, but we will find no allies from Beauxbatons’ quarter.”

“That is not true. Madame Maxime has long been sympathetic to the Order’s goals and actively disparages Gaunt’s anti-Muggle-born policies. She promotes social activism and equality within her school, and Beauxbatons’ Board suppresses the proliferation of Dark magic. We have more allies than you assume, Severus.”

“And more enemies.”

“Yes. And more enemies.”

Dumbledore completed the next plinth and paused to watch the magic brought to bear, the glittering relay of ancient sigils strung between the towering stones like gossamer. With the wards brought so close to the surface, the inside of Severus’ left arm started to itch, and he scratched at the unseen Mark.

One plinth remained, and they approached it.

“This constitutes an escalation, Albus,” Severus intoned. “Gaunt is exerting power over the school—stepping over the line—and Slytherin will retaliate. He will not stand idle while Gaunt uses what he perceives as his territory as a platform for the Ministry’s agendas.”

“Has he mentioned his plans to you?”

“No. But he is—furious. On edge.” The mere mention of the Triwizard Tournament was enough to elicit a violent reaction from the man, and Severus had suffered the worst of Slytherin’s tantrums these last few months.

“And if you were to put yourself in his place, Severus? What would you plan if you were Professor Slytherin?”

The suggestion made the Potions Master distinctly uncomfortable despite Occluding, like slipping on a pair of shoes and finding the insides wet with something foul. “I—he will want to consolidate power. It has always been a game of tit for tat between them; Gaunt and Slytherin are two bullies in the schoolyard, both wanting to be king. So if Gaunt is using the Tournament to find more allies, Slytherin will move to counter his influence by either negating it or supplementing his own.”

Dumbledore didn’t require his suppositions, of course. He’d thought of this all before. “Yes, I came to the same conclusions,” he sighed. His gaze swept over Severus, settling on the younger man’s eyes. “I need a moment to catch my breath. Go on and finish the final marker.”

Taken aback, Severus blinked, the reaction slower than it should have been. “I beg your pardon, Headmaster, but I do not know how.”

Albus smiled. “It’s simple enough with my presence and permission. You need only reach out and place your hand upon the stone….”

He waited for Severus to move, and the Potions Master hesitated for a long moment, until the weight of Dumbledore’s expectation forced him to huff and press his palm against the plinth, feeling ridiculous.

“Of course, if you were Occluding, my boy, you’d have to stop that.”

Severus shot the meddling old man an unimpressed glower, then did as instructed. “You seem perfectly capable of doing this on your own, Albus,” he grumbled as he pulled his shields apart, letting his thoughts have free rein once more. His irritation returned to the fore—and his frustration, his guilt, his ire. It amassed with physical force in his chest, and Severus’ nostrils flared, magic stinging against his skin.

“Now. Raise the ward toward yourself….”

Impatient, Severus yanked at the tangible line under his fingers—and stumbled, suddenly aware of the school’s presence rising above him like a veritable tidal wave, ancient spells exuding from the earth like the watchful eye of something vast and unknowable. The runes glistened red on the plinth like new wounds cut into flesh.

“Superimpose Mannaz over Ehwaz. Just there.”

Severus incanted the rune in his mind and pressed it forward into the plinth’s structure, watching the new sigil form over the first. He didn’t understand how, but he sensed the wards shivering and flexing, forming new pathways and allowances for the prospective foreign visitors who’d be arriving in the fall. Peeling his hand from the plinth felt like extracting himself from quicksand, and he gasped, sweat building under his heavy robes.

“Excellent work,” Dumbledore said with another bright, appeased smile. He reflected none of Severus’ exhaustion, looking as if he’d merely gone for a stroll in the woods instead of repeatedly prying and pulling at a magical eldritch force. Why did he have me do that? Severus wondered, because the Headmaster had a reason for everything he did, though the reason here didn’t present itself readily. It could be dangerous for Severus to know how the wards worked if Slytherin ever broke his mind.

What are you playing at, old man?

“Let us go and collect Minerva. Then, if you’re willing, I propose for us to undertake one last excursion today….”

Severus pinched the bridge of his nose.

 

xXx

 

Willing or not, Dumbledore was not to be denied, and so Severus found himself back in the castle, leading his older colleagues by the hand through the silver mirror in the blind hall off the library. He released Dumbledore and McGonagall the second they cleared the glass, and he once more crossed his arms over his chest, standing sullen in the bright corridor of Ravenclaw’s Aerie.

Fascinated, Dumbledore went to the nearest shelf and touched a book, inspecting the title imposed on the spine. “How utterly delightful.”

“Yes, well. Whatever information you seek from here will be antiquated at best. I don’t see why I needed to come as well,” Severus complained, earning an unimpressed tsk from McGonagall.

“I’m afraid no one else on staff has figured out the riddle for the entrance yet,” Dumbledore admitted. “Much to Filius’ frustration.”

It remained a strange, bitter mystery how Severus Snape still managed to pass through the Moon Mirrors while no one else could. No one else, he amended, eyes narrowing. Aside from the girl.

He knew Potter and her reprobates disappeared through the Mirrors on occasion and took refuge in the Aerie when they thought no one was any the wiser. Severus fixed the thought of the Slytherin trio in his mind and strode forward to the nearest arch. He stepped through and entered a lounge, the vaguest hint of hearth ash and parchment lingering in the air. He approached a table set by the hearth itself, surrounded by the three chairs, and glimpsed through the old parchment left behind. One sheet bore a half-hearted Charms assignment with the name Harriet Potter scribbled in the corner.

Minerva came up behind him, looking over his shoulder. Severus scratched his arm.

“Her handwriting remains abysmal,” he drawled, flicking the page toward the barren grate. He glanced at the empty portrait over the mantel.

“Is this where they disappear to when they’re not causing mischief?” Minerva asked, observing the room with veiled interest.

“No. They never cease to cause mischief; this is simply where they attempt to hide it.”

A soft flutter from somewhere across the room drew their attention, a minute passing before the sound came again. A tidy stack of vellum on a polished sideboard shuddered, a self-inking quill dancing over the top-most sheet, then lifting back into its stand, the sheet turning itself over into another pile. Severus and Minerva studied the vellum, the former testing the texture under his fingertips, the latter squinting at the completed sheets.

“What is all this?” she murmured. “A map of some kind? Or—well, there’s a great deal of other information here as well.”

“I believe this is part of their little trinket, as they like to call it.” Severus traced a line depicting a wall in a familiar building. “On hydra vellum. It retains magical signatures and allows for its replication.”

“That’s—impressive magic, Severus! But what on earth are they doing with it?”

“I haven’t the faintest idea.”

They returned to Albus, the older wizard entrenched in a section devoted entirely to Ancient Greek texts. He wore an expression of great discontent, a look that froze Severus in place when he saw it, for he had never seen Dumbledore look so inexplicably desolate, and yet the wizard wiped his face clean when he caught sight of Severus and Minerva. He forced a smile as he snapped a decaying volume shut.

“…Albus? Is everything…well?”

“Perfectly well, Severus.” No trace of his sudden melancholy touched his voice. Instead, he offered his arm to Minerva. “Are you ready to depart, m’dear? I find myself growing rather puckish after a day of so many adventures….”

“Headmaster?”

“Come along, Severus.”

“Did you find what you were searching for?”

Dumbledore didn’t answer.

 

xXx

 

Later, after Severus picked over his supper and returned to the quiet solitude of his quarters, he laid in silence and dread as he contemplated Gaunt and Slytherin and what horrors waited just beyond the horizons. He stared at the ceiling and counted his fears like an insomniac counting flying hippogriffs.

Half-asleep, his left arm began to burn—and Severus’ eyes sprang open to see his Mark darken in the waning candlelight.

 

 


A/N: Sorry for the wait!

Severus: “Okay, I faced a werewolf, a hundred Dementors, and Harriet Potter hates me. Now it can’t get worse than that.”

[Voldemort has entered the chat]

Chapter 155: like father, like daughter

Chapter Text

clv. like father, like daughter

 

Elara was only halfway through the second chapter of Miranda Goshawk’s Standard Book of Spells, Grade Three, when she heard the first plate break. Frowning, she couldn’t decide if she should be bothered with finding out what had happened, considering how comfortable she was. But then, the second plate broke, then a third, and Elara sighed aloud as she shut the book and dropped it on her nightstand. Cygnus and her great-uncle’s old owl Percival, perched on the armoire, swiveled their heads to watch her leave.

She stepped out into the corridor, brow furrowed, and heard something else fall and break, the distant, muffled mash of voices drifting up the stairwell. She glanced overhead, but Snape was either in the potions lab, not here, or utterly unconcerned, because nothing sounded from the level he inhabited.

Worthless git.

Wondering if the house-elves were having another row, Elara shut her bedroom door and straightened her clothes before heading for the steps. She stopped on the next floor to peek into the living room where Mr. Flamel and Harriet sat in discussion by the window, an open text on the coffee table between them. The alchemist had an animated way of speaking, the sunlight bright on his face, and though Harriet had slumped over to lean on her arm, she listened to him with rapt attention, the breeze pulling at the stray curls escaping her plait.

Satisfied, Elara continued onward.

Crash!

“Master is a horrid, despicable wizard, he is! Oh, my poor mistress, what would she say!”

“Shut up, Kreacher!”

Hate him! Kreacher hates him!”

Elara quickened her pace once she stepped off the stairs into the foyer and made as if to walk toward the basement where the kitchen lurked, until she heard the voices rise behind her, coming from the parlor. She entered the room in time to see a twelfth-century Goblin-wrought saucer emblazoned with the Black crest shatter on the floor.

Elara stared at the pile of shards in shock.

“What—what on earth are you doing?!” she gasped, her horror building as she took in the decimated tea service, the white porcelain ghastly against the dark color of the rug. Sirius stood before the open china hutch, a creamer dangling from his index finger, and he blinked as he turned to his daughter waiting gobsmacked at the threshold.

Sirius had cleaned himself up in the two days since his arrival at Grimmauld, his curly hair cut short about his ears, his beard clipped close to his jaw. He wore an odd mix of clothes—a faded Muggle t-shirt under an open waistcoat, Wizarding trousers and Muggle trainers. Elara had no idea where he’d gotten those; she couldn’t imagine the Aurors agreeing to pop by a department store in London before dropping him off, so she concluded he must have snuck out despite his restrictions to buy himself things to wear. The reckless idiot.

“Oh,” he said, fiddling with the creamer before it too joined the wreckage on the floor. Elara’s eyes widened. “I’m getting rid of this rubbish.”

“Rubbish? Rubbish?!” she repeated, voice rising into a screech. “That’s nearly four thousand Galleons you’ve just tossed out!”

Sirius frowned and reached for another plate, grimacing at the Black crest. He dropped it.

“Stop!”

“The money doesn’t matter, Elara,” he said, sounding weary and miffed. “It’s just a bunch of ruddy dishes belonging to a horde of pure-blood supremacists and arseholes. I don’t know why no one else has gotten rid of it yet.”

“It belongs to the family!”

Kreacher grasped Elara’s skirt and sobbed into her thigh, rubbing snot and tears on the fabric. “He is a horrible, horrible wizard!” he croaked. “Kreacher hates him! He ruins the House of Black!”

“Let go of her, you miserable elf!”

“Leave off!” Elara barked, settling a hand on Kreacher’s head—though, really, she didn’t much enjoy having him bawling into her skirt, or him touching her. Still, she didn’t appreciate how Sirius spoke to the elf, no matter how rude and unhelpful he was.

Her father took a breath for patience, fingers of one hand curling into a fist before he relinquished it with a shake. Lines deepened about his bruised eyes. “Listen, Elara. You and I and Harriet are a family. The Blacks—.” He flicked a hand at the remaining dishes and glowered. “They’re not family. You didn’t know them as I did. They were the worst kind of people—and these bloody plates here? Do you know what they did with them? They served people like You-Know-Who. They served him in this house, with these dishes, and filth like that doesn’t ever come off.”

Elara stiffened. “It doesn’t matter,” she said—because to her it didn’t matter where the dishes had been used before, or who’d been in the house, because before Sirius strolled back inside, Elara had been the only Black there. This was her home. Before, she’d had nothing of her own; everything in St. Giles’ had belonged to the clergy, even the clothes on her back, and the single possession that had ever been gifted to her with the understanding she wouldn’t need to hand it back one day was a simple iron cross—the same cross she threw into a bush when the orphanage disappeared behind her. Cygnus brought her into Grimmauld Place and gave her everything an orphan girl could possibly want: money, a house, history, a family.

Sirius didn’t throw the next plate, but he removed it from the hutch to add it to the rubbish tip.

“Don’t!”

“Stop it,” Sirius snapped, irritation growing. “I won’t have this cursed shite in the house with you and Harriet here. It goes.”

Kreacher pulled his face from Elara’s leg to snarl. “Master is a hideous, evil boy! Mistress should have never taken him back! Never, never—!

“Be quiet, Kreacher! That’s an order!” The house-elf snapped his mouth shut, though his lips worked furiously in a litany of silent swears.

“At least sell it!” Elara retorted. “Don’t just throw it away!”

“No. I won’t have it out there in the hands of some grubby Death Eater trying to relive the glory days.” He added another plate to his pile, grumbling, “Bad enough we have to have one in the house.”

“What?”

“Nothing. We can get new dishes. It isn’t worth the argument.”

All Elara could see was a literal fortune doomed to waste like Liquid Luck poured down a sink drain.

Two days. It had only been two days—four awkward meals, stilted conversations, and otherwise uncomfortable hours spent in each other’s company, and already Elara felt ready to slap the man across the face. He insinuated himself everywhere like an impossible Doxy infestation, touching everything and anything, arguing and moping and infuriating Elara all the more.

She’d promised Harriet she would try to get along with Sirius—or at least coexist with him. For two days, she’d held her temper, her snide remarks, the ugly, snappish things that welled up in her chest and wanted to come roaring out, and she’d been perfectly polite, if a bit curt. Now, she wanted to hex him, and be damned if the Ministry decided to expel her.

The glass insets of the china hutch splintered, and Sirius jumped. Elara yanked herself away from Kreacher and threw herself into the foyer, stomping toward the stairs. The gas lamps flickered—and between one step and the next, she gave in to the urge to shift forms, turning into a middling black dog, her claws sinking into the carpet as she darted upstairs.

“Elara!”

Being a dog softened the sharpness of her emotions, blunting that desperate, frustrated anger that made her feel out of control. Still, her fur bristled with impotent magic, and Elara shook it off of herself, the static crackling in her ears. She heard Sirius behind her—the thump of rubber-soled trainers on the bottom step—and so she ran to the landing and darted into the occupied living room.

Coming inside, she realized Mr. Flamel must have placed a muffling Charm of some kind over the doorway, which deadened the noise from the rest of the house and was most likely the reason they hadn’t gone to investigate the breaking glass. Both Harriet and Flamel looked up when Elara entered, and she threw herself into the former’s chair, Harriet huffing a breath as the dog’s weight settled on her lap.

“You’ve gotten bigger!” she accused, arms coming around Elara’s middle to hoist her more securely into the chair. Elara, for her part, growled and sulked, letting Harriet pat down her fur around her ears and neck. Flamel chuckled. “What’s the matter, then? You never let me pet you unless you’re upset.”

“‘Ave you been arguing with your father again, Elara?” Flamel asked with a knowing quirk of his brow. Elara turned her nose away, propping it on the arm of the chair. Harriet smelled of bland soap and something dry—snakeskin, maybe.

“I will take that as a yes.”

The floorboards creaked as Sirius entered the room, the cross expression on his face flickering when he hesitated, meeting the heavy gaze of Mr. Flamel.

Monsieur Black,” the aged alchemist acknowledged.

“Err—,” Sirius replied, fidgeting. Elara let out a snort, amused, and he scowled at her, finding his resolve. “Mr. Flamel, how’s the afternoon going? Lessons all right?”

“Harriet did very well in her Transfiguration revisions. Merveilleuse.”

“That’s—good. Minerva will be glad to hear it. Do you mind if I borrow my daughter for a minute? We were in the middle of a discussion.” The latter portion of his statement was directed at Elara, who made no move to get up.

“I think non,” Flamel said, reaching for his tea. “We are ‘aving a lovely conversation. Won’t you join us, Monsieur Black? Pour yourself a cup of tea.”

“I—I guess?”

Really, he had no choice; Mr. Flamel was the kind of person everyone obeyed—maybe because of his age, but most likely because of the respect his presence demanded. Sirius hadn’t even protested his arrival as he had with their other minders; instead, he’d gawked like a gormless Hufflepuff, and then made himself scarce.

Mr. Flamel poured a measure of tea into a glass and handed it to Sirius, who took it and sank into an empty chair without saying a word.

Elara had the impression that the old alchemist didn’t like Sirius, and not in the same way that Elara didn’t like him or because of his past incarceration. It was because Mr. Flamel loved Harriet like his own flesh and blood; an idiot could see the quiet regard he held for the young witch, the way his eyes brightened when they spoke of magic and their shared enthusiasm. They exchanged half a dozen letters most weeks, and Elara suspected he waited for Harriet’s replies just as much as Harriet waited for his. They had an easy camaraderie, and he was perhaps one of the only people Harriet respected as much as Professor Dumbledore. Perhaps more.

Perenelle once confessed to her they would gladly have taken them in if things were different. If the Mirror of Erised hadn’t shattered with the Philosopher’s Stone forever locked inside. Elara didn’t tell Harriet. She would never forgive herself for being there when the Mirror broke.

So no, Mr. Flamel didn’t dislike Sirius for some personal failing of his, or because of Azkaban or his house-arrest. He disliked Sirius because he had the opportunity that Flamel, for all his gold and wisdom and longevity, could not have. He would not see Harriet grow up.

Mr. Flamel shot Sirius one last cool look, ascertaining he was enjoying his tea, then turned his attention to the glass lens left on the coffee table. The sunlight coming through the open window shone on the brass rim, and Elara shut her eyes against the glare.

“Now, where were we—?” Flamel asked in a brighter tone, moving the Argonaut’s Atlas to spare Elara’s eyes. “Oh, excusez-moi.” She sniffed in thanks.

“The Dara Knot,” Harriet reminded him as she scratched behind Elara’s ears. “You said it represents strength and consistency.”

“Ah, yes. The Celts used it to symbolize the roots of the oak tree—the King of Trees, as it were. When combined with runes, the Dara Knot becomes a center of interconnectivity and structure. For your needs, it would create better accessibility to the stored information. It would certainly address some of the overheating issues. Et voila!

He made easy, rapid flourishes with his wand, and the drawn image of the Dara Knot appeared in the air before them, blazing with scarlet color.

“Wicked. Looks a bit like a net.”

Oui! It can be used as such in the right circumstances. You try.”

Harriet didn’t use her wand to recreate the symbol, instead shooing Elara off her lap so she could lean over the coffee table and use a quill and ink. Elara slunk over to the only remaining free chair, turned into a human, and fell into it.

Non, non, Harriet, it is one continuous line. Try again.”

As Harriet drew some of the most obscene-looking scribbles and cursed under her breath, Sirius carefully accepted the Atlas from Mr. Flamel and looked it over, holding it with his thumb and forefinger braced on the rim. He brought it closer to his eye and squinted—jerking back in shock when the magic revealed itself.

“Merlin! What is this thing?”

“It’s an atlas,” Elara told him, short and to the point, feeling superior in knowing something he didn’t. But then, the feeling passed, and Elara knew she was being intentionally juvenile and a bit daft. “Hermione, Harriet, and I made it this last year, and Harriet bought the lenses in France. It’s part map and part encyclopedia, basically.”

Sirius blinked, puzzled—though, whether he was puzzled over the Atlas or over his daughter’s sudden helpfulness, Elara couldn’t say. “A map?” he asked, a small smile tilting his mouth. “That reminds me of this old thing we made up in our school days. We called it—.”

“The Marauder’s Map,” Elara finished, observing her nails. “That tatty bit of parchment.”

That was intentionally rude, though Elara pretended not to notice. Sirius either didn’t care or had grown inured to his daughter’s spite, which made a certain amount of sense, considering where he’d grown up. Something like guilt squirmed in Elara’s heart, and she ruthlessly stamped it out.

“You found it, then? We lost it to Filch years ago.”

“No, someone else found it and gave it to Harriet. We used it as a model to make something more useful.”

“Hermione heard the word ‘mischief’ in the passphrase and almost had a fit,” Harriet put in, judging her newest effort. Mr. Flamel hummed and had her try again. “And there were a lot of places not on the Marauder’s Map, y’know. After I found the school’s blueprints, there was so much more to be added.”

“Like the Chamber of Secrets. Or Ravenclaw’s Aerie.”

“It’s called the Underneath, not the Chamber of whatever. Salazar doesn’t know where that title came from.”

Elara rolled her eyes. “Of course not. It’s not as if it’s a secret chamber or anything.”

Sirius’ eyes bounced back and forth between the pair. “Wait, hold on,” he demanded, setting the Atlas down before he dropped it. “What’s this about—you know where the Chamber of Secrets is?”

“The Underneath, aren’t you listening?” Harriet frowned, the tip of her tongue caught between her teeth as she concentrated on finishing the Dara Knot. It was still lopsided but much better than her previous attempts. “And of course I know where it is. I fell into it one time.”

“And you found the Aerie.”

“You and Hermione did much of the work with that in the translations. It was a lucky guess on my part.”

“And you have all your secret little conversations with Salazar Slytherin’s portrait.”

“They’re not secret conversations! You make it sound so sinister. And last time we spoke, he got in a bit of a strop because I laughed at something Rowena said.” Harriet glanced at Sirius and explained for his benefit, “Rowena Ravenclaw and Salazar Slytherin were mad for one another. They have a portrait together in the Aerie, and she likes taking the Mickey out of him whenever she can.” She laughed. “I swear Livi is him reincarnated. So bloody snooty.”

“…who’s Livi?”

Harriet, Flamel, and Elara all stiffened, all three of them thinking of the rather large, venomous serpent sequestrated somewhere in the house. Unfortunately, Livius’ appearance did not lend itself to friendly encounters, and whenever Sirius found out about the snake, Elara hoped someone like Dumbledore was on hand to deal with the fallout.

“No one!” Harriet chirped, clearing her throat. “I’m getting hungry. Who wants lunch? Maybe some tea. Mr. Flamel, would you like some more tea? I’ll get it!”

She hopped to her feet and darted from the room before anyone could breathe a word of protest. Mr. Flamel breathed a fond sigh and rose, ruffling a hand through his hair. He picked up the tea service and followed Harriet, though Elara heard him mutter, “Je plains Albus pour les ennuis que vous trouvez,” as he went.

Which left Elara alone with her father again. She crossed her arms and fought not to scowl.

“Elara….”

“Don’t.”

Sirius rubbed at his face, dragging his fingers through the rougher hair of his beard. “Listen,” he said, addressing his hands rather than her. “I don’t get it. Help me understand, yeah? They’re just bloody dishes. Are they really worth the row?”

Elara stood and didn’t look at him, keeping her eyes averted toward the rug—this rug free of porcelain shards. “They’re not just dishes,” she snapped. “They’re my dishes.”

He threw out his arms in a fit of pique. “We can get new ones!”

“No. We can’t.”

She strode toward the open door, and behind her, still seated in the afternoon sunlight, Sirius groaned and slouched in the armchair. “Merlin help me, Marlene,” he cursed. “Why did she have to inherit my stubbornness?”

Elara didn’t acknowledge him or his words; she stomped back to her bedroom and did not emerge for the rest of the day.

 


A/N: In canon, Sirius hated everything in Grimmauld, right down to the cutlery, while Elara—who never had anything—is intensely attached to it.

 

Chapter 156: the magical right

Chapter Text

 clvi. the magical right

 

After another week at Grimmauld Place, Harriet sat out on the porch in the morning light, her head leaning against the wall as she soaked in the heat and ignored the tension in her neck.

Today was Sirius’ trial.

Though it hadn’t been dawn for more than an hour, the day already seemed heinously long. The Aurors and Mr. Piers came to retrieve Sirius in the middle of the night so he could prepare, and Harriet hadn’t gotten any sleep, her thoughts apprehensive and her nerves on edge. The ache in her neck settled over her spine and shoulders like an overlarge spiderweb she couldn’t shake off.

Today, Sirius would either go free or go back to Azkaban.

Living with her godfather had been…awkward so far. Elara spent almost all of her time shut in her room, avoiding Sirius as he waged a silent war on the house—a war that Grimmauld Place was determined to win. The house hated him as much as Sirius hated it; doors slammed in his face, the risers tripped him, and twice the candles had tried to set his hair on fire. The miserable atmosphere did not lend itself to a restful summer holiday.

Harriet hoped that after the trial—after he was freed—Sirius would be more amenable to conversation. At the moment, he often sequestered himself in his room on the fourth floor—the floor Harriet never went up to, considering Snape slept up there too—or he sat in the back garden, brooding. When they did chat, Sirius started talking about her dad or reminiscing about their days at Hogwarts, and while Harriet liked hearing about James, the bittersweet emotion left a sharp taste in her mouth.

Sirius looked at her and saw her father, and he hadn’t expressed much interest in who Harriet and Elara were outside the shadow of old memories. She wanted things to be better when he closed this chapter in his life and had something else to look forward to instead of untold years inside a gray, static prison. She hoped things would change.

Studying her trainers, Harriet almost missed the sound of Apparition echoing from across the road.

She looked up and squinted toward the park, keeping her eyes steady until she spotted the tell-tale warble of a quick, cheap Disillusionment Charm rippling in the air. Since whoever was approaching the house couldn’t see it without permission, Harriet waited and watched until the person passed the wards and dismissed their disguise.

“Morning, Mrs. Malfoy.”

The blonde witch stood on the bottom step, peering with cool, genteel reproach at the younger woman. She dressed more somber than Harriet was used to seeing her, her robes a dim, charcoal gray, though she wore more diamonds than a Niffler could steal. Her eyes flicked over Harriet’s person, scanning her from top to bottom, and she arched one unimpressed brow.

“Miss Potter,” she acknowledged. “What are you doing out here?”

“Waiting for you. We’re supposed to leave soon, aren’t we?” She glanced behind Narcissa, seeing nothing but an empty street, and her shoulders slumped. “Could Hermione not come too?”

“Only family or specific members of the Ministry will be allowed inside.” Again, Mrs. Malfoy perused her ensemble, lingering on Harriet’s blouse and trousers and scuffed shoes. Then, without a word, she pointed one manicured finger at the door.

“What?”

“You need to change.”

“Why?” Harriet complained, though she followed the silent order and opened the front door, stepping inside. “What’s wrong with this?”

“You’re going to an official Wizengamot trial, Miss Potter. You need to dress appropriately.”

She chivvied Harriet upstairs, inspected her closet, then dragged her to Elara’s room to find something more suitable. Thirty minutes later, they were in danger of being late, and both Harriet and Elara were tidy and wearing plain, if well-tailored, robes in a dark, jewel-green and midnight navy. Elara had her family’s silver crest pinned on her collar, and Harriet had one as well, produced from Mrs. Malfoy’s pocket, though she hadn’t the faintest idea of where it could have come from.

Finally satisfied with their appearance, Narcissa bundled them through the Floo to the Leaky Cauldron and then quickly had both witches follow her into the Wizarding quarter, keeping her pace steady—if a tad rushed. They passed from Diagon to Empiric Alley, and Harriet swallowed down her nerves as she entered the Ministry of Magic for the first time.

The street entrance looked almost Muggle in its simplicity, laid out like a lobby or a waiting room, a bunch of benches before a single desk and a large lift against the far wall. A few people sat on the benches or meandered about, chatting in low, bored tones, and Mrs. Malfoy ignored them all in favor of approaching the wizard behind the desk. The spotty bloke lifted his head and blinked one eyelid at a time, swallowing back a yawn. He recognized Narcissa and stiffened his spine, forcing himself into some semblance of wakefulness.

“Oh, Madam Malfoy! What a pleasure to see you—!”

“Mr. Lloyd, how lovely. We’re in a bit of a rush, darling, so I haven’t the time to catch up.

“Of course, of course. Let me just—names and purpose for visit?”

“Narcissa Malfoy, Elara Black, and Harriet Potter for court, spectating.”

The wizard punched the words into a strange apparatus, and it spat three silver badges into Mrs. Malfoy’s waiting hand. She quickly pinned them onto their robes, and Harriet had just enough time to peer down and read ‘Harriet Potter - Level 10, Spectator’ before Draco’s mum rushed them to the waiting lift.

“The Atrium, ma’am?” the uniformed attendant asked, and when Mrs. Malfoy gave a curt nod of her head, the grate clattered shut, and he jerked the lever down to the number eight. Harriet gulped and staggered into Elara when the lift plummeted as if free-falling, her plait floating off her shoulder—and then it stopped, her stomach relocating back to its proper place in her middle instead of in her throat. Elara looked green.

Level eight: the Atrium. Welcome to the Ministry of Magic,” announced an unseen, feminine voice. “Visitors, please present your wand for registration at the security desk, and have a pleasant day.

The grate whisked itself open—and Harriet gawked at the passage beyond.

It must have begun life as a cave of some sort before the wizards came in and made it their own; the floor stretched out in gleaming hardwood, the dark paneling on the walls rising twice the height of a normal man before giving way to refined bricks, marble pillars, and a blue ceiling riveted with golden symbols. The Ministry hummed like an active beehive, people darting about here and there as they rushed toward their destinations, a cloud of purple folded airplanes flocking overhead. Active Floos took up the far wall, and Harriet wondered why they hadn’t come that way, thinking it would have been much quicker until she spotted the crowd of waiting reporters and cameramen.

Mrs. Malfoy kept a hand on Elara’s shoulder, and the younger witch walked at her side, hidden from their view.

They came to a stop before the Watchwizard, a poorly shaven bloke slumped on a stool by a brass contraption, the tag on his robes bearing the name ‘Eric Munch.’ “Welcome to the Ministry of Magic,” he said, uninterested, casting an indolent glance in their direction. “How many visitors?”

“Two,” Narcissa replied, pushing Harriet and Elara forward.

“Step over here.”

Elara went first, the wizard passing a wire-thin, golden Probity Probe over Elara’s front and back in two quick flicks before holding out his hand. “Wand.” Reluctant, Elara passed it over, and he dropped it onto the flat, brass plate of the apparatus on his desk. The contraption vibrated, chimed, and a strip of parchment popped into existence. “Eleven and a quarter, Ebony wood, and a Rougarou hair core?”

“Yes.”

He kept the parchment and forked the wand over, and then it was Harriet’s turn, watching with interest as she got inspected with the Probity Probe, the thin bar glowing brightly over her neck. Mr. Munch glanced at the obvious curse-scar there and waved it off, Harriet then handing him her own wand for inspection. He set it on the balance and yawned, waiting, and the balance started to vibrate as it had before. Then, however, the vibration became more violent, devolving into a hard, jerking shudder, Harriet’s wand jittering back and forth until the contraption let out a bang! and began to smoke. The Watchwizard stared with his mouth hanging open.

Mrs. Malfoy looked incredulous, and then her face became perfectly placid and relaxed as she spoke to Mr. Munch. “It seems your equipment is malfunctioning,” she said. “And we are in a terrible hurry. It simply wouldn’t do to keep the Wizengamot waiting.”

Harriet didn’t think the Wizengamot gave a single lick whether they arrived or not, but Munch didn’t know that. Honestly, he didn’t seem to much care either, too stumped over the machine’s iffy behavior. He shoved Harriet’s wand back into her hands, muttering, and they beat a hasty retreat deeper into the Atrium’s depths. A large fountain dominated its center, several golden statues clustered therein: a wizard with his wand upheld, surrounded by a doe-eyed witch, a centaur, a goblin, and a house-elf, all staring at the wizard with adoration. Looking at the arrangement, Harriet couldn’t help but say, “Well, that’s bloody insulting,” but neither Elara nor Mrs. Malfoy responded. Above it all, a banner of Marvolo Gaunt sneered down upon them.

Mrs. Malfoy took them to another lift, this one smaller than the first, set in a row of several others. Of course, when you’re a pure-blood witch of Narcissa’s standing, you did not squeeze into a compartment with others, so the two wizards already inside disembarked and ushered the three witches through. Mrs. Malfoy pressed the number for level nine, and the lift smoothly dropped another level, the bodiless voice announcing their arrival to the “Department of Mysteries.”

The grate slid back to reveal a long, barren corridor layered in reflective black tiles, a brazier hanging from a metal chain shedding a murky, teal light in the otherwise confined space. There was a tall, black door at the corridor’s end without signs or labels; Harriet thought Mrs. Malfoy would lead them to it, but they took one step off the lift, and she urged them to the left, toward a flight of steps under a plaque reading, “Courtrooms Five - Ten.

The stairs were quite dark and opened onto a bleak passage, one crowded with far too many people for how narrow it was. Harriet hadn’t expected to see anyone at all, let alone so suddenly, and she stumbled into Mrs. Malfoy’s back, babbling an apology.

“Do watch where you’re going, dear.”

Elara linked her arm through Harriet’s. Her face appeared ghostly pale in the torchlight, and the bare hand that slid against Harriet’s wrist left sticky sweat on her skin, Elara’s eyes darting from person to person. A motley assortment gathered there, men and women dressed in loose, plum-colored robes with silver ‘W’s stitched above their breasts, or others in the fitted, maroon attire donned by the Aurory.

They made slow progress to their destination, the hall too cramped for the three witches to pass through. Harriet couldn’t hear a word being said, the din of voices merging into a garbled jumble, and their faces looked ghoulish in the half-light, the shadows deep and seeping like water swelling over a bank. Some of the Aurors wore pins—a golden snake circling an eye—and some did not. Harriet’s gaze kept coming back to those funny little pins, almost certain she’d seen them somewhere before.

Nearing the door to Courtroom Ten, a wizard dressed in shabby robes rose from the bench and turned toward them, bringing his face into the light.

“Professor Lupin!”

“Hello, you two,” their History of Magic instructor greeted, sparing Narcissa a small, close-lipped smile. “Mrs. Malfoy, thank you for escorting them today.”

“Of course,” she drawled, making a damnably good impression of Snape.

“Are you here for the trial, Professor?” Harriet asked, wincing when she realized how silly the question was. “Why are there so many people here?”

“It’s a high-profile case. From what I’ve gathered while waiting, most anyone with an excuse to sit in on the Wizengamot has come to see the verdict.”

“Are you gonna sit with us?”

He rested his hand on Harriet’s shoulder and gave it a brief squeeze. Elara continued to fidget until Professor Lupin moved that hand to touch her arm in a quick show of comfort. “I’m afraid not. Only members of the Wizengamot or the Aurory—and family, of course—are allowed in. I’m here to give what support I can.”

Elara said something Harriet didn’t catch, the noise in the corridor too loud, joined by the sudden creak of the iron doors barring passage into the courtroom clanking open. A few of the more aware Wizengamot members headed inside, and Mrs. Malfoy was ready to excuse them from Professor Lupin’s presence, ushering both witches through the entrance and the thin meniscus of magic covering the passage. The ward passed over them like a light breeze, and Harriet guessed it was what kept people who had no business there out of the courtroom—not that half of those bloody people had any reason to show up, in her opinion. There were so many of them.

An air of solemnity pervaded the chamber beyond, a high-vaulted space of dark bricks and ancient pillars, the floor itself comprised of coruscating stone with significant scorch marks where magic had eaten away at the surface. Three steps led to the main arena, or so Harriet thought of it as, a recessed pit surrounded on all sides by tiers of chairs and a few assorted benches, one single chair set in the pit’s middle, hemmed by iron chains. There seemed to be a system of organization to the chairs because Wizengamot members skipped over seats without reason as they filtered inside, and the spectating Aurors relegated themselves to the benches. Mrs. Malfoy had them take a bench in the far back, half-hidden by the sporadic placement of torches.

“Is that Professor Dumbledore?” Elara asked. “Over there, on the second tier.”

It was their Headmaster, looking odd dressed in the same plum robes as most everyone else, speaking with a rather severe, black-haired man with long sideburns and a mustache. Harriet didn’t wave because that didn’t seem like a thing to in court, but she did twist in her seat to peer more intently at people, looking for more familiar faces. She didn’t spot any until she made the dreadful revelation that Minister Gaunt had arrived, seated two chairs down from what she guessed would be the main judge’s spot, an area at the head of the procession vaguely reminiscent of a pulpit. She stopped looking for others after spotting him.

Harriet leaned back when Gaunt’s red eyes swept the room.

The iron doors to the courtroom swung shut on the heels of the last person shuffling their feet inside, and though almost a hundred people gathered in the chairs and on the benches, the room could have accommodated thrice that number. The mumbled conversations came to an end when a stern, gray-haired witch with a monocle took her place at the head of the room. She banged a gavel against the banister separating her from the pit below.

“I think that’s Amelia Bones,” Elara whispered, wringing her hands together in her lap. “The head of the D.M.L.E. Susan’s aunt.”

“The courtroom will come to order,” Madam Bones boomed, settling in her seat as the last, lingering conversations dwindled. “Bring in the accused!”

The door clanked open once more, and Sirius strode inside, escorted by two Aurors—Tonks and that strange, grisly fellow Harriet had seen at Hogwarts last term—and Mr. Piers. Sirius walked as if utterly unburdened, dropping into the chair in the pit’s middle with his legs crossed and a grin on his face. The chains adorning the chair remained inert, but his Auror escorts stayed at his side. Mr. Piers bent down to mutter something unintelligible in his ear.

“Criminal trial of the accused, Sirius Orion Black, resident of the London Borough of Islington, held today, the eleventh of July. The interrogators are myself, Amelia Susan Bones, Head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement, and Minister for Magic, Marvolo Cadmus Gaunt. Court Scribe, Anne Katrina Gambol. Counsel for the accused will state his name for the record.”

Mr. Piers cleared his throat. “Johann Kurt Piers.”

Madam Bones nodded. “Charges against the accused are listed as sedition, the conscious and malicious impartation of sensitive information to the enemy, twelve counts of Muggle-murder, one count of murder in the first-degree of one Peter Michael Pettigrew, the facilitation to murder, one count of attempted murder upon one Harriet Dorea Potter, trespassing, the endangerment of magical children, unlawful breaking and entering, terrorism, and one count of attempted murder upon one Peter Michael Pettigrew. How do you plead?”

“Not guilty, Madam Bones.”

“Very well. Your defense, Mr. Black.”

Again, Mr. Piers cleared his throat and was quick to jump in, seeming to address Madam Bones directly instead of the Wizengamot as a whole. “The charges levied against my client are unsubstantiated or, plainly, incorrect. Accordingly, the record should show that Peter Michael Pettigrew is, in fact, alive and has been both charged and found guilty by the Wizengamot on the fifteenth of May of those crimes attributed to Sirius Black.”

Many of the Wizengamot members nodded along, having probably been present for the case in question. Harriet hadn’t known Pettigrew’s trial had already happened, and it irked her that no pressing announcement had been made in the Daily Prophet; she would have liked to have been informed when the man who’d betrayed her family and ruined her life went to prison for it.

“There is still the question of his facilitation to murder,” Gaunt said as he leaned forward and leered down at Sirius. “If we are to reference Mr. Pettigrew’s trial, then it should be noted that it was Sirius Black’s idea to have Pettigrew become the Secret Keeper for the Potter family’s location. That is a confirmed fact and, by definition, a facilitation to murder, is it not?”

A muscle flexed in Sirius’ jaw, but he showed remarkable restraint by not replying, listening instead to whatever Mr. Piers hissed in his ear. Harriet, for her part, wanted to tell Voldemort’s not-clone to fuck off back to whatever rock he’d crawled out from under, but that would be an emphatic bad idea, so she kept still.

“A boyhood association with Mr. Pettigrew does not make my client an accessory of his crimes, Minister,” Mr. Piers said. “Ultimately, it was the Potters’ choice to use Pettigrew as their Secret Keeper. A choice made of their own free will.”

Elara took Harriet’s hand in her own, and Harriet squeezed it.

“Fine,” the Minister retorted with poor grace, the cold look in his eyes enough to silence the witches and wizards sitting in his general area. “A good point, Mr. Piers. Let us move away from the past, then, and on to the present. Black is accused of using an illegal Animagus transformation—.”

“—a separate charge which has been settled outside of this court for a substantial fee.”

“—An illegal, at the time, Animagus transformation to escape Ministry-sanctioned incarceration.”

“Is it not the duty of an innocent man to seek freedom from misplaced bonds, Minister?”

“All criminals believe themselves innocent, Mr. Piers.” Gaunt smiled—a snide, unhurried thing, as if the wizard didn’t care what happened to Sirius, only that he did his best to inhibit him from getting the justice he so rightly deserved. Really, Harriet had to wonder why he was here; Gaunt had to know the likelihood of Sirius being acquitted, and he did not seem the kind of wizard who’d make a fool of himself arguing in opposition. “Has your client such little faith in the Ministry?”

At that, Sirius snorted, and Madam Bones shook her head.

“I believe the court can withstand Mr. Black’s incredulity for the moment,” she said, folding her hands together on the rail. “I move to dismiss the crimes levied against Sirius Black in 1981, so we may move on and concentrate on those added in 1993 and 1994. Votes are in body, not in volume. Those in favor?”

Hands went up—most hands, in fact, though the Aurors didn’t contribute.

“Those opposed?”

A few stragglers voted, and Gaunt flicked his hand upward as if in afterthought, obviously recognizing the futility in protesting.

Harriet tugged on Mrs. Malfoy’s snug sleeve. “What does that mean?” she asked. “‘Votes are in body, not in volume?’”

Mrs. Malfoy tilted her ear closer, and her jeweled earring sparkled in the torchlight. “Criminal trials before the Wizengamot are tried with a single vote attributed to the bodies of present jurors,” she whispered with a small sniff. “They vote with singular presence rather than the voting allotment of their House.”

Confused, Harriet didn’t fully understand what she meant by that but filed her questions away to be asked at a more appropriate time.

“The crimes attributed to 1993 and 1994 are as stated: trespassing, the endangerment of magical children, unlawful breaking and entering, terrorism, and one count of attempted murder upon one Peter Michael Pettigrew.”

“I must protest the dismissal of the conscious and malicious impartation of sensitive information to the enemy,” Gaunt interjected, turning his haunting eyes to Bones. “After all, Fenrir Greyback got out of his own cell somehow.”

Sirius stiffened in the chair, the chains clinking and clanking under his flexing arms. “I didn’t tell Greyback a thing,” he snarled. “And it’s not as if I could explain to him all he needed to do was become an Animagus, could I?”

“This court has already established that Mr. Black is not responsible for the crimes of others,” Madam Bones stated, peering at the Minister from the corner of her eye. “The charges will remain as levied.”

“Very well.”

“Your defense, Mr. Black.”

Mr. Piers nodded in acquiescence, and Sirius again fell silent. “I would ask the Wizengamot to take into account Sirius’ time served when considering his actions after leaving Azkaban prison. The legality of his behavior must be tempered by the knowledge of his spirit; Mr. Black acted with moral integrity, motivated to protect, not endanger, the students of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.”

Gaunt scoffed, a derisive, short sound of disbelief or disgust. “And the second attempted murder on Mr. Pettigrew? So we are to assume murder and violence are acceptable recourses now? Is that what you’re teaching at Hogwarts, Dumbledore?”

The Headmaster kept his reply steady and upbeat. “Oh, I can’t vouch for every word delivered by my professors, but violence against my students is not tolerated at Hogwarts. Not while I still live.”

“If we could return to the matter at hand, gentlemen.” Madam Bones exhaled, clearly growing more agitated by the constant asides interjected by the Minister. “In regards to the attempted murder against Mr. Pettigrew, what is your defense, Black?”

“I didn’t try to kill him,” Sirius said. “I had no intention of killing Peter. I only meant to apprehend him and hand him over to the proper Ministry authorities.”

Well, that’s a bloody lie, Harriet thought, and Elara’s hand twitched over hers as they shared the same recollection. Sirius had meant to murder Peter in cold blood.

“Care to repeat that assertion with Veritaserum?”

Mr. Piers bowled onwards before Sirius could put his foot in it. “The application of Veritaserum in a criminal trial is prohibited by the Guild of Ethical Potioneering and Standards, under the fifth section of their charter, proclaiming potions created by Guild brewers cannot be applied to those lacking free will. Prisoners, whether they give their assent or not, lack freedom of will, and as the Ministry can only utilize potions made by G.E.P.S approved potioneers—.”

“Yes, yes,” Gaunt snapped with a wave of his hand, a gold ring gleaming on his finger. “It was merely a suggestion. I am aware of Ministry protocols, Mr. Piers. My skepticism in Black’s honesty aside, even if we are to discredit the attempted murder, there is still the matter of breaking and entering a magical institution, trespassing, and terrorizing its residents.”

“Again, I must ask the Wizengamot to consider Mr. Black’s time already served in Azkaban and to understand his fervent desire to protect the children of Hogwarts. Two of those children included his own daughter and god-daughter. He should not be faulted for acting irrationally, as most panicked fathers would.”

“Ah, yes, the daughter.” Gaunt’s gaze swept the courtroom again, searching like a hungry dog, and both Elara and Harriet edged back into the shadows out of sight.

“Leave my brat out of this,” Sirius demanded, the appellation fond rather than rude, though Elara still frowned and huffed. “We were never in contact, and I never approached her. In fact, thanks to the Aurory, I believed she’d died in a fire in 1981!”

Arguments broke out among the jurors, the words again too muddled and confused for Harriet to understand. “Order!” Madam Bones boomed, slamming the gavel upon the rail, and silence rippled out through the room like a spell. “Elara Black is not on trial here and has no bearing upon the proceedings. It has also been brought to my attention that she was improperly questioned on school grounds by members of the Ministry.” She slanted a glare at Gaunt that could have curdled steel. “And as such cannot be questioned again with regards to Mr. Black’s trespasses. Even if she bore any guilt for his actions, the findings would not be admissible in this court! We are here to ascertain Mr. Black’s fate and Mr. Black’s fate alone.”

Gaunt didn’t seem to be listening to her. He still looked about the courtroom, discreetly turning his head, his red eyes flickering as they darted back and forth.

“It could be argued that my client wasn’t trespassing, Madam Bones,” Mr. Piers said into the quiet.

“How so?”

“As an alumnus of the school, it is a well-known axiom that Hogwarts will always give help to those who ask for it. In this instance, Mr. Black’s required aid was access to the school itself.”

Madam Bones’ mouth twitched in the approximation of a smirk, there and gone, her mind turning the words over as the other jurors tipped their heads together and discussed. Gaunt had stopped searching the room and instead had his hands balanced together, thoroughly bored of the trial and disinclined to interrupt again.

“And the charge of terrorism, Mr. Piers? How does your client contend that?”

“By contending it is unjustly levied, Madam. Terrorism, under the articles of the D.M.L.E, is defined as an unlawful act of intimidation in pursuit of political aims. Though Mr. Black accedes that his actions were terrifying, they were not those of terrorism, as he did not act with the intent of intimidation. As you have already dismissed claims of his allegiance to the known-terrorist He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named, it must be further accepted that Mr. Black was not working to extend the wizard’s agenda. He acted with reasonable force in defense of others.”

Again, the wizards and witches in plum-colored robes put their heads together in discussion, and Harriet noticed many Aurors doing the same, some nodding and some not, speculating over the legality of Sirius’ actions. It was much more complicated than Harriet had assumed, though she hadn’t much perspective on law or the like. Neither Mr. Piers nor Sirius reacted to the voices, though Harriet herself would have been as nervous as a Hufflepuff in the middle of the Slytherin common room. Sirius just crossed one leg over the other and chatted with his solicitor, ignoring the chains on his chair.

At length, Madam Bones again called for silence, and she proposed bringing this matter to a close. “It is clear the accused acted foolishly but without malice, and though his actions broke the law, his circumstances must be taken into accord. Twelve years in Azkaban have already been served, unjustly. The ramifications of Mr. Black’s deeds as they reflect through the actions of others are not ours to judge, not this day, and I move we come to a verdict. Those in favor of conviction?”

A smattering of hands rose, not enough to account for even half of those present, and the Minister didn’t bother to raise his hand at all. Harriet didn’t believe he’d suddenly come to an epiphany of consciousness, so she decided he simply didn’t care.

“Those opposed?”

Most of the court raised their hands now, and Madam Bones banged the gavel.

“Cleared of all charges.”

A small applause broke out, and Sirius grinned as he hugged Mr. Piers, who stood there and took it like he was used to overly clingy ex-convicts squeezing him about the middle. A great sigh left Harriet, and the whole chamber seemed brighter, airier, as the Wizengamot departed from their chairs to either leave or congratulate Sirius, most of them witches or wizards Harriet didn’t recognize. Next to her, Elara exhaled, and though the summer so far had been nothing but contentious between her and Sirius, she looked relieved.

“C’mon, then,” Harriet said, hopping to her feet. “Let’s go down.”

Elara stood and smoothed out her robes, nodding to Mrs. Malfoy, who shooed them forward on their own. “This is where I leave you,” the woman explained, letting her attention cut across the room toward the entrance, where Harriet noticed the long, blond hair of Mr. Malfoy. She hadn’t seen him in attendance, but he wore those same plum-colored robes as the others. “Do go and give my cousin my best.”

“Yes, Mrs. Malfoy.”

They went down the steps, following the rest of the congregation. “Sirius will be unbearable now,” Elara complained. “He’ll be able to do magic again, and it’ll be worse.”

Snorting, Harriet said, “But doesn’t that mean we’ll be able to do magic, too? Something about the wards and them being attached to a wizard who’s of age?”

“You have a point.”

Harriet stepped off the stairs into the crowd and lost sight of Sirius, craning her neck to no avail, though Elara retook her hand so they wouldn’t be separated. Unfortunately, given how the tiers came together, the arrangement dumped everyone into one another on their way out or into the lower pit, creating an ungainly cluster of plum and maroon robes. Harriet pressed forward, trying to creep by—and she almost leaped out of her skin when Professor Dumbledore laid his arm across her shoulders and suddenly turned her in the opposite direction.

“Professor—?!”

“I think it would be best,” he said, walking quickly, and Harriet suspected he used a spell to nudge people out of the way. “If you girls went home on ahead of Sirius. Tonks will gladly see you there.”

The witch in question waited not far from the crowded door, tossing them a cheeky wink and a smile. “Wotcher, Potter! Elara!”

Puzzled by the change in events, Harriet started to ask, “But why—?” and then happened to glance over her shoulder, upward, her eyes drawn as if by an invisible string to the one wizard who hadn’t descended into the teeming mass. Minister Gaunt leaned upon the banister before him, shoulders hunched, searching the faces of those below—until his eyes met Harriet’s and something sinister gleamed in their blood-red depths. The scar upon her neck prickled with alarm.

He’s not here for the trial, Harriet realized, dread ballooning in her chest. He’s not here for that at all.

Quick as she could, Tonks had Harriet and Elara out in the hallway, and she had no compunction against throwing elbows or clumsy knees into people of the Wizengamot or the Aurory to get past. Harriet again noted the curious golden pins worn by some of the Aurors. Their eyes followed her the longest.

Where have I seen it before?

Tonk didn’t have one, and when they squished themselves into the overburdened lift heading back to the Atrium, Harriet glanced up at the pink-haired witch. “Tonks?” she inquired. “What’re those badges a few of the Aurors wear? The gold ones with the eye and the snake?”

The affable, if tense, expression on Tonks’ face dwindled, and she swayed with the motion of the lift, balancing herself with one hand on the grate. “It’s for a group of Aurors and Ministry officials who answer to the Minister directly,” she explained, distracted by their arrival to the Ministry’s main floor. “Bunch of tossers, really, but nothing to worry about. They call themselves the Guardians of the Magical Right.”

Harriet contemplated the name and the funny pin as she followed Tonks and Elara, and it wasn’t until they’d taken another lift and she was back above ground, sunlight in her eyes, that she remembered where she’d seen the pin before.

It had been on a dead wizard, slumped on the floor of her tent, two years ago.

Harriet couldn’t wait to put as much space between herself and the Ministry as possible.


 

A/N:

Gaunt: “I’ve come here for one thing and one thing only.”

Dumbledore: “Justice?”

Gaunt: “To be petty as fuck. And maybe kidnap a child.”

Dumbledore: “Ah, yes. Thought so.”

 

Chapter 157: freedom and other vices

Chapter Text

clvii. freedom and other vices

 

Remus watched Sirius Black down his third shot of Ogden’s Old Firewhiskey and raised a disapproving brow.

“Don’t give me that, Moony,” Sirius sighed as smoke wafted from his mouth and he rubbed at his lower lip. Color flushed his thin cheeks, and his eyes glittered as dark as river stones in the candlelight. Around them, the Leaky Cauldron was crowded and warm, and no one took notice of the two wizards sitting in a dim corner enjoying their drinks. News of Sirius’ acquittal hadn’t yet had time to circulate through the community, and so he kept a low profile, sitting in the back, letting Remus get up and fetch their rounds.

“I’ve been dying for a drink all week, but there isn’t a bloody drop in the whole house.” He exhaled a pale, yellow flame and swallowed it, patting his chest. “I must have looked in every room of the house, turned over every cupboard, closet, chest, and vase. Not a drop.”

Remus hummed. “I assume Albus and Snape had everything removed when Harriet arrived. They’re good girls, but it’s probably best not to leave booze out for them to find.”

Mentioning the Potions Master deepened the lines in Sirius’ face, and he poured himself another Firewhiskey. Remus knew he should let the issue lie, but he’d always been too curious for his own good. It’d only been a handful of days, but he couldn’t believe neither of the two wizards had killed the other yet. He had a bet with Minerva that Snape would crack first, but she was adamant that it would be Sirius.

“How has it been? With Snape in the house?”

Sirius scoffed. “He’s not there during the day, and at night he either closes himself in that old lab downstairs or paces in his bloody room. He keeps me up with that fucking pacing. And don’t start, Remus; I’ve already had my ear talked off by Dumbledore about getting along with the big-nosed git.”

Remus grinned and sipped his gillywater.

“Still don’t understand why he gets a say in everything. I’m Harriet’s godfather, so where does he get off, saying he’ll take her out of the house?”

“Dumbledore? Sirius, the Headmaster explained how the situation is delicate with Harriet, didn’t he?”

Grumbling, the Animagus snuffed the flame on his drink, stroking his singed thumb against his forefinger. “‘Course he did. But now that I’m free, I asked why the guardianship couldn’t be transferred over to me, and Dumbledore said he’s afraid Gaunt will step in and complicate things. And that’s another thing—Gaunt, and that—that freak they have for a Defense professor? When I went into Azkaban, You-Know-Who was bloody dead—and now the whole world’s upside down, with Dumbledore telling me Harriet’s the Girl Who Lived and Frank and Alice’s boy is some kind of decoy and the great Dark Twat is still alive—.”

“Please keep your voice down,” Remus said. He glanced about the other booths, but most were empty and if they weren’t, the other patrons stayed interested in their own tankards rather than their conversation.

Sirius exhaled and rubbed at his face. Remus had experienced a similar sense of disbelief when Headmaster Dumbledore took him aside and explained the tenuous nature of Harriet Potter and Wizarding society as a whole. He’d spent so long among the Muggles, ignoring everything and anything that would remind him of Sirius or James or Lily—that he hadn’t witnessed the smaller, less critical changes or the way the world they salvaged from Voldemort’s clutches had dissolved back into the wreckage.

“I don’t understand why Dumbledore doesn’t kick that—that Slytherin arsehole out of the school. Isn’t his bloody job?”

“Because he can’t,” Remus said, lowering his eyes. “He explained it to me more in-depth when he employed me as the History professor. The Headmaster can recommend a member of staff for termination and, in normal circumstances, the Board of Governors would take the Headmaster’s recommendation and confirm the dismissal, but the Board as it is now is often at odd ends with Headmaster Dumbledore.” Remus brushed his fingers through the condensation gathering on his glass. “His previous attempts to remove him have been less than successful.”

“Well, obviously.” Sirius sniffed and took another drink. “The Board of Governors has always been filled with a bunch of cowardly toffs. Of course, it used to be a bunch of cowardly toffs afraid of Dumbledore, but ah, times changes.”

“I can understand your frustration—.”

“Can you? Everything—everyone—has moved on. It’s all different, and I don’t know anything anymore. I spent twelve years in there, Moony, and I can’t—. So little of it remains. I remember almost none of it, just pieces—like the color of the wall or the texture of the stone. There should be more there, but it’s—.” He exhaled, eyes shut.

“The brain often disassociates itself from trauma. It doesn’t want you to process and remember the things that cause such overwhelming stress—.”

Sirius interrupted with a sharp, scathing grunt but said nothing else.

“Have you considered seeing a mind healer?”

“Remus, I’ve been free for a handful of hours. Let me at least finish this bottle before we start in on the mind healers, yeah?”

Chastised, Remus held up a hand in surrender, because it really had only been a few hours since they departed the courtroom and the well-wishers, and if Sirius wanted a night to soak in the reality of freedom, then Remus would refrain from nagging.

But when should he bring it up? In his recollections, Sirius had never been one to accept advice without having first asked for it, and he wasn’t sure how to frame the idea so Sirius wouldn’t assume he thought him mad. Remus didn’t think that, of course, but the other man needed to talk to somebody. Everyone in Grimmauld Place could benefit from an extended therapy session.

“Gaunt asked about her.”

Blinking, Remus returned his wandering gaze to the wizard across from him. “Pardon?”

“Gaunt. Before I finally managed to get out the door, he came to give his own congratulations—the typical political posturing. He wanted to shake my hand, apologized on behalf of the ‘former administration,’ pontificating on how it was an uphill struggle to correct failures of his predecessors—and then he asked if I’d be meeting my daughters afterward. He buried the lead well enough, but I was raised to be the Head of the House of Black, wasn’t I? Dear ol’ mummy and father were gobshites, but they taught me to read between the lines.”

“I’m sure Orion and Walburga would be pleased to know something of what they taught stuck with you.”

Sirius gave a short, mirthless laugh. “Yeah, true. I told him in the politest way possible to get fucked.”

“Sirius!”

“I asked if he didn’t mind if I stopped listening to him and if he would do me the great honor of gifting me with his absence.” He laughed again. “But that’s part of the reason I decided it best to get out tonight. Ten Galleons says that gimlet-eyed sod by the bar who walked in five minutes after us is going to report back to Gaunt.”

Remus didn’t turn to see who Sirius meant, but he did shift his glass, using its reflection to see the fuzzy, dull outline of several bodies slumped in barstools, except for one form at the end, sitting up, unmoving.

“I don’t get what he wants with Harriet,” Sirius muttered. “According to Dumbledore, he doesn’t know anything, so why bother with some half-blood orphan?”

“Something happened in her first year with the Muggle Studies instructor, Quirinus Quirrell. Harriet witnessed his death.”

“Merlin’s ghost.”

“It was an accident, but the specifics were leaked to Gaunt through an agent he acquired at the school. Ever since he’s had more than a passing interest in getting a hold of her.”

Sirius scrubbed his face again, fingers ghosting over his brow and down to his mouth as he leaned in his chair. Remus sipped his drink again and then repositioned the glass, watching the vague shapes by the bar still. Sirius served himself another Firewhiskey, the bottle getting low, though he had enough sense to conjure another glass and fill it with water. The Aurors had handed him his wand—his real wand, not the one he’d filched in Knockturn Alley last year—along with his other effects, including the necessary paperwork declaring his innocence. Sirius had crumpled the lot, shrunken it, and stuffed it in a robe pocket.

“I don’t have a clue what I’m going to do,” Sirius sighed.

“About?”

“The girls,” he said. “Yesterday, they weren’t big enough to fit in my hands—and today, they’re suddenly fourteen. When did that happen? Who allowed that? And I’m supposed to take care of them? Jesus Christ.”

“It’s a bit late for all this, isn’t it?” Remus replied, sharper than intended. “You accepted being Harriet’s godfather years ago, in the middle of a war. You knew what might happen. You—we—accepted what it would mean to bring Elara into this world.”

“I didn’t bloody well think I’d spend more than a decade in Azkaban and get thrown into a house with two strangers, did I?” He smacked the table, glasses rattling. “They hate me.”

“They don’t hate you.”

“They hate me, Moony—or, at least, Elara does. Harriet treats me like some kind of odd, distant relative who’s come round for Christmas dinner unannounced.”

“She does not.”

“She does! And Elara and I got into a flaming row over dishes! Dishes! That old Black crockery mum used to use on her favorite guests.

Remus shook his head. “And why were you arguing over dishes?”

“I was throwing that rubbish out, and she got upset. So I told her we’d get new ones, and it’s as if she didn’t hear me or didn’t want to hear me. I thought the girl would brain me if given half the chance.”

“And did you explain what you were doing before you did it?” Remus asked, already knowing the answer. “Elara grew up in an orphanage, Sirius. She did not have means or possessions of her own. Of course she’d react poorly to you wasting things in the house she’d come to think of as her own.” He could empathize with her; his family hadn’t been poor, but they’d needed to be frugal more often than not while he was growing up. Remus was probably poorer now than he’d been as a boy, and Sirius—for all his own childhood tribulations and trials—had been privileged. He’d not wanted for anything, because even when his parents sent seething Howlers in the post, they followed the letters up with money and fresh Quidditch gear and new clothes.

Sirius stared into his drink as he contemplated Remus’ words, his brow furrowed.

“As for them being strangers, you’re going to have to get to know them as you would any new person you’ve just met. I know it’s not the same as watching them grow up, but they’re still children with a lot more growing to do. You need to make an effort to understand them as their own people, not just figments of their parents.”

The brow furrowing increased, and when Sirius looked up, it was joined by the slightest approximation of a pout. “What have you learned so far? Being their teacher for a year and everything.”

Remus hummed and balanced his chin on his folded hands, contemplating what to say. Sirius continued to pout until Remus couldn’t help a small chuckle, his chest lighter than it’d been in a long, long time. James and Lily were still gone, and nothing would erase the pain he’d experienced in the last thirteen years—but Sirius hadn’t betrayed them, and Elara was alive. Even in his wildest daydreams, Remus could not have imagined asking for more.

“Harriet likes Quidditch.”

“Oh, come off it, Remus. I knew that much.”

“Harriet likes Quidditch—,” Remus repeated with a superior tip of his nose. “Not because she’s particularly fanatic about the sport, but because she loves to fly. Professor Slytherin had her removed from the school team for his own reasons, and she’s more upset about the dismissal than she lets on. She’s indelibly curious about magic, though maybe not so much about the history of it,” he admitted, smiling. “She enjoys learning about her parents, but not in excess. I imagine it makes her sad to hear too much about the family she’ll never truly know. She’s also more manipulative than you’d expect.”

“Wh—manipulative? Harriet?”

“Yes. Not in a malicious manner, but if there’s a conversation she’d rather not have, she’s fairly accomplished at redirecting one’s attention if they’re not expecting it.” He finished his gillywater and, instead of returning to the bar for a refill, whispered a spell to fill the cup with plain water. “She’s…kind. I’m ashamed to admit I had my misconceptions, considering where she and Elara had been sorted, but…Harriet never spoke a word against me after what happened in the forest. Despite being chased and hunted by a werewolf, she hasn’t treated me different in the slightest.”

“Good. She shouldn’t.” He spoke firmly, but Remus detected the relief in Sirius’ tone. “And Elara?”

Again, Remus paused to gather his thoughts and Sirius waited with evident impatience, hungry for information. “She’s quite sensitive,” Remus finally said, earning an incredulous look from his tablemate. “Oh, she comes across as aloof and remote, but she’s a fourteen-year-old girl who has never had an adult to rely on and has experienced a truly horrid childhood. She’s had precious little control in her life, which must be part of the reason she’s reacted so negatively to your sudden appearance.”

The revelation did little to assuage Sirius. “I thought—I’d hoped she would be happy about it. About not being alone.”

“In her mind, she hasn’t been alone. She has Harriet and Miss Granger—their best friend, one of my cleverest students. Elara fears you’re going to change things—that you’ll fight Dumbledore needlessly on some irrelevant issue and get Harriet removed from the house—.”

“I wouldn’t!” Sirius argued, striking the table again with his palm, rattling the flatware. “I wouldn’t! And it’s shite that he can remove her anyway!”

“We aren’t going to argue this in public. My point, Sirius, is that Elara won’t react well to change, and she’s sensitive to people’s behavior concerning her or those close to her. Talk to her. Let her know your thoughts and allow her to come to you with hers.”

Sirius harrumphed. “You make it sound simple.”

“It is simple. Though, maybe more difficult in practice than in theory. Elara and Harriet are teenagers, after all. We should probably give thanks to Merlin and Morgana that they’re infinitely better behaved than you and James were at that age.”

A wolfish grin spread across Sirius’ face, and his eyes glimmered with past recollections, of all the misdeeds he and James—and Remus too, if he was honest—had gotten into during their Hogwarts years. He looked younger when he smiled, more like the boy Remus had fallen for and less like the hollowed-out convict still featured on the old, weathered wanted posters.

“You’re not in this alone,” he said softly. “You have the Order behind you, ready to help. You have—.” Hesitating, Remus forced himself to add, “Me.”

Sirius didn’t say anything. Instead, he reached across the table and placed a thin, cool hand over Remus’. He squeezed, a reassuring pressure of skin against skin, of dry fingertips pressing into old scars without flinching. They returned to their drinks—and the hand stayed where it was.

 

x X x

 

The hour grew late as Sirius and Remus moved their conversation onto less pertinent issues, chatting about old acquaintances or trivial Wizarding news until the menacing shadow at the bar gave up his watch and disappeared. They waited another hour, then Sirius polished off the remainder of his drink—the remainder of the bottle—with a satisfying smack of his lips.

“So, are you coming with me to Grimmauld?”

“Sirius….”

He waved an inebriated hand. “None o’ that. Got an extra bedroom on the fourth floor—right next to Snape, the tosser, if you can withstand his presence.”

Remus considered the offer and decided he really was too tired to Floo all the way back to Hogwarts, and he wasn’t sure his companion was in a fit state to get back home in one piece on his own. His splinched bits would probably end up scattered across Piccadilly. “Yes, alright.”

Sirius settled the tab with Tom, the bartender, before they stepped into the alley out behind the Leaky Cauldron and linked arms. The ease with which Sirius gave himself over to Remus’ care was disconcerting, like an old jumper he’d tried on with the expectation of it not fitting, only to find it more comfortable than ever. Remus didn’t know what to make of it, and he shrugged Sirius off when they arrived in the park across from Grimmauld, Number Twelve looming dark and ominous and unfriendly before them. The city groaned with noise in the distance, but this street laid quiet in the arms of a humid summer night, the Muggles all abed, their lights dimmed and shuttered. Insects buzzed in the bushes, and the dry grass crunched under their shoes.

“Hey, Moony?” Sirius asked as they crossed the road, his gait stuttering as they reached the kerb. He had to fish out an old iron key from his waistcoat and hand it over to Remus to get the front door open. Remus had been to Grimmauld before years in the past, but he found the foyer hadn’t changed much. It was cleaner, perhaps, with a pair of girl’s shoes left by the umbrella stand. He thought the tartan cloak on the hook might belong to McGonagall, forgotten sometime earlier in the week.

“Yes?”

“D’you think things can ever go back to the way they were? Before?”

“I don’t think this is a conversation to have when you’re three sheets to the wind—mind the step!”

Sirius managed the stoop, though he had to grab hold of Remus’ shoulder when he tripped on the raised threshold. “Bloody house is trying to kill me,” he snarled, flicking disheveled hair from his eyes. “But I’ve got my wand now. D’you hear that, you minging heap? You pile of planks and hippogriff dung? It’s war, now!”

Naturally, the house didn’t answer, though Remus thought it felt decidedly more ghoulish than it had a minute prior. With their luck, the house-elf heads would reanimate and try to eat them. “I see you remember the discussion about speaking with Elara before making any rash decisions about the house.”

“Hell.” Sirius made for the stairs and slid on the carpet, nearly toppling arse over elbows.

“Merlin, Padfoot. Let’s get you up to bed.”

With his arm once more linked through the other wizard’s, Remus helped him climb the stairs and braced a hand on the railing to keep his balance. Sirius slurred imprecations about the covered portrait on the first landing but otherwise said nothing until they reached the next floor, at which point he tugged on Remus until he stopped, gesturing at the light spilling out from under one of the closed doors.

“That’s Harriet’s room,” he said. “She shouldn’t be up, should she? It’s gone midnight by now.”

“No, she shouldn’t,” Remus agreed, considering. He let go of Sirius to cross the landing and gently rapped a knuckle against the door, calling, “Harriet? Are you awake?”

No answer. He tried again to a similar result—and Sirius leaned off the wall, grabbing the door’s handle.

“She probably nodded off and left the candles lit. Merlin knows I’ve done it enough times—.”

“Sirius, wait—.”

The door creaked open—.

“Harriet, are you—?”

Sirius’ question cut off with a sudden, startled shout as he fumbled for his wand—and Remus gasped as seven feet of living, hissing serpent reared off Harriet’s empty bed and bared monstrous fangs in their direction. Had Sirius been sober, his spell would have probably lit the linens alight, but instead, it shattered the window and tore the curtains. Harriet came leaping out of her trunk at the bed’s foot—James’ old trunk, Remus recognized—and yelled “Don’t hurt him!” as she threw herself between Sirius and the furious, venom-spewing beast.

Remus almost suffered his second heart attack of the night when something started screaming down below, and a door threw itself open overhead, footsteps pounding down the steps. Mussed by sleep and dressed in her night things, Elara appeared from one of the other doors on the landing, and Snape swept into view from the stairwell, still dressed in his daytime attire. Remus had to wonder for half a delirious moment if there was credence to the rumor of him being a vampire, as it really seemed Snape never bloody slept.

“What the fuck is that?! Godric’s gonads, Harriet, get away—!”

“Miss Black, will you go shut your grandmother up—?”

“Leave Livi alone!”

Harriet wrapped her thin arms around the snake’s neck, bringing its head closer to her chest—and to Remus’ astonishment, it stopped hissing and vibrating with rage, though its sharp eyes never left Sirius, its tongue flickering in indignation. Elara stomped downstairs, down toward the screaming, rude diatribe emanating from a familiar voice, and it cut off with a flourish of rustling fabric. Snape yanked Sirius back by the collar—earning a short, startled curse—and peered into the bedroom. He scoffed.

“All this drama over a pet, Black? How insipid.”

“That’s not a ruddy pet! What on earth—?!”

Harriet set about gathering the angry black serpent into her arms, looping together far too many coils over her arm. “This is, err, Livius,” she explained, stepping around the broken glass on the floor. “Sorry, I didn’t mention him before, but—um—he’s my familiar. I didn’t steal him, I swear.”

Sirius sputtered and choked, torn between what to explode over first, his face pale and glistening with nervous sweat. “That’s not a familiar, Harriet, that’s a venomous, wild animal!” He glowered at Snape. “How could you let her keep that thing in here?!”

“I don’t let Potter do anything. I’m not her nanny.” Snape gave his wand a lazy flick, repairing the window and tattered curtains. “She’s a Parselmouth, Black.”

“A Parselmou—?!

Harriet had at last gathered the snake together and tucked it under the sheets, pulling the thicker eiderdown over its horned head. She turned—and blushed, sneaking glances at the clothes and personal items strewn about the floor and dresser. There was a box of feminine products on the rug, and she kicked it under the bed with considerable force. “What’re you doing in my room anyway?” she demanded. “I didn’t let you in here!”

Sirius and Remus both shared abashed, uncomfortable looks. “We were checking on you,” Remus said. “It’s quite late, and we saw your candles were still lit.”

“What are you doing still awake, Potter?” Snape demanded as he crossed his arms and raised an imperious brow. “Decided to do a bit of midnight cleaning?”

Harriet’s blush deepened, and her green eyes flashed behind her spectacles. “Shove off, Snape! It’s none of your bloody business!” she shouted. “And get out of my room!”

A raw burst of magic threw the door shut in their faces, plunging the corridor into darkness once more aside for the bar of candlelight lingering at the threshold.

“Brilliant,” Elara intoned from behind the trio of wizards, her tone dripping disdain. “You’ve intruded on her privacy and threatened her familiar in one go. Truly brilliant.”

“And no one thought to tell me about this familiar?” Sirius retorted, ignoring Snape’s sudden, inexplicable retreat. Remus watched him go, pondering the odd look in the man’s black eyes when Harriet had addressed him directly. It had only lasted for a moment, but teaching with the man for a year had shown Remus how infrequent such flares of emotion were for the Potions Master. It was telling. “No one thought to tell me there was a ruddy monster in the house?! What in the world even is that thing?! How was I supposed to react to that?!”

“You never asked.” Elara returned to her room, pausing before entering. “I have a familiar as well, if you wanted to know. An owl,” she added. “He’s not friendly.”

“Of course bloody not.”

Her door snapped shut, leaving Sirius and Remus alone. Sirius stared after his daughter—their daughter—for one long, lingering, silent moment, then turned heel and headed back downstairs. Remus followed, sighing, and wondered how long it would take for him to remember there was no liquor in the house.

Not long at all.


 

A/N: Meanwhile, back at Hogwarts:

Dumbledore, sitting up in bed: “Ah poop, I forgot to tell them about the snake!”

Dumbledore: “…….”

Dumbledore, laying back down: “Oh well, they’ll figure it out.”

Chapter 158: little poisons

Chapter Text

clviii. little poisons

 

Harriet peeked into the swirling amber liquid inside her teacup and grumbled.

Next to the cup, the old wooden table held her open potions kit and Herbology textbook, the page held down with a carved salt shaker shaped like a leering skull. There was also a tiny cauldron set above a dish of sand and a little canister of student-grade phosphorus. Harriet consulted the page again, propping her cheek against her hand, and then rattled through the mostly depleted packets and bottles inside the kit.

She’d used almost everything last year, and they weren’t due to go to Diagon Alley until the end of the month.

“‘The leaves of the ‘Mandragora officinarum’ are a source of tropane alkaloids (atropine, scopolamine, cuscohygrine, et al.),’” Harriet read. “‘As such, the leaves cannot be used in topical or internal potions without first being prepared in the proper inertia agent. Symptoms of Mandragora poisoning mirror those of atropine poisoning, including tachycardia, hallucinations, dizziness, and vomiting.Merlin!”

Harriet was inclined to spit out the Mandrake leaf currently stuck under her tongue, but she knew Elara had prepared it before giving it to her. She knew that. It didn’t stop the leaf from tasting bitter and strange and vaguely poisonous.

She skimmed the rest of the entry—trying not to linger overlong on the list of poisoning symptoms or the creepy drawings of fully-grown Mandrakes—and found the addendum, which listed the proper companion book meant for potions. Harriet memorized the title and dashed upstairs to the library, asking the portrait of Headmaster Black for assistance in locating the appropriate tome. It was out of date by a whole century, but it would serve her purposes.

She returned to the basement, ignoring the muffled voices in the living room.

Bloody idiots, the both of them.

Sighing, Harriet opened the stiff textbook and searched for the page she needed.

“‘The magical composition of ‘Mandragora officinarum’ reacts negatively with the other flora of its family and with reagents of similar alkaloid compositions.’”

That meant if Harriet had the sudden hankering to mix in anything poisonous, it would probably ruin her mandrake leaf, but it didn’t mention anything about normal, non-poisonous plants. Relieved, she read the rest of the insert, going through it twice, before she dropped a sprig of rosemary, mint leaves, and three drops of grapeseed oil into the cauldron with three cups of witch-water. She checked it twice before spilling some grains of phosphorus into the sand dish. It was different than the stuff found in the Muggle world, but it still burned hot when ignited, leering red flames curling around the bottom of her blackened cauldron.

The voices overhead grew louder. Harriet stirred her concoction, ignoring the noise, and counted the rotations under her breath. She went to stick her face into the steam, then remembered her lab safety training at the last second, sitting back with a grunt and wafting the fumes to her nose.

It smelled okay. Rosemary and mint bound together were meant to mask the taste of most anything, though she’d read that the majority of potions didn’t react well to the addition. It made sense, given you couldn’t go about throwing things willy-nilly into the brew just because it tasted bad.

Harriet lifted the heated cauldron from the flame and set it on the cooling rack, using a ladle to spill a measure into her tea. She gave the cup a dubious glance and shrugged. “Cheers.”

She gulped down a mouthful—and grimaced. “Yuck!

When giving Harriet the Mandrake leaves she’d need to keep in her mouth for the Animagus potion, Elara had failed to mention it made absolutely everything taste like warm, sun-baked rubbish. How Elara, who got sick when something simply looked a bit off, had managed to keep the leaf in her own mouth for an entire month without spitting it out would go down as one of the world’s most puzzling unsolved mysteries.

The mint and rosemary potion made the tea taste less like soggy garbage and more like a mouthful of prickle bush. Harriet pondered how it could possibly be spicy.

“Definitely don’t have a career in potion inventing,” she groused, giving the tea another sip, shuddering. “Bloody hell.”

A month. She had to keep the leaf in for an entire lunar cycle. Harriet thought she might go spare or waste away before then.

Overhead, something fell with a dull thump, and a door slammed open. “Elara!

Harriet exhaled and leaned on her elbows, rubbing the pads of her fingers over her face, slipping them under her glasses to press on her closed eyes. They were arguing in the hall now. Well, they really never stopped arguing because if they weren’t arguing, they were sniping, and if they weren’t sniping, they were snarling, and if they weren’t snarling, they were ignoring one another with a heavy, expectant tension that Harriet hated most of all.

She’d read about Chinese water torture in a spy novel before and how the unpredictability of the drops had produced such anxiety and stress in the protagonist, he’d almost gone mad waiting for each splash of cold water on his face. Harriet felt something similar living in Grimmauld; it came as a relief when Elara and Sirius did start yelling at one another because lingering in silence only prolonged the inevitable, like holding a breath until it physically hurt, though the relief never lasted for long. It morphed to irritation, to anger, to sheer impatience.

They were just so bloody loud!

The stairs creaked under the weight of stomping feet, and Elara slammed into the room. Bright red color flushed her cheeks, and Harriet thought steam might escape her ears if she got any angrier.

“Of all the impossible morons in this world,” she seethed through clenched teeth. “I share genes with the most moronic one of all!”

Harriet chose not to comment, having no desire to insert herself into whatever argument they were playing out now. She concentrated on the potions’ text—which included even uglier illustrations than the Herbology one, whole diagrams on dissecting roots that looked like wailing, knobby infants.

“Horrid Gryffindors!” Elara spotted the teapot left by the hob and went to fashion herself a cup, sloshing hot liquid on the counter. “The absolute audacity of that man!”

Again, Harriet said nothing, and her silence only served to irk Elara. Once she had her drink, she came to stand next to Harriet and glanced into the messy cauldron, quirking a brow. “Why aren’t you using the potions lab?”

Harriet ground her teeth and closed her books, disregarding the blackened door off the kitchen—and the ominous occupant therein.

“Ah, that’s right. Because you’re quarreling with Snape.”

“I’m not quarreling with anyone.”

“No? Then why aren’t you using the potions lab?”

“Elara, leave it alone.”

A bang from upstairs interrupted whatever Elara meant to say in response, something solid colliding with the floor, and a reciprocal snarl erupted in the potions lab Elara kept bothering Harriet about. Snape burst out of the room and didn’t spare them an ounce of notice as he darted up the stairs and started shouting at Sirius. “Black, will you SHUT UP?!”

“Bugger off! This is my house, Snivellus! I can be as loud as I want!”

Harriet wished he wouldn’t. She wished Snape wouldn’t and Elara wouldn’t—but Snape was already in the foyer yelling up the stairwell, and a yelling Snape was a furious Snape, which meant the whole bloody house would suffer for it. The portrait on the landing started screaming hateful invectives about Snape’s mum, startling Elara into dropping her cup, Harriet kneading her brow to abate the headache within. Her head hurt so much she could barely see straight.

“Sirius knows shouting will set off Walburga,” Elara complained as she fished out her wand and pointed it at the broken teacup. “He knows that! And she gets more and more impossible to quiet each time she throws off the curtains! God help me, having such an impossible wizard for a father!”

“At least you have a father.”

Harriet regretted the words the moment they slipped out, and she squeezed her eyes shut, unwilling to look at her god-sister. Elara froze, and the portrait went silent as someone managed to get the curtains in place, but the house still felt much too loud to Harriet, like the ghost of their anger was hovering against her back, breathing on her neck. She pushed away from the table and left the basement, Elara calling after her. Harriet stopped in the foyer for a second, glaring at the gloomy stairwell, and strode out the front door into the sunlight.

It wasn’t much better outside; the temperature had risen as the summer matured, and not a lick of breeze could be found in the humid London streets, but it was quieter, and Harriet didn’t pause as she walked out of Number Twelve and shut the door behind her. She reached the edge of the wards, turned right, and headed in that direction along the sidewalk.

The ache in her shoulders and head abated the farther she went, sweat beading in her hairline under the sun, and Harriet exhaled loud and forceful, startling a bloke on the stoop of Number Three.

She didn’t blame Elara for her resentment or need to antagonize Sirius, even if Harriet didn’t empathize with it much. Sirius was difficult, prone to mood swings and stubbornness, adamant that Livi couldn’t wander the house and that Harriet couldn’t have snakes at the dining table. Elara didn’t help matters, flying off the handle if something as silly as a coaster went missing, and Harriet suspected Kreacher was moving stuff about to goad his mistress into having a row with Sirius. Snape lurked like a demon in the basement waiting to be set loose, Mably cried and fought Kreacher, and Harriet just wanted to sit in the lounge and do her homework without someone throwing crockery.

She crossed the road and wandered into a busier avenue, though she stayed aware of her surroundings, checking the signs and landmarks as she went. Merlin forbid she got lost in the city.

What would life be like if James Potter suddenly came back from beyond the grave? Would Harriet be angry, too, if her own father slid into her life without warning? Well, she told herself. It’s not the same thing. Elara’s dad was in prison for a heinous crime, and mine’s dead.

But Elara grew up thinking her parent was just as dead as Harriet knew hers to be, so did it make it worse to discover him alive but beyond reach? Did that fester bitterness, and was it worth the constant agony of living in a house where everyone bloody hated one another?

Maybe, Harriet thought without much conviction, pausing outside a bakery to let the delicious smells roll over her. She swallowed and could taste the Mandrake leaf’s essence in her saliva. Merlin, that’s gross.

Whatever Elara’s hangups, Harriet would have traded a great deal of things to have her own father back—or her mum. She really wished she had her mum with her. She wished Aunt Petunia didn’t despise her. She wished she could stay with the Flamels if Elara and Sirius intended to bicker all summer until blue in the face.

Harriet glimpsed a familiar logo among the milling Muggles and realized she’d stumbled upon a charity shop. She went inside and hummed with appreciation when the cool, conditioned air poured over her sweaty nape and sensitive ears. The man behind the register in the front gave her a cursory look, then went back to chatting with another customer, and Harriet wandered deeper into the store.

Some of her only fond memories from life with her relatives came from visiting charity shops with Aunt Petunia. Her aunt never bought anything new for Harriet, so she’d taken her niece to second-hand stores whenever Harriet absolutely needed clothes that Dudley’s hand-me-downs couldn’t provide. Of course, Petunia never let her buy anything herself, but she’d allowed Harriet to explore and to look around at all the odds and ends. It’d been a great deal of fun to a child who’d never been permitted anywhere aside from the grocery store or the park.

Harriet didn’t have any Muggle money on her, but she still browsed the aisles. She’d been lucky she hadn’t stormed out of the house in robes or something magical, instead wearing a pair of shorts, a thin jumper, and her school shoes, which were getting worn on the bottom from overuse. She discovered a shelf in the back dedicated to tatty old paperbacks—and to her delight, many were fantasy novels, including a few of her favorites. Wizarding fiction didn’t have anything on Muggle fiction. Harriet sat on the carpet, folded her legs, and started to read.

She didn’t know how long she stayed there, but it was cool and quiet with the sunlight softened by the height of the shelves and the buzzing fluorescents, and no one came to bother her so far into the store. Harriet knew the longer she procrastinated, the worse her eventual telling off would be, but she remained seated and pushed thoughts of Grimmauld Place and her complicated life from her mind, concentrating on the book in her hands.

It was peaceful for a time.

Someone came to stand next to her, and Harriet blinked, looking at a magenta trouser leg.

“Good afternoon, Harriet,” Albus Dumbledore said, smiling at the befuddled Slytherin witch. He wore the gaudiest Muggle suit she’d ever seen, though she guessed it was passable enough for London. Anywhere in the country, and he would have been better off wearing robes.

“Err—hullo, Headmaster,” she replied. “What are—?” She nearly asked what he was doing there but then rolled her eyes at herself for being such a numpty. “How d’you find me, sir?”

Still smiling, Dumbledore dipped his wizened hand into the pocket of his jacket and withdrew a familiar glass lens. Harriet had a copy of the same lens hanging under her jumper, along with an Erkling-bone spoon and Hugh’s skull. The Argonaut’s Atlas would show where any three of its paired lenses were at any given time. “A fascinating invention. Miss Black was kind enough to lend it to me.”

“Oh.”

Professor Dumbledore returned the Atlas to his pocket and tipped his head as he observed her, keen blue eyes lingering on the paperbacks she’d set next to her. “Everyone was quite worried when you left without mentioning where you intended to go. It’s quite dangerous to go off on your own.”

“Oh,” Harriet repeated more dully than before. She knew that. They must have been worried if they’d contacted the Headmaster and Elara had handed over her Atlas. Harriet felt guilty causing a panic when all she’d really wanted was a bit of time to herself. “I’m sorry, sir.”

“It’s quite all right, dear girl. I imagine it’s stifling being indoors so often.”

It wasn’t just being indoors; it was the constant confrontation, the conflict. It needled at Harriet as it had when she still lived with the Dursleys, and she had an overbearing need to get away from it.

“Is Elara okay? We—her and me and Hermione—promised to never give anyone our Atlases. She must’ve been scared.”

“Oh, Miss Black is in good health, though she seems to believe you two had a misunderstanding of sorts.” He peered at Harriet over the top of his half-moon spectacles. “Don’t worry. Even the best of friends will have tiffs from time to time, my dear. It’s healthy to express one’s self and disagree with a friend or loved one when you feel the need to.”

Sirius and Elara must be the healthiest people in England then, Harriet thought, amused and annoyed in equal increments. “If you say so, sir.”

“Severus was so concerned, he was about to look for you himself when Miss Black brought her Atlas to my attention.”

The mention of Snape hit Harriet like a snowball to the back of the head, and she clenched her jaw, glowering at her folded knees. Her derisive snort did not go unnoticed.

“Is something amiss, Harriet?”

“No, sir.” Gathering her courage—and no small amount of indignation—she forced herself to look up and meet his gaze. “Why did you hire him, Professor?” she asked. “When you know what he is?”

Shock flickered through the older wizard’s face, his white eyebrows lifting toward his hairline. “He spoke to you about that? I must admit, I’m surprised.”

“More like he shouted it at me. After—after that night, with Greyback, when I stopped by his office.”

“Ah,” he muttered mostly to himself. “I had wondered what was bothering the boy, but never mind my maundering. I have my reasons for Professor Snape’s appointment, and I believe wholeheartedly in his character despite what flaws might linger. Has he done something to abuse your trust since his revelation?”

Trust? Did—did Harriet trust Snape? What in the world? It had never occurred to her, but then again, trust did not come easily to Harriet. Did a perceived slight to that confidence have more to do with Harriet’s anger and emotions than what the wizard did fourteen years ago? She didn’t know.

“No, Professor.” He hummed a thoughtful note as Harriet closed the book she’d been reading and gently returned it and the others to the shelf, getting to her feet. “Snape told me…he told me about what he did. What he said to—him. About…about how my parents died, and there being a proph—.”

Headmaster Dumbledore interrupted her by squeezing Harriet’s shoulder. Not hard, but with enough pressure for her to know he didn’t want her to publicly mention the prophecy. Harriet didn’t think there’d be Death Eaters or agents of the Dark Lord out poking through discount bins, but better safe than sorry.

“I believe this is a conversation to be had in private,” he said, and Harriet’s face fell, thinking about Grimmauld Place and the lecture no doubt waiting for her. “Would you care to come with me to my office? I can let the others know you’re with me from there.”

Relief poured through her, though it mingled with a seed of dread as she thought about what he could possibly have to say about Snape. At least she didn’t have to go back yet. “Yes, sir.”

“Excellent. That leaves one last thing—.” He dipped his hand once more into the pocket holding the Atlas, and to Harriet’s curiosity, withdrew a folded Muggle tenner. He handed it to her with a wink. “I’ll meet you outside.”

Harriet watched Professor Dumbledore turn and stroll off toward the shop’s entrance. A Muggle woman and her teenager glanced in his direction with shared looks of incredulity and broke into a fit of giggles. With a soft snort, Harriet plucked the stack of novels she’d been perusing off the shelf and headed toward the register.

She wasn’t looking forward to this conversation.

 


A/N: Before someone goes off on how childish Elara is being—well, yeah. The fourteen-year-old with unprocessed trauma and a budding Dark magic addiction is going to be childish and unbearable at times, especially when the environment she previously controlled is being challenged. She ’ll get better, but not overnight.

Dumbledore: “I found her in a charity shop.”

Snape: “Can you get a refund?”

Dumbledore: “Severus, no.”

Chapter 159: despondent creature

Chapter Text

clix. despondent creature

 

Harriet’s first steps into Professor Dumbledore’s office were greeted by a sudden flurry of cheerful singing.

Oof!” she gasped as the wizard’s familiar soared and dropped upon her, and Harriet’s glasses would have been knocked clean off by his crimson wing had they not been Charmed into place. “It’s nice to see you too, Fawkes,” she told the bird sourly.

Dumbledore chuckled at the pair and gave a passing effort to remove Fawkes as he ushered Harriet to a seat, but the phoenix remained content on her shoulder, poking his beak at her pockets in search of treats. Harriet shifted under his weight, pursing her lips when she felt the prick of talons against her collarbone. Though he was careful, she’d been scratched more than once by those sharp claws before.

She settled in the chair and lowered her little plastic sack of books to the floor, where it leaned against the chair’s leg. For such an innocuous item, the Muggle bag was easily the most out-of-place oddity in the room.

“Would you like something to eat, Harriet?” the Headmaster asked as he sat behind his great desk. He wrote out a note with a quick flourish of his eagle quill and sent it spiraling into the hearth. It disappeared with a burst of green flames. “Perhaps a snack? Or something to drink?”

Harriet declined, if only because the Mandrake leaf was still lodged under her tongue, and she didn’t want to make a spectacle of herself trying to eat.

“Very well,” he said, leaning his elbow upon the desk and making as if to steeple his fingers, remembering himself at the last moment. Harriet wondered if he did that a lot, if the phantom urge to use his right arm overcame him and if he felt sad for it not being there. “I must speak with you before we have our conversation about Professor Snape.”

Harriet stroked Fawkes’ breast and nervously eyed the older wizard. Was she in trouble, then? “Yes, sir?”

“I would like to know why you ran away from Grimmauld Place.”

At first, Harriet didn’t have an answer for him because she couldn’t quite parse the words. “But I—I didn’t run away, Professor! I just needed some time to myself.”

“And you felt you needed to leave the house despite knowing the danger in doing so?”

There was no judgment in the Headmaster’s tone, though if anyone else had spoken them, Harriet would’ve winced at the recrimination.

“I don’t mean to chastise you, dear girl. I simply worry, as Severus has brought the contentions within the house to my notice. I will be speaking with Sirius to ensure the incessant arguing with his daughter either comes to an end or is brought within an acceptable increment. I will not hesitate to remove you if I find it is in your best interest.”

Harriet jumped to her feet, shocked. “But sir!” she cried.

“I am not saying this to be cruel. I allowed myself to be foolish before and to blindly trust the good intentions of family when I placed you in a home, and I promised I would not be so complacent or negligible again.”

“But they’re nothing like the Dursleys. Not at all, sir!”

“Emotional neglect is still neglect, my girl.” He observed her over his half-moon spectacles. “And if it is so overwhelming it has driven you from safety, then it is not something I could or even want to ignore. You deserve a pleasant, calm home. I will speak with Sirius.”

Harriet subsided and sunk into her chair again, Fawkes warbling on her shoulder. She didn’t want to leave Grimmauld Place. She just wanted the arguing to stop—though, she wondered if Professor Dumbledore talking with her godfather would do any good or if it would only frustrate the man. She should not have run out of the house, but Merlin! Harriet despised being cooped inside for days on end, and she resented Gaunt and Voldemort and Riddle and whoever else wished her ill and couldn’t let a girl have an ordinary childhood. Or, as ordinary as one could get when they were both orphaned and magical.

Not that I’m exactly a child anymore, Harriet thought.

Professor Dumbledore ordered tea, and Harriet accepted a cup, though it still tasted of leafy sewage and she had to concentrate on keeping from making faces. Fawkes dipped his beak and seemed to find the tea to his satisfaction, so Harriet held the cup and saucer up for him while she and the Headmaster sat in companionable silence.

“Ah,” the elderly wizard sighed as he savored his last sip of overly sweetened White Peony. “Now that we are watered and refreshed, let us bend our minds to the current predicament presented by our favorite Potions Master.”

Seeing as Snape was the only Potions Master Harriet knew, she acceded with Professor Dumbledore’s words; he was her favorite and her least favorite, most hated, despised, and reviled Potions Master.

“You asked me why I employed Severus when I am aware of his previous occupation as a Death Eater.”

“Yes, sir.”

“The answer is both complicated and simple, as the best answers are. The simple answer would be I have use for him.” Dumbledore had the grace to give a slight, sheepish shrug when Harriet arched a brow. “Severus…is an eminently capable wizard. He is the youngest Master of his trade in decades, one of our highest cumulative N.E.W.T achievers, and a person of indomitable strength. I did not hire him for any of these reasons, however.”

Dumbledore pressed a finger to his lips as he gathered his thoughts. Fawkes took the opportunity to hop from Harriet’s shoulder to the arm of the chair, settling there as Harriet continued to smooth his feathers. “You are aware that there is a…connection between our Defense professor, Minister Gaunt, Tom Riddle, and Voldemort?”

“Yes,” Harriet said. “You told me at the end of second year that they’re the same person, and yet not.”

“Correct.” He lowered his hand. “They are, and are not, the same person, and as such do and do not share the same ambitions.”

“That’s terribly unclear, Professor.”

He smiled, though it didn’t quite reach his eyes. “What they desire, my girl, no matter the road they have chosen to travel or the miens they utilize, is undisputed power.”

“Power?” Harriet wrinkled her nose. “But what does that have to do with Snape?”

Professor Snape.”

“Professor Snape, then.”

“Because Professor Snape, like so many young men and women before and after him, saw something he wanted in Lord Voldemort’s agenda.” He paused to allow Harriet’s disgusted grimace. “You yourself once commented you felt tempted by Voldemort’s promises, and you proved strong enough to resist. Should you not have compassion for those weaker than yourself?”

Harriet opened her mouth—and closed it, twice, unsure. “I—I want to say yes, Professor, but he…he’s a Death Eater.”

“It’s a difficult issue, yes. The world is not divided into halves that are true and untrue, good and evil, or right and wrong. I have known Dark wizards who made their decisions because they were cruel and violent; I have known those who folded to Voldemort’s lot because they were frightened or vulnerable. I won’t defend Severus’ choices when he was younger; I only have evidence of his character in the present and knowledge of what he has done in reparation.” Dumbledore exhaled, low and sad. “I hired Professor Snape despite his past because he acts upon his former allegiances to impart critical information against Voldemort and his iterations—at great peril to himself, might I add.”

Pausing, Harriet furrowed her brow and glanced at Fawkes, who watched her with his sharp, beady eyes. “He’s…a spy? You hired him because he’s a spy against Voldemort?”

“Simply put, yes. He turned against Voldemort before the war ended and has continued surveillance in opposition to similar parties in the years since.”

Slytherin, Harriet realized, eyes widening. She’d always thought Snape and the Defense professor were—well, not friends, but associates or allies of some kind, Snape always shadowing Slytherin through the corridors or in the common room, doing whatever the wizard required of him. Snape was spying on him? Bloody hell.

Professor Dumbledore took advantage of Harriet’s thoughtful quiet and waved his hand, one of his many cabinets popping open. A curious bowl floated through the air from the cabinet’s innards, drifting over until it settled on the desk with a solid click. Harriet leaned closer to inspect it and saw the flat bowl was made of gray, inscribed stone, filled with a bizarre material. It was neither liquid nor gas but somewhere in between, like a thick, pooling mist in which Harriet saw indistinct figures and shadows moving.

“Has Nicolas ever taken you into a Pensieve before, Harriet?”

She shook her head. “No, sir.”

“Oh? Surprising. Allow me to show you, then.” He again waved his hand at the bowl, and Harriet slid to her feet so she could come closer, her front bathed in the otherworldly blue light exuded by the basin’s mist. “This is a Pensieve. It allows one to pull thoughts and memories and musings from their mind and place them within the basin for perusal.”

“Really?” Harriet asked, peering closer. “Why would someone do that?”

“It separates your perception from the moment and allows for more diversified recall. It’s easier to form new perspectives or notice details you hadn’t spotted before when you can physically step back from your own recollection.”

Professor Dumbledore prodded the Pensieve with his wand and withdrew a glimmering silver ribbon connected to the end. He brought the ribbon to his temple, and it vanished with a flicker of light. As Harriet watched, he returned the wand to the Pensieve twice more, repeating the process, and then touched the tip of his wand to his temple and squinted, removing a silver ribbon instead of replacing it. Finally, he flicked his wand, and the ribbon detached, dropping into the Pensieve, dissolving into the white, meandering mist.

“Here is a memory of mine from 1981 I would like for you to see. I occurred not long after the deaths of your parents.”

Harriet’s eyes flicked from the Pensieve to the Headmaster’s. She didn’t have a clue what he meant for her to witness or how it would impact her thoughts on Snape, but it made her nervous. “What do I have to do, sir?”

“Touch your brow to the Pensieve’s edge. The rest will be self-explanatory.”

Frowning, Harriet shuffled her feet and eyed the Pensieve, then bent down toward the whirling mist. She breathed in, speculating what the mysterious substance smelled like and if it was safe to ingest—and as soon as her face came close to the basin, Harriet felt a hard jerk behind her navel. Reality suddenly bled away, and she was falling, hurtling through the air, and Harriet let out a smothered yelp when she landed.

The Headmaster’s office had disappeared. Turning in place, Harriet found it’d been replaced by a courtroom—a courtroom very much like the dark, intimidating dungeon where Sirius’ trial had taken place in the bowels of the Ministry. Thick gray swirls encumbered the room’s edges like bits of frazzled cotton stitching up the corners, all the details gone as thin as a child’s crooked drawing. A few people perched in the chairs and on the benches, the color of their plum-colored Wizengamot robes not as vibrant as Harriet remembered, their voices muffled behind white noise like the dead air between radio stations. Next to her sat a familiar face.

“Professor Dumbledore?” Harriet said, and her words came out quieter than she intended. Her breath huffed as if she had a thick cloth over her mouth. Dumbledore gave no indication that he’d heard her; instead, he was staring into the pit below, where a lone figure slouched in the prisoner’s chair.

It was Snape.

Harriet almost didn’t recognize him, though not because he looked terribly different than he did in the present. Given wizards didn’t age quite like Muggles did, he didn’t appear much younger, and he had the same, long dark hair, though his black robes had been replaced by a gray uniform, and he had the beginnings of a beard. Harriet had never seen him so…defeated, his spine bent, his head lowered toward his knees. His skinny arms twitched as if he would have put his hands over his face if they hadn’t been chained to the chair. The horrors of Azkaban lay upon him like a ghastly funerary shroud.

He didn’t have any of the scars around his left eye. Dumbledore still had both his hands.

As far as Harriet could tell, whatever trial had occurred was over, Dumbledore having not given her the entire memory. Perhaps that was why the room had gone so fuzzy at the edges; Dumbledore’s attention had turned from what few Wizengamot members dotted the raised seating and instead focused on Snape, who emerged crisp and clear in the Pensieve’s vision. When the Potions Master shifted his head, Harriet saw yellow and green bruises smeared across his wrists, hands, and cheekbones.

“It was a closed trial,” said a voice in Harriet’s ear. She nearly expired when she whipped around and found Dumbledore—the current Dumbledore, missing one arm and dressed in his ridiculous Muggle suit—seated on her other side. He smiled, but it fell as fast as it appeared. “Very short, and private. I provided evidence of Professor Snape’s shift in allegiance, and the details were kept from the Prophet’s grasp for his protection and anonymity. He was arrested and incarcerated, briefly, in the middle of November after a Death Eater by the name of Igor Karkaroff gave his name in return for amnesty.”

People moved in earnest now, dispersing, but Snape was still chained, and Harriet realized the front of the room, where Madam Bones had sat at Sirius’ trial, had grown less foggy. A man sat there, dark-haired, stern, adorned with a severe part and a trimmed, narrow mustache and frown lines that looked like they’d been carved into his skin with a knife. The glower he threw down at Snape’s bent head could have curdled milk.

“Barty Crouch Senior,” Dumbledore explained without prompting, looking at the Ministry official with an oddly blank expression, as if he’d thought of something unpleasant and meant to hide it. However, both the past and present Headmaster fidgeted with their sleeves when they glanced his way, and Harriet knew Dumbledore did the same thing when looking at Slytherin. “He used to be the head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement before a bit of family drama forced his reassignment. Barty was a very zealous man, especially when given authority over the Death Eater trials in 1981. He despised Dark magic and Voldemort’s followers, so much so I believe he dehumanized them. When we begin to see our enemies as lesser, as inhuman beasts unworthy of compassion or decency, we are little better than those we oppose, and such is the hubris poor Barty cannot shake.”

“Even Voldemort, Professor? Is he worthy of our compassion?” Harriet asked. Crouch stood and gathered his papers, still sneering at Snape.

“Compassion? No, I couldn’t say so. Voldemort has committed many monstrous acts, and yet, if he were at my mercy, I would not subject him to torture. I am a better man than that.”

Harriet looked again at the healing bruises spread on Snape’s thin face and scrawny hands. She watched how his fingers curled into fists when an Auror finally unbound the shackles to set him free. Past-Dumbledore stood, straightened his plum robes, and made for the steps, so Harriet and current-Dumbledore rose to follow him.

“Severus,” Dumbledore said, uncertain, as he reached down to cup a hand below Snape’s elbow. The Potions Master allowed the Headmaster to lever him out of the chair and yet still didn’t raise his head, his posture slumped and so bizarrely out of character, Harriet stared in wordless shock as they followed the pair from the courtroom to a small, stuffy antechamber across the dim corridor. There was nothing there but an old desk and a collection of mismatched chairs, and Harriet guessed it was where Sirius must have gone after the trial to collect his possessions and sign paperwork.

Snape shook Dumbledore’s hand off and slouched into the nearest seat. Harriet heard a click and glanced down, spotting the chains still hooked to the shackles on his skinny ankles. Dumbledore also saw this because he dismissed them with an angry flourish of his wand and asked in his most gentle tone, “Are you all right, Severus?”

“No,” Snape croaked in reply.

“We’ll get you to Poppy just as soon as we return to the castle, then—.”

Snape once more shied from Dumbledore’s touch like an unhappy, wild animal, and when he finally raised his chin, his expression exuded raw, poignant grief. He smelled unclean and sharply of salt, like some pale, half-dead sea creature pulled from the swelling tide, and his eyes were red-rimmed. Harriet didn’t think that was from someone hitting him, and she was so startled by his savage, tearful appearance, she backed up into the real Dumbledore. He steadied her with a hand on her shoulder.

“I don’t know why you bothered,” Snape said. “I belong on that rock. I belong there for all that I’ve done.”

“No.”

The short, curt reply incensed the younger man into baring his crooked teeth in a painful grimace. “You should have killed me that night on the hilltop. That is what I deserve—what I want. I don’t know why you bothered with—. With—! I should be dead. Please, God. I wish I was dead!”

“I said no.” Dumbledore knelt and took hold of Snape’s fists, squeezing tight enough to form new bruises over the old, shocking the stormy, disturbed look off Snape’s haggard face. “What use would you be to anyone then? How would you fulfill your promises? Are you such a coward, Severus?”

Snape gasped and looked down, the curtain of greasy hair falling between them. Silent sobs racked his frame. Harriet stared at the despondent creature and wanted nothing more than to leave this place.

“That was cruel,” she whispered, and the present-Dumbledore sadly nodded, his solemn gaze on Snape.

“Yes. Even when he was younger, Professor Snape didn’t respond well to softness, and in the depths of his grief after his best friend’s death, he would not hear affirmations. I had to be unkind at times for him to truly listen to me.”

Snape managed a small, choked statement. “I—I am not a coward.”

“Then prove it. Take the harder road and survive. Live. If not for yourself, then for Lily.”

Snape shuddered and sniffed, freeing one hand to wipe at his wet face, refusing to meet Dumbledore’s eyes.

“Her daughter is alive and well. Lily would want you to ensure she remains so.”

A soft snort left Snape—and he jerked his ratty sleeves down, hiding his hands and the slight, glinting scar wrapped about the right one. “She does not need me. I have never done anyone any good. Beyond that, does it matter? The Dark Lord is dead.”

“No, I don’t think he is, Severus. I don’t think he is.”

And then Snape had his face in his hands, the deep baritone of his voice gone high and thready in mournful agony. “I only ever wanted to escape the future I seemed doomed to find,” he said. “I only ever wanted to be better than what everyone thought I would become, and I failed. I failed, I always fucking fail. I never wanted this. Merlin, please—I cannot live with my failures. I cannot bear that my own idiocy has brought her end. Headmaster!”

“Every man must live with his mistakes. Trying to rectify them is what matters, and failure only occurs when you give up. I will not let you give up now, Severus.”

The door opened—and the memory began to fade, colors streaking like water through oil paint dripping on a tilted canvas. Harriet’s stomach lurched as Dumbledore gripped her arm, and they seemed to rise through the air, leaving Snape and the dim little chamber behind. Reality returned, and Harriet yelped at the sudden crick in her neck when she threw herself back into her chair. Fawkes let out a displeased chirp.

“Not an entirely pleasant experience,” Professor Dumbledore said as he settled, rubbing at his own sore neck under his gray hair. The memory continued to whirl and twist within the Pensieve, not unlike one of Harriet’s snakes in the terrarium, waiting to be fed. Circling and circling, a mass of coils never-ending.

Perspiration made the skin of her hands sticky, and Harriet wiped them on her thighs. She wished she hadn’t looked. The torn, wretched image of a ruined man didn’t mesh with her understanding of Snape, stirring like oil and water, spoiling her anger. In her heart, she knew Snape’s grief hadn’t been fake; she’d witnessed true malevolence in Voldemort when he stood over her mum’s corpse and laughed, and Snape was nothing like him. The Potions Master carried grief with him like a calling card, and it made him mean and spiteful and so profoundly, pathetically miserable.

He had not meant what he did, and still Harriet wanted to be mad, to rage against all semblance of empathy, but she also grew tired of hating him. For how long would she have to carry the grudges of dead people?

“I don’t think he’ll like that you showed me that, Professor.”

“No, he wouldn’t,” Dumbledore agreed with a sigh. “He would prefer you go on believing him cold and impervious and incapable of remorse, but I think it’s important you better understand the character of Severus Snape. He has loved and he has lost, and he has endeavored on to the best of his ability. There may come a time when he must do or say things that bring you to question his allegiance, and I would have you remember this: I trust Professor Snape. I believe you should as well.”

“I don’t know if I can. I don’t know if I want to—I’m very confused still, Headmaster. I’m sorry.”

She remembered Snape standing between herself and the werewolf. She remembered the horrible, garish red of the Dark Mark emblazoned on his pale flesh.

“She does not need me. I have never done anyone any good.”

But that wasn’t true, not in Harriet’s reckoning. Snape had saved her life—had saved the lives of her friends, had cared for the House of Slytherin while their inattentive Head ignored them in favor of his own agenda. He’d inadvertently gotten her parents killed. He was a prickly bastard, but Merlin did it hurt to remember him hunched over, begging to die.

Harriet didn’t think her mum would have wanted that.

Dumbledore only nodded at her admission. “There’s nothing to be sorry for, Harriet. I only ask you to keep an open mind. Allow Professor Snape to prove himself, for good or for ill, through his actions, and form your own opinion.”

Fawkes clicked his beak and leaned closer, Harriet’s fingers passing once more over his gleaming wing, feeling the fire that lived within his chest. She breathed in as she looked toward the window, the summer disproportionate in its yellow, cheerful glow, and she thought about Snape and Voldemort and the monster who resided even now in the dungeons, red-eyed and evil despite the youthful beauty of his face. The phoenix trilled.

“I will, Professor. I promise.”

 


A/N:

Dumbledore: *talks*

Harriet: “I’m taking your thesaurus away.”

Dumbledore: “That makes me disconsolate and bereaved.”

Chapter 160: the beetle and the hound

Chapter Text

clx. the beetle and the hound

 

When Harriet returned home, it was already past dark, and the dinner brought by Rikkety from Hogwarts had been eaten and cleared away. That left Sirius and Elara sitting at the dining room table, refusing to make eye contact, the silence thick and unsettling.

“Did his letter say what time she’d be back?”

“No. Not exactly.”

They waited.

An hour later, Harriet came through the Floo with Headmaster Dumbledore behind her, the taller wizard ducking to avoid knocking his head on the mantel. “Good evening, Sirius, Elara,” he greeted them, his smile genial but somewhat less friendly than usual. “Harriet, why don’t you go on upstairs now while I have a word with your family?”

Harriet grimaced but nonetheless nodded, saying, “Goodnight, Professor Dumbledore.”

“Goodnight, dear girl.”

She went up the stairs, quiet as a ghost—carrying a plastic sack from a Muggle shop Elara didn’t recognize. Dumbledore waited for her footsteps to fade, then waved his hand at the shut door, a thin ward laying itself across the entrance. “There we are,” he said—and then he turned to the table, took a seat across from them, and the lecture began.

Professor Dumbledore directed the vast majority of what he had to say at Sirius, who listened with ill-tempered intent, his eyes bright and his face flushed with embarrassment. Elara didn’t think he appreciated being talked down to, even if Dumbledore managed to leave him his dignity—more dignity than he deserved.

The Headmaster spoke on the value of communication, and the aura of disappointment swelled to encompass Elara in its crushing hold. Shamed, she kept her eyes on the table.

At least you have a father.

That was what Harriet had said—quietly, but also venomously. Elara had seen Harriet’s mood darkening since Sirius’ trial and had selfishly hoped it was because of him—but no. Instead, it was because of both of them.

On some level, Elara knew she took her situation for granted. She had access to a fortune, a comfortable house, and two fathers who wanted to be part of her life—while Harriet had money but no home and no blood relatives worth the air they soiled. Harriet had a bedroom that might be taken away from her, a tenuous net of supporters full of shifting gaps, the thought always in the back of her mind that she might have to leave, that she might not be able to stay. Harriet wanted to live with the Flamels but couldn’t because they were dying, and she didn’t want to admit it. She had nothing solid.

As a child, Elara had liked to think her parents had loved her and they’d gone on to heaven—but she hadn’t wished to be adopted, hadn’t wished for another family. She’d comprehended her own abnormality and had lived in fear of being taken home by strangers and then returned like a broken doll, so she settled for the rigors of the institution. Before the—the exorcism, the daily life and punishments doled out by the sisters had been bearable, if dreaded. Even so, Elara had kept the intrinsic knowledge of its impermanence close to her heart; one day, she knew she’d walk outside, the doors would shut behind her, and she would not have to look back. It would be a closed chapter of her life she did not need to revisit.

It wasn’t the same for Harriet. She hadn’t been neglected by the church or the government; she’d been neglected by her family, by her relatives, and she’d have to live with knowing the Dursleys were human rubbish for the rest of her life. Each time someone mentioned her mother, it would buzz in the peripheries like a persistent Snitch, the association of Lily’s sister treating her worse than most people treated their dogs.

Sirius made Elara want to scream and rage and cry all in the same breath, and yet he was there. There for her to malign and hate and curse at if she wished. There for her to forgive if she could find that within herself. She took that for granted.

None of it mattered—the money, the history, the house, all the things she and Sirius had been arguing over. Elara would light the match herself if it meant keeping Harriet in her life.

“May I be excused?” she asked Professor Dumbledore when he paused in his recriminations. He looked at her, thoughtful, then nodded—slipping his hand inside his pocket to retrieve her Atlas and gently slide it across the table.

“You may. Thank you for lending this to me, Miss Black. A most intriguing device.” He smiled. “Could you ask Professor Snape to come here? I have a few words for him before I depart.”

“Of course.”

The dingy potions lab was open, so Elara knew Snape wasn’t lurking inside. She departed the kitchen and headed up the stairs, grumbling about the climb as she passed the floor with her bedroom—Harriet’s door closed, candlelight filtering underneath—and came to the one above it. She knocked on the door to the room Snape had commandeered.

A body shifted within, audible only because of the corridor’s deathly silence, and Elara sensed more than heard the man’s feet approach.

Snape opened the door less than an inch and glared at her.

“Professor Dumbledore asked to see you in the kitchen,” she reported, pretending that glare didn’t still scare her a bit, and that she wasn’t trying to see behind him. But, really, she couldn’t help but be curious considering she hadn’t seen the room’s interior since early days, back when her great-uncle Cygnus had still been alive. It appeared much the same as before, gray and empty and impersonal aside from a small stack of leather-bound books on the nightstand.

She wondered if those books were Dark magic.

Snape stepped forward and snapped the door shut, almost closing it on his robes.

He scowled her right back down the stairs and kept going once she stopped at Harriet’s door, disappearing into the darkened stairwell. Distantly, Sirius spoke, and Professor Dumbledore interrupted him—and then all noise disappeared behind the ward, swallowed whole like Jonah and the whale. Elara sniffed in annoyance and knocked on Harriet’s door.

“Come in.”

Harriet was at her desk when Elara stepped inside, sorting through the letters that had arrived while she was out. She looked up at Elara—and flushed, dropping her eyes back to her hands, fidgeting with one of the scrolls.

“I wanted to apologize for earlier,” Elara said, closing the door. “I shouldn’t behave like that. It’s insensitive and intolerable.”

Harriet shrugged. “It’s fine. You didn’t do anything wrong. I—I was just upset.”

“You have every right to be upset.” Hesitating, Elara decided to stop dithering about and walked forward, hugging Harriet close. Harriet’s arms went around her waist and squeezed, bony elbow digging into her hip. Elara rested her chin atop her head, tucking a thick, wayward curl back behind her ear.

“I won’t fight with him anymore. I promise,” Elara whispered. “I won’t give Professor Dumbledore the excuse to remove you from the house. I won’t argue with Sirius.”

“You don’t have to promise that. It’s silly. Everyone argues and fights sometimes.”

Elara just held her tighter. “I’m sorry.”

“It’ll be okay, Elara. You don’t have to be sorry.”

They pulled apart, and Harriet cleared her throat, then started to tell her about the latest missive she’d received from Lockhart. Elara listened to her—but she also listened to the house, and heard when tired, ponderous steps made their way past the landing. They paused outside the door for a solid minute before moving on.

 

x X x

 

In the wake of Headmaster Dumbledore’s visit to Grimmauld Place, a few changes were implemented.

The most prevalent change was Professor Lupin’s relocation to the house, ostensibly to act as a nanny or a buffer between Elara and Sirius, though Elara made it her goal to be respectful and polite to her father, especially in Harriet’s presence. Lupin’s move also allowed Snape to spend less time at Grimmauld, which had apparently been more taxing on the wizard’s time than either Harriet or Elara knew. The only indication of his residency now was the occasional fumes escaping from the lab or the creak of floorboards above their bedrooms in the dead of night.

Harriet continued to ignore Snape’s presence, though not as aggressively as before. She even gave him a genial greeting when they crossed paths once in the library. Snape hadn’t said anything in return, of course, but he hadn’t run like Harriet had Spattergroit either.

One week after the incident, Sirius sat them—Elara, Harriet, and Remus—down in the lounge and introduced what he described as a “perfect family bonding experience.”

Elara thought whoever let him make decisions was an idiot, and if the Headmaster was the one who fed him this idea, she was going to slip a packet of Cockroach Clusters into his lemon sherbets.

“No more meals from Hogwarts,” he said with a defining finger in the air, wagging it for effect. “This isn’t a boarding house—malevolent bat in the attic notwithstanding. We’re going to start cooking our own food.”

“Sirius, you don’t know how to cook,” Remus pointed out with a bemused sort of expression. It was far too indulgent, in Elara’s opinion. He had the authority to put an end to this madness; they were all going to starve, for pity’s sake.

“I can learn!” He scratched his trimmed beard, glancing at Elara, then away, seeming to have trouble knowing where his gaze should rest. “And we’ll figure out some chores among us—with Mably and the other rotten bastard of an elf. It’s the stuff families have to decide and complete together.”

And so, a perfectly average Thursday afternoon found the four of them out under the unbearable summer sun, walking to the closest Muggle supermarket in their most passable Muggle clothes. When they finally reached it, Elara stepped through the automated doors next to her father and froze, both wearing what Harriet would later describe as identical expressions of comical incredulity.

Elara had never been to a supermarket. She could count on one hand the number of times she’d ventured outside of St. Giles’ or the neighboring church before, and a Sainsbury’s was not the type of establishment the sisters would have brought their charges to. Anything that represented life outside the religious sphere had been frowned upon.

For lack of a better word, the market was aggressively…Muggle. The air was nice and conditioned, but the lights were harsh, the grating noise of metal wheels and chimes hurt Elara’s ears, and the antiseptic smell stung in her nose. She glanced at Sirius, and he seemed to be enjoying himself.

Of course he is. I ’m in hell.

All right, here we are! I have our list—!” Sirius took a rolled-up parchment from his trouser pocket, earning puzzled looks from the housewives out for their midday shopping. He studied the teetering stack of baskets by the door. “We take one of these?”

Harriet hooked a finger around the handle of an empty trolley and pushed it forward, holding her face stiff as if desperately staving off a giggling fit. “Use this.”

“Oh. Err—is this ours to keep, then? They have so many.”

“No, Sirius….”

Remus took control of the trolley as they meandered through the aisles, and Sirius made his incompetence known from the start, staring agog at the colorful wrappers and packaging, his expression approaching mild fear. Elara didn’t know what anything was either.

“Why can’t we go to the grocer on Carkitt Market?” she complained, crossing her arms against her middle. The irrational thought kept popping into her head that here, in a Muggle space, she might come across someone she knew—someone from St. Giles’, and they’d recognize her. She kept tugging on her gloves and looking over her shoulder, an uncomfortable lump lodged in her throat.

Glowering at the packet of crisps in his hand, Sirius grumbled about “security,” and something obscene that Elara took to mean that Dumbledore had discouraged him from wandering about the Wizarding quarter with Harriet in tow. She sighed and watched as Harriet picked through Sirius’ selections and set some things back, picking others.

“What are you doing, Harriet?” Remus asked.

“Well, if we want something edible for dinner, we’re going to need more than Mars bars and fish oil.” Sirius dropped something else in the trolley. “Sirius, put the bread crumbs back. We’re not doing anything with those.”

Harriet directed Remus to the next aisle, Sirius chucking a package of dried egg noodles back on the shelf. Both he and Elara watched with furrowed brows as Harriet and Remus redid Sirius’ list and made impromptu meal plans, the trolley steadily filling as they roved about and made choices. Sirius backed into a display of tinned tuna at one point, knocking it over, and Remus had to hustle him away when he whipped his wand out on reflex and almost used magic in front of the Muggles.

Leaning against the trolley, Harriet said, “Somewhere in Scotland, Albus Dumbledore is laughing his beard off.”

Elara agreed.

An hour or so later, groceries and necessities were gathered, and Sirius satisfied his curiosity for all things Muggle, proving familiar with the currency when he counted out the pounds to give to the cashier. They each lugged a loaded sack outside, found a convenient alley, and Remus shrunk everything down so they could fit the miniaturized groceries into their pockets. A breeze cut through the oppressive summer heat, and as they started walking home, Elara had to acknowledge it hadn’t been an entirely awful afternoon.

“I never knew Muggles tinned so many types of food,” Sirius commented to Remus, turning to keep one eye on Harriet and Elara. “Did you, Harriet?”

“Yeah. But Aunt Petunia didn’t like stuff out of the tin; she wanted everything made fresh.” Then, under her breath, she added, “She saved the tinned food for me.”

“It’s not fresh in the tin?”

“No. It has preservatives.”

“What’s the point of that, then?”

Their conversing meant Sirius didn’t see the woman approaching them, but Elara did, tensing on instinct when Remus stiffened and touched Sirius’ arm. He whipped forward as the woman came closer.

She was dressed as a Muggle, but Elara had been around enough magical people to recognize their ostentatious style, and this woman wore a raffish, lime green pantsuit and carried a crocodile-skin handbag. She had talons for nails and bottle-blond hair coiffed and curled within an inch of life, her glasses studded with multicolored jewels and gems. She simpered—exposing three gold teeth—when Sirius scowled and stepped in front of Harriet and Elara.

“Mr. Black?” the woman—witch—asked. Sirius didn’t answer in the affirmative, but she kept going. “How do you do? I’m Rita Skeeter and I—.”

“I know who you are.”

Skeeter’s smile faltered, but the keenness in her narrowed eyes intensified. “Then you know I write for the Daily Prophet? I’ve been trying to get in contact with you, darling, ever since that mockery of a trial. I want to write your side of the story, Mr. Black—Sirius, can I call you Sirius?”

“No.”

“No?”

“No, you can’t call me by name.” Sirius stuck his nose in the air. “I know who you are, and I’ve told you and your editor I don’t want anything to do with your bloody rag of a paper.”

The witch affected a fake gasp. “But Mr. Black,” she said. “Don’t you think it would be best to show your side of things? To let the public see the family man behind the scenes?”

“No.”

“But—.”

Whatever inveigling Skeeter hoped to continue with got cut short when Sirius growled a low, irritated curse. “I told you to bugger off.”

He thrust his hand out, then down, not touching the witch—and suddenly she vanished with an orange flash and a yelp. Sirius smirked as he tucked his wand back into his sleeve.

“Sirius!” Remus hissed, his face aghast. “What did you do?!”

“Just a bit of harmless fun. It didn’t hurt her—just sent the daft bint off to the last place she Apparated from.”

“I know what spell you used, Sirius Black, and that is Dark magic!”

“Barely even! Steady on—!”

Remus snatched hold of him with one hand and used the other to hurry Harriet and Elara ahead. Harriet looked amused—and Elara had to admit, it had been a clever bit of magic. “Merlin help us, doing Dark magic in front of the children! What are you thinking?! You’ll be lucky if you aren’t reported—!”

From behind them, Harriet and Elara heard a long, drawn-out sigh.

“Why do I feel I’ll come to regret this?”

 


A/N:

Elara: “Dumbledore said to stop being an edgelord and go downstairs.”

Snape: “…”

Snape: “Okay.”

Chapter 161: misplaced children

Chapter Text

clxi. misplaced children

 

BLACK FAMILY CURSE: IS SIRIUS BLACK A DANGER TO SOCIETY?

 

Rita Skeeter reports of her harrowing experience encountering Sirius Black, 34, on the streets of Muggle London, the Borough of Islington, last Friday afternoon.

“I approached him to inquire after his welfare,” Skeeter tells, “After his acquittal by the Wizengamot. I only meant to ask him a few questions when Mr. Black attacked me with Dark magic, unprovoked!”

Speculations on the Lord to the House of Black ’s mental state lead many of us to wonder if the Wizengamot acted too quickly in their verdict, and if another investigation should be opened by Amelia Bones, Head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement. Madam Bones was not available for comment.

 

Hermione huffed as she read over the article, muttering, “Ridiculous!” under her breath. She flipped to the next page and repeated herself, louder. “Ridiculous!”

Her opinion of Sirius Black was not what Hermione would call…exceptional. It could be difficult to forget first impressions, and her first impression of Elara’s father had been of a frantic and rather smelly convict trying to murder a rat. True, he had an excuse for hunting Pettigrew, and, in his own mind, his reasons probably made more sense than they did in Hermione’s. However, reading about him assaulting the press, even taking into account Rita Skeeter’s blatant sensationalism, did not improve her opinion of him.

Were Harriet and Elara happy living with him? Well, perhaps happy wasn’t the opportune word; content was a better choice because Hermione couldn’t quite picture Elara and Harriet happy when she had evidence to the contrary in Harriet’s letters. Elara’s letters were less frequent and more succinct, and always they avoided the proverbial elephant in the room that was her father. Hermione tutted and frowned at the images posted with the article: a picture of Sirius after his trial, and a picture of Elara leaving the same trial with Tonks and Harriet. A shadow crossed the page.

“What up your nose, Granger?”

Hermione jumped, startled, and looked up at the figure hovering over her head. Malfoy hung there, slumped with lazy grace over his broom—his own Nimbus, because he couldn’t take the broom from school home. Sniffing, Hermione folded the paper to show the main article and thrust it toward Draco, who took it in one hand and browsed the writing. He snorted.

“That Skeeter woman harasses the old pure-blood families constantly when she’s not doing fluff pieces for witches about cosmetic spells or single wizards,” he said, handing the paper back. “She snuck into a few of mother and father’s Yule celebrations before. Nosy bint. They never figured out exactly how she managed to pass the wards.”

“She doesn’t have any business harassing people going on with their daily lives!”

“Well, she gets paid to do it, and so long as the public wants to read it, she’ll keep getting paid and keep writing.” He lowered the broom another foot, the toes of his Quidditch boots brushing the top of the other lounge chair. “Besides, Black has to be mad, so maybe she’s not so far off in what she wrote. Half of the people from that side of mother’s family were off their heads.”

Hermione threw an unimpressed glower in his direction, crossing one leg over the other, and she leaned into the cushioned lawn chair. “He’s not mad. He’s perfectly civil.”

“Half of the old Black Lords ended up in the Janus Thickney Ward at St. Mungo’s. Absolutely barmy, the lot of them. The whole family is cursed with Black Madness, and sooner or later, they all fall victim to it.”

“You’re being an idiot. That’s not real.”

He gave a high, superior kind of laugh that almost sounded like his father, his legs swaying over the stationary broom. “No, but it doesn’t change the fact that most of the Blacks had something wrong with them. Mother’s father, Cygnus Black, has the Wasting Syndrome and was knocked off before he was even sixty.”

“And? Didn’t Abraxas Malfoy die from Dragon Pox? Ailments aren’t limited to one family.”

Draco was quick with his reply. “But grandfather was well into his seventies, and it was an epidemic. A lot of people died before they invented the inoculations.”

Hermione noted he’d called Abraxas “grandfather” but hadn’t extended the same courtesy to Cygnus, then quietly acceded his point and lapsed into silence.

The wind kicked up, and the lawn rippled, the blades of grass swaying and catching the light like the water of a shallow pool. The weather had been abysmally hot for the last week or so, and Draco had not been the only one to take advantage of the cool cross-breeze falling over Wiltshire. Hermione had moved her profuse studying efforts to the grounds, and Narcissa was out in the garden, idly toying with her horticultural charms.

As far as Hermione knew, Jamie Ingham was still cloistered in his room, not that she cared. She’d given up trying to socialize with the other Muggle-born, who remained aloof and unwilling to chat with her because he thought she threatened his placement with the Malfoys. His own studying had reached a fevered pitch as he was set to enter his seventh and final year at Hogwarts.

At times, Hermione questioned her own intellectual privilege—if, by virtue of easily remembering and absorbing things she read and heard and saw, she took for granted her placement here. She liked studying, and when she might begin to find it dull or uninspiring, she had Elara and Harriet, who made it fun or always had fascinating questions and projects to research. What would happen when Jamie graduated? Would a new Muggle-born come to live here?

In her distraction, she missed Draco landing, and he picked up one of the books from the ground, where Hermione had stacked her things on a blanket to protect them from the grass. “‘Introduction to Household Sprites, Spirits, and Other Entities,’” he read aloud, brow raised. “‘Laws and Amendments in Regards to Beings, 1400s. What are you reading this for?”

“Because it’s interesting!” Hermione snapped, more than a bit defensive. Really, she just didn’t want Draco to start asking questions that might lead back to the incident with Dobby, who was the reason behind her desire to read those books. If Mr. Malfoy ever found out she was the one who freed the house-elf, Hermione believed he might honestly hex her.

Draco clearly didn’t believe her and had a snappy comment to reply with, but he kept whatever he meant to say to himself, instead setting the book back with the others. He’d been acting odd all summer. If Hermione hadn’t known better, she would have said he was being nice and friendly. “You know, there are more interesting books to find in the library.”

“I know there are more interesting books. I probably know the library better than you by now.”

“Oh, really?” Draco raised his nose into the air, a smirk on his lips. “Are you sure about that?”

Something in his eyes caused Hermione to pause, and her suspicions grew the wider his smirk became. “You’ve been into something you shouldn’t be, haven’t you?”

“Wouldn’t you like to know?”

“If you’re just going to be a prat, go away.”

Draco shrugged and shouldered his broom. “Fine,” he said, turning to leave, taking exaggerated steps across the grass, clearly waiting for Hermione to follow. Hermione tried to ignore him—but she cursed her own curiosity and gathered her books and paper, setting off after him, her face set in a scowl.

“If you’re doing this to get me in trouble—.”

Draco let out a loud and exaggerated sigh, and even Hermione had to admit the notion was silly. They weren’t eleven anymore. Mrs. and Mr. Malfoy would be far less impressed with their son for instigating mischief than with Hermione for falling prey to it.

They entered the library, ostensibly for Hermione to return the books she’d borrowed, but then Draco leaned his broom against a wall and led her up onto the balcony she favored, grinning all the while as he approached the bust of one of his less fortunate looking ancestors. He gripped the bust by the earlobes and tugged, almost scaring Hermione half to death when she thought the idiot was about to smash it on the floor, but the tug only caused a mechanism in the shelf to click, the entire bookcase pulling outward and sliding to the side to reveal a second case sequestered behind it.

Hermione rolled her eyes at Draco’s superior look.

“Well, it is your house, I suppose. It’d be ridiculous if I knew it better than you did.”

“Come off it, Granger. You’re impressed.”

“Not in the slightest.” She flipped her hair over her shoulder. “What’s in here, anyway? Not Dark texts, are they? I’m not in the mood to be cursed.”

“Just that row there.” He pointed to the very top, far out of reach, and now that he had, Hermione could sense the odious, glutinous feel of Dark magic oozing from the texts. An ugly thrill, to be sure. “A few of the family grimoires are in here—but that’s not the interesting part I told you about. Mother and father keep books here they don’t want others to know about.”

He reached around a rather withered history volume for a book hidden behind it. Hermione braced herself to see what terrible secret the Malfoys hid away in their secret storage, but then—.”

“That’s—that’s a Julia Child cookbook,” she stuttered, taking it from Draco’s hand. “Oh—oh, there are bookmarks in it, too—! Is this your mother’s?”

Scoffing, Draco crouched down to shuffle aside other volumes and said, “No, it’s my father’s.”

Of course, Hermione knew many men made for wonderful cooks and chefs, and it wasn’t really a feminine pastime—but the sudden image of Lucius Malfoy in his study, drinking elf-wine and perusing the joys of amuse-bouche had her tickled pink. Even men like Mr. Malfoy needed hobbies. “Oh really?”

“Yes. I once caught him making beef Wellington when he sent the elves off with mother on a visit to the Sangforts and thought I’d gone along with her. He swore up and down he was simply doing it for research and gave me such a telling off.”

Hermione giggled, trying to stifle the noise in her hand.

“And mother, well….” He pulled out a paperback, tapping the cover. The author was Danielle Steel.

No! Really?!”

“Really.”

Maybe Harriet was right. Maybe Muggles did do fiction better.

The pair laughed over the illicit stash of Muggle literature until the shock and humor wore off, and Hermione studied Draco’s profile as he flipped through his father’s recipe book. He looked content, his hair gently windswept with a single blade of grass caught in the collar of his robes.

Hermione tried to recall the last time Draco had been…well, Draco. He hadn’t spent the summer nagging her, hadn’t called her any names, hadn’t mocked her hair or her teeth or her heritage—and she couldn’t pinpoint the last time he had. Oh, for sure, he still had a go at Harriet or Elara, if feeling particularly brave, but he’d let Hermione alone.

How bizarre.

“Why are you being nice to me?” she asked, voice laced with skepticism. “You’re normally insufferable, you know.”

A delicate blush came to Draco’s pale face. “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he insisted, shoving the book back into its hiding place. One of the magical books complained about being so rudely shunted aside. “I’m not nice.”

“Hmm.” Hermione didn’t comment.

She helped him re-shelve the mess they’d misplaced, and Draco was just returning the first bookcase to its proper position when Hermione heard a raised voice. The hair on the nape of her neck stood on end as she turned toward the Yellow Room, located on the other side of the library, and the door therein where the sound filtered through. The voice had been male, and decidedly not Mr. Malfoy.

Hermione and Draco shared one meaningful glance before they wordlessly descended the balcony and exited the library, crossing through a gilded hall to the main foyer in the heart of the manor. The house’s doors were kept in pristine condition, so the hinges turned without protest when they silently opened, Hermione and Draco peering into the room beyond. Mr. Malfoy was there, as was Mrs. Malfoy, whom Hermione hadn’t heard come in from the gardens—and they were not alone. Hermione recognized that dreaded figure right off and shivered.

“M-my Lord—,” Mr. Malfoy said, voice breaking in either shock or fear. Hermione couldn’t tell. “How unexpected—.”

Lucius gasped when Minister Gaunt’s hand shot out and ensnared the other wizard’s wrist like a snake snagging a rat. He twisted Lucius’ left arm and split his sleeve with a word, glaring at the revealed forearm. Then, he hissed something in Parseltongue. Hermione couldn’t understand what was said, obviously, but she’d heard Harriet use it enough to recognize the harsh, malicious intonation in the Minister’s voice.

“Worthless,” Gaunt snarled. “Worthless!

A sudden, hard burst of invisible magic rocked the foyer, throwing Mr. Malfoy to the stone floor, Narcissa emitting one breathless shriek. Only Hermione’s arm braced against the doorway barred Draco from rushing inside.

“Don’t,” she whispered even as she shook. The magic tasted like copper in her mouth. “Don’t.”

“Mother—.”

“Don’t! You know it’ll only make it worse!” The voices came again, muffled now, quieter, and Hermione pulled Malfoy away. Draco’s eyes never left the door, his breathing high and reedy with worry. “We can’t be here…come on….”

Whether or not he listened to her, Hermione didn’t know, as they parted once they reached the stairs, and she rushed out of sight.

It was not entirely uncommon for the Minister to visit Malfoy Manor. He did so maybe once or twice a summer while Hermione had resided there, but only ever in brief, transient bursts, and he never once bothered himself with the presence of a Mudblood girl. Hermione would have happily retreated to her room and barricaded herself inside until the Minister departed again—so when she found herself summoned to the dining hall an hour later and saw the wizard still in attendance, she felt her heart sink somewhere into the vicinity of her toes.

Draco was not there, only his parents and a tired, twitchy Jamie Ingham in attendance aside from the Minister and herself. No food had been set on the table.

“Ah, Miss Granger,” Gaunt greeted from his seat before the lit hearth, the fire framing his lazy posture, glinting in the glass of his wine goblet. A more cliche scene Hermione had never witnessed before; it was far too bloody warm for a fire of that size, and the usual dining chair had been replaced with a grander armchair from the lounge, one with a high-back fit for casting much of his countenance in deep shadow.

Pedantic ponce, Hermione thought. Harriet was wearing off on her inner vocabulary.

“Hello, Minister.”

“Take a seat.”

As there were only three chairs at the table, including the pseudo-throne the Minister had taken for himself, Hermione had no choice but to sink into the place next to Ingham. The Malfoys stood off to the side by the hearth, and Hermione noted for the first time how apprehensive they looked, Lucius holding himself as if he’d taken a punishing blow to the ribs.

Sweat gathered on the nape of Hermione’s neck. What is happening?

Gaunt swirled the liquid in his glass once more, sipped—then dropped the goblet, only Dipthy’s sudden, timely jump saving it from shattering on the marble floor. Hermione couldn’t help how rigid her spine went waiting for the impact, and the sudden lack of it dragged down her back like sharp, bloody talons. Jamie looked startled and uneasy as well, and Gaunt just sneered.

For a long while, the Minister only stared at them—at Hermione—with a bitter, irritated look, the man’s jaw set like a petulant toddler who hadn’t gotten his way. The longer he looked, the more anxious Hermione became, because the Malfoys hadn’t said a single word, continuing to stand at attention like frightened house-elves waiting for their master to throw a punishing hand. Her pulse raced in her ears, and Hermione restrained her fidgeting by telling herself he wasn’t the Dark Lord, he couldn’t be, and she’d withstood Professor Slytherin’s disdain for years. She could withstand this as well.

“Have you heard from your friend this summer, Miss Granger?”

“My friend, sir?”

“Miss Potter.”

Hermione brushed aside the sheer absurdity of the Minister for Magic asking a teenage girl if she’d kept in contact with her schoolmate, formulating her answer. She knew what he wanted. He wanted Harriet. He might not comprehend the specifics, might not understand why she was special, but Gaunt had enough interest in the young witch to drag her under his thumb, willing or not, and Hermione was not going to help him.

“We’re not friends, I’m afraid, sir. Just dormmates.”

She saw the barest flicker in the Malfoys’ expressions, but neither said anything.

Gaunt’s hands tightened on the armrests of his chair, and he leaned forward ever so slightly, letting the firelight gild his edges. To Hermione’s eyes, he didn’t appear quite solid for half a second, as if an opaque screen upon his face had become transparent, the light leaking under the edges. But, then, she blinked, and the man was as solid and real as ever, something overwhelming burning in his red, terrifying eyes.

Had she answered wrong? What else could she have told him? ‘Leave Harriet alone, you awful, awful man?

“I think it’s time for a test,” Gaunt finally said, slouching back into his seat. He steepled his fingers and rested the tips against his plush mouth. He had the mien of a bully wanting to take out his temper on someone else. Someone smaller, weaker. “Yes, a test. Yes, yes. Poor, poor Lucius, how have you and your family functioned, overburdened as you’ve been? Two Muggle-borns wards are too many for one house to host.”

The sweat that had so far been limited to Hermione’s neck began to drip down her spine and coat her hands. All the light-hearted humor she’d shared in the library with Draco vanished, the warmth of summer like a distant memory.

He’s bluffing, she thought, her breathing too loud. He—there’s so many other houses hosting more than one Muggle-born, he’s—. He’s angry I won’t give him information—.

“S—sir?” Jamie asked. Gaunt ignored him.

“A test. An educational assessment. That’s why you’re here, after all. To learn.” Gaunt smiled, and for the first time that evening, looked composed, in control. “One test and one of you will remain. The other…will return home.”

Hermione felt sick, her stomach twisting into knots. She couldn’t breathe. “But sir, I’m—I’m only entering my fourth year.” She was quite well-read and knowledgeable, but Ingham was entering his seventh year and was already grinding his nose for his N.E.W.T.s.

“Then you had better do your very best, Miss Granger.”

“Sir—,” Jamie tried.

“Shut up,” Gaunt hissed, suddenly on his feet. His robes fanned out as he balanced his hands on the table, the firelight blazing blood-red through the lining. “What are the three so-called Unforgivable Curses?” Neither Jamie nor Hermione spoke. “Come now, it’s a simple question to start you out. Or would you rather not answer…?”

Jamie’s hand shot into the air. Betrayal prickled in Hermione’s chest—but they weren’t friends, had never been friends despite all of Hermione’s efforts to the contrary. “The Imperius Curse, the Killing Curse, and the Cruciatus.”

“Correct.” Hermione choked at Gaunt’s word. Reality set in that this was happening, that she needed to act. “How long, approximately, can the Cruciatus Curse be held before the victim succumbs to madness?”

Jamie hesitated, and Hermione jerked her hand upward. She knew this. She knew this because of something Madam Pomfrey had said in their second year, when Harriet had been tortured—.

“Fourteen minutes,” she blurted. “But it depends on the—the strength of the caster, on the power they put into the curse. The approximate average, according to studies, is fourteen minutes.”

“Hmm. And how long before the body…gives out?”

“Twenty-one minutes.”

“Very good, Miss Granger.”

The look Jamie gave her could have curdled milk. Gaunt smirked as if he was enjoying himself, and Hermione guessed he was. “What are the fifteen schools of Transfiguration and the four sub-classifications?”

Hermione got that question and the next, but the following four were all upper-level Arithmancy inquiries she hadn’t yet learned the equations for. The more Jamie answered, the more frightened Hermione became, until her chest felt tight and she thought she might faint in her seat.

One of you will remain. The other …will return home.

Flashes of her parents flickered in Hermione’s mind, met with a curious mix of regret, love, and distaste. She missed them, but they didn’t miss her. No, they missed the confused, downtrodden little girl who’d been branded a strange, bizarre creature by her fellows, and she’d been so miserable, so unsure of herself. Hermione didn’t want to go back. She couldn’t go back.

“What is Rappaport’s Law?”

Hermione and Jamie raised their hands at the same time, but Hermione was slightly faster. Her whole body shook. “An American law introduced in 1790 by Emily Rappaport, segregating Wizarding and Muggle populations in the States.”

“And what prompted the Law?”

Again, Hermione answer first. “A Muggle by the name of Batholomew Barebone extorted information from Dorcus Twelvetrees, a witch, that led to a nearly catastrophic raid against the MACUSA headquarters. The MACUSA were humiliated by the I.C.W.”

“Yes, just like Muggles,” Gaunt said in a snide voice. “Your people are like an embarrassing infestation in the walls; perfectly ignorable until you become unsightly.” He tipped his head, red eyes glinting.

“We’re not Muggles,” Hermione refuted, her tongue braver than it should be. “We’re magical. Just as magical as any other witch or wizard.”

“We’ll have to agree to disagree, Miss Granger. Don’t interrupt me again.” The Minister scoffed. “What is the VERD index of a spell passing through a human body?”

I should know this, Hermione thought—and yet her brain felt like mush, numbers jumbled about by her anger and frustration and fear. I should know this—!

Jamie answered, “Anything greater than a two-point-six.”

“Yes.” Gaunt tapped his fingertips against the table. Still, the Malfoys stayed silent, Narcissa gripping Lucius’ arm. “The four phases in the creation of the lapis occultus. What are they?”

This was another question aimed toward Ingham, who had taken Alchemy in his sixth year, purposefully meant to throw Hermione out of the running—but Gaunt didn’t know Hermione’s best friend was a personal confidant of Nicolas Flamel. Gaunt was trying to sabotage her, punish her, but Hermione was cleverer than that.

She rocked out of her seat and didn’t bother raising her hand. “The lapis occultus, also known as the Philosopher’s Stone, has four known stages in its creation: nigredo, albedo, citrinitas, rubedo—decomposition, the removal of impurities, actualization, and the self-synthesization between the alchemist and the Stone. No magical being aside from Master Nicolas Flamel is known to have passed the citrinitas phase of the Magnum Opus.”

Silence stretched as Hermione softly panted. Ingham had his hands balled into fists, gritting his teeth as he demanded, “How did you know that? The Philosopher’s Stone theory isn’t covered until the final term of seventh-year Alchemy!”

Hermione didn’t answer him; she continued to stare at Gaunt, trembling from head to foot. The Minister met her gaze until he became bored, and whatever sadistic enjoyment he’d gotten in leveling this punishment had run its course. His lip curled, and Hermione counted the questions again, knowing she and Jamie had answered a level amount, but would that matter? What would Gaunt do? Who would he choose?

Bile burned and sloshed in her throat, threatening to emerge. Hermione hated the Minister. She hated him as she’d never hated a person before, with a harsh, personal vindictiveness because whatever rash decision the wizard made, Hermione would have to obey. She was helpless. No power existed to which she could report his abuse of power, no agency willing to listen to a poor Muggle-born girl with no familial connections, no power, no voice.

Hermione despised him.

It seemed a lifetime passed before the Minister moved; Hermione had heard of the expression of one’s life passing before their eyes in a single instance, and she finally understood the truth of it as Gaunt’s hand lifted. She thought of Harriet and Elara and their dormitory beneath the water, the evenings they spent in the library or by the lake, the magic they shared and the things they learned together. She thought of Hogwarts and her professors and her friends; she thought of everything good and bad, everything wonderful and horrid, that had ever happened to her in the walls of that great castle.

Gaunt’s hand rose—and then, without his eyes leaving Hermione’s face, he held it out toward Jamie. “Your wand.”

“W-what?”

“Your wand, you incompetent Muggle fool.”

Slowly, Jamie reached into his pocket and retrieved the requested wand, extending it for the Minister to take. Hermione could taste sick in the back of her throat, as Gaunt had yet to look away, even as he set fire to the wand with a whispered word. Jamie shrieked as if his entire world was crumbling before his eyes.

The flames lasted for only a moment. It took one flippant moment to ruin a life.

“I’ll send someone for him in the morning,” Gaunt said, letting the hot ashes sift through his careless fingers. Hermione watched the mess fall and burn pockmarks in the priceless table. “Until we meet again, Miss Granger.”

Hermione sank back into her chair as the Minister left without a word to his hosts. Jamie fled the room screaming, and still Hermione fixed her gaze on the marred wood, the smoldering black marks spreading like a disease as disembodied wails echoed off the walls. As she willed herself not to tear up, she squeezed her hands together in her lap and listened to her heart race.

She didn’t feel as if she’d won. No, if anything, she’d lost her dignity when she deigned to play the Minister’s sick game. There were no winners and no losers, just scorch marks and screams and lingering disappointment.

“I believe we should skip supper this evening,” Narcissa whispered, swallowing.

Hermione agreed.

 

x X x

 

She woke in the dead of night to the brush of air on her face.

Hermione pried open tired eyes to see candlelight from the hall spill across her bedroom floor. She was quite certain she’d shut the door before retiring for the evening but nonetheless sat up to close it again. The sheets pooled in her lap, and Hermione sighed.

Why couldn’t it have been a nightmare?

Seated on the edge of her bed, Hermione realized someone was standing there with her, and she squeaked in alarm.

“Jamie?” she asked as the older boy moved into the light. His eyes were red-rimmed, his brown hair mussed. A damp sheen painted his puffy, raw cheeks. “Jamie, what are you—?”

Fingers closed around her throat, and Hermione’s hands flew to his wrists in shock.

“I haven’t come this far to be tossed aside now,” he sobbed. Tears fell from his face to Hermione’s as his weight bore down upon her, crushing her into the mattress. “I won’t let you. I won’t, I won’t—!”

She couldn’t breathe. Hermione scrambled to pull him off of her, but Jamie was so much heavier than her, bigger, stronger. My wand! she thought. My wand, where is—?!

“You don’t deserve to stay here!”

She let go of Ingham to reach for the nightstand, for the wand laying just there on the wooden rest. Hermione flailed, struggling, and kicked the nightstand with her foot. The lamp fell to the floor and shattered. Her wand rolled into the dark.

Jamie didn’t let go.

“S-stop—!” Hermione tried to say as she clawed at his wrists, and if Jamie heard her, he chose not to react. Blood leaked under her nails. “S-stop!

“Get off of her!”

Jamie grunted as a body collided with his, yanking him back, and Hermione gasped when his fingers loosened. Jamie threw an elbow into Draco’s face, the younger boy yelping, clutching his bloodied nose, and Jamie went back to strangling Hermione. There was a fervent glint in his eyes, perspiration building on his upper lip. Black spots danced in Hermione’s vision.

Then, Lucius Malfoy sprinted through the open door.

Stupefy!

The spell’s red light struck Jamie in the side, and he stiffened in an instant, his hands slackening around Hermione’s neck. She sucked in ragged, painful bursts of air and kicked at the boy, wriggling out from under him until she could sit up. Draco held his broken nose as he climbed to his feet, blood splattering his nightshirt. Jamie didn’t move.

Hermione’s neck throbbed, and as she touched the ache with her shaking fingers, she noticed Narcissa and Lucius standing in the doorway, wearing their dressing gowns, gobsmacked as they took in the devastation Minister Gaunt had wrought upon them.

No one said a word as Hermione started to cry.


A/N: Sorry for the wait!

Draco: “Behold, the secret reading material my father keeps!”

Hermione: “Wait, I don’t want to see that—!”

Draco: *reveals cookbook*

Hermione: “Oh thank Merlin. Because I thought—.”

Draco: “?”

Hermione: “Err. Never mind what I thought.”

 

There ’s a Discord server where you can stay up to date on chapter releases and join the CDT community! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

 

Chapter 162: the monster

Chapter Text

clxii. the monster

 

Sirius thought the walk from the train station might be worse than the ride itself.

It had been mentioned at dinner the night before, while Harriet and Remus manned the cooker and Sirius and Elara pretended to be useful by setting the table, that the girls had visited the grave of his uncle, Cygnus, the summer before, and Elara held the miserable old bastard in some kind of esteem. In Sirius’ memory, Cygnus had spent much of his time in and out of hospital or wrangling in his harridan daughters. Andy had turned out all right in the end, but the other two—.

Whatever Sirius’ thoughts on the man, he’d looked at Elara’s face when Remus mentioned Cygnus and saw the sadness flicker across it. Sirius had blurted out that he would take her if she wanted, and Elara had accepted. Begrudgingly and rudely, true, but she’d said yes, and now they were walking from the station to the graveyard without a single word being spoken between them. Harriet had been left behind in the house’s safety for some much-needed Astronomy revision with Remus. Elara kept her eyes on the ground and her hands folded in front of herself.

Sometimes when Sirius studied her from the corner of his eye, when she wasn’t scowling or sneering, she reminded him a lot of Regulus. They had a similar prettiness to their features; where Sirius had always been flushed from anger or laughter, they shared that pleasing contrast of dark hair and pale color. They also dressed like snobs; even in Muggle clothes, his daughter wore long skirts and buttoned shirts with the Black pin on her lapel. Regulus used to be like that, always wanting to impress their parents and always sneering at Sirius’ style.

They’d reached the gate. Sirius passed through it first and held it open for Elara, and she muttered her thanks under her breath. Sirius shoved his hands into his pockets and sighed through his nose.

Sirius had visited the old Black tomb once or twice in his youth, what felt like a bloody lifetime ago. He remembered it being a dreary, boring affair where some distant cousins had been interred in the tomb itself, and he hadn’t thought to pay much attention at the time. Now, he stood in the shade of the old, twisted elms next to his daughter, and he wondered what she thought about.

“He was always sick, from what I remember,” Sirius commented, eyes trailing over the elms, the roofs of magical tombs. “I’m not sure what it was that he had, but I guess it’s something they inoculate you for now.”

He’d always wondered if that was why Walburga was such a beast; Cygnus suffered from a wasting body, whereas his sister had a wasting mind. Orion had been more level-headed; he was strict as they come, but he at least gave Sirius and Regulus breathing room when they needed it.

“Cygnus made sure I was emancipated before he died,” Elara said out of the blue, staring down at the plot her great-uncle had been buried in next to his wife, Druella. “It was…the greatest gift anyone had ever given me because it meant no one could tell me where I had to live. No one…no one could send me back.”

Sirius didn’t respond. He took his hands from his pockets and let one hover as if to touch her shoulder, to offer comfort, but he’d have to be a blinking nutter to not realize how much Elara disliked being touched. The only person she tolerated was Harriet.

“I was at an orphanage before, from when I was a baby, I guess. Mably took me there to save me from the fire, and she doesn’t know that they…they weren’t good people, the Muggles.” She gripped her gloved hands together. “They—hurt me. They thought I was a monster.”

Sirius felt as if all the air had been sucked from his lungs. Merlin, what was he meant to say? Never in his darkest nightmares had he ever considered having this kind of conversation with his daughter. The images from the forest earlier in the year haunted him—that ghastly, raised scar on her skin that Sirius hadn’t seen again. “You stand there and claim you never hurt anybody, she’d screamed. “And what? Expect me to embrace you? Expect me to—fucking forgive you?

Yes, Sirius thought, because more than anything, he wanted her forgiveness, even if he didn’t really deserve it. He’d been stumbling from one colossal fuck up to the next, and it’d cost his daughter more than he could ever hope to repay.

In the same breath, it made him angry. Angry she couldn’t see all that he’d sacrificed just trying to keep her and Remus, Marlene, James, Lily, and Harriet safe. He would give his life in a second for any of them.

But maybe that was the point of Elara’s frustrations. It was an easy choice to throw himself into danger; it was harder to deal with the rest of it.

“McGonagall says I have to talk about this because my anger is misplaced or whatever nonsense.” Elara sniffed and then crouched, plucking small weeds from Cygnus’ marker. She had yet to look at Sirius. “I didn’t want to talk to her about it either, but it’s part of the deal for Harriet to stay with me. With us. I got upset and broke a lamp, and it hit Harriet, so now I get to talk about things I’d rather not share.”

“You’d do just about anything to help Harriet—even put up with me.”

Sirius meant for his words to be teasing, but Elara’s expression remained stoic. Serious. “Yes.”

“And this rubbish about the dishes and the old trash in the house, arguing with me—is because you’re angry? Because you think I left you there? It wasn’t my choice to place you with Muggles; Morgana bless your mother’s soul, but that was all Marlene’s idea, and it saved your life.”

“I’m angry about a lot of things,” she admitted. “And I don’t know how not to be. I’m angry about the orphanage. I’m angry about Harriet’s relatives, and about Hermione’s stupid parents. I’m mad at you and Remus and Dumbledore, and I get so furious when Professor Slytherin hexes Harriet, I want to curse him into the wall. I want to curse him until he’s dead, and I know I could do it. It would be easy.”

Sirius knelt next to Elara and touched her shoulder, just his fingertips barely putting pressure on her. Her eyes cut in his direction, dismissive. How in the hell was he meant to deal with this?

“I don’t think I’m the right person to tell you not to get angry,” he confessed, giving the back of his head an uneasy scratch. “I tried to murder Pettigrew, after all. Not a shining beacon for anger management.”

Elara scoffed.

“Then again, maybe you can think of my example as something you’re not supposed to do. I mean, shite, I spent twelve years in prison and lost everything, and a lot of that can be blamed on my anger. I thought—at the time, when everything was happening, it all made sense to me. Lying to Remus, giving you to Marlene, making Peter the Secret Keeper; it all sounded logical when I’m in that mood, brassed off and wanting to hex a blighter. It sounded bloody clever.”

“It wasn’t.”

“Well, no, now it obviously isn’t.” He scratched at the hair on his chin, frustrated again. “Elara, everything I ever did was done because I was trying to protect the people I love. I can’t claim any gift with Divinations or some kind of preternatural strategic ability; I did what I thought was best and made mistakes. We all make mistakes.”

“That doesn’t mean all mistakes must be forgiven.”

“Elara, I’m your father.”

“That doesn’t mean much to an orphan.” She shrugged her rigid shoulder out from under his touch. “It’s just a word.”

“Only because you think it is.” Sirius forced himself to grab her shoulder again, leaving his hand there despite her glare and attempt to roll it off. “But it doesn’t absolve me of my guilt, does it? I’m still your father—and you can be angry if you want, but I’m not going to let you be an idiot like me, all right?”

“No, it’s not all right.”

They sat in quiet contemplation of the grave, voices bobbing in the distance, the cars moving on the street farther beyond. Sirius grappled with something to say, something profound like Dumbledore would come up with that would make the whole world come together in perfect harmony, but reality had proven to Sirius that even wizards like the Headmaster couldn’t always make the universe a comfortable, obliging place. James had always been the more charismatic one in their group; Sirius had been quick with a laugh, Remus the patient ear, and Peter—.

Fuck Peter. We should have dunked his head in a bloody loo instead of Snivellus ’.

What had Remus told him? You have to get to know them. How in the hell was he meant to do that? Why didn’t teenage daughters come with instruction manuals, for Merlin’s sake?!

“How’d you and Harriet meet?”

Elara’s brow furrowed, thrown by the change in topic, but she went with it, sounding a mite wary when she answered. “At the Magical Menagerie. She was talking to—a snake, and I didn’t know that was possible.” Elara shifted, her legs probably sore from kneeling in the dirt. Sirius knew his were. “She helped me choose my owl.”

“And your other friend, Hermione? How’d you meet her?”

“At school. I wasn’t terribly fond of her at first; she’s…bossy at times. But she’s the kind of person who’d help you even it’s against her better judgment, and while she may stand there and say, ‘I told you so,’ she’ll still help pick up the mess.”

“She sounds like a good friend.”

“She is.” Elara rose, and Sirius followed, knocking bits of grass off his trousers. “That snake Harriet was talking to—it’s Livius. Her familiar. He snuck out of the shop and found her that night, and she’s had him ever since. The Menagerie still has a sign up offering a reward for the return of their stolen Horned Serpent.” Her eyes cut sideways, her mouth compressed. “Don’t tell anyone.”

It really shouldn’t have warmed Sirius’ heart to know his goddaughter got into mischief just like her father—especially not when that mischief involved felony theft. The ill-used and frankly underdeveloped voice of responsibility in the back of his head said he should not be proud of her and should probably reprimand his daughter for keeping mum about it.

Fuck it. Sirius grinned and mimicked locking his mouth with a key. Elara rolled her eyes heavenward, not impressed, though Sirius thought it better than her usual stony, sullen glare.

“Do you know the spell for flowers?” he asked after a moment, clearing his throat. “So you can leave him some?”

Elara hesitated. “Yes.”

“You can cast it while I’m here.”

“I—. I’m not sure what I should leave.”

Sirius gave it some thought. “Gladioli,” he said, snapping his fingers. When Elara raised a brow, he explained, “Remembrance, integrity, sincerity, and strength.” A laugh escaped, rough like a bark, and his daughter’s incredulous staring intensified. “It’s a pure-blood thing usually taught to younger kids ages before Hogwarts. Ol’ mummy dearest had different flowers on the sideboard every morning depending on her mood. We’d wake up and find a vase of petunias and know we were in for it that day.”

“I’d be inclined to feel more sympathy for grandmother if her portrait wasn’t such a screeching, racist hag.” She withdrew her wand—and Sirius felt a pang of loss, thinking of how no one had been there when she got it, not him or Remus or Marlene. Elara gave it a flick, incanting, “Orchideous Gladiolus.”

A bouquet of blue gladioli appeared in his daughter’s free hand, finished off with a black ribbon, and this was something Sirius thought he could be proud of—Elara’s strong grasp of Transfiguration. It was lovely.

They left the flowers on the grave and departed, Sirius shoving his hands in his pockets again, deciding this outing hadn’t been a total waste, not if it helped him find common ground with Elara.

Crossing through the gate, he glanced at her, fishing for something else to say. “Remus and Harriet are making hamburgers tonight.”

“Ugh.”

“What? Don’t like hamburgers?”

“No, not especially.”

What?”

“I don’t enjoy food I have to touch with my hands.”

“That’s half the fun of it.”

Sirius and Elara walked through a group of Muggles heading in the other direction, neither thinking much of it while they bickered over their dinner choices until a man drew to a sudden halt and grabbed Elara by the arm.

“Miss—Miss Black? Elara Black?”

He was a Muggle by Sirius’ estimate, dressed in a plain, boring black shirt and trousers, carrying fliers in one hand advertising a function of some sort. He spotted the white collar after everything else, and it took Sirius more than a second to place it. He’d grown up pagan as all obedient pure-blood boys and girls do, but he had a passing familiarity with other religions, though he couldn’t really mark the different denominations of Christianity. Hogwarts once had a weekend seminar delving into the origins and cross-connection between Muggle religion, saints, and the magical world, and Sirius remembered Remus dragging him to it one Sunday.

He recognized that the man was a priest—and that he had a hand on his daughter.

“What do you think you’re on about?” Sirius demanded, yanking the man’s hand from Elara, who’d gone pale as if she’d discovered her bed curtains replaced by a Lethifold. The priest looked at him with shock and suspicion, his eyes capped by thick white eyebrows, his balding pate speckled with perspiration from the afternoon heat. When he spoke, the words came out in a deep Irish brogue.

“Who are you then to be with this girl?”

“I’m her father. Who the hell are you?”

The man answered in an angry rumble, managing to grab Elara’s arm again while Sirius was distracted, the girl gasping and giving her wrist a hard, ineffectual yank. “Miss Black doesn’t have a father and has been a runaway from our care for several years now. I’ll be reporting you to the police—and you, Miss Black, what could you possibly be thinking, you reckless girl—?!”

Sirius froze.

He was an intelligent man; a decade in Azkaban might have knocked his wits about, but they were all there still, despite their apparent disarray. ‘I was in an orphanage before,’ Elara had said, not an hour passed. ‘They thought I was a monster.

England didn’t have many orphanages anymore, the crown having done away with the practice, but in the private, religious sector—.

The Forbidden Forest loomed in his mind’s eye—the smell of old leaves, Pettigrew’s whimpering, Sirius staring down the end of his own child’s wand.

Ten years of the cane, and their exorcism—.

Watery starlight splayed across pale skin, a cross emblazoned into flesh—.

They hurt me. They thought—.

Pink marks around narrow, scrawny wrists—.

‘—I was a monster.’

Sirius’ clenched fist flashed out before he gave it a second thought, and his fingers ached when they collided with the man’s face. The gobsmacked priest released his grip on Elara as he toppled onto his arse, and he instead clutched his very broken nose. Blood trickled through his fingers and along his chin, staining that saintly white collar of his.

Sirius yanked Elara behind him as he bent at the waist, putting his face close to the man’s. “You come near my daughter again,” he hissed. “And I’ll do more than break your fucking nose. You’re afraid of what a little girl with a spot of magic might do? I’ll show you, Muggle filth. I’ll show you what a real monster looks like.” The man’s eyes widened in fright, and Sirius straightened. “You’ll get yours in the end. I promise it.”

People had started to stop in the street, staring, alarmed by the sudden assault, and Sirius knew they had to get out of there before he did something bloody stupid. He snatched Elara’s hand up in his and stormed off, not stopping until they’d marched two streets over in the wrong direction from the station, and he pulled his daughter into someone’s empty garden. Her fingers trembled against his, and she sucked in an aborted, wet breath, swallowing the urge to sob.

At a loss, Sirius tugged the girl into his arms, and she went without a fight, hiccuping against his shoulder as Sirius held her close. It was the first time since she’d been a toddler that he’d hugged her. It was the first time in over a decade that he’d hugged anyone, and Sirius felt tears build in his own eyes for an entirely different reason than the girl’s.

“It’s all right now,” he said, patting Elara’s back. “He’s gone now—it’s all gone. Remember what you said about Cygnus? He made it so you don’t have to go back there. You don’t ever have to see them again. You get to go home to Harriet and Remus and me. Mably’s going to make you a nice cuppa, and it’s going to be all right.”

She calmed bit by bit and stopped crying, but she still trembled like the Whomping Willow on a bad day, and her breathing had yet to even out. It came in harsh, shallow bursts against by his ear, and her shoulders shook with the effort under his hands.

“I have to go—go home,” she managed, taking a step back. Tears streaked her reddened, blotchy cheeks, the long eyelashes she’d inherited from him stuck in wet clumps. Sirius would rather have her mad and snarling at him than this. She suddenly looked her age, and his heart burned. “I need my—my potion.”

“Potion? What potion?”

“Sn-Snape makes it. It’s for my asthma.”

“All right, all right. Off we go, then. I’ll Apparate us.”

“I didn’t—I didn’t take anything. I’ll get sick.”

Sirius held onto her hands and gave them a squeeze. He tried to smile, when what he really wished to do was find that man again and test his own extensive knowledge of the Black family’s library. He couldn’t. He shouldn’t. “Well, what’s a little vomit among family, yeah? On three, then. One, two, three—.”

 

xXx

 

Sirius’s headache had grown to mythic proportions by the time the old grandfather clock chimed the midnight hour, and he hid the nearly empty bottle under the couch.

He’d tried going to bed at a decent time, but he’d spent much of the evening tossing and turning in a huff, thinking about Elara and that bastard and how Sirius could possibly bring repercussions down on his daughter’s childhood home without sparking a witchhunt that would end with a furious Ministry official banging on his door. Nothing he attempted stilled his violent thoughts, and so he finally gave up, found the parlor on the main floor, and tucked into the bourbon he had stashed under the sagging couch.

Remus would be annoyed with him for getting pissed when he staggered out of bed tomorrow sometime in the late afternoon. Apparently, it set a bad example for the girls. Sirius wanted to remind him that they couldn’t all be professors who rose with the dawn and apparently never did anything wrong. Sirius loved the man, but Remus’ unflinching moral compass and ideals could grate on his fucking nerves.

He drank until all the sharp, raw-edged thoughts misaligned in his head didn’t hurt quite so much, and then he put the bottle away and slouched to his feet. Groaning, he stretched his back and muddled through the unlit room, pausing at the doorway when he thought about having to climb all those bloody stairs. The furniture in the parlor hadn’t been updated in half a century, and if he kipped down here, he was fairly certain Kreacher would find a way to hex him in the night.

Need one of those—what do Muggles call them? Ele-waiters?

A single gas lamp remained lit in the foyer, and it provided enough light for Sirius to see the front door come open a crack and admit the dark, silent figure of Severus Snape. The bourbon curdled in Sirius’ gut as he looked at the man, and it took Snape more than a handful of seconds before he realized the shadow lingering by the parlor entrance was actually Sirius watching him with barely restrained hatred.

“Just like you to come slinking in during the night,” Sirius sneered. “Like some kind of cockroach.”

“Drunk again, I see,” Snape retorted after clearing his throat. Quick as a flash, he had a hand against the wall and then lowered it again, hiding it in his robes. Sirius questioned what he was doing. “Why you haven’t bothered to simply drown yourself at a pub and spare us the odor of your self-indulgent pickling is beyond me.”

“It’s my fucking house,” Sirius retorted—an argument that was getting old, even to him. No one seemed to respect that it was in fact Sirius’ house and not a halfway home for Death Eater filth. “I can drink if I want. I have to wonder if you even have a house, Snivellus, or if you just gather like some kind of depraved mold in other people’s front room.”

“I could live on the streets and it’d still be better than this hovel.”

Sirius took a step nearer the other man. “But you do have a house, don’t you?” he said, a grin spreading at the wary slant of Snape’s gaze. “Lily mentioned it once, didn’t she? Said it was a sad little tip worthy of a weedy, greasy half-Muggle like you.” Lily hadn’t said any of that, of course. Had she been alive to hear Sirius say ‘half-Muggle’ in such a disparaging way, she’d probably punch him in the teeth. “It’s somewhere called Spinner’s End, innit—?”

“Shut up.”

Snape made as if to step toward Sirius, or perhaps around him, and Sirius lashed out at the git, wanting a row, wanting to take his anger out on someone—but Snape suddenly faltered when the Animagus shoved him. He stumbled, and his shoulder hit the opposite wall with a thump and a grunt.

Sirius laughed. “And you call me drunk, you tosser!”

Furious, Snape straightened and continued past Sirius to the stairs, disappearing up the steps. Sirius considering sending a Tripping Jinx after him, but it’d probably wake his bloody mother, and truth be told, he was too tired to arse with Snape at the moment. He muttered, “Tosser,” again under his breath.

Yawning, Sirius decided to go back into the parlor to sleep—but then spotted the stain on the far wall.

“The hell is that?”

Sirius had to get within a foot of the spot before his less-than-level brain could make sense of the mark, and only then did he realize it looked like blood, fresh blood left exactly where that arse Snape had stumbled.

“Merlin’s bollocks,” Sirius muttered, tossing a scowl toward the stairs. He didn’t care if Snape’s arm fell off, but he wasn’t going to be blamed for it, especially since he hadn’t done a thing to the arsehole.

He had only made it up six steps when he felt the tell-tale tug of someone coming through the kitchen Floo. Sirius decided he’d probably had too much to drink when it took him a full minute to realize someone had just come waltzing into his house unannounced for the second time in fifteen minutes.

“What now?” he hissed, stomping back down at the stairs toward the basement.

He vaguely recognized the blonde witch standing by his dining table, but he didn’t recall her name until she turned toward the door, and the dying fire lit in the hearth sparkled on the Black crest pinned to her robes. Sirius let out a long, annoyed sigh. “What are you doing here, Narcissa?”

“Your manners are as impeccable as ever, cousin,” she replied, but her posh voice lacked enthusiasm. Sirius couldn’t be sure, but she seemed distracted.

“It’s past bloody midnight. My manners have a bedtime.”

Narcissa arched a perfectly unimpressed brow and took a seat at the table, gaze flicking toward the carriage clock, then away. “Kreacher.”

The house-elf appeared without need for further prompting, the miserable creature bending himself almost in half as he approached the pure-blood woman. “What can Kreacher be doing for Miss Narcissa?”

“Tea,” Narcissa said with an imperious tilt of her head, and the elf was off before Sirius could even scoff. As Kreacher clattered about setting up the kettle, Sirius jerked out one of the chairs and dropped into it, stretching his legs, staring down his cousin with open dislike. Tea was served—the elf skipping over his master with a derisive smirk—and Narcissa dismissed him with a curt command not to eavesdrop.

As soon as the door shut, the witch had her wand in hand, warding the entry, and Sirius felt a whisper of unease clench in his middle. “What is this about?” he demanded.

“Don’t worry yourself; I don’t relish this visit any more than you do, so I will be frank. First, tell me what you know of the MPA law.”

Sirius blinked. “The what?”

“The Muggle-born Protection Act.”

“I—.” He had the impression someone had spoken to him about it before, but he was drunk and tired and had already spent much of the summer trying to catch up on twelve years of missed information. Sirius rubbed at his scruffy face. “It’s that bullshit proposition pushed through by Gaunt when he first got elected, isn’t it? Something about helping Muggle-borns by fostering them out so your lot can keep them under your thumb.”

Narcissa’s lips thinned as she took a sip of tea, finger extended, and gently returned the cup to its saucer. “Yes, well, that is the basics of it,” she replied. “There is also an inherent merit system; the best children get placed in the most prestigious houses and are shuffled based on their performance in school. Should they fail any of their exams, it’s possible they’ll be exiled from the society altogether.”

“Jesus Christ.”

“Quite. I do not know how informed you are on the current political climate or how involved you are with Dumbledore’s little gang of reprobates, but—.” She fidgeted with the cup, a clear sign of agitation most pure-bloods got trained out of early in their youth if they had parents like Narcissa and Sirius. “You know I watch the children on occasion.” Her pale eyes flicked upward toward the floors above and back to Sirius. “And as such, I am aware of their close friendship with Miss Granger.”

Sirius didn’t have a single inkling on where this strange conversation was going. Was he passed out on the sofa, dreaming? “Yeah, and?”

“Miss Granger has been a ward of the House of Malfoy since 1991.”

“Poor girl. What does that have to do with anything?”

Narcissa gave him a look of evident impatience as if she’d laid out all the pieces of a puzzle and thought him an idiot for not putting it together. “Surely you know of Minister Gaunt’s…well, let’s call it what it is, shall we? His obsession with the Potter girl? We know Dumbledore is aware of it and has taken pains to keep her situation hazy and unapproachable to him.”

Sirius leaned forward. “No more games, Narcissa. What do you want from me?”

“There was an incident this evening concerning Gaunt and Her—the Granger girl. He’s taken to pressuring and—punishing her for her lack of information about Miss Potter.” Narcissa took another steadying sip of tea, the cup clattering in the saucer when it returned to its place. “He took the initiative to test the children in our care, Miss Granger and a Mr. Ingham.” She swallowed. “Allow me to skip the retelling and simply say it resulted in Mr. Ingham attempting to murder Miss Granger when his own placement in our home was rendered superfluous.”

“What the fuck?”

Narcissa suddenly shoved her tea across the table toward Sirius, sloshing it over the rim. “Would you mind sobering yourself while I am telling you this? For Merlin’s sake.”

Sirius took the cup without question and downed it, summoning the pot to pour himself another. The tart heat of the leaves and caffeine helped perk his drowsy mind, though it didn’t make what Narcissa had said anymore palatable. The Minister for Magic was inciting children to kill each other now? Nimue’s bones.

“You need to take her from us.”

He choked and almost coughed his tea back out. “Are you daft?”

“That is how the MPA works,” Narcissa reiterated with a new sharpness to her tone. “The House of Black has always been above the House of Malfoy in terms of prestige. I am led to understand Miss Granger is at the very top of her class and is entitled to the most austere home in the eyes of the MPA.” Her subtle glance about the kitchen proved her real thoughts about Sirius’ home, but she said nothing against it. She was a Black, after all, before she became a Malfoy. “Were you to apply for the program and request a ward, she would be placed with you.”

“Again, I have to ask; are you daft? I’m a recently acquitted felon, if you care to remember, and thoroughly disliked by the Ministry.”

“It doesn’t matter. That is not how the MPA works. It is not a social program as it is toted to be; the welfare of the children and the suitability of the homes into which they are placed is not as important as the name under which they are registered.”

“That is vile,” Sirius spat. “How can you sit back and be party to this?”

Narcissa shifted, folding her hands together in her lap. “I did not come to debate political views with you are this hour. You need to apply for the girl. Immediately.”

“I already have two teenage daughters I have absolutely no idea how to care for. I can’t take on another.”

Sirius.” The witch spoke his name with harsh sincerity, not the dull, boring drawl or unctuous laugh her kind used in drawing rooms or exclusive functions. “I fear for Hermione’s life if Gaunt returns for her again. It is imperative you do not underestimate the Minister.” There was real fear in her eyes, in the tightening of her voice. “You must do this.”

Before he could take a breath, she had paperwork on the table before him, skirting the spilled tea, great sheaves of parchment with official Ministry seals and a self-inking quill made from an eagle feather. Sirius stared at Narcissa, taken aback, as she appeared at his side and all but forced his loose fingers around the quill.

“You will fill out these forms without error and accompany me to the MPA office in the Ministry directly afterward. I have it on excellent authority that the clerk will be at his station throughout the night, and I will transfer wardship over to you. If you are asked about this at a later point, you will say your daughters encouraged you to take their friend into your care, or you were moved by sentiment to do your duty as a House Lord. You will say we were reticent to comply with your demands but bent in the face of the law.” She held a finger to his face, and Sirius flinched as if it was a wand. “And if you breathe a single word to the otherwise, I will make you long for Azkaban again, dear cousin. Do you understand?”

Taking a shaky breath, Sirius could only nod.

“Good boy.” She gave his head an affectionate pat. “Now sign.”

Sirius picked up the quill, turned to the first page of the packet, and signed.


A/N:

Remus: “So, how was your day with Elara?”

Sirius: “I punched a priest.”

Remus: “Why are you like this.”

Thank you so much for 5k kudos and over 200k hits! That ’s amazing, and I really appreciate you all taking the time to read my work!

Chapter 163: hermione's oath

Chapter Text

clxiii. hermione’s oath

 

Harriet barely had her eyes open before she noticed something was amiss.

She shuffled out of bed much too early in the morning, dragged on her dressing gown, and tip-toed past Livius to make it to her door and then the landing. From there, she staggered like a stunned garden gnome down the stairs and into the dimly lit kitchen, fully intending to start on breakfast—when she noticed Professor McGonagall sitting grim-faced at the table with a cup of tea.

“Miss Potter,” she said with a telling arch of her brow. “What are you doing up so early?”

“Oh, err—.”

“I assume you’re getting a glass of water before going back to bed.”

It was one of those things. Professor Dumbledore needled Harriet about life with the Dursleys, and because he was one of the cleverest people she’d ever met, he had a way of determining the answers to questions he hadn’t actually asked, where a grimace or an eye-twitch or a slight tightening of her hands was the only confirmation he needed. Bloody infuriating, that. So it came to be decided that Harriet wasn’t meant to be out of bed before a certain hour, wasn’t responsible for certain chores, and wasn’t supposed to make breakfast. All because she did those things for the Dursleys.

Honestly, Harriet wished they would stop making such a fuss.

“Children are supposed to enjoy their summer holidays and sleep in. Or so I’ve been told by many an unappreciative student complaining about the starting time of term classes when they return to the castle.”

Harriet gave her a miffed look, unappreciative of being called a child, but then—. “Wait a second,” she said, squinting despite her glasses as she spied the time. “What’re you doing here so early, Professor?” McGonagall often proved the most prompt of their minders, but her arrivals usually happened after their first meal. Not at this hour, not unless something had happened.

“An urgent matter has called Mr. Black to the Ministry,” the witch said, getting to her feet.

“Before dawn? But what—?”

“It’s nothing to concern yourself with this early. You’ll know more this afternoon. Off to bed with you.”

But—!

With both hands on Harriet’s shoulders, McGonagall marched her out of the kitchen and back up the stairs, escorting her straight to her room. She didn’t turn around until Harriet was through the door. Of course, Harriet had no intention of going to bed or staying in the room, so she changed out of her pajamas into a pair of wrinkled trousers and a jumper she’d left on the chair, then eased out onto the landing with only her socks on her feet, listening intently for McGonagall’s presence. Hearing nothing, she slipped across the landing and opened Elara’s door.

The other witch was fast asleep with her face buried in her pillow, hair unbound, a book dropped on the covers left open to the last page she’d read. Harriet prodded her shoulder until she woke with a snort.

“Elara,” she hissed. “Sirius went to the Ministry last night and isn’t back yet and McGonagall won’t tell me anything!” Elara made a valiant effort to roll over and go back to sleep, but Harriet persisted in poking her arm. “C’mon, Elara, wake up!”

The older girl grumbled and made a grab for her wand, having to try twice more before she picked it up off the nightstand and muttered a spell for the time. The bright numerals flickered to life—and Elara chucked the forgotten book at Harriet’s head. She managed to duck, but only just.

“It’s five in the morning!” Elara raged, words slurred with fatigue. “I don’t care if Sirius has gotten eaten by a Nundu! Come back at a decent hour and I’ll worry about it then!”

“But—.”

Next came a pillow, Harriet blocking it with her arm. “Out!

Harriet escaped the room before Elara contemplated hexing her and stood on the landing, more than a mite annoyed.

It was another one of those things—the absolutely grating phenomenon of the older witches and wizards in their circle privileging information because they felt Harriet and her friends were too young. She didn’t appreciate that in the slightest when her age had so far not excluded her from attempted poisoning, kidnapping, torture, and the occasional murder. The least McGonagall could do was tell her why her flighty godfather had swanned off to the Ministry of all places in the middle of the night. He hated the Ministry.

In the dark, Harriet’s eyes dared to flick upward.

That’s the worst bloody idea I’ve ever had, she told herself, and yet her feet had already picked themselves up and moved toward the steps, ascending higher into the house. It was a terrible idea, if only because Harriet didn’t know if Snape had been briefed on the situation, and she knew Professor Lupin—Remus—wasn’t home tonight. Snape did tend to simply know everything, like a demented or rather rude encyclopedia, and he had to be in his room, given how the door slamming and something hitting the floor had woken Harriet earlier in the night. The git.

Still, that didn’t mean trying to coerce information from him would be wise. In fact, it seemed the very opposite of it.

Too soon, Harriet found herself looking at the door across from Sirius’, her face scrunched in a kind of resigned grimace as she contemplated knocking. She didn’t want to touch the door. She felt sure it’d probably burn her hand off.

Taking a breath, Harriet set her shoulders and said, “Snape.”

Truly, she expected nothing to happen, for the professor to either ignore her or not hear her, as it was far too early for most ordinary people to be out of bed. However, her luck failed her as the lock clicked open and the door swung in on silent hinges.

Harriet had never been in that room before; Snape’s arrival at Grimmauld Place had been almost synonymous with her own, and he’d claimed the room right off, meaning she nor Elara had no reason to go inside. It resembled most of the other spots in the house—a bit dingy, light from the Muggle street seeping in through the threadbare curtains, though much of the dark, pompous design choices had been muted. A single candle had been lit, giving off just enough to see by in the unwelcoming space.

The smell of alcohol—the medical kind—overwhelmed, joined by a sticky, pungent flower smell Harriet couldn’t quite name but had smelled often enough around Hogwarts. The Potions Master sat in the armchair by the window, sprawled with his wand resting idly in his hand, having obviously used it to open the door. Snape looked half-dead, slumped in the unwilling candlelight, the stick on the nightstand burned down to the nub. He still wore his day clothes; Harriet could tell they were old, from the afternoon prior given the wrinkles, though he’d undone the cravat, and it looked as if he’d tried to get his boots off and had given it up as a poor job.

Hermione owes me ten Galleons, she thought grimly, fighting the urge to flinch under the man’s indolent glower. I told her he never bloody sleeps.

“I warned you years ago, girl, if you knock on my door, you had best be dying or prepared to do so. So what do you want?”

Harriet ignored his less than affable greeting, not expecting anything different. At least he was speaking to her. Really, she’d be more frightened if he failed to say anything at all, as a silent Snape was a contemplating Snape, and a contemplating Snape usually meant someone was in for a nasty punishment.

Lingering just inside the threshold, her hands slightly sweaty, she said, “Sirius has gone to the Ministry. He left sometime last night.”

“And?”

“And I want to know why. McGonagall wouldn’t say, and I’m guessing she’s informed you about it.”

“So you thought I would tell you? Really.” He dragged out the syllables of the last word in that droll, snide way of his, but he didn’t seem to have the energy to make a go of being difficult. He hadn’t even gotten up. Snape blinked at Harriet, still stood defiantly inside the door, and said, “As far as I am aware, there was an altercation involving Miss Granger at Malfoy Manor in the evening.”

“What?!” Harriet squawked—slapping a hand over her mouth with a nervous glance toward the dark hallway. If McGonagall caught her up here harassing Snape, she’d find her nose in a corner for half the bloody day. “What d’you mean? What about Hermione? Did the Malfoys—?”

“The Malfoys were only peripherally involved. I have no knowledge of Miss Granger’s state.”

“What does that even mean, ‘peripherally involved?!”

“I haven’t a dictionary on hand for your usage. Pity.”

“I know what peripherally bloody means!” Harriet hissed. “What does any of this have to do with Sirius going to the Ministry?!”

“I’m sure I don’t know or care.” He leaned his head back against the chair’s top, his black eyes half-closed as he watched Harriet like an indolent lizard. Harriet opened her mouth to snarl at him for being a bastard, not caring how furious he’d get—when she stopped, narrowing her eyes at the fresh stain smeared across the dusty floorboards.

“That’s blood,” she commented, to which Snape said nothing. “Are you—err, are you all right? Sir?”

Snape blinked again—long and slow and somewhat dazed in Harriet’s opinion. She’d smelled that cloying floral smell before in the hospital wing and thought it might be a particularly strong pain potion, something Pomfrey had fed her after her encounter with Riddle in the Aerie.

His only response was to flick his wand. Then, a feeling like an invisible hand pressed against Harriet’s face and gave a light push, causing her to stumble back a step, startled. The door swung shut, and the lock clicked home.

“Arsehole,” Harriet grumbled.

“I heard that.”

She scampered as fast as she could.

 

xXx

 

Harriet waited for hours on the bottom step with Elara—who could barely remember Harriet’s late-night wake-up call but became much more lucid after having her morning tea. She joined Harriet on the step, both witches sick to their stomachs with worry as they considered Snape’s cryptic words on their best friend’s fate.

McGonagall wasn’t answering questions; she was properly brassed off at Snape for worrying them with half-baked information, and she was also mad at Harriet for somehow prying the news from the man when he’d apparently locked himself in his room and refused to acknowledge the Deputy Headmistress’ impatient knocking. Harriet wondered if she should tell her that Snape had gotten hurt somehow or if the resulting Doxy nest of problems would be worth some blood smudged on the floor.

In the end, she kept quiet, more worried for Hermione at the moment than the Potions Master.

Noon passed by the time the distant pop of Apparition sounded in the park across the street. Harriet went to her feet, wincing at the ache in her back from sitting for so long. McGonagall appeared from the parlor, where she’d been making or accepting Floo for much of the morning, followed by a tired Remus, who’d arrived maybe an hour beforehand.

“Away from the entrance, Miss Potter.”

Irked, Harriet stepped back to stand with Elara, Remus reaching out to give her shoulder a reaffirming squeeze. They listened to the soft, muffled scuffs of approaching footsteps as McGonagall opened the door.

Hermione came through the door first—and how odd, Harriet thought, to see her there in Grimmauld Place, and yet how fitting. She always missed Hermione over the summers when they were kept apart, and it had always been sad for her to remember they couldn’t see their friend unless they utilized some cloak and dagger nonsense to meet in Diagon Alley. It made Harriet resent everything just a little bit more when she couldn’t be a normal girl who could go out for visits or leave the bloody house without someone reciting the dangers in her ear.

Hermione turned to them, exhaustion heavy in her weathered expression, and her brown eyes blurred with unshed tears. Robes and a cloak had been thrown on over her pajamas, her hair frazzled, no socks visible above the tops of her shoes. She flung herself at Harriet first, who braced herself for the impending impact, still getting the air knocked out of her when Hermione hugged her tighter than a boa constrictor. Elara got pulled into the impromptu huddle, and Harriet found herself being crushed between the pair until Hermione finally—reluctantly—let go.

A swollen ring of purpling bruises encircled her neck.

“Hermione!” Harriet gasped, frozen. “Wh—?!”

Elara reached a hand over Harriet’s shoulder. “Who did this?” she demanded in a soft voice as she brushed Hermione’s injured throat with her fingertips. “Was it…?” Her gaze flicked past her, to the blond witch now crossing the threshold, and the glass lamps trembled as if terrified.

“No,” Hermione rushed to reassure her. “No, it was—. It wasn’t the Malfoys. They—helped me.”

Elara continued to eye Narcissa with clear distrust even as Hermione turned to the woman. Sirius came through the door last of all, dragging Hermione’s trunk and the carrier for her familiar, exchanging a look with Professor McGonagall. Harriet, meanwhile, looked at the trunk, then at her godfather.

“Is Hermione staying with us?” she demanded.

“Yes,” Sirius said, distracted as he set the trunk down and went about releasing Crookshanks. “She’s going to be staying here from now on with the rest of us.”

“But what about—?” Harriet stopped herself and shook her head, tired of the circular arguments she kept having with the adults in the house. She would ask Hermione and get the story proper.

“I’ll call Poppy and see if she’s available,” McGonagall said, her attention centered on Hermione’s neck. “I’m sure she’ll be able to step away from her holiday for a moment to assist.”

“Can’t we just have Snivellus give her a potion? I know he’s here.”

McGonagall’s mouth—already dangerously thin—thinned further as she huffed and crossed her hands. “He doesn’t appear amenable to requests at the moment.”

Sirius’ eye twitched. “What? What good is the greasy sn—bloke if all he does is haunt my fucking house like a ghoul? He’s never bloody useful.

Harriet didn’t tell them she was fairly certain the man had gotten injured, and she didn’t tell them he’d most likely self-medicated on a pain potion. That was Snape’s business, not theirs, and not Harriet’s.

As McGonagall started in on a short, waspish lecture for Sirius and Remus sighed, Harriet caught Hermione’s hand in her own, worried about the other witch’s tired, emotionless stare. “I have some bruise cream up in my trunk I got from Pomfrey at the end of last term. We can use that.”

Hermione nodded, glancing again at Mrs. Malfoy, who stood apart from Sirius and McGonagall as they argued, drawn and silent in a way she never usually was. Hermione took a breath, paused, then took another before she and told her, “Thank you, Mrs. Malfoy.”

Narcissa looked away as she nodded once. “Yes, well,” she said, clearing her throat. “I need to leave now that you’re settled, Hermione.”

“Will you thank Draco for me? Please?”

“…Yes.”

Mrs. Malfoy took her leave, rushing for the Floo in the kitchen, and the trio of young Slytherin witches made their way up the stairs. Hermione’s curiosity was stifled by what she’d endured to a point where she didn’t question anything she saw, not even the gruesome line of house-elf heads or the snarling portrait hidden behind a curtain. It wasn’t until she was seated on Harriet’s unmade bed, holding Crookshanks in her lap, that she started to relay what had occurred the night before.

It was worse than anything Harriet had imagined.

“Jamie Ingham?” she gasped as she emerged from her trunk’s innards, a jar of topical ointment in hand. “That fucking tosser did this to you?”

“Honestly, Harriet, the swearing….”

“I think the occasion warrants a bit of swearing, don’t you?” Harriet unscrewed the cream’s lid and dipped her fingers inside. “Chin up.”

Hermione acquiesced, tipping her head back as Elara gathered her bushy hair and pulled it out of the way, and Harriet smeared the ointment over the grotesque outline of Jamie Ingham’s wretched fingers.

“I told you, it wasn’t Jamie,” Hermione said. “Or, well, it might have been his hands—but it was Gaunt. It was Gaunt’s fault. He was the one who instigated everything.”

“That doesn’t negate what the blighter did!”

“Doesn’t it?”

“What’s going to happen to Ingham?” Elara asked.

“I asked the Malfoys not to report his…attack.”

What?!”

“His life is already ruined!” Hermione cried. “Gaunt ruined his life, and it’s because of me. For Merlin’s sake, they would send him to Azkaban, and they’ve already destroyed his wand! Do you know what that means? Even if he does find an illegal replacement, he’ll never find employment, never be able to lead a normal life in the magical world! Even if he left the country, he wouldn’t be able to complete his magical education without a signed release from Hogwarts, and the Board would refuse to give it—and he has no money, no benefactor, no home! He’s spent six years dedicated to studying magic, and it means nothing. Nothing.” She dragged in a harsh, hitching breath. “Just because I refused to answer the Minister’s stupid questions!

The three witches sat together in silence on Harriet’s bed as Hermione sobbed into her cat’s fur. The marks on her skin faded as the minutes passed, but her tears didn’t, and Harriet wasn’t sure they ever would. Oh, she’d stop crying in time—but the impression would remain in a way the bruises wouldn’t. Hermione would never forget how a slight tip of the Minister’s hand drove another Muggleborn to attempt murdering her in her own bed.

“I won’t let him get away with it,” she sniffled into Harriet’s scarred shoulder, stroking Crookshanks’ riled fur. “Maybe not today, and maybe not tomorrow, but one day. One day the Minister will get exactly what he deserves for all that he’s done, and I’m going to be there to see it. I swear it.”

Unsure of what to say, Harriet continued to pat Hermione’s back, her eyes fixed to the floor, the front of her jumper wet with Hermione’s sorrow. She wondered how many more lives Minister Gaunt would destroy before Hermione’s prophesied retribution found him. She didn’t think she wanted to know.


A/N:

Hermione: “It’s nice to be here! I hope the rest of the holiday is relaxing.”

Harriet: “….”

Elara: “Oh you poor, deluded soul.”

Chapter 164: a measure of quality

Chapter Text

clxiv. a measure of quality

 

The echoing crack of Apparition fell short in the dense woodland as Severus appeared among the summer-ripe lingonberry bushes.

He didn’t move for several minutes. He lingered there in the bracken, staring down at the flat, chiseled flagstone partly buried in the weeds, a marker to assist wizards and witches in visualizing the proper spot to appear. He felt like a man with one foot on the gallows’ step, hesitating for more time before the inevitable farce began.

Enough of this maudlin twaddle.

Severus shifted, rolling his shoulders and cracking his neck, shaking off the pained slouch he’d fallen into over the day. He curled each finger of his right hand into his palm one by one, then extended them, forcing the screaming tendons extending past his wrist to contract and stretch. It was a miracle he could move the hand at all.

Slytherin threw a fit on his last visit, and Severus had only partially dodged the curse that glanced his arm. Despite his best attempts, he hadn’t been able to find the counter, the spell either too esoteric or existing purely in the Dark Lord’s head, though his efforts in quickly cobbling together a Dittany potion spliced with Murtlap Essence had managed to stop the bleeding. Nevertheless, the wound persisted, and if he couldn’t heal it, Severus would have to go to Dumbledore before it became septic.

Merlin save me from that.

The grass under his boots had been trodden on already, flattened by heavy footsteps, and Severus walked through the dark without the need to light his wand. The wards ahead of him buzzed like the angry hive of a thousand hornets, and he lifted his wounded limb to the paunchy surface, letting the old blood on his skin serve as the needed sacrifice. The buzzing abated, and he stepped through the transparent bubble with little thought, continuing from the weeds to the cobbled path leading higher up the mountain.

The Tor, as the Sangforts had named their ancestral home, clung to the precipice of upland rocks, fringed in thick, overgrown trees—located not terribly far from Hogwarts, on the far side of the Forbidden Forest. Severus always thought it ironic, considering none of the Sangforts ever had or ever would enroll in Hogwarts; the local dearth of Dark magic meant the old family vastly preferred Durmstrang.

The manor itself stood limned in summer moonlight, looking very ghoulish, like something out of an old Muggle film about vampires haunting Gothic houses. It did little to impress Severus, who would have been pleased if the whole place were to simply slide off the cliff into the deep canyon below.

As he climbed the steps, he concentrated on his shields, letting the cold, unmoving waters of his Occlumency subsume his mind until his emotions slumbered in the depths of his mental sea. It was a pretty way of saying he felt nothing at all as he crossed the stone courtyard to the main doors, and a downtrodden elf allowed him access to the house.

He could hear the voices and laughter from the foyer, and the noise only grew louder as Severus approached the main dining hall. He emerged below the mezzanine to survey the room, the high, mullioned windows overlooking the canyon, the crystal chandelier, the long walnut table inlaid with gold. The accouterments gave the scene a posh tinge, like a Malfoy ball, but Severus knew the family’s fortune had dwindled—both in the metaphoric and physical sense—thanks to Slytherin’s desired tithes. Cladius had a sense for money, and Severus knew he had to be hiding a sizable chunk of it from the Dark Lord.

A lull in the conversation preceded the turn of Slytherin’s head, the seemingly young wizard lounging at the head of the table, unaffected. Red eyes found Severus lurking as he was prone to do, and a smile split Slytherin’s handsome face. “Severus! How nice of you to join us. I had worried you’d be late.”

He’d timed his arrival carefully, avoiding being unaccountably rude while also missing the majority of the meal—something he always avoided in mixed company. His immunity and gained tolerance for most poisons didn’t rule out new hybrids, and the injury to his forearm made his hand shake something fierce when he tried to grip flatware or a quill. Severus wasn’t about to sit at a table with a bunch of Dark sycophants and tremble, for Merlin’s sake.

“Apologies, my Lord. A delicate brew demanded my attention.”

“Of course.” Slytherin’s attention thinned, already bored with Severus’ excuses. “Come, join us.”

Around the table, faces turned to the Potions Master as he approached an open seat.

“Oh, joy. The half-blood is here,” Gauthar Sangfort muttered in an undertone to his wife, Nefaria, the light-haired pair hiding their mouths behind their crystal wine glasses.

“The stink of him,” Nefaria complained. Severus reeked of sweat and emulsified potions ingredients, having not given a thought to changing after spending a night in agony and a day bent over a cauldron, half-insensible from potent analgesics. Most everyone else in attendance had donned their best; Severus wore the same clothes he always wore, this particular pair of robes speckled in blood and potions.

He blinked. When did I last sleep?

Severus pretended he hadn’t heard them and seated himself, letting his gaze drag along the table and register who had come to this farce. Ernest Nott, Theodore’s elderly father, sat in attendance with his third wife, Rosetta, as did Mathias Avery, Hekter Flint, Silas Burke and his sister Huldah, and Alden Rosier. Cladius, Gauthar’s father, was deep in his cups—or so he let everyone think—and Cicero Aeter had stolen a seat by Slytherin’s side, leaning closer to speak in low, hushed tones, as if he had a secret. Severus almost snorted, given Cicero never amounted to anything more than a sleazy legend chaser and a distraction.

I guess I should be thankful for that, he thought, ignoring the wine that appeared before him. Anything that distracts Slytherin from his designs should be cherished indeed….

Younger faces dotted the peripheries of the table—fodder for the Knights of Walpurgis, Hogwarts alumni every last one of them, mostly from the House of Slytherin, though the odd Gryffindor or Hufflepuff had joined the corp. Funnily enough, Ravenclaws didn’t usually succumb to Tom Slytherin’s guile; too strange, he’d once told Severus. Too prone to following their own whims.

Severus thought they’d all be a lot better off if they were all as weird as the Lovegood girl. The chit hung some radishes from her ears, and Slytherin looked the other way.

That didn’t spare her from the Diadem, though.

His attention snagged on a new face sitting to Slytherin’s right and paused.

“You remember Cobalt Selket, don’t you, Severus?” the Defense instructor asked, a hand coming to settle on the young boy’s arm—and Selket was just a boy, despite graduating in 1990. His shoulders rounded under his uncertainty, his round face flushed with the tentativeness of youth—the kind that lingered in some despite the years. Severus named it ignorance on his best days, and the rest of the time simply referred to it as stupidity.

Yes, he remembered Selket. He remembered sternly advising him to take a position on the Continent, thus firmly removing himself from the Dark Lord’s temptations, and yet here he was.

You stupid, stupid boy.

Severus inclined his head and looked away. Conversations continued, and he distantly felt the disdain of the others when they glanced in his direction. Their distaste slid off of him like an Impervius Charm; none of it touched his consciousness, not as deeply embedded as it was in his being, and Severus’ distinct lack of emotion bored the others, so they paid him little mind. He made motions as if drinking his wine while none of it actually crossed his lips. His wounded armed flared each time the muscles moved.

Pure-blood arseholes, he thought in a voice that sounded far too much like Potter’s. He swatted it aside.

From the far head of the table, Cladius got to his feet and swayed slightly as he came down the line. He performed his little display with mastery, putting enough effort into his steps to be noticeable but with enough subtlety to not exaggerate. He gripped the back of Severus’ chair, aged fingers curling into the carved wood, and affected a weak hiccup.

“Aye, Snape. I’ve had a bit too much tipple. Got anything for a poor drunkard stashed away there?”

Across the table, Gauthar sucked air through his straight teeth and hissed, “For Circe’s sake, father.”

Ignoring their genteel squabbling, Severus snapped his fingers and summoned the requisite vial from his robes. Oh, it certainly had the appearance of Hangover Relief if anyone at the table thought to take a glance at it, as Severus had specifically engineered the recipe to mimic the look. Cladius accepted the vial with entitled gratitude—the kind his poncy breed of pure-bloods always expressed towards half-bloods and the like—and drank it down, straightening his back.

“Much better. My thanks, Master Snape.”

Severus nodded—one solid jerk of his chin—and placed the vial back in his pocket.

To most in society, Cladius Sangfort was an affable drunk and respected rune augmenter, a flighty and superficial character warranting a few off chuckles at gatherings—but Severus knew better. The eldest Sangfort was a Dark wizard who struck a deal with the devil when Tom Riddle had only just left Hogwarts, making him an original Knight of Walpurgis and Death Eater. Whether a person was a Knight or a Guardian or a Death Eater, they did not usually last long. Cladius’ longevity alone spoke of his influence and cunning.

As did the fact that he had a secret no one but Severus had ever sussed out.

About half a decade ago, Severus noted a peculiar and distinct smell clinging to the wizard’s robes, an odor belonging to a very narrow subset of mixtures, one of which fitted a tincture prescribed for Fibulus Fever—a magical autoimmune disease that caused brittle bones. It wasn’t something Severus would usually concern himself with—but the Dark Lord abhorred…weakness. He culled those with infirmity from his ranks, and so Severus understood Sangfort was keeping a very naughty secret from his Lord to spare his own neck. How very Slytherin, for a man who’d never set foot in Hogwarts.

Severus had approached Cladius with a proposition; in exchange for discreetly brewing and providing the needed potion, Sangfort occasionally sent an owl the Potions Master’s way, detailing when Slytherin decided to frequent the Tor, who he brought with him, and what kind of discussion went on behind Severus’ back. In return, Severus conveniently forgot all about the man’s disease.

Under the table, Severus tapped an impatient finger against his thigh as Cladius returned to his seat. He had heard nothing of Selket being recruited, and Cladius had not reported new visitors. How many others had Severus heard nothing about? Was this a reflection of his standing? An unforeseen backsliding in Slytherin’s trust?

None of his ruminations reflected on his still face. Severus did what he did best; he sat and waited and listened. He listened to the idle gossip and the truth it concealed. Mentions of the Ministry and its various departments outlined an increased interest in Gaunt’s activities among the Knights, but Severus didn’t detect any whiffs of dissension. Most of those who had a seat at that table were clever enough to never hint toward any wavering sentiment. Slytherin’s more pointed question to Nefaria about her daughter Elinor’s time at Durmstrang revealed his own interest in how Gaunt’s attentions had turned to Hogwarts with the Triwizard Tournament.

Overall, Severus felt he was going to have a very bad year.

“A pity Erroneous couldn’t attend,” Slytherin said, patting his mouth with a napkin. “But business called him away.”

Or, more succinctly, spying on Gaunt left Erroneous Pyrites too busy to come lick Slytherin’s boots this evening. Severus wished his own duties reporting on Dumbledore would excuse him as well, but it being summer didn’t give him much excuse to be near the venerable wizard.

Slytherin rose, black robes falling about him in a puddle of bespoke, gilded silk. “Severus, a walk.”

With a simple bow of his head, Severus stood to follow the shorter wizard wherever he wished to go—and, in this instance, Slytherin merely moved them to the mezzanine, a more shadowed venue from where the Dark Lord could survey his pawns scattered below. Severus remained a respectful distance away as Slytherin leaned a casual hand on the railing and the chandelier poured gossamer golden light on his profile, the rest of him plunged into the heavier dark of the mezzanine. Red eyes swiveled to survey Severus, unknown thoughts swirling behind them.

Whenever Slytherin looked at him like that—with silent, indolent speculation—Severus considered he might be about to die.

“You have something to tell me, Severus?”

“A minor development.”

“Oh?”

“Guardianship over the Granger girl switched hands,” Severus reported. “The specifics of the situation are unclear, but she has apparently become a ward of the Blacks, removed from the Malfoys’ purview.”

“Erroneous has already brought this to my attention,” Slytherin said, the reprimand clear as Severus forced his neck to bend in acknowledgment. “But he is closer to the source, as it were. I would have been very unhappy with him had you brought this to me first.”

A pity, Severus thought, lips threatening to curl in a snide smirk. But, then again, Albus would wish for me to enable Erroneous Pyrites, not bring him down. Pyrites undermined Gaunt on Slytherin’s behest, and of the two nefarious men, Gaunt flexed his power in more ostentatious, dangerous ways. He needed more checks because, for all that Slytherin’s machinations often proved insidious and devastating, they were survivable.

Usually.

“It is an interesting turn of events,” Slytherin remarked as he crossed his arms. “The sneaky little Mudblood is safely tucked away from Gaunt’s sticky fingers. Naturally, she was the weakest point of access to Potter for the Ministry and the misguided Guardians. I bet Dumbledore is well pleased with himself.” A contemplative mien settled over Slytherin’s expression, and the sudden urge to shove him from the balcony almost overcame Severus. It bucked against his shields like some deepsea swelling creature picking at the ice. He quickly posed a question.

“Cobalt Selket, my Lord? I am…surprised.”

“Ah,” Slytherin said, waving a hand, glancing at the boy in question. He still seemed uncertain of his place there—but also eager, greedy for the easy privilege displayed before him. Poor dead fool. “I know. Not up to my usual standards, true. I doubt he’ll last long, but he’ll have his uses.” An unaffected sigh escaped him, and Severus’ hands twitched in the long sleeves of his robes. “I despair of finding quality in the dregs I am allowed to nurture. If only the Headmaster would do us the great honor of kicking off over his kippers in the morning….”

Slytherin turned to him, and the only warning he received was the ghoulish glow of crimson eyes in a shadowed face before Slytherin’s hand snaked out like a viper and grabbed his arm. The pain of careless fingers digging into his wound drove Severus to his knees, but he didn’t utter a single sound of protest.

“That is what I like about you, Severus,” Slytherin crooned. “You’re quality, for all that you have aggrieved me so over the years.” His other hand touched Severus’ rigid face, thumb brushing the scars by his left eye. “But you learn well, and you’ve lasted while so many others have…displeased me. Where they have proven themselves worthless, you rise above. Most of the time, at least.” Again, his thumb passed by Severus’ false eye, and the nail scratched against the scar tissue. His fingers continued to dig into his arm with unflagging strength. Blood pattered on the dull carpet.

Severus continued to look forward with a blank, unfeeling stare, and Slytherin leaned closer.

“Gaunt wants to play in my school, and I’m supposed to make do with the likes of Cobalt Ssselket?” He laughed, cold and high, his answering smile as cruel as Dumbledore’s was kind. “No. I need a bit more than that, and if I cannot find quality, why not make it myself?”

Severus did not entirely follow his deranged line of thinking, but he memorized the words nonetheless. “I will do as my Lord wishes.”

“Yes, you will, won’t you?”

His fingers relaxed, and Slytherin passed his hand over the interior of Severus’ forearm. Magic prickled against the Potions Master’s skin, and he felt the wound knit itself closed under the unvoiced counter-curse, taking the lingering agony with it. Blood stopped seeping into his sleeve.

“Thank you, my Lord.”

“That is the only reward you shall receive for me.” Slytherin surveyed his hand, eyes half-closed as he rubbed the red gore between his fingertips. “Do not appear so disheveled in my presence again.”

“Of course, my Lord.”

“Get out of my sight until I have need of you again.”

Bowing once more, Severus stood and swept away. He did not wait to see Slytherin lick the blood from his skin.

 

xXx

 

Hours later, sequestered in his office at Hogwarts, Severus pondered over Slytherin’s words for the hundredth time.

If I cannot find quality, why not make it myself?”

“But to what end?” he breathed, brow furrowed. “And what evil does it mean for the rest of us?”

Silent again, he withdrew a bound leather ledger from the bottom drawer of his desk, unwinding the clasp to lay it open on the surface. He flipped through the yellowing pages of cheap parchment, surveying the lines until he paused upon a page marked “1990” is own spidery script. There, he slid his finger down the list to the name “Cobalt Selket.”

With little emotion, Severus picked up his inked quill and crossed the name out.

He closed the book, and as the pages fluttered, he pretended he didn’t see the dozens upon dozens of similar names dismissed with other, foreboding slashes.

Severus pretended it didn’t make him feel like he was dying a little more every day.


 

A/N: The Sangfort and Aeter families are OC characters I use in some of my others fics. You might recognize the Aeter name from The Theory of Magic, if you ’ve read it. I don’t have anything with the Sangforts published atm, so this is their first appearance technically. They’re not particularly important characters, but they do flesh out Slytherin’s Knights a bit more.

Slytherin: “That is what I like about you.”

Severus: “My winning personality?”

Slytherin: “…No.”

Chapter 165: perilous day trips

Chapter Text

clxv. perilous day trips

 

The clay shingles clicked and complained under Harriet’s weight as she stretched toward the block wall, radio clasped in her sweaty hands.

“Harriet, be careful,” Hermione called from below, fussing when one of the old shingles snapped at the edge and fell into the bushes.

“I’m fine,” Harriet told her, rolling her eyes where the other witch couldn’t see. Elara barked, and Harriet would have thrown a wad of the leaves decaying in clumps up there if her hands hadn’t been full. Instead, she stretched over the slim gap between the shed and the wall, reached up, and settled the radio on the cinderblock pillar. She poked the switch, and static warbled in the air.

During an afternoon of exploration in the cluttered storage spaces of the old Blacks, the trio of Slytherin witches came across a stash of Muggle things Sirius confessed to squirreling away in his school days. Among the collection of odds and ends was an old radio.

Usually, Muggle electronics didn’t work around magic—but the radio had been sitting in a Wizarding house for so long, like a bag of tea leaves steeping in hot water, that some of the magic stuck. It still didn’t worth a damn inside the wards, but there was one spot Harriet had found where the wards met the property line in a wibbly mess, and if she put the radio just an inch or so on the other side of the line….

After another nudge, the static turned into Muggle music.

Grinning, Harriet slid along the tiles and leaves and shoved off the edge of the roof, hopping down from the shed to join her friends.

“I still can’t believe you found this spot,” Hermione huffed, sitting on a cracked stone bench, picking at the dried-out moss. “What were you doing on the shed’s roof in the first place?”

Harriet pretended she didn’t hear her, finding her own seat on the ground. The earth already soaked in the morning sun, the heat drowsy and delightful, though not too humid or hot—at least not yet. Harriet had grass stains on her trousers. Hermione had tied her hair back in a frizzy, but comfortable bun.

Elara, lounging as an Animagus, growled at Livius when the Horned Serpent flicked his tongue in her direction. He hissed—as did the three little golems following him, inspecting the tangled weeds. Elara huffed and rose on all four paws, padding over to Hermione and jumping onto the available space on the bench.

Music filtered across the garden, interrupted by an ad for a summer sale.

Hermione had a far-off, thoughtful expression on her face as she listened to the radio’s chatter. “I miss the Muggle world sometimes,” she commented. “There are so many lovely things that don’t translate well into magical society or don’t have the same utility. Oh, and the anonymity. It seems most every witch or wizard knows one another—or at least knows someone who knows somebody else. I miss being able to go out and having no risk of popping in on someone familiar.”

“Don’t expect that anonymity around here,” Harriet said with a small grin. “Everyone at the local Sainsbury’s recognizes us, especially Sirius. He makes getting groceries a bit of a, err….”

Elara shifted forms, appearing perched on the bench next to Hermione, the picture of elegant ease. “A spectacle. He makes everything a spectacle.”

Well, Harriet couldn’t argue with that, nor did she blame Sirius. She’d spent most of her life ignorant of the magical world, yet she still spotted sights in Muggle London that she’d never seen before. It wasn’t his fault he didn’t remember that tower of stacked tuna tins didn’t have a Stabilizing Charm on it.

“Harriet,” Elara said.

“Hmm?”

“Have you been practicing?”

“Practicing—? Oh.”

A defeated breath escaped her as Harriet sprawled onto the grass, staring up at the blue sky above. “Yes,” she admitted. “‘Amato animo animato animagus,’ every morning and every night.”

“Are you clearing your mind?”

“…yes.”

“You’re lying.”

“Oi!”

Sighing, Hermione crossed one leg over the other, shoe popping loose from her heel as her foot bobbed. “Professor McGonagall’s going to murder you, you know.”

It was a distinct possibility and a risk Harriet was willing to take.

“If you tattle on me, I’ll tell her you made the potion.”

Hermione gasped. “I would never!”

Humming, Elara said, “I think she was considering tattling to get a better deal, Harriet!”

“No!”

Harriet sat up and nodded several times. “Yes, she was definitely considering it.”

Hermione finally caught on to their teasing and crossed her arms. “You two are terrible. I would never.”

“Well, if it’s any comfort, I’ll already be murdered before I get the chance to say who made the potion. Elara still has nightmares of the lecture she got.”

Hermione giggled as Elara shivered. “I thought it entirely possible she might turn me into a flobberworm.”

“You would probably both deserve it for trying—and succeeding, in Elara’s case—to become Animagi behind her back.”

“We still can’t convince you to try it, Hermione?”

“No, I prefer all my limbs exactly as they are, thank you.” Hermione studied her fingers as if making sure they were still in the right shape. “The horrible stories the books tell about all the witches and wizards who’ve gotten stuck halfway between forms are horrendous.”

Harriet didn’t want to hear the stories again; the one about the bloke who ended up with fins for hands was enough for her. “Well, what’s that thing the Gryffindors always say?”

Elara frowned. “…No risk, no reward?”

“There you go.”

Hermione snorted. “Professor Slytherin would be appalled to hear you say that.”

“He’s always appalled.”

“You mean appalling.”

They laughed and changed the conversation to something less grim, chatting about the weather or how annoying Elara found Snape’s holiday assignment. Hermione kicked off both her shoes and stretched her legs, mindful of her socks in the grass, while Livi eventually found his way over to Harriet and curled against her side.

Halfway through Elara’s rather convincing argument on why Snape should be banned from assigning six feet on epithelial potions over summer, the back door clattered open.

“Girls!” Remus called. “We’re almost ready to leave for Diagon Alley!” He paused. “Why is there music playing?”

“No reason!” Harriet popped to her feet and scaled the shed again. Livi watched her as if considering what she was doing. Going by the running commentary, he thought her very foolish unless something tasty waited up there.

Elara collected the golems—cursing Kevin and his propensity for biting—while Hermione put her shoes back on. Remus came outside to see what kept them.

“Harriet, what on earth are you doing?”

“Nothing!” She reached, turned off the radio, and picked it up, almost overbalanced by the heavy weight. With a grunt, she brought it back into her chest and pinned it there with her arm before sliding her way back down the roof’s short pitch.

“It doesn’t appear to be nothing,” Remus remarked as Harriet landed on her feet. He raised a brow at the radio but didn’t say anything. Harriet tucked it under her arm and shot him her best smile, the one she reserved for her professors when she knew she was out of bounds.

“So, Diagon Alley? Excellent!”

The corner of Remus’ mouth quirked as he took out his wand and spelled the knees of Harriet’s trousers clean.

“Thanks, Pro—Remus!”

“Think nothing of it. What about the rest of you? Any spots need removing?”

Elara and Hermione shook their heads, and Remus ushered them back inside. He plucked the radio out of Harriet’s hands as she passed him. “You can have it back when you promise to stop climbing buildings.”

“It’s not that tall!”

“It is still a building, however.”

“Barely,” Harriet grumbled.

“Go on. We’ll be leaving in a few minutes.”

The reminder perked Harriet up. She collected Livi and let him twist over her shoulders and around her middle, which gave Harriet a decidedly lumpy look, not that she minded much. Kevin, Rick, and Howard got transferred from Elara’s pocket to hers—and Harriet pretended she didn’t see Hermione’s disapproving glance at Livi’s invisible coils.

“C’mon, Hermione. It’s my birthday.”

She shook her head. “That doesn’t give you a free pass to carry a deadly wizard-killer in public.”

“It should.”

Sirius was waiting for them in the kitchen, sliding his arms into a pair of new summer robes that clashed with the dated Muggle t-shirt underneath. “Hey, you lot. Ready to go?” He grinned at Harriet. “Ready to get out of the house for a bit?”

“Yes!”

“Yeah, me too.” He looked to Remus, who appeared last, having stashed the radio somewhere. Harriet would have to find out where later. “Who’re we meeting there?”

“Mad-Eye and his trainee are supposed to be scouting the area ahead of us and will send word if it is needed.”

“What about Snivellus?”

“According to Albus, he won’t be available until later this afternoon.”

“Worthless cu—.” Sirius cleared his throat, Remus arching a reprimanding brow. “All right.” He said instead, plucking the dish of Floo Powder from the mantel. “I’ll go first, then.”

Sirius disappeared through the flames, followed by Harriet, then Hermione, and Elara and Remus last of all, the former chewing on a slice of pickled ginger to counter her nausea. A large crowd gathered in The Leaky Cauldron, witches and wizards descending for an early lunch in loud, chattering groups. Harriet almost got shoved right back into the fire when she appeared.

They got out of the pub with a bit of maneuvering and judicial application of elbows. Harriet didn’t care if it was crowded; she relished any chance to escape Grimmauld Place that didn’t involve trying to stop Sirius from causing miniature disasters in the grocery store. She knew her friends felt the same.

Birthdays had always been a source of contention for Harriet. Even years after leaving Privet Drive, the date filled her with nervous anticipation, as if waiting for it all to be a joke. As if her entire life would disappear in the blink of an eye.

Rationally, Harriet knew she was being silly; she had so many people in her life who cared about her, the breakfast table piled with enough gifts to make Dudley envious, but the doubt remained. Like a tiny, incessant weed, it poked its head through the dirt every so often, no matter how many times Harriet pulled it out.

Elara linked her arm through hers, and Harriet blinked, brushing off uncertain thoughts. “So you don’t get lost again,” Elara said, the corner of her lips hitching in a half-smirk. “Like you did before when you wound up in Knockturn Alley and got led back by Slytherin.”

“Merlin, don’t remind me. I thought I was going to be harvested for fingernails that day.”

They wandered the quarter without a specific destination in mind, though they did stop by Florean Fortescue’s for ice cream, and Hermione dragged them to the stationary shop to peruse the inks. They spent two and half hours in Flourish and Blotts, then a further hour in Wiseacre’s Wizarding Equipment looking for a special “magical embolizing” cauldron Hermione insisted they needed to improve the Atlas.

The bloke behind the counter at Potage’s Cauldron Shop took one look at them and snapped that what they wanted was only available to journeymen and above.

Rude, Harriet thought when they got shown the door.

Then Hermione suggested they “borrow the necessary equipment from Snape, and Elara turned white as a ghost on Christmas. They spent forty-five minutes talking the bushy-haired witch out of her latest bout of madness.

“It would prevent magical bleeds and make the Atlas far more difficult to detect!” she insisted with a huff. “Someone’s got to have one somewhere.

Afterward, they meandered toward the north end of the alley, the crowd thicker than ever, and Sirius drew Harriet aside.

“Listen,” he said, one hand on her shoulder, careful not to touch Livi’s heavy coils. They stood by the shadowed entrance of Eeylops Owl Emporium, watched the bright, luminous eyes of a dozen owls perched behind the windows. “I, err, bought you something—for your birthday.”

Harriet brightened. “Oh?” Honestly, she hadn’t thought of who didn’t get her a gift this morning, only making herself a note on those she needed to send thank you letters to tonight.

“Remus told me you were upset when that arsehole teacher of yours kicked you off the Quidditch team. Which is bloody criminal—I saw you play, once, at your last game. Did you know that? Amazing Seeker, even with the—ah—Dementors.” Sirius stuck his hands in the pockets of his robes and shuffled his feet. “It’s not fair to you.”

“Well, there’s not much I can do about it. Unless Slytherin changes his mind.” Harriet wouldn’t hold her breath for that. He seemed content on his decision—if only because it made Harriet unhappy.

“Playing at Hogwarts isn’t your only option.”

“What d’you mean?”

“I mean I signed you up for a summer league if you’re interested.” He removed a hand from his pocket, bringing with it a bit of folded parchment he gave to Harriet. “I had a hell of a time convincing Dumbledore, but he agreed it’s not right keeping you lot locked inside all the time.”

Harriet unfolded the parchment and found that it was an acknowledgment for Harriet’s enrollment in one of the local junior leagues as a Seeker. She hadn’t known those existed.

“This is great!” she exclaimed, smiling. Then, a thought occurred to her, and the smile faltered. “Do they have spare brooms for their team? I—the broom I used before was ruined, and even then, it wasn’t mine.”

“That was part of your present, actually.” Sirius gestured at the letter, which Harriet finished unfolding, catching a smaller slip of parchment tucked into the bottom. It was a receipt from Quality Quidditch Supplies, and when Harriet saw what Sirius had bought, her eyes nearly popped out of her head.

“I—that’s—it’s too much! I—.”

Sirius scratched the back of his head. “I had to make up for thirteen missed birthdays, right? And you could probably blame me for you crashing your broom in the first place and getting kicked off the team.”

“Flint and Slytherin were looking for an excuse anyway,” Harriet replied without thought, her mind still stuck on the item listed on the slip. Sirius had torn the total off, but Harriet had gone into the store to ask the price before and knew it hadn’t changed.

A Firebolt. He’d bought her a Firebolt.

“I—thank you, Sirius. Thank you.”

Before she could second guess herself, Harriet hugged him tight around the middle, Livi wriggling in protest against her shoulders when Sirius returned the gesture. He ruffled her hair when she let go—which Harriet knew probably made her fringe stick straight up.

“Come on, they assured me it’d be ready to pick up today….”

Inside the Quality Quidditch Supplies, the manager all but bent over backwards to help Sirius—which Harriet figured was because her godfather had dropped a sizable fortune on buying a bloody broom there. He had the broom wrapped and shrunken before bringing it out of the backroom per Sirius’ request, not wanting to cause a stir. It wasn’t every day someone bought a Firebolt.

As Sirius flicked through some paperwork in need of his signature, Harriet glanced at Elara and Hermione, who wore bemused expressions, standing off to the side. Elara caught her gaze and smiled, her lips closed, the skin about her eyes tight with unspoken tension.

A sudden wriggle of guilt bloomed in Harriet’s middle.

Up until recently, the money in the Black vaults had been under Elara’s purview—and Harriet knew she’d watched it carefully. Elara had exchanged letters with Gringotts at least once a week as she learned about interest and family investments and taxes, sitting at her carrel reading thick books about finances that often put her straight to sleep. Elara had been responsible for every Galleon in the vaults, and Sirius had gone ahead and spent a massive chunk in one day.

Merlin, Harriet hoped her godfather had at least mentioned it to his daughter beforehand.

They left the shop with Harriet’s new, shrunken broom safely tucked into the pocket occupied by Howard, and their group decided on meandering back toward the Leaky Cauldron for an early supper. They had just passed under the swinging sign for Slug and Jiggers’ when the spectral form of an eagle swept down upon them, circling Sirius’ head.

Danger,” the eagle croaked in a familiar, gravely voice. “Guardians on the move.

Sirius and Remus stiffened.

“What’s that mean?” Harriet asked as the eagle Patronus dispersed into a shower of glittering dust. “I got the danger bit, but—.”

The crowd ahead of them thinned enough for the pub’s entrance to be visible from where they stood, and the man dressed in maroon robes stationed by the door couldn’t be mistaken for anything other than an Auror. Another Auror harried the groups of people trying to pass him by, searching faces.

“Oh, shit,” Sirius cursed under his breath, forcibly turning himself and Harriet away. “Bastards never take a holiday, do they? Never mind supper. Let’s get you lot home.”

They started toward the opposite side of the alley, walking fast, keeping to the peripheries to avoid the main crush. Suddenly, Sirius came to a sudden halt and pressed them back into a recessed alcove cluttered with empty crates.

Where the wide, shallow steps merged the northern end of the quarter to the south side, two more Aurors strode below the ragged shadows cast by Charmed bunting, their eyes squinting against the harsh sunlight. The taller of the pair pointed in one direction, and he went in another.

Golden pins flared against their chests.

“Guardians of the Magical Right,” Remus muttered from behind, keeping a hand on Elara and Hermione’s arms. “We should Apparate, Sirius.”

They tried, both Sirius and Remus taking half-steps to their right, twisting, but neither went anywhere at all. Sirius swore again, and Remus grimaced.

“Anti-Disapparition Jinx,” he explained to the three witches.

“They can’t have covered the whole alley,” Sirius argued, tugging on the hood of Harriet’s robes until it came free of the collar and he could yank it over her head. Unfortunately, given the robes had been designed with summer in mind, the fabric provided little disguise.

“What do they want?” Harriet asked, her heart beating an uncomfortable stitch in her chest. “We haven’t done anything wrong. They have no reason to bother us, right?”

Remus shook his head. “They don’t need a particular reason to question a witch or wizard if there’s probable suspicion of a past or imminent crime”

“But there’s no—.”

“It is no matter if there is or isn’t suspicion or a real crime, Harriet. Yes, they would have to release Sirius, Elara, and myself, and Hermione would go back to her guardian, Sirius—but you, as an untended minor—.”

Harriet’s blood ran cold. “They’d take me away,” she said, voice hoarse. “Because neither of you is my proper guardian, and there’s no bloody way they’d contact the Dursleys. They’re Muggles. So that means—it means they’re trying to separate us.”

“Yes.”

Livi, sensing the sudden spike in Harriet’s fear, shifted and hissed in her ear. “Misstresss?

Stay hidden,” she told him, then adding, “Bite the bad wizards if they try to take me away.” If Gaunt got his hands on her, Harriet didn’t think she’d ever be found again.

Sirius’ hand clenched tighter on her shoulder, thumb pressing down into her bones. “We can—.”

One of the Aurors spotted them and started forward, pushing through the throngs of people.

A few summers past, Harriet had spent a great deal of time familiarizing herself with the British Wizarding quarter’s layout, so she knew to quickly grab the back of Remus and Sirius’ cloaks and pull them back, darting to the door of Whizz Hard Books. The haggard old woman at the front barely had a chance to raise her head before the five of them squeezed through the cluttered aisles and burst out the back door.

Harriet led them down the empty lane, running, listening for pursuit until she spotted another door opening, an employee coming out to throw rubbish in the tip—.

“There—!”

The heavy odor inside the Tobacconist rolled over them in a sickly cloud, Elara wheezing into her sleeve. The mustachioed proprietor sputtered and shouted at Sirius and Remus to get the minors out of his shop. They obliged him, spilling over the front threshold into the humid heat of Horizont Alley.

When another attempt to Disapparate failed them, Harriet brought them to Flimflam’s Lanterns, and they disappeared into the steep, narrow passage connecting Horizont to Carkitt Market. A few more Aurors haunted the Market, but the open space surrounding the central fountain had attracted more visitors than Diagon and Horizont combined. Children screamed and splashed in the water, and people coming out of Dr. Filibuster’s kept setting off various Charmed fireworks.

The mob made it more difficult for them to be spotted—and more difficult to stay together.

No sooner had they attempted to cross the plaza than a group of teenagers older than Harriet and her friends ran by, and Harriet stumbled. One misstep, and Sirius’ hand slipped from her shoulder, his fingers scrabbling for purchase, tugging hard before falling off. She heard his voice, but turned and cursed when the crowd surged, and Harriet lost sight of her group.

She didn’t shout Sirius’ name. She didn’t think she’d be heard—and if she was, there was a chance the person who’d answer wasn’t someone she wanted to find her. Instead, Harriet shoved at the people around her, earning several yelps of protest, and searched for someone she knew.

She thought she heard her name called from somewhere on her left, where Remus and the others had vanished, and Harriet forced her way closer. No one was there.

One minute turned to two—to three, then ten. The bodies around her kept moving, and Harriet’s heart kept racing, and she couldn’t—.

Don’t panic, she told herself, throat tight, sweat dripping along the nape of her neck. Her hand shook as she tucked it under the collar of her blouse and pulled on the leather strap hidden underneath, feeling Hugh’s skull and—more importantly—the Atlas drag against her sternum.

If she got it out, she could find the others on it, and then—.

A cold hand gripped her wrist, and Harriet gasped. She looked up and saw the maroon cloak, the unfamiliar face, and a black wand pointed at her neck.

Harriet reacted on instinct, baring her teeth. “Livius!

The Horned Serpent curled against her throat, invisible head rising from her collar with a heinous hissing—.

Petrificus Totalus!

Harriet expected her body to stiffen, for her legs to snap together and her arms to fall to her side—but it was Livi who went limp against her shoulder.

How did he see—?

“I’m in no mood to deal with your bloody snake, Potter!”

“Wh—?!” Harriet yanked hard against the hand still holding her wrist, but the fingers tightened, refusing to let go.

“In your second year, you and your reprobate friends stole from me in order to brew illegal Polyjuice Potion,” the man said. “I assume you used it to transform into Aurora Sinistra for your ill-conceived spying efforts.”

Harriet stared aghast at the bloke, mouth moving without sound for several moments until his words clicked in her brain. Polyjuice. “…Snape?”

He said nothing further, only turning around and hexing the closest group out of his path. Harriet had to run to keep pace with the wizard as they crossed the plaza. He led her under a brick archway at the far edge of the Market, and they stepped out from the Wizarding quarter into Muggle London, into a sheltered, hedged-in byway somewhere in Holborn.

Another of Gaunt’s Aurors waited there, his robes Transfigured into a lopsided coat. He glanced at Harriet and her impromptu savior and had to look again, surprised. He fumbled for his wand.

Snape’s spell caught him across the face and slammed the poor blighter into the brick wall at his back. Something crunched.

Before the Auror could fully slide to the asphalt, Snape locked his arm around Harriet’s middle and twisted—.

The abrupt Apparition flipped Harriet’s already upset stomach and bile burned in her throat. She would have tripped on her face if not for Snape’s grip, his bony fingers digging into her side. He kept her upright, and they marched across the road into the shadow of Number Twelve.

“Trust Black to fuck up a simple day trip,” Snape mocked, finally letting Harriet go. She sunk onto the porch step, her knees weak, palms coated in anxious sweat. It was eerie to hear Snape’s words come out of a stranger’s mouth in the stranger’s high, grating voice.

As an afterthought, Harriet shook off her daze and canceled the spell on Livi. He tightened on instinct about her neck, and she choked, pulling at his coils as the serpent’s head whipped toward Snape. The Potions Master kept a wary eye on the creature even as Harriet wrapped a hand about his head to hold him back.

I will eatsss him!

He’d probably taste like bitter tea leaves,” Harriet muttered, wrestling Livi into her arms. “Stop. It’s Professor Snape. He’s not one of the bad wizards.

Livi paused, and his purple tongue furiously tasted the air until he discovered something Harriet couldn’t smell. He hissed low and menacing but still settled onto Harriet’s lap, letting her stroke his scales to calm him down.

The bright, vivid form of Snape’s Patronus burst into view, the pulsating phoenix saturating the grim little stoop in its beautiful, soft light as it hovered in the air.

“I have the girl,” he intoned to the bird. “At the house.”

With those simple words, Snape flicked his wand, and the phoenix flapped its wings, then vanished. The cool, euphoric feeling went with it, replaced by the dull, wet summer heat. Harriet blinked the starlight from her eyes and focused on Snape.

“It wasn’t Sirius’ fault,” she argued. “We got separated by the crowd.”

“How convenient.”

“I’m not—tall. Or very big. So you can’t blame Sirius for—.”

“I can, and I can blame you as well, you daft numbskull,” he snapped, eyes fixed upon her own. Harriet noticed the left was black—black as his usual color, and she guessed it hadn’t changed with the Polyjuice. She couldn’t fathom how he’d kept that same funny eye when he transformed.

Or, well, she could, but all conclusions were far too gruesome for her to consider in depth.

“You need to be more assertive.”

“What, just start hexing people in the ankles as you do?”

Yes,” Snape retorted. The light brown roots of his hair began to darken and lengthen. “I don’t care what you have to do to get those fools out of your way. Do not allow yourself to be separated from your bumbling guardians! If Gaunt gets his hands on you—.”

Snape cut himself off, jaw snapping closed like a steel trap, mouth forming a thin, dangerous line.

“How’d you even know I was in trouble? Remus said you weren’t gonna be around today.”

“I don’t report my schedule to you, Potter.” He sounded more tired than reprimanding, wincing as the bones in his hands shifted and popped. “And the less those two half-wits know, the better—.”

A crimson streak barreled toward the wizard, and he had an instant to form a protective shield, nearly trampling Harriet when the speed of the assault forced him back a step. Another curse sailed in his direction, and Snape flicked it aside.

“Get out of the road before the Muggles see, you addle-brained pillock!” he shouted.

“Who the fuck—?!”

Padfoot!

The rapid patter of footsteps preceded the appearance of Sirius, Remus, Elara, and Hermione from around the dowdy bushes lining the adjacent park, Harriet’s friends paying little heed to the unfamiliar figure in red as they dashed toward Number Twelve.

“Harriet!” Hermione cried as she reached her, nearly clipping Snape in her haste. “Harriet, what on earth happened? You were right there, and then—.”

“Why didn’t you use your Atlas?” Elara demanded, glowering at Snape, then at Harriet. “The whole point of us creating it was to use in situations like this!”

“I was going to, but—.”

Sirius, following after the witches, pointed his wand at Snape and demanded, “Who are you?”

“Seeing as I’m standing inside the property’s wards, who do you think?”

“I said—!”

“Lupin, do call off your mutt before he gets himself hurt.”

Either Remus had already guessed Snape’s identity, or he presented a calmer front than Sirius, who appeared no happier having learned the truth.

“I thought you were out licking boots today, Snivellus? Your master give you a good kick in your crooked teeth?”

Snape didn’t respond. His body started to grow and broaden, so he countered the Transfiguration on his robes, fitted maroon fabric giving way to billowing black cloth. He yanked Gaunt’s pin—the eye with the golden serpent surrounding it—from his lapel and stuck it in his pocket as his skin lightened and his face resumed its usual shape.

“For Godric’s sake, Sirius,” Remus sighed as he crossed the yard, ignoring the two wizards. He set his hand on Harriet’s head and brushed back her fringe. “Are you all right?”

“Fine,” she shrugged. “Just the crowds, you know? I can’t move in them.”

“We’ll have to be more careful in the future.”

“See that you are,” Snape said, voice cold, brow furrowed. “I haven’t time to go collecting children every time you lose them, dog.”

“No one fucking asked you!” Sirius yelled. “No one needs you hanging about, Snape!”

The muscles in Snape’s jaw flexed and tightened, his brow furrowing as his wand turned toward Sirius’ head. At the last second, Harriet’s godfather realized the danger and lifted his own wand, his eyes widening, and Harriet grabbed the hands of both of her friends in preparation of ducking for cover.

The door to Number Twelve popped open.

“Gentlemen,” Professor Dumbledore greeted in his usual bright disposition, blue eyes taking in the scene. “Perhaps it would be better to postpone this conversation for a better time? Oh, I love a good row on the front step as much as the next wizard, but the wards are not, unfortunately, entirely soundproof.”

Begrudgingly, Sirius and Snape lowered their wands, arms moving as if doing so caused physical pain.

“Severus, a word?”

Whatever Dumbledore wished to say to the Potions Master would have to wait because, with a single cutting glance in his direction, Snape shoved his wand into his sleeve, sneered, and Disapparated. The resounding snap echoed in the empty street, and the Headmaster frowned.

“Well, I guess he’s not staying for pudding….”

Later, after they’d been pulled into the house and the unfortunate end of an otherwise splendid day had been swept under the rug, Harriet sat at the table eating cake with the dozen or so people who’d come to celebrate her birthday—and she couldn’t help but think of the haunted look in Snape’s heavy gaze.

He hadn’t answered her when she’d asked how he’d known she was in danger. Harriet didn’t think he ever would.


A/N:

Remus: “Oh no, we lost Harriet!”

Elara, clearing her throat: “Neville Longbottom is the greatest wizard ever!”

Harriet, in the distance: “LONGBOTTOM IS A TOSSER!”

Remus: “Nevermind.”

Chapter 166: domesticity

Chapter Text

clxvi. domesticity

 

Remus never believed a life like this could belong to him.

It was the kind of life where he woke on a comfortable bed to the distant, muffled noise of London traffic, sunlight peeking through the bedroom curtains. He rose, washed, dressed, and went downstairs to begin breakfast. It was the kind of life where he roused sleepy teenagers under his care from their beds, tutted over his ex-partner’s hangover, and tried to tempt the house ghoul down to the table. Severus always refused—violently—but that didn’t stop Remus from trying. Kill them with kindness, as his mother used to say.

It was the kind of life where he kept his own desk in the office on the third floor and sometimes got visited by a curious Kneazle. He could spend the morning perusing books in the library for his summer research projects. In the afternoon, he helped the girls with their holiday assignments, answered their questions about magic, and worried about what mischief they meant to unleash. He healed Harriet’s scraped knees when she crashed her Firebolt into the bushes, reminded Elara to take her potions, and fixed Hermione’s hair after she managed to burn a chunk of it off with a misbehaving spell.

Some afternoons, he found himself staring at Harriet’s league boots left by the door in the foyer, at the random books Hermione forgot in various rooms, or listening to muted strains of Elara practicing the piano in the music room. Sirius worked on repairs to the house with begrudging roughness, and chores got completed with typical teenage complaining—but the dishes were always washed, the floors swept, and beds made.

Sometimes, Harriet whispered in empty rooms with nobody there. Sometimes, startling nightmares from across the corridor woke Remus in the dead of night, and he’d fall back asleep listening to the pacing in the room next door like a grim metronome ticking down the midnight hour. Sometimes, Elara couldn’t stand a friendly touch, and Hermione clammed up as if she could feel the hand of Jamie Ingham pressing on her throat again. A pall of doom would weigh upon the house, and they’d eat dinner in dead silence.

But, the morning would come and shed its greetings of warm, humid light upon them, and the girls would laugh over their breakfast and make new plans for the new day. Whatever darkness gripped them slipped away into the dawn.

And when Remus returned after the full moon, he’d step through the Floo to find a fresh cup of coffee waiting for him and a heap of crispy bacon.

It was…domestic. It was an existence Remus never thought he’d have or deserve.

Every day, different visitors and minders stopped by, including an alchemist older than the printing press and the Headmaster himself. Flamel, Remus firmly believed, loved Harriet like his own flesh and blood, to the point where Remus thought it odd he hadn’t taken Harriet and Elara into his own home at his earliest convenience. He commented on this to Minerva, who made vague references to Flamel’s supposedly busy schedule.

Each time the alchemist departed, he did so after embracing Harriet tightly, a fond kiss placed on her red cheek, and effusive French reminders given to keep her manners, stay out of trouble, and remember to write.

He acted as if he did not know when, or if, he would return.

The Headmaster always arrived in the guise of Order business. It was never in an official capacity—no meetings called, no summons given, and the information imparted by the older wizard always erred on the side of equivocal and thus summarily unimportant. Frankly, Remus came to assume Dumbledore went to Grimmauld Place to escape Slytherin’s pernicious presence in the castle and to put breathing space between himself and his responsibilities.

Remus could scarcely comprehend how the issues handled by Headmaster daily hadn’t crushed him years ago. Even wizards like Albus Dumbledore were human, after all.

His presence made for some interesting conversations over tea, as did the motley assortment of minders who passed through the house. The echoes of teenage laughter echoed in the narrow corridors, accompanied by the occasional pop of spellfire.

One afternoon in mid-August, Remus poured Earl Grey for himself, McGonagall, Snape, and Dumbledore, who gave a blithe comment on a communal staffing issue that further proved Remus’ assertion that the Headmaster used any excuse he could to absent the castle during the summer holidays. Snape flicked his eyes toward McGonagall in shared thought, and Remus wondered if they’d come to the same conclusion as him.

“How are things, Remus?” Dumbledore asked as he doctored his cup to his preference, the sugar and cream moving with only a negligent wave of his hand. “Is Miss Granger settling in well?”

“Yes, I believe so,” he replied as he resumed his seat. “Having her friends with her has made any potential issues of awkwardness a moot point. Although, I’ve recently decided Hermione is not, in fact, the level-headed member of their group.”

“Oh?”

“Not after their most recent experiment.” Remus sipped his tea and glanced upward, a smile playing over his mouth. “I couldn’t get a straight answer on what exactly they were attempting to do with that cauldron, only that it had been Hermione’s idea and the resulting mess ate a hole in Harriet’s floor.”

From his armchair across the table, Snape scoffed into his cup. “They were attempting to embolize it,” he explained with his usual curt aplomb. “I could smell the burning zinc and foxweed upstairs.”

“I’m sorry, I don’t know what that is.”

“It’s most commonly seen in alchemy,” Albus explained when Snape failed to do so. He wore a thoughtful expression as he fiddled with a ring on his thumb. “To embolize a cauldron, typically those made of cast iron or solid gold, is to grant it the property of embolizing potions or elements brewed within it.”

“What would be the purpose of that?”

“Embolized elements or potions retain their magic within their own field. It makes certain ingredients or mixtures that are usually either too conductive or reactive more amenable to exposure or combination to different substances.” He stopped fiddling with the ring. “I believe Severus uses such a cauldron when experimenting with new potion recipes.”

Snape neither denied nor confirmed that allegation. “It is more often used in dubious crowds to hide magical artifacts.” His brow gave a condescending jerk upward. “But they couldn’t possibly be doing something illegal. Not Potter.”

“I sense a bit of skepticism in your tone, Severus.”

“Me? Never.”

McGonagall leaned forward to take one of the ginger biscuits left on the coffee table by Mably. “I don’t suppose you’d relinquish your death grip on one of your own cauldrons so further attempts won’t burn the house down around our ears?”

“Perhaps it has escaped your notice, but I am not a pawnbroker.”

Remus watched Minerva and Snape bicker. Dumbledore, content to let the pair snipe at one another, fixed himself another cup of overly sweet tea and had a biscuit. “I must confess that I’m surprised Nicolas hasn’t given them one. They must not have asked yet.”

“Listen here, Albus,” McGonagall said with a finger pointed at the man. “Severus lending them a cauldron is one thing. That impossible man involving himself is another. Don’t go encouraging him to support their mischief.”

“A fair bit of mischief builds character.”

A fair bit of mischief breaks bones,” she retorted, wiping biscuit crumbs on her napkin. “And gives me gray hairs.”

“Then perhaps Severus could be convinced to lend his equipment to spare us Nicolas’ more creative interventions.”

The look on Severus’ dour face could have struck a lesser man dead, but Dumbledore only smiled. Snape dropped his cup on the table. “Of course, Headmaster,” he said, his baritone like cold silk, dripping disdain. “You know I am always so keen to lend you a hand.

McGonagall sputtered into her tea. “Severus!”

Dumbledore—unaffected by the remark—chuckled, his eyes sparkling with delight. “Oh, thank you, Severus.” He blew on his tea and had a sip. “Ah. I can always trust you to keep an eye out for me.”

Albus!” McGonagall cried. “Of all the things to say—!”

Snape continued his sullen consumption of his afternoon tea, scowling at the Headmaster. Remus put his head in his hands, unsure if he wanted to laugh or cry.

 

xXx

 

In the last week of August, Remus stood in his office, unpacking a box of books and trinkets onto a barren shelf while Sirius lounged on the dusty settee.

Their topic of conversation caught Remus off-guard.

“The World Cup?” he said with an incredulous tilt of his head. “I couldn’t imagine they have tickets for sale still. It’s only two days off!”

Sirius shifted in his seat, a sure sign of his nerves, as was the occasional picking at his shirt’s aging logo. The words ‘The Swooning Sirens’ were barely legible. “Well,” he said, clearing his throat. “A bit of prodding at the Ministry here and there, some whispers of discontent over my arrest, and suddenly a tidy amount of tickets popped up for sale out of some bloke’s pocket in the Department of Games.”

Remus set down his bookend shaped like a geode. “A likely story, I’m sure.”

Sirius laughed. “Bagman’s always been a greedy blowhard, even when he played for the Wasps. Imagine my surprise when I learned he’s working for the bloody Ministry now.” Sirius rolled his eyes. “Information had a way of making its rounds in Azkaban. I heard a rumor that ol’ Ludo had been selling information to Rookwood for years before the war ended. Of course, nothing came of that. Merlin forbid they arrest someone famous.”

Sirius continued to grumble under his breath, sweeping a negligible hand over the window. He eyed the dust and wiped it on his jeans. “It’s good you’re sprucing the place up now, though you really should let the elves come up here and clean.”

“I prefer to do it myself,” Remus replied. “And I didn’t have anything to bring with me before. Nothing worth setting out in an office, at any rate.” He thought of the sad bunch of rags and beaten textbooks that had been the sum of his worldly possessions before Albus offered him this job. He shook his head. “You do know Elara and Hermione don’t like Quidditch, correct?”

Sirius nodded with an absentminded wave of his hand. “There’s a lot more to do at a World Cup than just watching the game, and I think they’ll like visiting all the vendors and seeing the folks from abroad. James and I went to the one in Cork back in seventy-three.” He hesitated and cleared his throat again, eyes on the floor. “I would have gotten a ticket for you, but I—.”

“But it’s the morning after my monthly, I know,” Remus replied, placing the last of his books on the shelves. It’d be more physically demanding than he’d be able to handle so fresh off the full moon, and he’d be needed at Hogwarts to prepare for the term’s beginning. “Have you spoken about it to the Headmaster? Has he approved of them going?”

Sirius’ face took on a pinched mien as it always did when Albus’ oversight got brought into a conversation. He understood why Dumbledore—and the Order, by extension—needed to be informed of Harriet’s whereabouts, but the extent of the consequences never seemed to sink in fully.

Remus didn’t blame him. Sirius had spent twelve years with an utter lack of intellectual stimulation. Feeding on Death Eater gossip shouted or screamed down a crude corridor didn’t much count in Remus’ opinion. Twelve years without anything to challenge or shape his perceptions had arrested his development, steeping him in the very worst parts of his younger psyche.

“He said it was fine,” Sirius admitted, sour. “Security will be tight enough with foreigners around. Don’t even have to take Snivellus with us, thank Merlin.”

Remus turned to face him fully. “You have to stop calling him that.”

“What, you too? It was fine to call him that before, but now it’s a great dirty sin? Rubbish.”

“It was never all right to say it,” Remus admitted, the guilt burning holes in his gut as he recalled all the times he’d maligned the gawky Slytherin in his youth. He’d known it was wrong as a boy, had felt that accusing lurch in his chest whenever he’d joined in on the mockery, but he’d been lonely and gullible and afraid of losing his only friends. He didn’t have that excuse now.

“He isn’t a pleasant man, nor someone I would ever count as a friend, but the juvenile sniping does nothing but make the rest of us miserable. Can’t you see that the girls respect Severus? It makes them uncomfortable to hear you drag out old business like yesterday’s laundry.”

Sirius’ face grew darker as Remus spoke, his teeth grinding. “I know,” he said, voice sharp and unpleasant. “I know, but I can’t help it. Every time I see the sneaky git, it’s like I’m sixteen again and he’s about to hex me with something nasty on the way back from the loo.” He scowled at the far wall. “He shattered every bone in my right foot, but I couldn’t prove a thing, so he didn’t see a day of detention for it.”

Remus remembered the incident. “A week before that, we strung him up by the ankles and stripped him naked in front of half the school down by the lake. I think he was a bit angry, Sirius.”

“He called Lily a Mudblood.”

“And that was business between Snape and Lily,” Remus retorted, a measure of ashamed heat infusing his tone. Merlin knew he’d been furious when he heard what Snape had said, but why had he let James and Sirius carry on like that? He had been a Prefect, and he did nothing. “It’s old business, mate. You’re not sixteen anymore.”

“I know.” Sirius fidgeted with his hands and said nothing more, so Remus moved on to the next box, and from it, he pulled out new frames with new photographs. There were only three—one of Elara and her rare happy smile, one of Harriet and Hermione, and one of Remus and Sirius—but the three frames made Remus’ heart feel very full. He set each one out with a gentle touch.

“It irritates me that Dumbledore won’t give me more to do,” Sirius said into the easy quiet. “Everything went to shite while I was away, but he won’t let me help with anything, won’t even let me look after the girls on my own. It’s frustrating.”

“It’s very…delicate, you understand? The situation isn’t like it was before, in eighty-one. It’s changed. Albus doesn’t give me much to do either, beyond teaching and watching the girls.” And you, he amended in his head. “We have to trust the Headmaster knows what he needs of us and simply do our best.”

Sirius grunted. “I could do more at the Ministry,” he argued. “In the Wizengamot. The House of Black controls a total of thirty votes, but Dumbledore’s cautioned me against doing anything with them. Do you know how hard it is to see these rubbish laws being passed and wondering if my votes could have tossed them in the bin?”

“He doesn’t want you to make yourself a target. The Wizengamot is overwhelmingly pro-Gaunt at the moment if you haven’t noticed. Even thirty votes wouldn’t do much, but it’d be enough to aggravate certain parties into taking action.”

“Perhaps they deserve to be aggravated.”

“Sirius, be—.” He almost said serious and caught himself. “Reasonable. Godric’s ghost, don’t you remember what happened before? All the Lords who went missing from their homes in the dead of night?”

“I probably remember better than you do, Moony.” Sirius sighed, rolled his head on his shoulders to rid his neck of any stiffness. “I helped James in trying to find them, and usually we only came back with…pieces.”

“Exactly. You can’t go about making enemies to prove a point. You have three children dependent on you now.” Remus came out from around his desk and laid a hand on Sirius’ shoulder. The other man reached up to touch it, fingers folding around Remus’. “That’s more important than the Wizengamot or anything else.”

The fingers tightened on his, running over old scars and calluses. “Speaking of,” Sirius said with a wry grin, sadness still lurking in his pale eyes. “The girls are probably ready to start supper. We should get home.”

“Who did you leave them with this afternoon?”

“Andromeda. The witch wouldn’t know a pan from a skillet.”

“A trait that runs in the family, I see.”

An elbow prodded Remus’ ribs as he went about locking his office and his classroom, and they set off on foot by unspoken agreement. They made for an odd pair—Remus, in his academic robes, Sirius dressed down in a t-shirt and jeans dragged out of an old wardrobe. The Animagus looped an arm through his, and Remus let him stay like that for half of their journey.

There was something beautifully haunted about Hogwarts at the end of summer with evening sunlight dying at the windows. It felt expectant, like a child marking calendar days with little crosses through the dates. Hopeful in the face of slow, simmering melancholy. It lingered with them as they walked.

Their footsteps echoed in the empty hall, joined by the muffled chatter of idle portraits and the occasional groan of shifting stone. They had only just made it down the main marble steps to the entrance hall when the hollow susurration of a moving door caught Remus’ attention. He paused, and his gaze flicked toward the Great Hall.

Professor Slytherin stood in the open doorway, his face cast mostly into shadow from the sunlight pouring through the Great Hall’s high windows at his back. “Good evening, Professor Lupin,” he said in that snide monotone he favored when speaking with those he deemed lesser. His eyes flared like garnets. “And Lord Black. It’s a pleasure to make your acquaintance.”

Remus had the sudden image of Sirius doing something incredibly stupid and started to pray—but Sirius merely inclined his head, his expression flat and empty. He kept his hands balled into fists inside his pockets.

“Slytherin, right?”

“Yes. Professor Slytherin. The Head of Slytherin House—both inside this school and without.” He smiled, dimples appearing in his young, charming face, though nothing but contempt lined his cold, unmoving stare. “Your daughter is my House. And you goddaughter. And your new ward. How very curious.”

“Not really,” Sirius said with his own fake smile. “It’s the House of the cunning and clever, innit? My girls are very clever.”

“Hmm. That they are.” Slytherin tilted his head, his hands folded before himself. “But let’s hope they aren’t too clever for their own good.”

“Oh, I don’t think that’s possible.” Sirius chuckled. “Perhaps too clever for your own good.”

A cold thrill went down Remus’ spine as Slytherin’s false smile dropped. “Sirius,” he said, soft and urgent, touching the other wizard’s arm. “We really do need to get going. Please excuse us, Professor.”

“Of course, Lupin.” Slytherin inclined his head and took one soundless step backward into the Great Hall. “Until our next meeting, Lord Black.”

“Can’t wait for it.”

Remus and Sirius went on their way, conscious of the eyes that remained on their backs until the castle’s main doors snapped closed at their heels. Sirius refrained from commenting until they’d almost reached the waiting gates.

“I can see what you mean by things being delicate. I don’t know how you make it through the day without punching that tosser.”

Remus only sighed.

Chapter 167: the world cup

Chapter Text

clxvii. the world cup

 

Barely a whisper of morning light warmed the eastern horizon when the residents of Number Twelve, Grimmauld Place stumbled through their Floo and arrived in the Ministry Atrium.

“Just this way,” Sirius said as he hiked his rucksack higher on his shoulder and gestured at the milling crowd headed for the lift. The entirety of the procession all wore Muggles clothes—or, well, their best approximation of Muggle clothes, which amounted to a garish collection of the oddest things paired with weird shoes and funny hats. A harried bloke off to the side kept pulling the worst offenders out of line, trying to get them to some semblance of order.

Sirius had Harriet’s hand so tightly gripped she thought her fingers might pop off at any moment. He was being ridiculous, seeing as they were all going to the same place. Harriet wouldn’t have time to get lost, and Gaunt wouldn’t have a chance to nab her.

“We’ll be out of here in a tick,” Sirius continued when no one said anything in return. “This is the nearest access point they’ve set up for those of us who live in London or are visiting. Otherwise, I would have taken you lot to the Dartford Portkey. That would have meant getting up earlier, though, and, well….”

Elara could barely keep her eyes open, staggering half-blind behind Hermione, who had the foresight to grab her hand lest she wandered off the wrong way. The three girls wore short trousers, trainers, and comfortable blouses, Elara’s supplemented with a cardigan. People side-eyed Harriet’s necklace, what with the crow skull dangling past her sternum—but really, it wasn’t any more outlandish than that git by the lift in the tutu.

By some miracle, they made it onto the lift and into the Department of Transportation without incident. The Department reminded Harriet of the airport terminals she’d seen pictures of, a vast, long hall with Charmed windows and gates with plaques above them. Times flickered by in animated chalk.

Most of the milling witches and wizards made for the gate labeled “422nd Quidditch World Cup - Dartmoor,” though one or two people kept walking toward the other gates. Those Portkeys headed for far more distant locales.

When Harriet’s group came to the front of the line, a witch with spider-like spectacles handed Sirius a grubby magazine out of a massive box of rubbish. “All parties must grasp the Portkey securely,” she instructed in a bored voice, another witch by her examining a large watch with too many hands. “Do not let go of the Portkey until both feet have returned to the ground. The Department is not liable for any incidental splinching or disincorporation.”

Sirius and the trio of Slytherin witches took hold of a corner of the magazine.

“Fourteen seconds,” the watch-witch announced.

“Thank you for traveling with us today. Please enjoy your trip,” added the first.

A hook yanked behind Harriet’s navel, and she held her breath and closed her eyes as the Ministry’s tiled floor disappeared under her shoes. The wind howled, pulling its fingers through her plaited hair, her breath tight and hot in her chest—until the wind lessened, and Harriet braced her legs just before the pulling sensation stopped.

She heard Elara and Hermione crumple to the ground with matching groans, and Sirius dropped the magazine on Hermione’s face.

“Six-fifteen from the Department of Transportation, London,” announced an exhausted wizard in muddied galoshes. He flicked his wand, and the magazine flew over to a crate already bursting with junk. “Please make room for incoming parties.”

Harriet offered her hand to Hermione while Sirius got Elara upright, the latter pale and sweaty from the magical travel but holding up well. As they stepped aside and approached a second wizard wearing a kilt matched with a poncho, Harriet glanced around at the flat moorland—and realized they were in Devon, where Trefhud was. She was fairly certain they weren’t terribly far from the Flamels.

“Name?” the kilted Ministry wizard asked.

“Black,” Sirius provided.

“Black…You’re in the first field you find.” He pointed where the trees rose thicker over the flat moors. “About a quarter-mile there. Your site manager is Mr. Roberts—and for Merlin’s sake, remember he’s Muggle. No visible magic. Nothing odd.”

Sirius eyed the wizard’s funny clothes but restrained himself from commenting, instead gesturing for the girls to follow him into the moor’s thinning mist. Harriet could already see the field stretched out past a rustic stone cottage, hundreds of tents like the peaks of little mountains.

A dazed Muggle—Mr. Roberts—stood by the cottage door, and he blinked at Sirius and the girls as they approached him. He looked for all the world as if someone had smacked him over the head one too many times.

“Name?” Mr. Roberts asked.

“Black,” Sirius replied. “One tent, one plot.”

“Aye…here’s a site map. You’re down this row here.”

Sirius nodded, took the map, and shoved thirty pounds into the bloke’s hand. Mr. Roberts looked at the money as if he’d forgotten he was supposed to be collecting it.

“Poor bastard,” Sirius muttered as they walked away, leaving the Muggle looking befuddled by a potted geranium and his open door. “They must’ve hit him with half a dozen Obliviates by now….”

“Isn’t that illegal?” Hermione demanded. “He’s simply trying to do his job, and this is a Muggle camping site!”

“The Ministry bends its own rules all the time.”

As Hermione started in on how abusive that was, Harriet peered around at the other tents they passed and realized someone really should send Mr. Roberts on vacation. Only a numpty wouldn’t recognize something odd was afoot here.

“Oi, look at that,” she said to Elara, pointing at a tent with three floors and a bloody turret. “That’s not something from a Muggle-approved line.”

“Most wizards wouldn’t know Muggle-approved if it bit in the backside,” Elara replied, raising a brow at a massive enclosure complete with a lion lounging on conjured grass and a reflection pool. “I think those tent poles are made of solid gold. Good Lord.”

Their own plot wasn’t nearly so grand. It had a simple sign out front with the word “BLACK” lazily written across it, and Sirius didn’t pretend to fuss with their tent the Muggle way. Instead, he dropped the rucksack on the dusty ground and gave it a few firm but discreet pokes with his wand until it started to unfold. It came together, finished, in under a minute.

Nothing about their tent looked magical, though maybe it rose a bit taller and more rigid than a Muggle version might have stood. Elara and Hermione bestowed dubious grimaces upon their accommodations, but Harriet was well-versed in magic camping and didn’t hesitate to throw open the flap and stroll right it.

“Oh,” Hermione gasped when she stepped inside and caught a glimpse of the interior. It had a much more modern aesthetic than the old tent Harriet had used before, a comfortable arrangement of couches arrayed before a stone hearth, the floors all a rich, cherry wood. Three solid doors led off to the two bedrooms and the loo. A full kitchenette waited in the back, joined by a lovely table topped in a flowered cloth cover.

Harriet cracked open one of the bedroom doors and peered inside, finding three four-poster beds with the sheets and covers tucked in, either put together by Remus or one of the house-elves. In the main room, Elara made a beeline for one of the couches and flopped onto it in a sprawl.

“Well,” Sirius said, hand on his hip as he looked at his daughter. Elara had already dropped into a doze. “I guess we’re having a nap first….”

Forty minutes later, after Elara woke more alert and less snippy, and the other girls had a chance to settle in, Sirius tossed a ward over their site, and their group ventured out to explore.

More and more people had begun to wander out of tents, greeting their neighbors or heading off to the well for water. Sirius was all for the spirit of Muggle camping, but Harriet knew his patience had its limits, and getting in the queue to retrieve water when he could conjure it in a tick crossed the line.

Sirius wasn’t the only one. The Ministry played hell rushing from one row to another, putting out purple campfires or grounding brooms, tearing down animated banners or shooing magical familiars back into tents. Harriet spotted Gaunt’s Aurors among the officials, but even they didn’t have time to spare for harassing her.

They started past a site nearer the woods—when Harriet paused and squinted at the balding, older redhead struggling with a box of matches.

“Mr. Weasley?” she called, and when he looked up, she beamed. “Hi, Mr. Weasley! It’s me, Harriet!”

“Harriet!” he exclaimed once he recognized the girl. “How nice to see you. And Elara, too!”

Sirius and Hermione introduced themselves to Mr. Weasley, who only hesitated for a moment when he realized he was shaking hands with a former Azkaban convict. Oddly enough, they knew of each other through Mrs. Weasley, though the pair of wizards remained vague in the details. Sirius asked after the Weasley matriarch, and Arthur relished a chance to chat about his wife.

He invited them for breakfast, and once Hermione took the book of matches from him to get the campfire started, the younger Weasleys filtered out of the tents.

Ginny, cheeks painted with the Irish flag, all but tackled Harriet and Elara, brimming with excitement. “Morgana save me from all these stupid boys,” she complained, an arm looped around Harriet’s neck. “All my brothers are here, plus Neville, his dad, and Dean. I’m the only girl here, since Mum didn’t come!”

Harriet wondered how they’d gotten a tent big enough for the sheer number of Weasleys who joined the campfire after the flames started to build. Ginny pointed out her brothers Bill and Charlie, who Harriet had never seen before, and then pulled her, Hermione, and Elara over to the girls’ tent so Harriet could avoid seeing Longbottom. He’d been sent off with his friends to get water and was due back any minute.

“I still can’t stand him,” Harriet said to Ginny, who shrugged as she fell into a seat around a rickety table. The tent was small and not as nice as Sirius’, lacking a kitchenette or a separate bedroom, but it was also clean and comfortable. Someone had put a vase of bright yellow flowers out. Elara and Hermione found seats, Elara covering a yawn.

“He was better last year,” Hermione pointed out. “He barely spared a word for any of us.”

“Define better.”

Ginny blushed at the mentioned at the mention of Neville. “He’s—I don’t know. I listened when you told me I should pay more attention to who he is as a person, rather than just him being the Boy-Who-Lived, and I guess he’s not as…amazing as I thought.” She scuffed the heel of her weathered shoe on the floor. “But he’s better than you think.”

“Considering I think he’s pond scum, I hope he’s better than that. Someone please define better.”

Hermione smacked Harriet into the arm.

“Ow!”

The conversation turned to Ginny asking Hermione about living at Grimmauld Place and what happened with the Malfoys. Though Hermione remained effusive in her happiness at moving in with Harriet and Elara, she didn’t say much about what actually occurred in Wiltshire. Ingham’s name didn’t come up once.

Thirty minutes later, Fred and George popped their heads inside to tell them breakfast was almost ready, and they asked if Harriet had a moment to chat. Frowning, Harriet glanced at Ginny—who only shrugged—and then sighed, deciding to follow the pair outside.

“Might as well see what they’re up to….”

She pulled back the flap to exit the tent—and stilled when she spotted two men by the fire chatting with Arthur Weasley. One was a portly wizard dressed in dated, professional Quidditch robes who held himself with an easygoing, boisterous air. The other was a man Harriet recognized.

Harriet only knew Barty Crouch Senior from his image in Dumbledore’s Pensieve, a no-nonsense fellow with a severe hair part, an impeccable Muggle suit, and an expression like stone. Seeing him filled her with an awful sense of foreboding, an itchy fear in her skin she got every time she walked into the Ministry or went down Empiric Alley. Looking at Crouch, she remembered a bruised and defeated Snape, bowing his head as Crouch leered with hate and violence burning in his gaze.

What did Professor Dumbledore say? she tried to recall. He used to work in the DMLE before they transferred him. I wonder to which department?

Standing by Arthur, Sirius glared at Crouch like he hoped he’d catch fire.

“Coming, Potter?”

“Coming!”

She met Fred and George in the shadow of the boys’ tent, both turning to her with matching grins. Harriet raised a brow.

“Potter, we hear you’ve got a pocketful of gold—.”

“Metaphorically speaking—.”

“That you’re willing to spend,” Fred said, leaning his arm on his brother’s shoulder.

“And?” Harriet asked.

And, from one mischief-maker to another—.”

“That map you gave us on the Moon Mirrors proved a treat in a tight spot, by the way—.”

“That it did, George—.”

“Got us out of Filch’s path half a dozen times last term—.”

“Anyway, we wanted to ask if you’d be interested in investing in a little venture of ours.”

George nodded. “It’s something we’ve been working on for a while. We just got into production this summer, and the experiments have been driving Mum up the wall.”

“We tricked Percy into eating a Ton-Tongue Toffee and, well, suffice it to say, our buttocks haven’t felt the same ever since.”

“We probably deserved it. Percy had quite a fright—.”

“Where are you two going with this?” Harriet asked. As amusing as their anecdotes could be, she was sure Sirius would have kittens when he realized she’d wandered out of sight.

“Like we said, Potter, we have a venture we think you’d like to invest in.”

Fred retrieved a folded bit of parchment from his trouser pocket, and Harriet couldn’t disguise her interest. After all, the last time Fred and George Weasley decided to give her a funny bit of parchment, she’d ended up with a one-of-a-kind magical innovation hanging from her neck.

Harriet took the parchment and eyed the words Weasleys’ Wizard Wheezes written across the top.

“An investment, you say…?”

 

xXx

 

Dusk descended in increments, the sky shimmering in veils of gold and red and finally violet as the stars came out. It was then that the Ministry gave up their war against the Statue aggressors, and the vendors emerged in force.

Harriet had visited many strange places in magical Britain, but she’d never encountered so many curious foods, sweets, or costumes before. The vendors popped up every few feet to sell their wares, and more and more witches and wizards emerged from the woods, having Apparated in from around the country. The crowd fairly hummed with anticipation as the night came nearer.

It didn’t take long for Harriet’s purse to feel lighter. She bought kebabs and Charmed shawarma, mochi filled with ice cream flavored with a magical plant that could only be found in Japan. It turned her hair purple for an hour.

She ended up shelling out enough for six pairs of Omnioculars, three for her and friends to use, and three for Hermione to take apart and use in experiments. “Think of it!” Hermione enthused, gesturing at a pair. “Think of the improvements we could do to the Atlas with Charms like these. I don’t know how they did it. The memory and relay in them are fantastic! I just have to figure out how they work….”

Elara wrapped a green scarf around Harriet’s neck, and four-leaf clovers speckled her hair. None of the girls had a keen interest in the teams playing, but they chose to support Ireland for the Slytherin green while Sirius picked Bulgaria for the Gryffindor red.

“Someone has to have Gryffindor pride in this family,” he grumbled. Elara rolled her eyes behind his back.

When full dark came over the moors, a sudden, booming gong rippled out from the woods, and in its wake came a wave of green and red lanterns blooming to life in the trees. They illuminated a path deeper into the foliage.

The crowd merged in one direction, great whoops and cries of excitement filling the air with gaudy sparks fired from wands or bouts of song. Sirius again had his hand tight on Harriet’s despite her protests, and she hated it, feeling like a misbehaving child who couldn’t be trusted on her own.

He didn’t let go until they’d come into the shadow of a massive stadium glittering gold like a unicorn’s hooves under a thick coat of wards and protections. Of course, Harriet almost tripped over Hermione as she stared in awe at the huge, towering walls, so her hand got retaken as they climbed up the carpeted stairs. Sirius flashed their tickets to a Ministry witch, and she grunted the number for a row high above their heads.

“This is brilliant,” Harriet said when they reached their spot, hollering over the roar of so many voices rising to meet them. Their row was situated three down from the box at the very top, but the seats were still excellent, providing a perfect view of the vast stadium sprawled out below. The Hogwarts stadium seemed minuscule in comparison.

“Glad you like it,” Sirius said as they took their seats at the front. He leaned back in his chair and propped his feet onto the railing, gifting the trio of young witches with a roguish grin. “We can thank Ludo Bagman and his gambling predilection for our good fortune.”

Elara snorted, and Hermione looked disapproving, but Harriet laughed.

Once the stadium had filled, an unfamiliar voice boomed from the top box above. “Ladies and gentlemen, welcome! Welcome to the four hundred and twenty-second Quidditch World Cup, brought to you by the International Confederation of Wizards Quidditch Committee—sponsored this year by the British Ministry of Magic and the Department of Magical Games and Sports!”

The crowd cheered, flags waving, chanting the names of their favorite players.

“Without further ado, please welcome the Bulgarian National Team Mascots!”

“Mascots?” Harriet asked, leaning forward in her seat. A few clovers fell from her hair and disappeared in a haze of green glitter. “Like the ones at Muggle sports?”

“Not quite,” Sirius explained. “Non-magical folk use animal costumes, don’t they? Wizards bring native creatures.”

“Native creatures…?”

A stream of women entered the field—beautiful women with hair like captured starlight falling in waves at their backs, their skin gleaming. Their bodies moved with sinuous grace, and their red dresses undulated without any wind.

“Huh,” Harriet said, sitting back. She’d expected something a bit less…human. “What’re they?”

Hermione lifted her gaze from the programme. “Oh dear,” she muttered, voice barely audible above the noise. “They’re veela. I can’t believe they allowed them to be brought here in such masses.”

“Veela?”

“A bit like sirens, but with dancing. Watch—.”

Music began to play, and, as Hermione had said, the veela danced. Their agility impressed Harriet, but she didn’t understand what deeper meaning lurked behind their movements—until she glanced at Sirius and the other wizards in their row. They all had the same dazed, moon-struck expressions, one bloke on the end trying to scale the railing, his wife holding him back with a furious curse. A mother had clapped her hands over her son’s ears.

At least her guardian stayed in his seat, even if Sirius appeared as if he might start drooling at any moment.

Harriet looked at Elara to comment. A vivid flush had overcome her godsister’s face, her gray eyes wide as Galleons and glassy, her mouth set in a grimace. She held her hands as tight fists in her lap, and if Harriet had reached out to touch her, she would have felt Elara’s shaking.

The veela kept dancing, and Elara looked as if she might be sick—or stand up.

Is she all right? Harriet opened her mouth to question her, when—.

She blinked behind her spectacles, lips parting.

Oh.

Ohhh!

With a discreet twitch of her wrist, Harriet’s wand slid from her brace to her hand, and she flicked it at Elara’s head. “Silencio,” she whispered.

No one noticed the brief glimmer of spell-light. Elara’s mouth moved in a soundless gasp as she regained composure, and she flashed a look of gratitude in Harriet’s direction. Harriet grinned.

They settled in to watch the game.

 

xXx

 

“I have to admit,” Hermione said later that night as they sat by their campfire. The game had come to a climactic ending with Ireland the victors, though Bulgaria had caught the Snitch. “Watching professional Quidditch is more compelling than school games.”

Above, fireworks burst in massive halos of green and gold, and drunken choruses of Amhrán na bhFiann echoed in the distance. Harriet had somehow managed to get doused in emerald paint, and she kept picking it off her hands and nails.

“Some professional games can still be boring as flobberworm farming,” Sirius said from his patch of grass, drinking down his mug of Wizarding poitín shared by their overzealous Irish neighbors. They’d tried to give the girls some, but Sirius had put his foot down. “You can get stuck watching a couple of blind Seekers who let the game go on for bloody days. They have to cycle the players for second-string rotations, and the crowds kip right there in their seats.”

“Ridiculous,” Elara said, sipping her Butterbeer. “Wouldn’t everyone be sick of the game at that point?”

“It’s suspenseful,” Sirius argued. “If a game’s too short, it’s a letdown, innit? But today’s game was perfect—and those Irish Chasers! The Bulgarian Seeker Krum flies like a demon, but the Irish have excellent teamwork….”

It wasn’t long before Sirius drank a tad too much poitín and herded them off to bed, stumbling back inside the tent. Harriet, Elara, and Hermione stayed awake another hour after changing into their night things, too excited by the events of the day to sleep. Even so, their chatter dwindled as midnight crawled past, and their heads landed on their pillows one by one.

Harriet drifted to the quiet, uncoordinated strains of, “Le gunnaí scréach, trí lámhach na bpiléar,” and her breathing evened with every pop and crack of celebratory fireworks. The shadows wavered against the tent wall and seemed to dance like those strange veela creatures.

Seo dhíbh canáigh,” the wizards sang. “Amhrán na bhFiann!”

She dreamed of the cupboard again, the musty blankets pulled up to her nose, the chink of light beaming below the shut door. Someone passed before it, the black shape of their feet blocking the glow, and a chill fell upon Harriet when nails scratched against the paneled wood.

Let me in,” the voice crooned, and then louder, “Let me in!

The cupboard shook and the walls moaned, Harriet frozen upon her cot, listening to the shadows that scrambled against the floor.

When it stopped, she lifted her head and whispered, “Hello?

The latch rattled, and the hinges creaked as the door began to open—.

Harriet gasped.


A/N: I didn ’t want to rewrite the whole game. It's kinda tedious when you already know who wins. I honestly considered skipping the whole World Cup, considering a lot of the original themes and ideas introduced in canon I’ve already touched upon—but here we are.

Chapter 168: death eaters

Chapter Text

clxviii. death eaters

 

Elara knew something was wrong the instant she pried open her tired eyes to see Hermione leaning over her.

“What is it?” she asked, groggy and exhausted, but it only took a moment for her to register the difference in the noise coming from the campground. The singing—while not skillful to begin with—had changed to a different kind of caterwauling altogether.

“Something’s happening,” Hermione said, her voice high and crackling with tension, fear evident in her wide, gleaming eyes. She wrung her hands as Elara sat up and swayed, hearing the screaming bubble in the distance, joined by loud snaps and pops that didn’t sound much like fireworks. “I can’t—Harriet’s not waking. I can’t wake her, and I don’t—.”

Elara lurched from her bed and tore the sheets off in her haste, almost landing in a heap upon the floor. Hermione snatched hold of her arm, steadying her, and Elara came to the side of Harriet’s bed.

The other witch had kicked her blankets down about her legs, the skin of her bare neck and face glimmering with perspiration. Her scar appeared inflamed and painful, the edges pink as if it had only just healed.

Harriet’s eyes roved beneath her eyelids, a sliver of white visible through parted lashes.

Elara did not know what to do. “Harriet,” she called, though Hermione would have already tried that. Outside, the cries of distress continued, and an ugly, simmering light warmed the tent’s canvas walls. Had a firecracker sparked one of the tents? That didn’t explain the screaming. It wasn’t as if fire was an uncommon result in magic gone awry. Witches and wizards accustomed themselves to it rather quickly.

Elara had felt worse flames than what could be thrown by a bit of soggy fabric.

She stiffened her spine and called Harriet’s name again, reaching out to grip her shoulders. Her skin felt scalding under Elara’s hands.

“Get water from the tap,” she told Hermione, who darted out of the room and returned seconds later, carrying a dripping glass. Without preamble, Elara took it and threw its contents in Harriet’s face.

The girl came awake with a snarl and would have hit Elara if not for the hands still tight upon her skinny shoulders. Her fingers wrapped around Elara’s wrists, nails biting the skin, lip curled as she stared ahead, unseeing—.

Harriet!

Harriet blinked as the haze dissolved from her glinting eyes, and she looked at Elara, her chest rising and falling as she caught her breath. Her response came as an articulate, “Huh?”

“Are you all right?” Elara asked, slowly letting the other witch go. Harriet had nightmares more often than regular dreams—nightmares that often left her sweat-soaked and confused, but Elara had never been unable to wake her before.

Fire glowed brighter outside.

We’ve more pressing issues to deal with at the moment than Harriet’s bad dreams.

“…why am I wet?”

Before Elara or Hermione could say a word, a sharper, higher scream came from much too close to their tent, and Harriet startled, noticing the putrescent haze. The smell of ash triggered Elara’s cough.

“What is going on?”

“We’re not sure,” Hermione replied, hurriedly tucking her fluffy hair behind her ears. “I woke up to use the lavatory, and I noticed the noise, and when I tried to wake you, you wouldn’t open your eyes.”

Another scream, a yell for someone to run, and the rapid patter of footsteps. The three witches exchanged startled anxious glances.

“Where’s Sirius? We need to get him—.”

Heedless of the water dripping from her hair and nightgown, Harriet staggered out of bed and hurried from their room, throwing open the door to Sirius’. Elara’s father laid on his back, his breathing loud, and he barely responded when Harriet shook him.

They didn’t have time for this and didn’t have a second glass of water. Elara pushed forward and slapped him on the ear.

“Ow—fuck!” Sirius grumbled, covering his face with his arms. He squinted. “What the hell?”

“Sirius, get up,” Elara snapped. “There’s something wrong.”

He sat up with a reluctant grunt, his eyes only cracking open enough to peer at the three girls gathered at his bedside. “They’re just celebrating,” he said—or, rather, slurred, the words hardly audible as he rubbed at his mouth and face. He passed the sounds off at first, but he kept listening, and when he heard the screaming, his eyes widened.

“What is that?”

“We don’t know!”

Sirius rose and snatched his wand from his rumpled sheets, shoving his bare feet into his shoes. Elara and the others hurried to their own room to do the same, Hermione pausing long enough to yank on a jumper. They chased Sirius through the tent’s main room and into the night.

Smoke crawled like morning mist through the grounds, and the fire had created unnatural daylight, streaming as the dawn does over the horizon. Except, it was not the sun blazing on the line of crowded tents.

One of the larger tents collapsed, the displaced air throwing off sparks and embers as the smoke rolled. Elara coughed and covered her eyes against the flying debris, but not before she saw the line of figures dressed in black.

Spellfire popped and cracked, and a line of fresh fire shot over the field. Elara stumbled in surprise, but Harriet’s hand on her arm kept her upright. The shorter witch kept a firm grip on her wand. The fire reflected off her spectacles.

“Are those—? Those are Muggles,” Hermione gasped in horror, pointing above the moving horde. “That’s Mr. Roberts!”

It was indeed Mr. Roberts, his eyes open in a blank, unseeing stare as he was levitated higher into the air, joined by a woman and two children who must be his wife and children. The marching group howled and jeered as the Muggles spun thirty, forty feet above their heads—falling only to be caught at the last second by another spell, thrown skyward.

“Where is the Ministry?!” Hermione shouted.

If there was ever a time for Gaunt or his thugs to make an appearance, it was now.

There were too many of them. Elara could hear shouts and angry hexes being thrown in the distance—undoubtedly by the Ministry and the event’s security. Still, the group of marching wizards stood between them and the others.

All too suddenly, a few of those hooded heads turned in their direction, silver masks gleaming in the firelight. A wizard flung a curse—and Sirius shielded them, his swift Protego rippling under the angry red haze.

“Those are Death Eaters,” Sirius said with uncommon severity. “I need you three to run.”

“But—.”

Another curse flew and struck his shield, solidifying and falling to the ground in a thick, sizzling ooze instead of dispersing. The grass hissed.

“Don’t argue! Go to the woods—and stay together! Go!”

Elara turned as Sirius fired a spell in retaliation. Her mouth went dry, chest tight. She twisted a hand into Harriet’s nightshirt and tugged her toward the waiting trees when the other witch hesitated, and Hermione snapped at them both to hurry. The drunken jeering grew louder at their backs.

Bodies shifted in the dark beneath the canopy, screams and cries of fear echoing in their ears. A sound like a bomb went off in the distance, and it trembled in the earth under their feet. The tightness in Elara’s chest grew like a physical thing, hot and electric like thunderclouds building in her throat.

“Watch out—!”

The smoke filtered through the underbrush, shapes coalescing into bodies, silver masks in the lowlight—.

Adhaerere Lentum!

Elara didn’t have time to react. Harriet moved with startling speed, her wand already raised, and the spell flew at the first Death Eater’s face. Elara didn’t have any idea where Harriet had learned that incantation, but the wizard shrieked when sticky black adhesive struck him in the eyes.

“Bugger!” the second wizard shouted. He lifted his arm—.

Harriet’s wand danced in her hand. “Incarcerous Herbivicus!

The dry earth cracked and burst as roots shot from the ground and tangled about his ankles. It brought the Death Eater to his knees and then dragged his head into the dirt, ignoring his frightened struggles.

Harriet snatched Elara’s wrist and yanked her into motion.

The dark pressed close as they ran, the sharp brambles snagging against their legs. Pursuing feet pounded behind them—or perhaps Elara only heard the frantic, painful beating of her own heart. Blood rushed in her ears, and only Harriet’s firm, unrelenting grip wrist kept her from falling when her feet caught on broken branches and bushes.

Elara had no idea how far they’d gone when they stopped. The air still hung thick about them, and though the smell of smoke and dust had settled, Elara still couldn’t catch her breath.

She was having an asthma attack and didn’t have Snape handy with one of his potions.

“Where—what—?” Hermione panted, the moonlight shining just enough to show how red her face had grown. “What—should we do—now? Sirius didn’t say—.”

“I don’t know,” Harriet replied. She wiped the sweat from her brow and surveyed their surroundings, taking in the shape of the trees, the traces of smoke billowing across the sky. “Elara needs to rest.”

Elara took this as her chance to sit, heedless of the dead leaves and damp earth. She kneaded her hands against her sternum as if to force the muscles in her chest to loosen, but nothing eased the sharp spasm under her ribs. Her lungs prickled.

She didn’t have any suggestions for what they should do. She was clueless—and no small amount of frightened.

Screams still echoed in the distance, filtering through the dense wood like thready bursts of wind, and they could hear the shock of booming spellfire.

Harriet studied the way they’d come as if searching for more dark wizards. Her gaze remained keen despite the exhaustion weighing on them all. “We can’t just wait here, and what about Sirius? What if he gets hurt?”

“There’s less reason for him to be hurt if he’s not trying to protect us. He should have been able to join the Ministry and others,” Hermione said. “But what else can we do? We’re going to get lost out here—and Elara can’t keep running. The smoke—.”

Elara made an effort to refute her, but it escaped in a wheeze.

The shrieks came again, nearer, chased by cruel laughter.

“We’re not going to stand about and get found by Death Eaters or Gaunt’s arseholes. I have an idea.”

Harriet crouched in front of Elara, resting her hands on her shoulders. “Change into a dog,” she said. “If you can. Hurry.”

It was difficult, but Elara managed to pull on the warm, buzzing feel of magic lurking under her skin and tug it on like a familiar jumper. The shift overtook her, though it did little to alleviate the ache in her chest. Her shape might have changed, but dogs, too, got asthma.

Suddenly, skinny arms hooked under her belly, and Elara yelped as she was hauled against Harriet’s chest. The girl started running again, and Hermione followed.

For several minutes, Elara concentrated on nothing but her own breathing, attempting to match it with Harriet’s. It felt as if she were trying to inhale through a thick bit of cloth. It hurt in her lungs, in her chest, back, throat, and mouth. She could taste smoke on the back of her tongue.

Despite weeks shut up in Grimmauld Place, Harriet ran fast, even with Elara weighing her down. She was fitter than her or Hermione, but she kept herself from out-pacing the latter. Twenty minutes later, she stopped when Hermione, clutching a stitch in her side, could go no farther.

By then, they’d reached another part of the forest. The destructive noises had dwindled in favor of the more natural sounds of the breeze in the trees and the chatter of nocturnal insects. Crickets chirped in the grass, and somewhere an owl screeched.

Harriet lowered Elara onto a mossy log. Elara shifted—and immediately regretted it as her lungs stretched. She groaned and folded over her knees.

Hermione came to her side, and Elara tensed when she touched her back. “Are you all right? Oh, what a stupid question. You’re obviously not all right. Here—.” A wand entered Elara’s field of view. “Anapneo!

The spell worked for a moment, forcing her airways open for long enough for Elara to drag in two much-needed breaths before her throat started to close again. Hermione cast it again.

Meanwhile, Harriet dragged her necklace out from under her nightshirt, the bones clicking against the glass of the Atlas. Harriet gripped Hugh’s skull and incanted, “Avolare.”

The runes on the skull glowed red, and Hugh the crow appeared perched on Harriet’s hand. He cawed.

Harriet used her wand to cut off a hunk of her messy hair, and Hugh clamped onto it with his beak.

“Go to Nicolas Flamel,” she told him, and the crow took flight.

Hermione’s head turned to watch the bird go, then looked at Harriet. “Master Flamel? Why?”

“We’re near Trefud, kind of,” the witch replied—and Elara realized she was correct. It hadn’t occurred to her before, but both she and Harriet had been in this forest in the past. Harriet had gone through a large part of it in her quest for Hugh.

Elara choked—and kept choked until Hermione used the spell again.

“Wretched—smoke—!”

“Don’t try to talk. Just breathe in through your nose, out through your mouth.”

Harriet sat on the log next to them, adjusting the Argonaut’s Atlas to lay on her lap. “Non Ducor Duco.”

The Atlas enlarged, and Harriet tapped it with her wand again. “Search: Sirius Black.”

Hermione fidgeted. “It’s been a bit spotty when looking for specific people. The Charms are…complicated.”

Harriet hummed under her breath, her face lit by the map’s soft blue glow. Elara could see many dots and names but couldn’t read the words. “He’s with a bunch of people. I don’t recognize most of them—but there’s Mr. Weasley, and Barty Crouch.”

“So he’s safe.”

“As safe as he can be around a bunch of Ministry blokes—ouch, bloody hell! It’s getting hot!” Harriet almost jumped and dropped the lens.

Hermione sighed. “I told you, it’s spotty.”

“As spotty as a house fire. Merlin!” Harriet canceled the Atlas, and the glow dimmed. She settled once it cooled.

“What do you mean for us to do now, Harriet? Are we going to wait for Sirius to find us?”

“No. That’ll take too long.” She glanced at Elara. “We’ll start in the right direction.”

“Where?”

“Toward Trefhud.”

The right direction proved somewhere farther west, and they started walking. Elara hesitated for a moment before changing to a dog again, feeling too lightheaded and shaky on her feet to take more than a few steps. Harriet carried her again.

“You’re gonna be okay,” she murmured above Elara’s head. She smelled of sweat and cinders. “It’ll be fine. Just wait.”

They traversed through the woods for another hour, and by then, Elara felt very nearly sick from the combination of her asthma and the gentle, rocking motion of Harriet’s arms. Her grip grew shakier as her strength waned, and Hermione’s footing became clumsier.

The older witch stumbled on a rock and hissed. “I didn’t think to put on socks. I’ve gotten blisters everywhere.”

Harriet snorted. “It’s not as if you thought we were going to go for a run in the middle of the night.” Coming to a stop, she eased Elara to the ground, and the trio all sat, fatigued and covered in small cuts and bruises from the foliage.

Everything looked the same. Elara would think they were going in circles if not for the Point Me spell.

They didn’t say anything for a time—until Hermione growled and burst out in frustration. “What on earth were they thinking?” she demanded. “Honestly, attacking the World Cup! Security was impossibly high!”

“They’re Death Eaters, Hermione. Not the most logical people.”

“But were they?”

“What do you mean?”

“It just—it seems very stupid. Any of the Death Eaters who escaped the culling thirteen years ago had to use a lot of finesse or influence to stay free of Azkaban. So why would they risk it for a round of blithe terrorism?”

“Maybe they’re recruits of Gaunt. Or Slytherin.”

“That doesn’t make sense, though.”

Harriet rubbed at her temple and sighed. “I don’t know, Hermione. I doubt we ever will.”

Elara thought they both had good points; if Elara were the minion of a psychopathic Dark Lord, she wouldn’t go about drawing attention to herself surrounded by Aurors, private sector security, and Ministry officials. Then again, Death Eaters were bigots, and by definition, idiots.

They fell silent again.

“Harriet?”

“Hmm?”

“…what were you dreaming of?”

Harriet blinked and looked at her, an idle hand stroking Elara’s back. “I—don’t know. You know I usually can’t remember.”

“But this was…strange. You wouldn’t wake, and your eyes—.”

Suddenly, something rustled in the leaves, and Harriet got pegged in the face by a whole bushel of evergreen needles.

“‘Arriet!”

Mr. Flamel burst through the trees, following his Locater Effigy. His hair was wild from sleep, hastily dressed in robes thrown over his striped pajamas. The wand light burned Elara’s eyes, and she whined, huffing another breath.

Oh, Dieu merci,” the alchemist gasped as he found them. He yanked Harriet into a one-armed embrace, still holding his wand in a white-knuckled grip. “Vous me terrifiez! What am I to do with you girls? You cannot even enjoy a game without trouble coming to get you!”

“You know what happened?”

Oui. I exchanged messages with Albus asking why you might be sending me ‘air in the middle of the night.” He brushed the spot where the hair had been roughly cut. “A clever idea, petit oiseau.

He released Harriet and reached for Elara, carding his fingers through the fur on the scruff of her neck.

“And you, Elara? And ‘Ermione?”

“Elara’s ill,” Hermione said, bending to scoop the Animagus up, staggering under her weight. “They set the camp on fire, and the smoke—.”

Mr. Flamel nodded, exhaling a breath in relief. He ran a hand through his wild hair and then crouched to pick up a random pebble. Mumbling a spell under his breath, he waved his wand, and the pebble flashed blue.

“Let us get you three somewhere safe,” he said. “Come ‘ere. Hold my hand here, Harriet, and keep Elara close, ‘ermione, yes?” He tucked Hermione and Elara under one arm and Harriet under the other. “Ready? Trois, deux, un—.”

He pronounced an activation word in French Elara didn’t catch, and the Portkey in his fist triggered. Hermione’s grip tightened about her middle. The forest vanished in a swirl of color—and a moment later, everything went black.

None noticed the green skull spewing a writhing serpent as it rose against the sky. Elara and the others wouldn’t know the Dark Mark had come to haunt the World Cup until the following day.


A/N:

Elara: *smacks Sirius*

Sirius, waking up: “I’m up, I’m up!”

Elara: *smacks Sirius again*

Elara: “Just making sure.”

Chapter 169: morsmordre

Chapter Text

clxix. morsmordre

 

The rest of the summer proved…interesting for Hermione Granger.

After the World Cup, she, Harriet, and Elara spent a sleepless morning at the Flamel residence. It wasn’t surprising no one got any rest after the night they’d had. Hermione had never met the Flamels before and had to swallow a few dozen questions when she found herself sitting at the breakfast table with two world-famous alchemists so as not to disturb the somber mood.

The morning Prophet displayed the scene at the campground in vivid detail—including the ghastly image of the Dark Mark splayed over the stars like a gruesome constellation. Looking at it turned Hermione’s stomach, and she barely touched the food Perenelle Flamel set in front of her.

C’est des ordures,” Master Flamel grumbled as he flipped through the paper, dark smudges under his eyes. He continued in gruff, tired French, and his wife only sighed as she poured him another coffee.

It could not have been foreseen, Nicolas,” she said. Flamel only groused and disappeared behind the wrinkled pages.

Hermione didn’t repeat to the others his mutterings on how it’d been foolish for them to be allowed to go to the World Cup in the first place. She understood his worry, but she disagreed; it simply wasn’t fair or right for them to forgo everything in life simply because there was a measure of risk involved. Hermione refused to live in a box.

The Flamels sent them out to explore the garden, and by the time they returned indoors, Headmaster Dumbledore and Sirius had arrived, the latter sporting several scuffs and abrasions on his hands and face. Hermione could tell the adults had spent their time trading tense words given the thickness in the air. Flamel had dragged a hand through his hair several times, and Professor Dumbledore had a pensive look on his aged face.

They returned to Grimmauld Place, but not before Master Flamel extracted a promise from each witch to write when they could. He touched Hermione’s shoulder before she stepped through the Floo, and when she looked up at him, he leaned closer to her ear.

Look after Harriet for me, oui?” he said in French, his eyes warm. “Things are not good in Britain. Keep yourselves safe.

I will.”

Write me if you need anything.

She followed the others after that, Trefhud disappearing in a whorl of ash and green flame. Hermione promised herself she wouldn’t abuse the privilege, but if she did write Master Flamel asking if he had a spare Embolized Cauldron sitting out, she didn’t see the harm in it.

Back at Grimmauld Place, Sirius caught much of the blame for the three of them ending up in the woods alone; those who passed through the house always had a brief comment or a word of reprimand for him. Professor Snape especially always threw out a cutting comment.

Hermione didn’t think Elara’s father deserved the censure. Really, he’d made the best decision possible for the situation.

Sirius could not have Apparated away with three additional people, and in the chaos, he couldn’t have Apparated with two and reliably come back for the third. Hermione couldn’t say he would have been capable of Apparating at all in his tired and mildly hungover state. St. Mungo’s reported a large spike in splinching incidents the day following the Cup.

Additionally, Sirius seemed a competent and clever wizard—for the most part, Hermione thought. But he wasn’t on the same level as Professor Dumbledore or Master Flamel, which meant he couldn’t magic up a Portkey on command or hope to fend off a raid of Death Eaters while running with three underage witches.

Really, he made the best decision possible.

Speaking of Death Eaters—Hermione had formed the unfortunate habit of being in the wrong place at the right time. Or so she would claim if any of the older witches and wizards managed to catch her lurking on landings or on convenient steps. She gleaned more information about those who’d been at the World Cup than the adults had seen fit to give them.

Professors Dumbledore, McGonagall, and Snape did not think the raiders had been Death Eaters; in Snape’s own words, they’d been nothing more than a crowd of “dithering degenerate drunkards” and not at all like You-Know-Who’s real followers. Indeed, almost all of those who’d set fire to the camp fled in terror when the Dark Mark appeared—a spell apparently only known to true Death Eaters.

Hermione gathered from the rest of his snide explanations or retorts that Death Eaters, specifically, did not much exist anymore. Not outside of Azkaban.

Master Flamel disagreed. He didn’t believe the wizards needed to be “tried and true” to propagate You-Know-Who’s message. For the Flamels, one didn’t have to be baptized by the Dark Lord himself to be considered a “Death Eater”; donning the robes and terrorizing Muggles was enough.

Hermione’s own opinion was mixed. Indisputably there’d been at least one Death Eater there. At one point or another, the person who’d cast the Dark Mark had sworn themselves to You-Known-Who—not to Slytherin, or Gaunt, who did not teach their followers that magic. According to Snape’s reply to McGonagall, it did not fit their agenda to use the insignia of Lord Voldemort.

The other Dark wizards at the Cup had run at the sight of the Mark. Wizards knew about mob mentality; Hermione questioned whether or not it was possible a single group of Dark-leaning sympathizers simply incited the chaos by encouraging others who had their inhibitions lowered after the game. Had they acted against their better judgment? Hermione would bet her new allowance from Sirius that many of those in the raid were traditionally anti-Voldemort proponents.

It was no secret many in the Wizarding world held magic dear and feared the unknown. Person to person, they might harbor no ill-will to Muggles, but toss them into a larger congregation, and they would feel less guilt or reluctance in harming them.

Whatever the truth, the system was flawed, and with Gaunt at the head of their society, Hermione didn’t see it improving any time soon.

Suddenly, September came upon them, and Hogwarts was due to begin. Elara and Hermione returned to Diagon Alley with Professor McGonagall to find their supplies while Harriet remained safe in Grimmauld Place. They spent much of the day and night before the first of the month trying to find all of their possessions and pack. Hermione hadn’t been at the house terribly long, but already her things seemed to wander into every room.

For all its gloom and oppressive decor, she liked Grimmauld Place. She adored the mystery of it, the history, and the feeling of home. She’d grown more comfortable at Malfoy Manor, but there’d always been a line between her and the residents, a knowledge of her impermanence and status. At Grimmauld, she was simply…family.

The morning of their departure didn’t start on a good note. Sirius proved morose and surly at the prospect of everyone but him leaving the house. He dragged breakfast out into a lengthy affair, much to Professor Lupin’s irritation. He’d never struck Hermione as the kind of man who stirred to anger easily, but Sirius seemed apt at irking the normally docile werewolf.

Then, while dragging her trunk downstairs, Elara missed a step on the stairs and fell, rolling her ankle. Professor Lupin and Sirius spent a further forty-five minutes squabbling over what to do—neither being much of a medi-wizard. Hermione finally huffed and wrapped Elara’s foot until Madam Pomfrey saw her at school.

By the time they stepped through the Floo, they barely had a moment to take a breath before they had to race for the train. Professor Lupin almost fell when the Express lurched into motion while he pulled Harriet and her luggage off the platform. Students hung out of windows to wave at their parents and younger siblings still crowding the station, a long, deep whistle signaling the start of their journey.

Professor Lupin exhaled in relief. “You three go on and find your friends,” he told them, slightly out of breath. “I’m going to go find myself a seat in the dining car.”

Hermione and the others dragged their trunks along behind them as they went in search of an empty compartment or someone they knew. Ginny was the one who came to find them and brought the trio to where she and Luna were sitting.

Conversation naturally turned toward the World Cup.

“We were really worried about you lot,” Ginny said as she tucked her hair back behind her ears. She already wore her school robes, the color slightly woebegone from age. “But it was impossible to find anyone. Fred and George and me got separated from Neville and Ron and Dean almost from the start.”

“I’m surprised Longbottom didn’t throw himself into the thick of it and get cursed,” Harriet said. She dug out a potion bottle from her bag and offered it to Elara to dull the pain in her leg. Elara downed it and slumped into the bench, sighing.

Ginny shook her head. “Even Ron isn’t thick enough to let him do that. They did nearly get trampled, though. They ended up finding Neville’s dad and sheltering by the stadium.” She looked at Luna, who idly pulled on a long strand of her pale hair. “It’s a good thing you didn’t go. Your dad would have had kittens if something else happened to you.”

Smiling, Luna shrugged, bulbous, roughly cut gemstones glinting on her earlobes. “Daddy thinks it wasn’t Dark wizards at all.”

Elara blinked. “What on earth does he think it was, then?”

“He says it was a mass hallucination brought on by the growth of Fibblefluff Flowers in the area. The pollen causes delusions, you know.”

The four witches stared at the Ravenclaw until Harriet broke, asking, “What’s a Fibblefluff Flower?” At that point, Luna yanked a copy of her father’s paper, The Quibbler, out of her satchel and showed Harriet an article.

As they chatted about non-existent foliage, Hermione let her familiar out of his basket and hummed in thought. Crookshanks turned his gaze toward Cygnus’ cage and made the wise decision to look away. “Ginny, did you see who cast the Dark Mark? Did Neville or Ron? Or your dad?”

Again, Ginny shook her head. “Neville claims he heard the bloke who did it, but it was too dark to see.”

“He heard them?”

“Yeah. Said the incantation was, ‘morsmordre,’ and Dad told us that lines up with what they know of the Dark Mark.”

That was more information than what Hermione had been able to dig up in old Prophets or the Grimmauld Library. It did lend credence to the idea of an actual Death Eater being present.

But who was it? And what was their motive?

Movement outside the compartment window caught her eye, and Hermione turned her head in time to see Malfoy walk by with Goyle and Crabbe. He must have been preoccupied if he didn’t see fit to stop and harass them.

I wonder….

Hermione shooed Crookshanks off her lap. “I’ll just be a moment.”

Harriet looked up from the Quibbler she shared with Luna. Apparently, when opened to a specific page, the paper belched glitter on its reader. Both Harriet and Luna had gold flecks on their faces. “Where are you off to?”

“Just to have a word with someone. I’ll be right back.”

“Okay. D’you want something from the trolley if it comes?”

“No, thank you.”

Hermione rose and stepped into the corridor, sliding the door shut behind her. She turned in the direction Draco had walked and began searching the compartments. Hermione peered through each window she passed until she found Draco sitting with the other Slytherin boys of their year. He had his chin propped on his hand, gaze fixed on the countryside outside.

Hermione opened the door, and five heads turned in her direction.

“Out and about without the other losers, Granger?” Zabini asked. Honestly, Hermione had heard more creative insults, and Zabini’s voice lacked bite. “No Potty or Mad Black?”

Nott scoffed, turning a page in his book. “I dare you to call Black mad to her face.”

“Merlin, no.”

“Too afraid?”

“I have self-preservation, I’ll have you know. I saw what she did to Longbottom’s face in second-year.”

Hermione huffed. “Draco, do you have a moment?” she asked, ignoring Zabini and Nott. The blond wizard straightened and nodded, getting to his feet. Goyle said something to Crabbe that Hermione didn’t catch, elbowing him, and Malfoy kicked him hard in the ankle.

Once in the corridor, Malfoy cocked a brow and leaned on the door at his back, crossing his arms. “So, Granger. What do you need?”

Hermione turned in both directions, eying the nearest student, who stood about four compartments farther down and thus out of earshot. She didn’t have much hope for this fact-finding mission, but she might as well try. “I need you to tell me the truth,” she said in a strained voice. “Was your father there at the World Cup?”

“Well, of course. We had seats in the top box, best tickets given—.” Malfoy froze when he caught the meaning of Hermione’s sharp look, and he flinched, banging his elbow into the door. “No! Not—no, not then. Merlin, Granger, are you mad? You were in the manor. You know what Gaunt—what he’s like when upset.” Draco swallowed. “Do you really believe Father would participate in such nonsense when he works with the Minister?”

Hermione shrugged. “I don’t know, do I? And don’t deny your father’s disdain for Muggles. It’s not hard to think he’d approve of what those monsters were doing.”

“Disliking Muggles doesn’t mean he goes out flipping children in the air like a game of Exploding Snap.” Malfoy actually sounded insulted by her question. He sneered at a second-year Hufflepuff coming down the way, and the poor boy almost tripped over his own feet in his rush to get away.

“Well, to be honest, I was wondering if Gaunt had a hand in it. If he did, then maybe—.” Hermione glanced away from Draco, looking out the window at the trees whipping past. “But if your father wasn’t there….”

“That’s absurd, Granger. The Ministry did not come out looking good after most of the crowd got away, and next year is an election year. The Minister was not pleased.”

“It could be a ploy. Creating his own enemy to overcome and present a false sense of valor.” Hermione’s heart wasn’t in the theory. She’d also considered, abstractly, if Professor Slytherin had anything to do with the raid in a bid to destabilize Gaunt—but, if he had, Professor Snape would surely know and wouldn’t have suggested the event was an anomaly.

“You don’t believe that.”

“No,” Hermione allowed. “Are…are your mum and dad all right?” Goodness, it felt odd asking after the Malfoys of all people, but Hermione remembered Mrs. Malfoy had done her utmost to protect her from Gaunt, ensuring her relocation to the Black house, and Mr. Malfoy, for all that he was a bigoted man, had never abused Hermione or let her go wanting. She didn’t’ wish them ill.

Draco blinked, surprised by her question. It might have been her imagination, but Hermione thought he blushed. “Yes, perfectly fine. Father took us home when—things escalated.” He cleared his throat and then stuck his nose in the air, some of his more self-assured mannerisms returning. “I lost my wand when that riffraff came through. Mother had to take me Ollivander’s to buy a new one.”

Hermione rolled her eyes. “How did you manage that?”

“If I knew the answer, I wouldn’t have lost it, would I?”

“I hope you remembered to report your old one as missing.”

“Of course I did. Do I look as brainless as Potter to you?”

Outraged, Hermione opened her mouth to tell him off, when she noted the slight tip of his lips. “Honestly, Draco. Do you want another toad in your hair?”

He sniffed. “Horrid little goblin. No respectable witch would go about throwing toads.”

“I might throw a toad at you as well for that remark.”

“Hey!”

Hermione waved off his sputtering comment and bid Malfoy goodbye, hearing the tell-tale clatter of the lunch trolley’s wheels. She returned to her compartment, finding Elara had fallen asleep with her head propped on Harriet’s shoulder while Harriet talked Quidditch with Ginny. Luna smiled at Hermione’s return but chose not to say anything.

Sitting again, Hermione gathered Crookshanks in her arms as the bandy-legged half-Kneazle came to settle on her lap, turning over her thoughts like stones in her mind.

Abandoned on the other bench, the Quibbler bore an image of the Dark Mark in the night sky, green and ghoulish and haunting. Even a disreputable conspiracy-theorist paper had covered the event after the World Cup.

Hermione had more questions than answers, and it frustrated her. A Death Eater had been at the campground—either as part of the marauding group or against them, but inarguably there. Someone had to cast the Mark into the sky. If they were not one of Gaunt’s, and not one of Slytherin’s, then who? And why now? What did it mean?

Hermione didn’t know, and that terrified her.


 

A/N: Going back to Hogwarts woo!

Chapter 170: the triwizard tournament

Chapter Text

clxx. the triwizard tournament

 

The first sight of Hogwarts after a long summer never failed to take Harriet’s breath away.

The castle stretched against a clear sky, the many turrets and swooping arches stark in the moonlight with torches blazing in the windows. Harriet hung partly out of her carriage window to see the boar-flanked gates, the sweeping grounds, the Thestral in front of her flicking its wings. The air was cool but still sticky with the memory of summer, and Harriet sucked in a deep, relieving breath.

She loved spending time at Grimmauld Place with everyone—loved having a family, as unconventional as it might be—but she did not love the long, hot days stuck inside, unable to go anywhere. If not for junior Quidditch league practice, Harriet would’ve gone mad.

At Hogwarts, she could go anywhere she wanted. Well, if she avoided Snape…and Slytherin, and Filch, and—most of the staff, if she was being honest. She seemed to get chastised for going most anywhere in the castle, but what they didn’t know wouldn’t hurt them.

Elara yawned next to her, pressing her gloved fingers against her eyes. “That potion made me tired.”

“You being tired made you tired,” Harriet replied, settling in her seat again. She let the window clatter shut. “We’re almost there. We’ll have supper, and you’ll be able to go off to bed.”

Elara grunted, and when the carriage came to a stop, Harriet was the first to hop out, followed by Elara, then Hermione. Ahead of them, the doors to the entrance hall hung open, accepting the crowd of students moving inside. They’d only just stepped off the top step when Peeves started pelting students with sludge-filled balloons.

“What in the world—?”

The poltergeist cackled as he lobbed another at a cringing second-year Hufflepuff. “Weeee!”

Elara groaned and stepped around a stinking puddle. “If this is any indication of how this year is going to go—.”

Harriet threw up a shield before she could be smacked by a balloon, letting it ricochet off into a group of older Ravenclaws. She stepped to the side, finding a spot out of the way against the wall—which was how she found herself standing next to Longbottom.

The anticipated pinch of hatred settled in Harriet’s middle when she saw the Boy Who Lived. It crept up, cold and unwelcome, like sharp-tipped fingers scratching along her spine.

“Potter,” he said.

“Longbottom,” Harriet acknowledged, her mouth twisting.

“Good summer?”

“S’alright.”

“Mine was good,” he went on, grinning. “I trained with Acke Grouse, you know. In America. He’s the Defense professor at Ilvermorny.”

“Mmm,” Harriet replied, making minimal effort to sound interested. She’d only been in the castle for a few minutes and didn’t much want to be put in detention for hexing Longbottom on the first night.

“I improved my Shield Charm tenfold. Professor Grouse said it’s as good as a Defense master’s.”

Mmm.

“Better than yours, at the very least. Even with the special treatment Slytherin gives you, he’ll have to admit how much I’ve improved.”

Harriet expected Longbottom to act a prat at some point, so she didn’t react to his needling dig. If he wanted “special treatment” from Professor Slytherin, she welcomed him to it. Maybe he’d regret it after being cursed into the stone floor a few times.

Peeves lobbed a balloon in their direction—and Harriet used a Shield Charm to direct the balloon right into Longbottom’s face. He shrieked as it burst, and sludge rushed down his new robes.

Someone yelled for the Bloody Baron to be called, and Harriet took this as her cue to leave so the ghost could arrive. She skirted the growing mess and entered the Great Hall, narrowly avoiding Professor McGonagall as she came rushing out after Peeves.

Elara and Hermione soon joined Harriet at the Slytherin table, and Madam Pomfrey came from the dais, a stern expression fixed on her lined face.

“Professor Lupin said you would need a quick look over,” she said to Elara, who grimaced and turned on the bench, pulling aside her robes to reveal her leg. Madam Pomfrey had her ankle healed in a trice and returned to the High Table.

“She makes that look easy,” Elara groused as she straightened her robes and turned on the bench again. “Meanwhile, Sirius and Remus fussed over it for half an hour and only managed to turn my sock purple.”

Hermione laughed.

Harriet laced her fingers together and leaned her chin on her hands, waiting for the hall to fill and for supper to commence. Life at Hogwarts had proved dramatic for the last three years, but Harriet remained hopeful nothing overly climatic would happen this term. She looked forward to classes, continuing her Animagus practice, and having a chance to explore the grounds with Livi. She hoped life remained quiet.

The Slytherin table filled soon enough, as did the other tables, the professors and instructors filtering in through the side door. Harriet didn’t take much notice of them until Hermione gently nudged her foot, and she glanced around at her.

“Professor Slytherin looks….” She stopped, nibbling on her lip. “Upset.”

Harriet’s understood why Hermione hesitated when she tipped her head and scanned the High Table, finding Slytherin in his usual seat by Snape. She couldn’t say if he was upset or—angry? Bored? The wizard adopted his typical laconic posture, but his gaze was unsettled, moving restlessly around the room. He kept his hand on his goblet, the knuckles white from his grip’s pressure.

“What d’you think that’s about?”

“I haven’t the foggiest.” Hermione grimaced. “And hopefully, we don’t find out.”

The Headmaster made his appearance, and McGonagall went out of the Great Hall again to escort in the new first years. Remus arrived and smiled in their direction, but he didn’t do anything more to draw attention to himself. Slytherin sneered at the History of Magic professor as he took his seat and muttered something to Snape, who didn’t even blink.

Harriet watched the Sorting with idle attention, clapping when new students came to Slytherin House but otherwise letting her mind drift. She didn’t return to the present until Professor Dumbledore gave a brief word of welcome, and the Feast began.

The food was as good as ever, and the company marginally less aggravating than it’d been in the past. No one commented on Harriet’s less than perfectly refined table manners, and no one decided to bring up blood status and beat it like a dead Hippogriff. Harriet even had a pleasant conversation with the fifth years Flora and Hestia Carrow about their summer holiday in Greece.

After a filling supper of steak and kidney pie, Yorkshire pudding, gravy, and a fruity trifle for dessert, Harriet felt more than ready to toddle off to the dungeons and find her bed. When the Headmaster rose to his feet, resplendent violet robes rippling down to his shoes, she braced herself for one of his long, lingering speeches.

“Welcome! Welcome back to Hogwarts—or welcome for the first time. Now that you are all well-fed and watered, I would like to bend your ear for a moment with a few important announcements.

“Firstly, I must inform you that the Inter-House Quidditch Cup will not be held this year.”

The expected chorus of shouts and cries of dismay rose from the students—though Harriet couldn’t help the small, vindictive “Ha!” that escaped her. The malicious, selfish little devil in her heart felt smug that if she couldn’t play Quidditch, no one else could either.

Harriet reminded herself she was being incredibly petty, but that didn’t stop her pleased smirk when she glimpsed Malfoy’s devastated face.

“Instead, Hogwarts has been given the great privilege of hosting the Triwizard Tournament, an event that will begin October and run for the rest of the year.”

A storm of muttering erupted, and Harriet frowned, something niggling at the back of her mind. “The Triwizard Tournament? Where have I heard of that before?”

“We came across it in our research,” Hermione replied with a matching frown. “They transported Gorgons into the country for one of the contests. Remember? When we were looking for information on the Petrifications?”

“Oh, bloody hell. That tournament? Why didn’t Remus mention it?”

“He was probably asked to keep it a surprise. I didn’t hear anything about it at the Malfoys’, though Lucius must have been involved or at least known.”

At the head of the room, Dumbledore continued speaking. “The Triwizard Tournament has been a long-standing tradition held between the three major European magical institutes: Hogwarts, Beauxbatons, and Durmstrang. In decades past, the schools rotated who hosted the Tournament, but it was eventually discontinued in the face of numerous safety concerns and the mounting death toll.”

Harriet mouthed the words death toll under her breath and exchanged a look with Elara.

“Our Ministry of Magic, most specifically the Departments of International Magical Cooperation and Magical Games, in conjunction with the Minister’s office, have decided to revive the Tournament with modern precautions implemented to ensure the safety of all participants and spectators.”

At this point, Harriet noted a subtle shift among the staff while everyone else was distracted by conversation. The Headmaster had stopped smiling, and McGonagall leaned back in her chair, mouth forming the same thin line it always did when Harriet said something particularly rude. Snape hadn’t moved a muscle, but Slytherin—who hadn’t touched anything on the table for the entire evening aside from his wine—had a fierce snarl on his face.

“The champions chosen from each school will compete in a series of challenges for the Triwizard Cup, the glory of their school, and a thousand Galleons personal prize money.”

Excitement buzzed through the Great Hall again at the prizes. For most, that was a lot of money. Harriet knew she was especially privileged, having been left an obscene amount of gold by her family, but even if she’d still had nothing and was living in the cupboard with the Dursleys constantly at her ear, she didn’t think a thousand Galleons would be enough to drag her out in front of something like a bloody Gorgon.

Maybe it’s all about perspective, she thought, eyes on Dumbledore, then Slytherin again. Having gone against a Basilisk and a werewolf, I’d give up a lot more than a thousand Galleons to not be in that position again.

“In an effort to better protect our students and to ensure only those best capable of facing the intended challenges enter the competition, the Ministry and the prospective schools, including Hogwarts, have agreed to implement an age limit. Therefore, to enter, you must be seventeen years old—.”

Outrage, most notably from the Gryffindor table, drowned out the rest of Dumbledore’s words, and the Headmaster had to raise his voice to be heard.

“—And I will be personally ensuring no person under the proper age will be able to enter.”

“Well, what did they expect to happen?” Hermione said with a roll of her eyes. “Could you imagine a first or second year managing to enter and be chosen? What chance would they stand against a sixth or seventh year?”

“Especially when they use things like Gorgons,” Harriet muttered, shivering. “Hey, d’you think I could close my eyes and convince a Gorgon’s hair to bite it?”

“I would think they’re impervious to the venom—if the snakes have venom at all.”

“That’s rubbish, then.” Harriet paused. “D’you think Gorgons can speak Parseltongue? Merlin’s beard, that’d be awful, having a head full of chatty snakes. All they want to talk about is napping and which snacks taste best. No wonder Gorgons are so brassed off.”

Across the table by Hermione, Pansy Parkinson turned her scowl on Harriet. “Why are you going on about Gorgons, Potter?”

“Because they used them in the Tournament before.”

“You’re lying.”

“Why would I lie about that, Parkinson? Don’t be an idiot.”

Pansy’s face went decidedly green, and Headmaster Dumbledore finally cut his speech off to dismiss them for bed. Harriet stretched as she stood, ready to go off to the dorm and get Livi settled in his blanket-nest. Too long in the trunk, and he’d be set on creating mischief.

Harriet didn’t notice Professor Slytherin departing the hall with a grim Snape right at his heels. She followed her classmates toward the dungeons.

Entering the common room felt much like returning home, even with the silent, stupid dynamic between the upper-years and their seating arrangement and the serpent painting on the wall. The dim, soft glow of the silver lanterns and the banked heat emanating from the hearths warmed Harriet’s bones, and she couldn’t help but close her eyes once inside, sighing.

“All right, Harriet?”

“Yeah, fine.”

She watched the new first years inspect their surroundings, startled gasps sounding when a dark form swam beyond the green windows. Had she ever been that short? Or should she ask herself when she stopped being that short? It seemed like yesterday she first arrived at Hogwarts.

The air shifted at her back.

Harriet swallowed a startled yelp when she felt cool cloth brush her arm and turned to see Professor Slytherin silently glide past her into the common room, Snape shadowing his presence. The others fell silent in a wave as they noticed their Head of House’s sudden appearance.

“Good evening, children,” Slytherin said as he surveyed those gathered before him. “Ah…the new first years. Welcome to the glorious House of Slytherin. I am your Head of House, Professor Slytherin, descendant of Salazar Slytherin himself, and the Dark Arts instructor.”

Harriet had one of those knee-jerk reactions where she almost sputtered and corrected him by saying “Defense Against the Dark Arts,” but she kept her head and stayed silent, shuffling farther into the crowd.

“The upper-years will doubtless inform you that I don’t often see the need to address you here in the common room; I like to believe my students are clever enough not to waste my time.”

The first-years fidgeted under Slytherin’s unfeeling scrutiny, then the wizard made a slow, uninterested turn and passed through the room’s middle. Snape remained by the entrance, barely visible in the low light.

“This year, Headmaster Dumbledore and the Minister have seen fit to inflict the nuisance that is the Triwizard Tournament upon us.” He laced his hands together before himself, red eyes roving over the crowd. “I, and your Board of Governors, voiced our concerns about the dangers presented by the Tournament, but our worries were not taken into the Ministry’s accounting. The competition is, unfortunately, fully under the Ministry’s jurisdiction.”

Harriet scoffed. Whatever Slytherin’s game, his speech hadn’t been prompted by concern for the student body. This was the wizard who routinely brought in Dark creatures to give his students “hands on” experience.

Slytherin let his words soak in, the slightest flicker of his tongue touching his sharp teeth. That was a tell; Harriet had learned over the years that it meant the professor was scheming, or his thoughts were coming together at a rapid pace.

But what about the Tournament does he dislike? It has to be because of the Minister’s involvement. Harriet scrunched her nose. But what does the Minister stand to gain from this?

Slytherin hummed softly, almost gently, and the sound made Harriet’s skin crawl. He spoke in an earnest tone, and yet everything he said reeked of insincerity, sticky like sugary toffee that hurt Harriet’s stomach and made her feel ill.

“I may not be able to prevent Hogwarts’ participation in this farce, but I can stop my House from getting involved.” The wizard smirked, cocking his head to the side with almost boyish charm. He looked so strange under the silver lanterns, almost blurry or soft, as if one swipe at his face would disperse him like a bad dream. “No Slytherin student will enter the Triwizard Tournament. If I find out one of our House disobeys this rule, I will be most…displeased.”

Whispers dared breach the silence that had dominated the common room since Slytherin’s arrival. Some of the seventh years, like Lucian Bole, Peregrine Derrick, and Desdemona Bragge, wore frustrated or offended expressions. For the most part, people attributed glory as a Gryffindor trait, but Slytherins weren’t called ambitious for nothing. Being denied a chance at the Triwizard Cup rankled.

Slytherin lifted one pale hand, and the whispering ceased. “Of course, I would never deny my students the chance to prove themselves, if they so desired.”

Snape shifted, the slight turn of his hand, thumb moving against his forefinger.

“So I have come to the decision that I will be taking on a personal apprentice.”

What?

“It is an opportunity I will allow only my dear Slytherins. Instead of competing for the Ministry’s entertainment and a measly pauper’s prize, I will set a series of tasks for those of the House who express interest. In the end, I will select winner, if you will. One person upon whom I will bestow a gift the likes of which none of you will ever see again.”

The whispering returned, more eager than before, some like Bragge and Derrick grinning from ear to ear. Harriet felt sick again, unable to think of anything she’d desire less than to be Professor Slytherin’s apprentice. For others, his sycophants and those upper-years and those who hung on his every word, this was a dream come true.

“What is he on about?” Elara muttered, to which Harriet could only shake her head.

“He’s making a distinction while also dividing the House,” Hermione hissed. “Us and them, Slytherin and other. Then, he’s pitting us against one another for his regard.”

Professor Slytherin’s head made a half turn in their direction, and Hermione shut her mouth, Elara directing her gaze toward the hearth while Harriet inspected her shoes.

“Anyone interested, any age, needs only to bring me their name.” He smiled, teeth too sharp, red eyes lurid and wide. “But keep in mind, no matter if you are interested or not, you will not be entering the Triwizard Tournament.”

His final warning—threat—given, Professor Slytherin nodded to the gathered students and swanned out of the common room in a flicker of black silk. Again, Snape followed like a looming thundercloud.

As if afraid to move, the crowd of Slytherin students only dispersed themselves after the seventh year prefect, Lyla Muldoon, dismissed them. Harriet and the others went to their dorm, remaining oddly quiet, and Harriet went about tending to her snakes after the others closed themselves behind their curtains.

An hour later, she settled in bed, but she didn’t sleep. Instead, she stared at the slight ripple of moonlight escaping the window, lost in thought until her eyelids grew too heavy to stay open. Harriet sighed, pushing away ruminations about Slytherin and Gaunt, then finally rolled over and went to sleep.


A/N:

Harriet: “This year is going to be totally normal—.”

Dumbledore, banging pots and pans: “Death tournament, children!”

Harriet: “…”

Harriet: “Never mind.”

Chapter 171: drowning at heart

Chapter Text

clxxi. drowning at heart

 

“I warned you,” Severus said to the Headmaster seated behind his cluttered desk. “I warned you this summer that Slytherin would do something like this. I said he would seek to consolidate power after Selwyn’s death, and now with Gaunt pressing his influence, Slytherin will do what he can to maintain power in the school.”

Dumbledore watched the Potions Master’s anxious pacing, balancing his chin on the knuckles of his only hand. The hour had grown late, the office illuminated by the subtle glow of candles set on the low tables. Dumbledore wore his night things, scarlet pajamas threaded with stripes of gold, completed by a night cap with a lion’s fuzzy head for a tassel.  

Severus had been unable to leave Slytherin’s side until the red-eyed wizard waved him off, and only then did he dare come to the Headmaster, having to wake him in the middle of the night to deliver the urgent news of Slytherin’s unfolding plans. If Dumbledore protested being stirred from his rest, he made no mention of it.

“Yes, I remember, Severus. We knew he would act, though we were not sure how until now.” Dumbledore paused, and Severus stopped pacing, his robes settling about his legs. “You mentioned something quite curious after your last visit to the Sangfort home.”

Severus glared at the man and had to take a breath, calming the needling burst of thoughts in his head to refocus his attention. “‘If I cannot find quality, why not make it myself?’” he quoted, his stomach turning at the memory. “The statement had not made much sense at the time.”

“What better way to bolster his own agenda than to make another impression of himself?”

“Because that worked out so well for the Dark Lord,” Severus scorned, pacing again. From his perch, Dumbledore’s interminably aggravating familiar warbled half a song and ruffled his wings as if readying himself to leap for Snape’s shoulder. Severus jerked himself away, and Fawkes clacked his beak.

“Ah, that is not the kind of impression I mean, my boy.” Dumbledore continued to watch him, though his eyes didn’t quite track the motion, lost somewhere in the middle-distance, following paths Severus could only guess. “At the heart of things, Tom Riddle is an egoist. I don’t believe he fully understood the extent of his arrogance until the…afterimages of his being decided they know better than their own self.”

Dumbledore removed his chin from his hand and allowed Fawkes to fly over, giving the phoenix a place to perch. Around them, the many faces of Headmasters and Mistresses muttered to one another or continued to doze.

“The impression of which I spoke is the picture Tom would create that would resemble only those traits he desired; loyalty, cunning, and power. He will feign intentions of sharing influence, whereas we know he will do no such thing.” Fawkes preened himself, and Dumbledore shifted him to the head of his chair, out of the way. “With an apprentice, he could—potentially—mold them to act only on his will. They would be an agent capable of challenging his enemies while remaining devoted only to the creature called Tom Slytherin.”

Severus kneaded at his forehead as the Headmaster spoke, his thumb tracing over the scar tissue and missing hair in his left brow. “Capable of challenging his enemies,” he repeated slowly, giving the words undue consideration. “His enemies would include you.”

“Naturally.”

“But additionally, that would also include Gaunt. Gaunt and—.”

Voldemort. He only thought the name, and still, the inside of his left forearm prickled with sensation.

Dumbledore smiled, a serene upturn of his lips mostly hidden by his beard. “I would say that if our dear professor is considering an apprentice, he may feel my time as Headmaster is coming to a close, and he will no longer benefit from my presence. How very odd it is to consider our curious symbiosis, wherein I am both the shield and sword Minister Gaunt and Professor Slytherin wield against one another.”

Severus didn’t say anything, scowling at the carpet. Dumbledore would, eventually, pass away. It was an inevitability that Slytherin had been banking on for years; he needed only to maintain authority over the Board, and they would make him Headmaster when Dumbledore died. However, Severus didn’t worry about it often; while Dumbledore was by no means young, the average life expectancy of a wizard extended over a hundred-and-eighty. Albus had only just celebrated his one-hundredth-and-thirteenth birthday in August.

“He would use this prospective lackey to harm you.”

“No, I don’t believe so. The bylaw clearly states any person suspected in influencing the death of a Headmaster or Headmistress of the school can never become Headmaster themselves.” Dumbledore chuckled, stroking the long plumage of Fawkes’ tail. “If there is one positive thing I can attribute to Tom Slytherin, it is his patience. He has not waited this long to misstep now.”

“Even good men lose patience, and he is not a good man.”

“But he is an ambitious one, and a version of himself who is more sound of mind than the others.” Dumbledore looked to Severus and held his eyes level on the younger wizard. “I do not believe he has active designs on my life at this time.”

“The keyword there, Headmaster, is active. Even passive designs reap results. Don’t be a fool.”

Severus finally stomped over and sat in his usual chair by the desk, burying his face in his hands to mask his frustration. For years, he’d understood the forced armistice between Gaunt and Slytherin would not hold. Like Dumbledore’s death, it was an inevitability. Neither wizard would ever settle for anything less than absolute power, and with the Dark Mark returning on the arms of old Death Eaters….

Like a dam under too much pressure, something had to give.

“Which of our students do you believe will be most interested in Tom’s proposal?”

Severus lifted his head, exhaling. “Who wouldn’t be interested? Even those with no Dark leanings would be hard-pressed to ignore a prospective apprenticeship with a Master, especially one offered so freely. Derrick, Bragge, Crowle, Craft, Vuharith, Lestrange, Pucey, and Dread would be the most likely candidates, but others would enter for consideration.”

“And who do you think Tom would be most interested in?”

He wasn’t certain. Severus had to Occlude to estimate the madness of Slytherin’s choices better, to separate emotion from perceived cruelty or impartial logic. But, truly, he thought the answer was all of them. Every student who dressed in green and silver bore Slytherin’s attention, and his greed knew no bounds. If he could have every single one of them under his thumb, he would.

“Bragge, for her intelligence. He would choose Stokk if he needed another unassuming agent in the Ministry, but he has Pyrites now. Perhaps Lestrange, for his viciousness.”

“Yes, it would be quite a coup for him, wouldn’t it? Earning the loyalty of Bellatrix’s son.” Dumbledore sighed and adjusted his glasses. “I worry for the younger students, Severus. The revelations Tom has shared with you intimate his wish to manipulate a more impressionable mind.”

“He intends for there to be a competition of some sort; I cannot imagine he thinks one of the younger students would stand a chance against the upper-years.” Severus rolled his eyes. “Lestrange, in particular, would not be above sabotaging them to ease his way.”

“That is true.” Albus nodded as if to himself. Fawkes sensed his anxious mood and trilled, which only forced Severus to his feet to resume his disquieted pacing. He came to the window and looked out, but the world remained dark and veiled in the dead of night.

“And what of Harriet?”

Severus flinched and spun on his heels. “Potter is a fourth year,” he snapped. “And not nearly so stupid as to give her name for his consideration!”

“I was not referring to Harriet’s interest so much as Tom’s interest in her.”

“He is interested in all of the students,” Severus prevaricated, facing the window again. His reflection appeared distorted in the glass, the pale outline of a face visible in the black mass of his body. His eyes came out as little more than black pits, shadowed and strange and unrecognizable.

“Severus?” Albus prompted.

“What?”

His feigning ignorance did not put the Headmaster off. “I know it can be uncomfortable thinking of Tom’s interest in someone you care for—.”

Severus choked, and no amount of Occlusion could stop his next outburst. “Don’t be ridiculous!” he snarled. “I don’t care at all for the horrid brat! She tests my nerves at every opportunity!”

“Then why do you hesitate when I ask after Tom’s designs for her?”

Severus opened his mouth—and no sound came out. He tried again, to the same result.

“He—the girl annoys him. His opinion changes from week to week, but he’s shared Gaunt’s curiosity in her after what happened to Quirrel. From what I understand, he doesn’t know if it was a fluke or something more.” Severus flexed his hands and picked at an old scar at the base of his right thumb. “Difficult nuisance that she is, I assume Slytherin is waiting until she is older before making a decision.”

It had been a gamble, teaching the girl a weakness in Slytherin’s Shield Charm. She’d infuriated the wizard when she’d proved able to land a blow upon him, no matter how paltry. Snape only hoped that fury carried over into the wizard’s pride and he’d write Potter off for her audacity.

“Harriet will not always be fourteen, Severus.”

“Yes, thank you, Headmaster. I am aware of how time operates.”

“Then you understand we cannot simply discount her role in proceedings because of her youth.”

Severus whirled from the window, grinding his teeth. “She does not have a role in whatever twisted games Slytherin means to play.”

“Severus—.”

Whatever the Headmaster meant to say was cut off by the slam of the door as Snape left his office and descended the spiraling stairs. Severus saw no reason to stay; he’d delivered his message, and Dumbledore could do with what he willed.

“Bastard,” Severus hissed through his crooked teeth, shoving his way past the slow-moving gargoyle. He stormed off toward the dungeons, thinking of his quarters and his bed and getting some semblance of sleep before dawn—but he stopped short, his breathing loud in the corridor’s narrow confines. His hands shook.

It had nothing to do with caring. Why did everyone assume that because he wasn’t a dewy-eyed Hufflepuff or sanctimonious Gryffindor that watching his students walk to their doom didn’t affect him? Dumbledore didn’t know about the book. He didn’t know about all the names, the lines Severus drew through them, and the guilt that grew each time a young witch or wizard died or disappeared for a psychopath’s desires.

Severus started in the other direction, climbing higher rather than lower into the depths of the school. He reached the Astronomy Tower in a few, short minutes, and he drew in the cold night air, letting the high winds bite at his face and bare hands. Severus leaned on the parapet’s railing and cursed the Headmaster again.

He thought of Potter in Slytherin’s hands, and his throat tightened and burned as if he’d swallowed a mouthful of glass. It filled his lungs and his stomach until he felt himself drowning at heart, blood rushing in his ears, his mouth bitter and dry and his chest hollow like an abandoned cave.

It was not about caring. It was about futility, exhaustion, fear. It was waking every morning with the looming knowledge of his own mortality, knowing each day might prove the day Slytherin’s temper went too far, or Severus’ perceived usefulness ran its course. It was the imminence of years passing, doom growing, the looming certainty of Potter’s death becoming clearer and clearer like a developing photograph.

He lifted his right hand, stark white in the moonlight, and his eyes traced the hair-thin scar encircling his palm, disappearing into his rumpled sleeve.

Severus did not fear death. If anything, it’d be a bloody holiday after sloughing through the nightmare that was the Dark Lord’s machinations. However, he did fear how his end would come about. He feared he would not die alone.

Which fate is worse? Severus asked himself. Potter under Slytherin’s thrall or the girl telling him to sod off?

It was not about caring—and even if it was, did even Dumbledore assume him made out of stone?

He’d missed something in the office, a line of questioning Albus had cottoned onto while Snape’s mind had been elsewhere. Why else bring up Potter? She’d not been relevant. The bridge between the girl and their discussion on other students hadn’t been wholly abrupt, but the Headmaster had jumped a gap somewhere along the line—.

“Beautiful night,” Dumbledore commented—and Severus nearly hexed the man, his heart crashing into his sternum. “The stars are quite lovely.”

“Jesus Christ, Albus.”

“Apologies, my boy, I thought you heard my entry.” A smile twitched the Headmaster’s beard, and Severus sniffed, forcing his hands away from his wand. “You were in such a rush, and I hoped to make sure you were well.”

“Just peachy,” Severus sneered, sparking a chuckle from the other wizard. “What more could you possibly want from me now, Headmaster? It’s gone past two.”

Albus peered at him with that singular, uncanny focus the Potions Master had never experienced from another, save perhaps the Dark Lord himself. The unpleasant sensation of having one’s very self exposed and observed shook his bones, and Severus held himself firm, Occluding until he barely felt the wind, let alone Albus’ regard.

The Headmaster joined him at the railing and surveyed the grounds. “I didn’t have a chance to tell you the Ministry will be sending their first set of Aurors in the morning.”

Severus was relieved he hadn’t brought up Slytherin again, but he masked that relief with a derisive glare. “Already? It is not even October yet.”

“Oh, I believe Minister Gaunt wishes for them to familiarize themselves with the grounds and their rounds.”

“Nothing says international camaraderie quite like a mob of authoritarian hit wizards in a school.”

“It is being billed as an extra security precaution for the children.”

Severus snorted. “And Nifflers will fly out of the Minister’s arse.”

“You have such a way with words.”

“I’m not paid to be loquacious. Or polite.”

Albus laid his hand on his arm, and Severus froze, taken aback by the sudden contact. He stared at the older man’s wizened fingers, and Dumbledore squeezed his wrist enough for the pressure to be felt through the thick wool sleeve and his heavy Occlusion. “Everything will be well in the end.”

Severus said nothing.

Dumbledore turned from the edge of the battlement and urged Snape to follow him inside, out of the cold. Severus went, if only because the sharp clawing inside his abdomen had abated and he despised being a maudlin twat lamenting his life in the dead of night. He’d solve nothing worrying himself sick.

They walked together through the dark corridor, joined by the snore of sleeping portraits and the breeze’s whine in the old window casements. Severus didn’t think he’d sleep tonight.

Shuffling in his nightwear, Albus withdrew his hand from his dressing gown pocket and held up a palmful of lemon sherbets, offering one to his colleague.

“You keep sweets in your pajamas, Headmaster?”

“I had quite forgotten they were there.”

The look Severus gave him clearly conveyed his skepticism. “You’re going to rot what teeth you have left.”

Dumbledore shook his hand in invitation, about to lower it—when Severus plucked one of the sweets from him and popped it into his mouth. The Headmaster was so surprised he stopped walking, and Severus raised one droll brow in response.

“No one will ever believe you.”

With that, he gathered his robes around himself and swept away, leaving a flummoxed Albus behind.

Chapter 172: things worth knowing

Chapter Text

clxxii. things worth knowing

 

For the whole week, the Triwizard Tournament remained the only topic of conversation anyone cared to talk about.

Frankly, Harriet found it a bit dull. The prospect of the competition sounded interesting and fun, but in the same breath, it seemed an awful lot of attention to spare something that would, theoretically, only concern three days for the vast majority of the student body.

Chatter in the Slytherin common room showed several upper-years still grumbled about their Head of House’s decision to exclude them from the Tournament. Harriet considered the obsessive need to participate in every challenge or chance to prove themselves a failing Slytherins shared with Gryffindors. They were a bit like Dudley, petulant and angry whenever someone else had a game he didn’t.

The Slytherins kept their discontent quiet for the most part. One seething glance from their Professor kept their heads bowed and conversation to a minimum. Terrance Higgs dared to question aloud just what would happen if someone went behind Slytherin’s back and entered the Tournament anyway, and Lucian Bole hexed his mouth shut.

No one wanted to test Slytherin’s conviction.

The professors had difficulty getting their students to concentrate that first week back to class. Even Snape and McGonagall broke out their most severe voices when people kept turning in their seats to murmur to their neighbors about the competition. Snape handed out detentions with every other breath, though Harriet managed to escape unscathed.

He still ignored her the best he could. She, in turn, did the same.

This term, Harriet found herself with more free time, much to Elara and Hermione’s disgust. After mulling it over for much of the summer, Harriet finally wrote Professor Slytherin—cringing the whole while—and asked to withdraw from Divinations. His response had come on the back of her letter, and in his pedantic and pompous prose, the wizard had told Harriet to do as she wished and not to bother him about the specifics—or else.

She counted herself lucky the letter hadn’t been cursed.

Elara was peeved over her decision, now having to sit through Trelawney’s class alone.

“I’m not getting anything out of it,” Harriet tried to explain after Snape distributed schedules over breakfast and they noticed the change. “I don’t want to waste my time with it.”

That led to a disagreement over Divinations’ usefulness, and Hermione and Elara spent much of their first day back snapping at one another.

Meanwhile, Hermione thought Harriet should use the excuse of dropping Divinations to enroll in Arithmancy and didn’t understand her reluctance. Truly, Harriet just wanted the few extra hours the week to herself and didn’t have much interest in Arithmancy. Hermione and Elara both found the intricate matrices and relays incredibly fascinating, but they mostly gave her a headache.

Because of her surplus of time, Harriet found herself sitting in the common room on the first Wednesday afternoon on her own, the rest of her year mates off in their classes.

Quentin Trimble’s The Dark Forces: A Guide to Self-Protection laid open in her lap, and Harriet propped her feet on the table’s edge and leaned her chair back in a way that would have set Hermione off in a huff.

She’d studied part of the book over the summer already and had read the first-year edition from cover to cover years ago. Really, she didn’t think Trimble had added much in the Grade Four edition, but she wouldn’t put it past Slytherin to find one obscure spell in a footnote and give her a detention for not knowing it.

Letting her chair teeter farther backward, Harriet exhaled through her nose, her attention wandering over the rest of the room.

One upper-year student sat by the main hearth—Hawkworth, she thought—and he had star charts open in front of him, studying a fold on the pamphlet. Third years gathered around the chess table, Aidan Shafiq playing Reinhold Burke while Theodric Barrow leaned on the back of Burke’s chair, muttering advice.

Closer to Harriet, a few of the new first years had out their Transfiguration texts and seemed to be making headway on their homework. On the table between them laid a bunch of matches.

“You’re doing it wrong,” said the boy, his hair curly and brown, matched by an extensive pattern of freckles over his pudgy cheeks. “It’s acusfors!

His match twitched and turned pointy. The material didn’t change.

Harriet observed that he had the right of it, but he mucked up the motion, too tentative on the final tick, and hadn’t emphasized the right syllable.

“That’s—that’s not right either,” one of the girls with him, blonde with murky green eyes, stated.

“It is!” the boy argued. “I’m just…messing something up….”

The third member of their group turned to glance in Harriet’s direction—who immediately ducked her head and fiddled with the pages of Trimble’s book, pretending she hadn’t been listening.

“Maybe we can ask her.”

“Err, isn’t that a third year?”

“A fourth year, I think. I don’t know her name. Come along.”

“Wait, Izumi—!”

Harriet heard the patter of approaching footsteps and let her chair fall back on all four legs, raising her gaze to watch the three first years. The boy hesitated, hanging back with the blonde girl, but the second girl—dark-haired and dark-eyed with blue crystals dangling from her earrings—strode right up to Harriet without reserve.

“Hello,” she said, sticking her hand out. “Izumi Takagi. And this is Adaline Overcliff and Graham Pritchard.”

“‘Lo,” Harriet replied. She shook the girl’s hand. “I’m Harriet Potter.”

“Potter?” Takagi lifted her nose in the air, eyes sharpening. “Pure-blood?”

Harriet resisted the urge to groan, well used to the different kinds of people who joined Slytherin House. A large portion of them only cared about family names or placed too much curiosity on a person’s lineage. Like a handshake, it became a social tick in the House more often than not.

Harriet didn’t answer her, smiling. “D’you need something?”

Takagi paused, then nodded. “Yes. Do you know the Match to Needle spell?”

“Of course. Do you lot need help with it?”

The three first years bobbled their heads, and Harriet gestured for Pritchard to set down his match. He did so, and she asked him to perform the spell. It had a similar result as before, sharpening the match’s top.

“You have the wrong emphasis,” she told him as she hit the match with a muttered spell, changing it back into its proper form. “Can I have your textbook for a moment? Brilliant, thanks. Now, you see how the incantation is made of two parts? ‘Acus and ‘fors.’ You’ll see ‘fors’ a lot in Transfiguration, and that’s usually the bit you wanna stress. It’s from ‘forma,’ meaning shape, and the main point of the magic is to change the match, the form being secondary to that. Professor McGonagall would call ‘acus’ the guiding word giving the main part of the spell direction.”

Harriet did the spell herself, the match turning into a proper needle, the eyelet slender and proportioned with delicate edging around the side. She turned it back with another flick.

Pritchard tried again, and this time the match turned into a needle, but the material didn’t follow.

“Now, what you need is to regulate the power in your spell. I had a lot of difficulty with that when I was a first year—ended up with needles the size of javelins.” Chagrined, Harriet scratched her cheek. “Typically, power translates into how you move and the force applied in your wrist.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Like when you flick your wand. You have to be more confident; be firmer, but not hasty. Take your time while you’re learning. With practice, you’ll be faster.”

Pritchard blinked, then mustered his resolve and tried the spell again. “Acusfors!

The match wobbled and changed, Pritchard grinning as Harriet picked it up. “Almost,” she told him, bending the needle between two fingers. The outside had a flimsy metal covering, but the inside was still wood. She repaired the needle, then reverted it again. “A few more tries, and you’ll have it.”

Sitting, Pritchard moved himself and his needle out of the way for Overcliff to step closer, the girl fidgety and nervous as she met Harriet’s eyes and immediately looked away.

“Do—do you remember what the e-essay is meant to be about?” she stuttered.

“For acusfors?” Harriet scratched her head and frowned, trying to recall. Takagi took it upon herself to practice the incantation, and as far as Harriet could tell, she had the opposite problem from Pritchard, wherein she put too much power into her magic casting. Her needle turned into lead and thickened to the size of a pencil.

Harriet idly pinched the girl’s elbow between her thumb and forefinger so she’d stop flailing quite so much. “Oi, you’re going to put someone’s eye out.”

“Sorry, Potter.”

Harriet turned to Overcliff again. “I think McGonagall probably wants an etymology break down. That’s what we usually did in our first year.”

“Wh-what’s that?”

“Oh. The professor always tells us to take the bits that make up the spell and explain their meaning in the essays and how they impact the magic and stuff.” She cleared her throat. “So, like how I told you ‘fors’ comes from ‘forma.’ She’ll start teaching you Latin next year, I think, and you start learning how spell-chains are formed, how they’re altered, and having the language etymology makes it easier.”

Overcliff made a quick dash back to their table and returned with her parchment and quill. She started making notes on what Harriet had told her—which was how, ten minutes later, Harriet found herself standing over three first years with her old, battered writing primer in hand, teaching them how to use a quill.

“Trust me, all it takes is one failed essay from Snape for you to start practicing your penmanship. Of course, McGonagall fusses too—and Slytherin tosses anything he can’t immediately read.”

“Professor Sl-Slytherin is our Head of House, right?”

“Mmm,” Harriet replied—because it was true, but in the same way it was true that the Dursleys were Harriet’s guardians, which was to say meant it wasn’t really true at all. He had all the authority and none of the responsibilities. “Yeah, he is.”

“We haven’t had him in class yet,” Takagi commented, gently flicking her eagle-feather quill back and forth. She had the best handwriting of the group, but English was her second language and not the one she wrote at home. She needed to practice the characters of the Latin alphabet. “Is he always like…that?”

She made a gesture toward the common room, recalling their first night here, and Harriet grimaced. The first years looked at her, waiting for an answer, and she sighed. “He’s, ah…particular,” Harriet hedged. “Not the kind of bloke you want to go bothering with schoolwork questions, though. You understand?”

“Can we come to you with questions?”

Harriet blinked. “Oh, err—sure. Why not?”

They grinned and went back to scribbling, the steady scratch of quills on parchment oddly soothing against the slow, heavy slosh of the tide. Harriet stared out the window at the distant, inscrutable shadows moving in the water, the shape of things both big and small among the waving kelp towers.

“Hey, Potter!”

She turned her head as two more underclassmen approached. The first Harriet recognized straight-off as Gabriel Flourish, red-haired and grinning, and the second she had to think about for a moment. Then, she remembered the skinny, dark-haired boy was Gabriel’s friend Walt Murton—a Muggle-born she’d fished out of a closet a time or two when the older boys acted like prats.

“‘Lo, Flourish, Murton.”

Flourish blushed to the roots of his hair at the greeting, not that Harriet had any idea why. “We noticed you’re giving Transfiguration tutoring?”

Harriet stared at the two boys, then at the table with the curious first years—the table holding three copies of Miranda Goshawk’s Standard Book of Spells, Grade One, and a tidy stack of glinting needles. “Is that what I’m doing?”

“Could you help us review the Transfiguration alphabet? Walt and I are both hopeless at it.”

“I—guess so?” Bewildered, Harriet nonetheless tugged two more chairs to the already overburdened table, and the second years joined them.

Having so many eyes on her made Harriet uncomfortable—and really, Transfiguration wasn’t her best subject. She considered telling them to find someone more capable, to wait for a prefect or to ask Professor McGonagall for more assistance, but Harriet realized she was the only one here and willing to listen right now. They didn’t have other options.

So she sighed, adjusted her glasses, and flipped the nearest textbook to the glyph legend in the back. The bloody Transfiguration alphabet was the bane of her existence.

“All right, this is what you want to do….”

 

xXx

 

The bell rang, ending class and signaling the start of lunch. Hawkworth folded up his star charts, and the chess game came to an end. Those students still in the common room bundled up their belongings and went on their way.

“Thanks for all your help, Potter!” Takagi said, the sentiment mirrored by the others as they stuffed Transfiguration books in their satchels.

“Yeah, of course,” Harriet said, feeling quite odd as the underclassmen departed with the other Slytherins. They left behind ink-splattered scraps of parchment, broken quills, Transfigured needles, and a hair-clip that belonged to Overcliff. Harriet picked it up and turned it over in her hand. The shiny covering glittered in the dull green light filtering through the lake.

“Rikkety?”

With a pop, the house-elf appeared, dusting her hands off on her toga as she hopped to attention. “Miss Harriet Potter! What can Rikkety be helping you with?”

“Could you return this to Adaline Overcliff’s dorm?”

“Yes, miss!”

The house-elf and clip disappeared, leaving Harriet to tidy the rest of the table. She reverted the needles to matches and tossed them and the spoiled parchments into the hearth, pausing to watch them burn. She spelled the ink stains off the table, then picked up her copy of The Dark Forces: A Guide to Self-Protection. She tucked it into the wide pocket of her cloak.

It had been a very…odd afternoon. Harriet didn’t know what to make of it. She didn’t consider herself very smart and had never thought she’d be the kind of person someone would come to with homework questions. Strangely, she hadn’t had difficulty reviewing the material or explaining it.

“‘So teach us things worth knowing,” she hummed under her breath as she tucked in the chairs and cast a final look out the window. “‘Bring back what we’ve forgot. Just do your best, we’ll do the rest. And learn until our brains all rot.’”

Harriet departed the common room, her head full of thoughts and wonderings she pushed aside in favor of her stomach, considering instead the spread waiting for her in the Great Hall.

The wall had only just sealed shut behind her, the dark of the corridor pressing close, cold air breathing on her bare face. She couldn’t say why she stopped, or why she suddenly knew someone was there, only that it was true. Awareness prickled against Harriet’s spine, and she stood still, hand inching toward her concealed wand.

A thump echoed against the stones. Harriet stepped back, closer to the hidden dorms, unease twisting her middle—.

She shrieked when a person suddenly eased into the torchlight, revealing a horridly scarred face and a wide, oscillating eye.

“Wh—what in the bloody hell are you doing here?” Harriet demanded on a weak breath as she recognized the bloke as the Auror, Moody. She’d seen him before as one of the wizards in charge of Sirius’ incarceration, but nothing could have prepared her to see him again skulking about the dungeons.

Why is he down here? Why is he even at Hogwarts?

“Never you mind, girl,” he growled, wooden leg thumping as he stepped nearer. Harriet froze. “Get going. Now.”

She didn’t need to be told twice. Harriet darted by him and ran.

 

A/N:

There ’s a Discord server where you can stay up to date on chapter releases and join the CDT community! Here’s the link: CDT Discord

Chapter 173: waiting for a name

Chapter Text

clxxiii. waiting for a name

 

As he stood, Headmaster Dumbledore tapped his fork against the rim of his goblet, and Harriet and the rest of the student body quieted at the sound of the soft crystal chimes.

“If I may have a moment of your time,” the wizard said, silencing those last few scattered voices. “Today, while venturing from class to class, you may have noticed members of the Aurory in the halls. I want to ensure you they are here on the behest of the Ministry to guarantee your safety, as well as the safety of our Tournament guests when they eventually arrive.”

“Wish he’d mentioned that before,” Harriet muttered as she poked her spoon at the remnants of her pudding. Dumbledore bid them enjoy the rest of their meal and resumed his seat. “That bloke Moody scared the life out of me in the dungeons earlier.”

Overhearing her, Katherine Runcorn looked around. “Moody?” she asked, turning from a conversation with Millicent. “Mad-Eye Moody?”

“The one with the—well, the eye?” Harriet pointed at her face for emphasis. “Yeah.”

Runcorn shuddered, and across the table, Crabbe and Goyle exchanged shifty glances.

“He has a…reputation with certain families,” Parkinson put in, her usual sour expression taking on a pinched aspect. Harriet raised an eyebrow, waiting for more clarification, and she continued. “With certain dignified families who don’t deserve to have his lackeys from the Aurory swooping around, making nuisances of themselves. Anyone who got questioned after the war most likely has nothing pleasant to say about him.”

Hermione cut across Parkinson’s building tirade and asked, “What was he doing in the dungeons with you?”

“Well, he wasn’t with me. And I suppose he was ensuring our safety,” Harriet said with no little amount of snark. Given her run-ins with most Aurors in the past had been less than friendly, she didn’t much appreciate being ambushed by one somewhere she hadn’t expected to find them. Like a Boggart popping out of a teapot.

Under her breath, Elara murmured, “At least he’s not a Guardian of the Magical Right.”

“Some of those tossers are around?”

“Yes, of course. They’re here on the Minister’s orders, so his…people would be involved as well.”

Harriet shut her eyes and pinched the bridge of her nose. “Brilliant. Just brilliant.”

“Slytherin appears about as pleased by this change as you do,” Elara pointed out, stirring milk into her tea. “Mind, don’t look at him just yet. He’s glaring.”

Harriet heeded her advice and peered at the High Table from the corner of her eye, the peripheral look less clear outside of her glasses but solid enough for her to make out most of the wizard. His lips had formed a dangerous moue, and Snape looked just as frustrated. The Aurors sat at the other end of the table, the area extended by magic, though Moody himself looked to be absent.

He’s probably off looking for another ambush spot.

Harriet stuck her spoon in her mouth and sighed.

Slytherin’s expression didn’t change much overnight; by breakfast, it had solidified into a low, simmering rage, and Harriet and the others had Defense later that day. Harriet wagered he’d be ready to set desks on fire after a few more hours.

By the time the fourth year Gryffindors and Slytherins marched into class, she’d seen several Aurors about the castle, mostly stationed in unobtrusive places in the halls or spotted at a distance, moving through the woods. Some wore the pins for the Guardians of the Magical Right, and others did not. For now, they appeared disinterested in doing much of anything, though Harriet kept a wary eye on them and grimaced whenever she heard the thump of Moody’s wooden leg.

Slytherin hardly said a word as he swept into the room, announced only by the sudden bang of the door coming shut and the tremble of torches, as if the light itself was afraid of setting off his temper.

“Your assignment is on the board,” he snapped as he reached the head of the aisle and went to his desk. He paused there to look out at the startled faces of his students, and his mouth curled in a nasty smile. “For your sake, do refrain from asking questions. It’s just reading. If you can’t manage that, I’ll have to recommend your relocation to a primary school.”

Chairs squeaked and papers crinkled as books were retrieved from bags, and Harriet took out her Transfiguration text, having already read the assigned chapter twice. She doubted Slytherin would care one way or the other so long as she stayed quiet.

The lesson commenced without further incident, their professor ignoring them in favor of his own book, reclining in his chair with his face more in shadow than out of it. Longbottom braved his mood in typical Gryffindor idiocy and raised a hand, but Slytherin merely scoffed and refused to call on him.

Longbottom dropped his hand and rolled his eyes. Next to him, Weasley shrugged.

Harriet scribbled a note on a scrap of parchment and passed it to Hermione.

What d ’you think his issue with the Aurors is? The GMR might be here, but what does he care? They don’t have authority over him.

Hermione scanned the message, then pretended to copy something from her open book as she replied.

They may have little power, but I doubt he appreciates the extra eyes.

Harriet hadn’t considered that, and it seemed obvious in hindsight. She didn’t like having the Minister’s people about either, even if they couldn’t do anything to her while in school. Imagining one of those pin-wearing prats telling Gaunt about her day made Harriet’s skin crawl.

Hermione added a line: At least it’s better than having the Dementors here.

A snort escaped Harriet, and she bowed her head an instant before Slytherin’s gaze snapped up and scanned the room. She had the presence of mind to fold their notepaper and hide it inside her book before he noticed.

The remainder of the two-hour period passed in middling silence, pages turning and quills scratching, the occasional whisper daring to stir the monotony. Finally, when the bell rang, Harriet gathered her things together and slipped them into her satchel, readying herself to leave and head to dinner.

“Miss Potter,” came the dreaded voice from the front. “Stay behind.”

It was enough for her to utter a curse under her breath and drop her satchel on her abandoned chair.

“D’you think he saw the note passing?” she asked Elara.

“Probably. I would give the book to one of us before he asks for it.”

Moving fast, Harriet shoved her entire bag into Hermione’s hands just as Professor Slytherin stood and brushed his sleeve as if removing dust. He looked at the three of them with barely concealed annoyance.

“I didn’t request for you to remain, Miss Black, Miss Granger. It would be in your best interest not to test my patience this evening. Go to the Great Hall.”

Harriet’s friends risked lingering for another moment, giving her worried glances, then shuffled out into the corridor after the others. Slytherin crooked a finger, and the door threw itself closed, sealing her inside.

The professor leaned on his desk and observed Harriet, pleased by the visible discomfort she couldn’t entirely mask. She approached him and pointedly stared at her shoes, waiting for him to speak. He did so after taking in a deep breath and releasing a loud, indolent sigh. “I do hope you enjoyed Trimble’s work.”

Harriet blinked and lifted her gaze just enough to see his chin. “Sir?”

“I’m assuming you finished reading the book since you chose to spend my class period studying something McGonagall assigned.”

His displeasure weighed on Harriet like a physical force, and she shrugged her shoulders under her robes to dislodge the feeling. “I’m sorry, Professor. I finished the textbook over the holiday already.”

He raised a brow and smiled. “Nothing better to do?”

“Erm. No, not really. Sir.”

What was this about? Surely he hadn’t held her back just for a chin-wag over her reading preferences. If he had a problem with it, he’d have called her out during class and given her detention with Filch. He’d done it before for lesser infractions.

Harriet shuffled from one foot to the other—and forced herself to stop fidgeting, waiting for Professor Slytherin to get to his point.

Everything the wizard did was a pretense; the long pauses, the unsettling stare, the small simper on his red lips. He always seemed angry, but he wore that anger behind a disconcerting expression, a smile of straight, white teeth with eyes like bloody maws. He was always so—quiet, quiet as death, and if Harriet closed her eyes, she could almost believe him gone if not for the cold dread oozing off his person.

“Hmm.” Slytherin folded his hands together before himself. “You haven’t brought me your name.”

“What? I mean—pardon, Professor?”

He sniffed, eying Harriet as if she’d morphed into a particularly stupid dung-beetle. “You have working ears, my dear, or so I believed. I told all Slytherins to bring me their names if they were interested in becoming my apprentice. You have failed to do so.”

For one undignified moment, Harriet gaped at the wizard. He couldn’t be bloody serious. There wasn’t a thing she wanted less in this world—but his sickly red eyes remained fixed on her, unmoving, and Harriet knew he was dead serious and meant for her to answer him. Now.

“I—didn’t want to waste your time,” she said, wildly searching for the right words. “All the—the seventh years and sixth years have probably come to you, right? And I figured you wanted to pick one of them.”

“I said the opportunity is open to all years,” he told her. “If I thought it a waste of my time, I would not have allowed it. This is your fourth year under my tutelage, Miss Potter; have I struck you as a wizard who wastes his time?”

Harriet swallowed. “No, Professor. You haven’t.” She drew a breath to ask why he bothered bringing this up to her, why it mattered if she hadn’t mentioned her interest, but she held her tongue. “I—when do we have to have our names in to you by?”

“By the end of October.” His hands twitched ever so slightly, and his eyes flicked about her face. “If you simply have no interest, don’t put yourself out on my account—.”

“Oh no, Professor!” Harriet hurried to assure him. She didn’t want to, but she had four more years as his student, and she’d gained enough bruises from the first time she’d inadvertently insulted him. She needed to get herself out of this mess. “I just—want to talk to my guardian first. It’s a big commitment and everything, and I would want to take it seriously.”

The comment mollified the wizard for the moment, his expression losing the hardening contempt—at least in part. “I told you before you have potential, did I not? Such a clever witch. I am looking forward to you proving yourself.” Slytherin smiled, teeth sharp, glinting. “Don’t wait too long to give your answer, Miss Potter,” he said. “I do so loathe procrastinators.”

Harriet muttered a vague, panicked reassurance, the whole of her courage seeming to sink from her heart to her shoes until she felt like vomiting on Slytherin’s impeccable robes. He unlaced his hands and straightened, and though he didn’t loom as he had when she was younger, Harriet still had to look up to meet his gaze.

A frigid sensation skated against her face, and she flinched, eyes jumping away. The shadows under her feet twitched.

The door came open and hit the wall with force, and Harriet stepped back, not having realized Professor Slytherin had drifted nearer, his hand extended toward her shoulder, a single inch away from touching her. Her heart clenched and raced, horror bleeding from her skin in cold, clammy sweat—an instinct she didn’t have time to examine telling her to get away from the wizard.

What was he doing? What—?

“Auror Moody,” Slytherin said, looking past her, and Harriet could hear the thumping leg now, the Auror’s distinctive gait and his harsh grunt of breath coming nearer. Thank Merlin. “Have you not heard of knocking before?”

“Lesson’s over,” Moody replied, unbothered by Slytherin’s cutting stare. His strange eye whirred and focused on Harriet as she turned around, her face pale and dotted with perspiration. “Don’t see a reason for you to linger here, and I have to finish a security check, don’t I?”

“In my classroom?”

“You never know where Dark wizards might be hiding, eh, Slytherin?”

Whatever the professor’s response, Harriet didn’t hear it; she gathered her wits, made excuses, and bolted from the classroom, gasping in the warmer air of the corridor. She tugged at her tie as she hurried, her footsteps echoing, putting much-needed space between herself and the Defense instructor.

She needed to talk to someone. Not Hermione or Elara, who’d be worried but unable to do anything about her situation. She could write Mr. Flamel—she would write him—but he felt so far away, and what could he do to help, really?

He’ll know what to say, Harriet reassured herself. She took the stairs two at a time. He always knows what to say. He’ll—.

She’d almost reached the Great Hall, walking through the dim passage adjoined to its side, hearing the laughter and smelling the food already—when she saw the familiar shadow of the Potions Master’s lanky silhouette striding in the opposite direction, heading toward the staff entrance. He seemed to register her appearance at the exact moment she did because they both stopped and stared. His robes eddied about his ankles like the slow slosh of the tide.

“Late for supper, Potter?” he sneered. “Perhaps I should take points for loitering—.”

Snape’s voice cut off, not that Harriet had registered the words, her mouth dry and her throat tight, skinny hands trembling by her side. Something in Snape’s face changed—his black eyes flaring, his snide, bitter bulwark lowering a fraction as he took in Harriet’s frightened expression. Her panting echoed in the corridor.

“What is wrong?” he demanded, his volume low and suspicious.

“I—.” Harriet stuttered, then swallowed, wetting her lips. “Slytherin, he—. He held me after class and wanted to know why I hadn’t given him my name yet. For his competition. To be his apprentice.”

Snape stiffened, drawing his wide shoulders higher as if bracing against something unpleasant. “What did you tell him?”

“That I needed more time.” The ominous sensation from earlier pressed harder on Harriet’s chest, and she looked wide-eyed into Snape’s face. “What is going to happen when I tell him no? Bloody hell, he’s not a bloke who takes no for an answer!”

Stirring, Snape stepped forward and took Harriet by the elbow, his fingers tightening as he drew her closer to his side. He pulled her along as they set off at a quick pace, passing by the open doors of the Great Hall, the golden light spilling across the gray flagstones. Their feet skirted the glow as they started down the stairs to the dungeons.

“Wh—where are we going?”

Snape turned to her, part of his face illuminated by a waiting torch. He wasn’t frightened; Harriet had seen the wizard battle a werewolf and knew what he looked like when scared, but Snape still had an anxious cast about his furrowed brow and shadowed eyes.

“To speak with the Headmaster.” His hand tightened, a solid, reassuring grip on her arm. “He will know what to do.”

Harriet hoped so. She really did.

Chapter 174: just harriet

Chapter Text

clxxiv. just harriet

 

Even in a daze, Harriet had the presence of mind to wonder aloud why Snape was walking her into the dungeons if he meant for them to speak with the Headmaster.

“Because the Headmaster is at dinner,” the Potions Master answered in a short, clipped retort. “You could march the whole breadth of the school on your own, or you could avoid the attention by using the Floo.”

They stepped into his classroom, and half a moment later, they exited the Floo into the Headmaster’s office, Harriet wincing against the bright, late afternoon sunlight reflecting off the lake. Fawkes trilled and ruffled his wings in greeting but remained on his perch, more interested in the food laid out in his dish.

Harriet didn’t wait for Snape’s direction before sitting down on a padded bench shoved against the wall, her knees weak. Above her head, one of the old Heads scoffed.

“In trouble again, girl?” Phineas Nigellus asked, looking smug in his gilded frame. “It’s only been a week, and you’re already here to see the Headmaster. Oh, it might be expulsion this time.”

She twisted and scowled up at the wizard. “I’m not in trouble. At least, I don’t think so.”

“Should I tell my grandson to expect you home? He’s been in a terrible sulk ever since you and little Elara departed.”

His fond referral to the youngest member of his depleted House made Harriet cringe and wrinkle her nose. She wagered that he wouldn’t call Elara little to her face; he valued his portrait too much.

“Will you shut up?” Snape spat. Phineas recoiled, gasping.

“Well! How’s that for a show of respect! And from a former Head of Slytherin no less!”

Ignoring him, Snape paced from the hearth to the Headmaster’s desk, an expanse that included three short steps to the higher platform and a wide swathe of antique carpet. He completed the circuit twice before Harriet shook herself enough to gather her wits and draw a breath.

“Hermione and Elara,” she said, freezing Snape in place. “They—Slytherin kicked them out of the room and sent them to dinner. They’ll be worried.”

“You mean they’ll cause a scene,” Snape retorted. “How typical. Wait here—.”

Without waiting for further argument, he threw himself through the Floo and disappeared. Harriet didn’t know why he’d be bent out of shape about her friends being worried if she disappeared, but decided he was upset, and Snape was always more of an arsehole when upset.

She removed her glasses and rubbed her tired eyes.

“Hmpf.” Phineas huffed from the wall. “I don’t know what that boy’s problem is, but he has no business speaking to me in that manner.”

“He’s always been a rattlecap,” said a plump Headmistress two frames over. “But Phinny, my lad, your blathering could test even the most stalwart of fellows.”

“Don’t be ridiculous.”

Harriet replaced her glasses and sighed.

Snape returned some minutes later, swooping out of the hearth like an escaping plume of smoke, and behind him came the Headmaster, who appeared only marginally more cheerful than the scowling Potions Master.

“Good evening, Harriet.”

“‘Lo, Headmaster.”

Instead of going toward his desk, Professor Dumbledore conjured a pair of padded chairs across from Harriet and lowered himself into one. Snape didn’t sit, opting to loom at the hearth, facing away from them.

“Are you well?”

Harriet shifted in her seat and shrugged her shoulders. “I’m all right, sir. Just—.” Scared. Petrified. Anxious. “Not sure what I should do. Did Snape—?”

“Yes, Professor Snape told me what he could when he came to retrieve me.”

Harriet simply nodded, unsure of what else to say, if she needed to say anything at all. Some part of her tensed in expectation of Dumbledore getting annoyed with her bringing something so trivial to his attention, though logically Harriet knew he would never do that. Still, it seemed surreal to be so grim and terrified over such a small thing as a question.

“I don’t know what I’m supposed to tell him,” she confessed.

“You tell him no, obviously,” Snape snapped by the fire, crossing his arms against his chest. “That was never in any doubt.”

“Yeah?” Harriet retorted, heat rising in her neck. She didn’t like the insinuation that she was an idiot for being uncertain. “Then why don’t you go tell him that? Go tell him to sod off and then sit in his class for the next four years! It’s not like you have to worry about getting your face hexed into a desk for demonstration purposes just because he’s brassed off with you!”

Snape dropped his arms and whirled around. “You insolent—!”

Professor Dumbledore lifted his hand, stilling Snape’s words. Harriet’s eyes cut to him, and the anger flared again, her teeth gnashing and her throat tight, wanting Snape to open his mouth so she’d have an excuse to shout and yell and—.

“Enough,” Dumbledore said. “Enough, Harriet.”

She caught her breath and blinked, forcing herself to look away. The air filling her lungs sunk like syrup in her chest, and Harriet held it there until the itch under her skin dissipated, and the hands clenched into fists on her lap relaxed. She exhaled.

A full minute of tense silence passed them by before Professor Dumbledore spoke. “If you repeat your conversation with Professor Slytherin, Harriet. That would be most helpful.”

She told him, beginning with the wizard’s odd remarks on her reading material, continuing to his mention of the competition and the deadline. All the while, Dumbledore listened close, and Harriet refused to look at the black shape of the Potions Master lurking behind his chair.

“I don’t have until October, really,” she told the Headmaster. “No matter what he said. He made it clear he’d be offended if I took too long to make up my mind. I told him I have to talk to my guardians and hoped it would give me more time.”

Professor Dumbledore made a noise of agreement, looking past Harriet, his brilliant mind stirring up thoughts she could only guess at. His brow furrowed.

Harriet wished she could be even half as bright as Dumbledore, or as powerful. Then she could tell Slytherin to jog on, and he’d have to leave her in peace.

But that’s not true, is it? She reminded herself, heart sinking. Even Dumbledore has to put up with him. Greatest wizard of the century, and there’s nothing he can do about the pompous git.

Apropos of nothing, the Headmaster stood and walked away, meandering up the steps to the dais that held his desk and most of his bookshelves. Confused, Harriet forced her weak knees to cooperate and followed, coming to a stop by the comfortable guest chairs. She rested her hand on the top of one, and her fingers drew anxious patterns over the fabric.

Dumbledore remained with his back to the room, head tilted as he looked at the many ancient frames of his predecessors and they looked back at him, waiting for him to speak. Even Fawkes had ceased nibbling on his dinner to study the wizard.

Finally, he turned.

“What would you say if I asked you to tell Professor Slytherin yes?”

The shock didn’t have a chance to register, and Harriet hadn’t yet opened her mouth before robes rustled behind her, and Snape stepped closer. She’d almost forgotten he was there.

“Have you lost your bloody mind?!” he thundered. The portraits yelped in indignation.

Dumbledore didn’t answer him. He kept his blue eyes pinned to Harriet as she struggled to find her voice.

“Why, sir?” she managed after clearing her throat. “Do—? Oh. I think I get it. D’you want me to enter his competition and lose on purpose?”

“No, actually. It would be my intention for you to win.”

Whatever semblance of relief Harriet had found vanished, and she thought she might vomit.

Snape, meanwhile, hadn’t lost his ability to talk like Harriet. In fact, he had quite a bit to say.

“Had I know bringing her to you would result in your trite efforts of encouraging latent, suicidal Gryffindor tendencies, I wouldn’t have bothered!” he snarled, earning a sharp look from the Headmaster. “Haven’t there been enough martyrs in this war? Haven’t enough Potters died under the Dark Lord’s wand? Why on earth would you encourage this stupidity?”

“Severus—.”

“No, perhaps I’m mistaken. Maybe I’ve misjudged your intentions. Perhaps you’re simply a fan of short coffins—!”

“Enough!” Dumbledore shouted, and Harriet stumbled, having never heard him raise his voice before. Snape’s mouth snapped closed with an audible click of teeth, his face flushed with anger as he glared at the Headmaster.

The two men stared at one another, sharing some silent, meaningful communication before Snape swiveled on the heels of his boots and stormed from the room.

The quiet that resulted after the door slammed and shook the windows twisted Harriet’s insides.

“Why, Professor?”

Dumbledore exhaled, then moved to sit his chair behind the desk. That felt significant to Harriet, that he meant to talk to her as her Headmaster, her guardian, instead of as a friend or an equal. She found that…comforting, though she couldn’t rightly reckon why. Maybe because it gave the illusion of him knowing all the right answers when she didn’t.

“I do not quite know where to begin. The idea first occurred to me when Professor Snape reported Professor Slytherin’s intention to find an apprentice. In his cruel and uncaring way, our Defense instructor has always paid you particular attention, your experiences and deeds at the school earning his interest. I knew he would consider you a potential candidate. Though we have always discouraged that interest, I have at times wondered if it’d serve us better to encourage it.”

Harriet said nothing, still standing by the chair as she watched Dumbledore, and he watched her, a slight tip to his head as he considered her expression.

“We’ve had discussions about Lord Voldemort before.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Discussions on his…similarities with Professor Slytherin and Minister Gaunt.”

“Yes.”

Dumbledore paused again as if carefully picking his words. Harriet wished he wouldn’t. Cold, nervous sweat prickled on the back of her neck.

“Harriet,” he murmured, voice soft and raspy. “My heart wishes for nothing more than to say you should decline Professor Slytherin’s invitation and never suffer his attention again. If I could, I would send you far from here. You and Miss Black and Miss Granger. I would send you away from the shadows that have grown so long and dark over our community, and I would not have such a terrible burden placed upon you. I would see you and all of the children under my care happy and free.”

Harriet lowered her gaze, fingers fidgeting again. “I don’t think life’s ever been that convenient for me, Professor.”

He smiled, and it was a small, sad thing. “It has been considered in the past whether or not you would be safer at Beauxbatons.”

A flash of conversation stirred in Harriet’s memory, recalling the Flamels’ mingling voices, Perenelle adamant in her desire to take Harriet and Elara in. Mr. Flamel had said no.

“Because ze danger does not exist in Poudlard alone; it exists in ‘Arriet, and so long as some piece of Tom Riddle keeps breathing, she will be in danger. No matter where she goes.”

The back of her eyes prickled, and Harriet sniffed. “I wouldn’t want to leave Hogwarts.”

“No?”

“No. Hogwarts is my home.” She shrugged, not quite able to bring her eyes back to the Headmaster, her stomach doing anxious flip-flops in her middle. “And it wouldn’t matter, would it? If I went away. It—. He would come for me eventually, wouldn’t he?”

“Yes.”

“Because Neville’s not really the Boy Who Lived.”

“No, he is not.”

A sudden flash of anger returned to Harriet. It swelled white-hot from her chest to her mouth, unshed tears burning hot under her eyelids. “It’s not fair,” she shouted, voice strangled by emotion. “And I don’t care what anyone says about life not being fair! It’s not right! I never—I never asked for any of this! I didn’t do anything! And because of some bloody red-eyed tosser who doesn’t know how to die properly, I have to be scared all the time to be on my own or I might be kidnapped or poisoned, and I can’t have a normal summer or family or a normal fucking school year—.”

Throat tightening, Harriet jerked into motion, not sure what she meant to do or where to go, but the sudden flash of Fawkes’ brilliant wings caught her attention, and Harriet went to stand before his perch. The phoenix began to trill a song as she reached for him, and she could feel the melody quiver under his warm feathers.

For a long while, Harriet remained there while the bird sang and the Headmaster didn’t speak, the fire popping in the grate, the last of the sunlight vanishing on the horizon. Her anger didn’t dissipate as quickly as before, lingering overlong like a bad smell, and when it did go, it left behind a sore emptiness, an acute sting of grief and embarrassment.

“I’m sorry, Professor,” she whispered, barely audible over Fawkes’ chirping. “I know it’s not your fault.”

She heard Dumbledore’s bones creak as he rose and came to join her by the perch. “I would be a very foolish wizard indeed if I didn’t allow a witch to vent her frustrations every now and again.”

Harriet tried to smile, her mouth making vague motions in that direction, and Professor Dumbledore studied her face. He paid particular attention to her eyes before he inclined his chin.

“Tell me, Harriet; do you know why Professor Slytherin has always declined to teach the students dueling?”

“No,” she said on reflex. “Or, well, wait. Because he doesn’t want others to pick up on his weaknesses?”

“Exactly right.”

“Then, his apprentice….” Harriet said, the metaphoric dots connecting as she looked up at Professor Dumbledore.

“Would learn those weaknesses, yes.”

“…and the weaknesses of….” Her eyes widened. “Gaunt. And Voldemort. Because they’re the same.”

“Fundamentally so.” Dumbledore nodded. “It has been my goal for many years to protect others from Dark wizards, most notably Tom Riddle and his followers. I fear that, more often than not, I have failed. Sometimes spectacularly so.” Fawkes crooned a low, somber note as the Headmaster stroked one finger against his beak. “What I owe you more than happiness or blissful ignorance, Harriet, is the ability to protect yourself and the ones you love from those who would harm you. I could send you to Beauxbatons. I could lie and say I do not believe Voldemort will return or that he will not seek you out in time. However, these platitudes would not serve to protect you from the inevitable nor grant you the tools to carry on after my best wishes fail. If I can give you the ability to survive, I will see it done, even if Tom must be your teacher to sow his own ruin.”

The firmness of his tone seemed to be reflected by the burnished glow of the lights, the blooming flicker of candles coming alive as the windows darkened against the coming night. None of the portraits dared speak, though they all sat at attention, watching. Waiting.

“I promise, one day, the world will not be so dark. Tom will answer for his crimes and be punished at the end of this long road. Then, it will be people like you, dear girl, and the children of this school who resist the tyranny of evil men, who will triumph.”

Harriet lowered her hand from Fawkes and swallowed her trepidation. “You think I could defeat him? I—. Headmaster, I’m not—. I could never stand a chance against him, sir. If—when—the Dark Lord came for me, I couldn’t best him.”

“He is not as invincible as he pretends to be.”

Grimacing, Harriet muttered, “But I’m not brilliant, or—powerful. I’m just—.” She rubbed at her neck, scratching the raised, ropey skin of her scar. “I’m just Harriet, Professor. Just Harriet. Nothing special.”

“And he is just Tom Riddle. Harriet Potter is worth far, far more than the creature he has become.”

Harriet had to face away, her cheeks warm. A tiny wisp of hope escaped into her heart, and she realized her view of her future had long since dimmed into something obscure and elusive, tainted by nightmares of a madman’s laughter and her own tortured screams. Since the end of her first year, she’d known Voldemort would return one day, and Harriet wondered when she’d begun to accept death as an inevitability.

For one second, Professor Dumbledore’s words shone a light through the dark clouds, and Harriet imagined what the future could be. It was a world without Muggle-born registries or crooked Aurors, a world in which Professor Slytherin did not preside over bruised, terrified children and Marvolo Gaunt didn’t get to ruin people’s lives for sport.

It seemed very, very far away.

“D’you really think I could be his apprentice?” she asked. “That I could learn what I need to know and not be…tempted like before in front of the Mirror of Erised?”

“Yes. I believe in you, Harriet.”

She smiled then, a brief flash of teeth before she bowed her head again, and Dumbledore chuckled. “I can try, I guess. But, Professor, it might be for nothing. It’s a competition, and I’m almost certain Slytherin hates my guts.”

“All I can ask of you is to try, and it would do Tom good to have his own sentiments returned in full.”

Harriet snorted and gave Fawkes one final stroke, a warm, tingling sensation clinging to her fingertips after she moved away. “I’m still afraid, Headmaster.”

He grasped her skinny shoulder and squeezed. “You wouldn’t be alone. We would help you however we could.”

Harriet didn’t ask him what he meant by ‘we.’ When he led her to the door, and she passed down the spiraling stairs and through the gargoyle, she found Snape waiting in the corridor, still sullen and angry but nonetheless there. He sneered at Harriet, uncrossing his arms as he leaned away from the wall.

Without a word, they both turned and started on their way toward the dungeons together.


A/N:

Dumbledore: “Ha, yeah, let’s make her Slytherin’s apprentice!”

Snape: “…”

Snape: “It’s time you got put in a home, old man.”

Chapter 175: family problems

Chapter Text

clxxv. family problems

 

Something was bothering Harriet.

Even an idiot could see it, and Elara did not consider herself an idiot. Nor did Hermione, who unfortunately didn’t have the tact to know when concern started to bleed into aggravation, and Harriet had clammed up after the fifth time Hermione asked her to divulge what happened in the classroom with Slytherin. So they spent most of their Astronomy lesson in tense, expectant silence, with Harriet marking nothing on her star chart.

When they returned to the dorms, the younger witch crawled into bed and closed her curtains, refusing to speak with anyone.

Something was wrong, but Elara wouldn’t push her. She sighed and went to her own bed, and after tossing and turning for an hour, she fell asleep.

Too early in the morning, the carriage clock started screaming to wake the dormitory for breakfast, and Elara opened bleary eyes to the shadowed ceiling. Exhaustion sat on her like a fat, petulant gargoyle.

“I am going to kill that clock one day,” she grumbled to no one in particular, listening to the others groan and complain as they roused from sleep. “I’m going to curse it right off the wall into a pile of splinters.”

She sat up far enough to tug her curtains open. She glanced at Harriet’s bed and found it empty.

Typical.

After bathing and dressing, doing her buttons up to the very top one and clipping her silver brooch chain into place on her collar, Elara went out in search of her wayward god-sister. She expected she’d need to visit the library or check the Aerie—but she was in luck. Harriet lurked in the common room at their preferred table, her face turned to the slow-moving water beyond the window.

She looked rather vulnerable, sitting alone with her knees folded up against her chest, the green illumination bright against her glasses. Dark furrows had grown beneath her eyes, and Elara guessed she’d gotten very little sleep. How long had she been awake, watching the lake?

“You’re up early,” she commented as she took her preferred seat, back to the wall so she could survey the rest of the room. Only a few others had drifted out of the dorms so far. Mallory Vuharith and Jacqueline Urquhart chatted by the main hearth, and Elara noted the painted serpent above the mantel focused intently on their conversation.

Harriet shrugged a shoulder. “Couldn’t sleep.”

“I’m surprised you stayed in the common room.”

“With all the bloody Aurors hanging about, it’s impossible to go anywhere without someone watching,” she sighed, leaning her chin on her fist. “Even if I use the Moon Mirrors, I have a decent chance of colliding into one of Gaunt’s snooping numpties on my way out.”

Elara laced her hands against her middle and leaned back, slouching several inches in her chair.

“Where’s Hermione?”

“Elbow-deep in her carrel, last I saw. Trying to fit far too many books into her satchel.”

Harriet let out a fond huff, and the morose air about her lightened. “We should split the cost of a bag with a good Extendable Charm for Yule. She’d like it.”

“We can’t make it ourselves?”

“No. The spellwork is nasty. I asked Professor Flitwick about it a while ago and got stuck in a thirty-minute conversation about the Alteration branch of Charms and the standards set by the C-triple-M guild.” Harriet wrinkled her nose. “He made me promise not to try it, lest I start collapsing time and space or whatever.”

Well. Elara hadn’t known that was possible and found herself less keen on experimenting with those forms of Charms.

Harriet stretched, uncurling from her cramped position to put her feet on the floor. She snuck a hand under her glasses to rub at her eyes, groaning, and Elara watched her. Of course, she wanted to ask Harriet about yesterday afternoon, but she bid her time, letting Harriet come around to the conversation on her own time. Besides, Hermione would be out soon, and her concern did not have patience for pointless prevaricating.

“How has your Animagus training been going?”

Harriet’s gaze snapped about the room on instinct, ensuring no one had wandered into hearing range. “A bit shit, really.”

“Why?”

“I’m not great at the meditation. My head never gets quiet enough.”

Elara passed a hand over her mouth, thinking. She tapped a finger against her lips. “Perhaps you should try a different kind of meditation.”

Clearly that answer puzzled Harriet, for her face scrunched in confusion. “There’s different types?”

“Yes. There are many types. I have a book on how they vary—mind, it was written by an obscene augur obsessed with Divinations. He makes Trelawney sound as no-nonsense as Snape, but when you get through the effusive drivel, it’s quite informative.”

“That sounds useful—and bizarrely funny. Worse than Trelawney, really? Can I see it?”

“Of course.”

A few more tired souls began trickling into the common room, Hermione among them. She had two scrolls in hand, fussing with the heavy bag hanging off her shoulder as she tried to find room for the scrolls.

“Oh!” she said as she lifted her head and spotted the pair of them waiting by their usual table. “Good morning. Harriet—you look terrible! Did you get any sleep at all?”

“Nice to see you too, Hermione. Lovely morning.”

“Don’t be ridiculous. Are you feeling okay? Do you need to see Madam Pomfrey?”

Harriet released a loud exhale as Hermione found a seat, and the bag hit the floor with a thump. “I’m fine, really,” she promised, cutting off Hermione’s next stream of concern. “I had a lot on my mind.”

Hermione glanced at Elara, who made a discreet tip of her head to the side, then flicked her eyes toward Harriet.

“Do you want to tell us what happened now?”

“Not really.” Harriet laughed, a hollow, humorless noise. “I guess I need to, though. After Slytherin spoke to me, I ran into Snape, and he took me to Dumbledore.” Shifting, she picked at the hem of her skirt. “Slytherin said he wants me to enter his competition, and Dumbledore wants me to do it.”

Elara flinched. What? “Is he mad?” she asked, not entirely certain whether she meant that in jest or not. She usually expected the Headmaster to make sound decisions, even if she didn’t fully understand his thought process, but this—.

“He thinks I’ll need the training,” Harriet replied. “That I—that I need to learn how to protect myself against him, and who better to teach me than Slytherin himself?”

“And so he believes throwing you headlong into the wolf’s mouth will do the trick?” Elara demanded, brow raised. “Ridiculous. Tell me you told him no.”

Harriet didn’t respond.

After a hesitant moment, Hermione said, “It…it makes a terrible form of sense,” and immediately raised her hands when Elara’s head snapped in her direction. “Not that I completely agree, but...theoretically, if Harriet were his apprentice, then wouldn’t Slytherin be obliged to keep her safe? A master is charged with their apprentice’s well-being.”

“Hermione,” Elara said a bit too sharply. “Are you being serious?”

“Well, this isn’t exactly the time to be silly, is it?” she retorted. “Defense Masters are under the Circle of Magical Mastery and Manifestation’s legislation and are charged with maintaining their apprentice’s health.”

“And professors are under the legislation of the Headmaster!” Elara waved an agitated hand. “We’ve witnessed exactly how much power Dumbledore has over Slytherin, and they reside in the same castle. How much influence do you think the Circle would have without direct proximity? Truly?”

“All I mean to point out is, in this speculative situation, Slytherin would be culpable for keeping Harriet safe from You-Know-Who! Too many complaints, even anonymously given, would create problems for him. If they revoked the certification on his mastery, he could lose his position, no matter who he has in his pocket.”

“Your speculative situation is nonsense, and I highly doubt Slytherin’s mastery is legal to begin with, no matter his apparent skill. He is You-Know-Who. Harriet can’t very well be kept safe if she’s being bludgeoned half to death by Slytherin’s informative teaching methods!”

“Honestly—!”

“Can you two lower your voices?” Harriet grumbled. “For Merlin’s sake. Don’t talk about me like I’m not sitting right bloody here and didn’t already have this conversation with the Headmaster.”

“Did you have an actual conversation, or did he speak at you and sound incredibly wise but otherwise full of himself?”

Harriet glared at her. “Don’t talk about the Headmaster like that. He’s not perfect, but he’s the reason I’m not stuck in an orphanage somewhere or locked up for Gaunt to poke and prod at.”

“He’s the reason you went to the Dursleys in the first place.”

Harriet’s eyes narrowed, and Elara thought they appeared red, if only for a moment, and assumed the light of the fire in the far grate cast reflected oddly in her glasses. Harriet drew in a breath and said, “I’m aware. It’s also not the point of what we’re talking about.”

“No, we’re talking about you doing something stupid simply because the Headmaster told you to.”

“Elara, that’s enough,” Hermione interjected. Elara rounded on her.

“And you’re encouraging it!”

Harriet snapped, “Quiet!” and Elara had enough of her wits to look about and see subtle, curious eyes turning to their usually quiet corner of the room. Glowering at the nosy idiots, Elara gathered her composure and straightened her spine.

“Listen,” Harriet continued in an undertone. “I’m not a half-witted child who hasn’t thought about this for hours. And it’s not Dumbledore’s intention for Slytherin to protect me or whatever rot. He wants me to learn, and I—.” She paused, frowning for a moment. “I don’t like it. I don’t want to even consider it, and really, it’s silly to think I could win the competition. I don’t know what it entails, but I’m only a fourth year, and it isn’t like Slytherin would make it easy.”

Elara could concede to that. She’d imagined from the outset that Slytherin had something cruel and demeaning planned for his prospective apprentice; after all, it wouldn’t do for their ego to swell too much. They’d win the competition and immediately be reminded of their place.

“I don’t know if I’m going to enter, even if it brasses Slytherin off. But Professor Dumbledore…he gave me a lot to consider. Every year, I end up helpless to something or someone, and if it’s possible I could use this situation to my advantage….” She exhaled, resigned. “I’m tired of always being too weak or too slow or too stupid. It’d be nice, just for once, to have the upper hand.”

“But at what cost? He’s a deceptive b—.” Elara’s mouth closed around the curse, her lips twitching. “A deceptive degenerate. Would he teach you anything worth knowing? Or just keep you under his thumb?”

“I wouldn’t envy anyone trying to keep Harriet under their thumb. It would never be allowed,” Hermione said. “That’s Professor Slytherin’s greatest failing. Don’t you see? People like him, wizard or Muggle, depend on isolating their victims to make them more malleable to their whims. Harriet would never be alone. She would always have us.”

“We cannot be there all the time, Hermione.”

“I’m not afraid of him,” Harriet replied. “I am not brave, but I am not a coward.”

“This has little to do with cowardice or bravery or any Gryffindor posturing. It’s about it being a supremely foolish idea to play Slytherin’s games.”

Their conversation came to a natural close as more students entered the common room, and it became difficult to maintain privacy. Harriet disappeared with a vague mention of not wanting breakfast, which wasn’t uncommon when she was stressed. Hermione ran off to the dormitory searching for a book she’d forgotten, leaving Elara alone with her thoughts.

She stood by what she’d told them both; nothing good would come from indulging in Slytherin’s schemes, but she wasn’t as short-sighted to say snubbing Slytherin would be the better option. Even with a good excuse, the professor would feel slighted, and Elara wouldn’t put it past him to spend a lot of energy on being petty.

What would be better for Harriet to endure? Pettiness or positive regard?

Her god-sister might claim not to be frightened, but Elara was. She didn’t want Harriet to be brought to Slytherin’s attention any more than necessary, and she definitely didn’t want her involved in anything touched by the Dark Lord.

Life, however, had not been kind to Harriet. She’d been marked as a child for some horrid destiny, and Elara couldn’t say it was better to avoid Slytherin now in hopes of diverting danger when danger would find Harriet eventually. It was as inexorable as the steady march of time.

Elara shut her eyes against the headache already brewing in her skull.

“Are you coming to breakfast?” Hermione asked when she returned, her bag now shut snug. Elara blinked, hearing the hidden wall entrance to the common room open and close as people drifted out into the outer corridor, and she looked up at her friend.

“Yes,” she sighed, standing. “I won’t be able to get through Defense without something in my stomach. Even if he only has us reading again.”

“I never thought I’d be pleased to have a teacher who doesn’t teach.” Hermione frowned. “Though, him having us sit quietly at our desks commonly means his temper is worse than usual. He certainly isn’t pleased about the Aurors.”

“Nobody is.”

After leaving the common room, they climbed the steps behind most of their House, lost in their respective thoughts. Near the entrance hall, Hermione paused to look at Elara.

“I’m going to sit with Terry,” she said. “We wanted to go over a bit of the Herbology essay before class today.”

Elara cocked a brow. “Terry, hmm?”

“Yes. Why?”

“That essay excuse is convenient, considering I know you completed it on Friday. If you want to spend time with him, you don’t have to pretend you’re studying.”

Hermione’s cheeks darkened so much Elara could see the change even in the dim light of the corridor. “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she sniffed. “Besides, you seem to rather enjoy studying with Sophie Roper in the library, and you don’t see me commenting on it.”

Alarmed, Elara caught her by the elbow, holding her back as the others continued forward. “It’s not the same thing,” she hissed. Hermione shot her a knowing look.

“Isn’t it, though?”

Heat stole through her face until Elara could feel the blood pounding in her ears. A mortified weight crept along her spine, the likes of which she hadn’t experienced since her days in the orphanage, constantly wary of being called a monster. “Hermione, I don’t—I’m not—.”

“It’s fine. Goodness.” Suddenly, Hermione linked her arm through hers, and Elara stumbled from the height difference. She could feel perspiration building beneath her gloves despite her fingers going numb. “Let’s go have breakfast.”

“I….”

They kept walking, the chill in the dungeons doing nothing to steal the heat from Elara’s face, though her heart slowly returned to normal. “I don’t have to sit with Terry,” Hermione said, nonchalant. “You’re right about my essay being complete.”

“You can have breakfast with him if you want.”

“It’s not necessary—and besides, we have better things to be doing this morning.” A sly grin tipped Hermione’s mouth as they came into the foyer proper, the smells of breakfast drifting through the Great Hall’s open doors.

“Such as?”

“Plotting how best to keep Harriet out of trouble, of course. Somebody has to do it, and it’s going to be us.”

Chapter 176: teenage woes

Chapter Text

clxxvi. teenage woes

 

Sometimes, Harriet thought time had a way of moving too fast and too slow at the same time.

It dripped like heavy syrup, oozing, then pooling in thick layers until it couldn’t be displaced. It gathered unseen in all the places she failed to look, then another week passed, and Harriet barely realized a day had come and gone. In the same breath, it felt like one of the longest weeks of her life.

Her resolution to speak with Professor Slytherin wavered from hour to hour, minute to minute. She spent her lessons in a haze of indecision, hashing a Colovaria spell so badly in Transfiguration, McGonagall set her lines during her free period, and she had to apologize to Susan Bones for turning her hair magenta for three days. She blackened her own eye in Herbology with a Bouncing Bulb, and then lost her Streeler in the weeds during Care of Magical Creatures. She kept her head so low in Defense, it barely cleared the desk.

No matter what she’d told Elara, Professor Slytherin terrified Harriet. It was the way he moved, the way he talked, the way his eyes cut and lingered like the edge of a blade braced against skin. Even if he hadn’t been her professor, even if she’d never been cursed by him before, Harriet would have seen the bloke in a corridor and given him a wide berth.

There was a part of Harriet she didn’t much care to examine that envied Slytherin’s frightening mien. It envied him his confidence, his invulnerability, and that part wanted to learn the kind of magic he had bobbing around his head. It wanted to know the spells that could intimidate wizards as strong as Dumbledore or Voldemort himself, no matter the price.

Mostly, though, Harriet didn’t want anything to do with Slytherin. She wanted to go to school and learn fascinating magic and be—normal, whatever that meant, though normality had never been an option for her. Voldemort stole that away when he decided to take her parents’ lives and make a hash of killing her too.

She’d have to give Slytherin her answer soon. She worried about disappointing Professor Dumbledore or landing herself in a terrible situation. Still, she waffled.

Coward.

Harriet sighed as she continued along the wide steps, scuffing her shoes against the pitted slabs. Livi lifted his invisible head from under the front flap of her cloak, and Harriet felt his nose against her ear. He flicked his tongue, and Harriet flinched, giggling.

Stop it.

Misstresss isss quiet,” he complained, the brief ripple of black scales gleaming in the warm sunshine before the serpent hid himself again. “Her mind lossst in thought.”

I have a lot to consider,” she argued.

What mussst ssshe consssider?

Human things.”

An unhappy noise rose from Livi, and Harriet felt his coils pinch against her side as he tightened them. She ignored him for the moment and continued on, crossing the lawn, grass whisking against her ankles as she stepped onto the gravel path by the greenhouses. She kept walking and listening to the magical plants in their enclosures, Professor Sprout humming somewhere in the distance, the laughter of students coming from farther off still, down by the shores of the lake. Finally, Harriet reached the end, where the garden wall didn’t rise quite so high, and she stepped over it.

It was quiet there where the woods met the gentle slope of spotty grass beyond the wall, though it wasn’t a place people often visited given its general proximity to the compost pile Sprout and Hagrid maintained. That same compost pile provided an excellent hunting area for Livi because of the rodents and pests it attracted. Tasty rats and gnomes lived in the short, bristly shrubbery of the woods.

Harriet dragged herself out of one arm of her cloak, sweating a bit, and started disentangling the heavy snake from her body. Livi made himself visible and leveled a hard, impatient look in her direction.

I have a choice to make,” she confessed to him. “About whether I want to learn magic from a bad wizard or not. He could hurt me if I choose to be his apprentice. But in the long run, I might be hurt more if I choose not to.

It was the kind of higher reasoning Livi didn’t fully grasp. “Misstresss will not be hurt,” he asserted. “I will bitesss the bad wizard.”

Unfortunately, all my problems won’t disappear if you chomp them. And I don’t think chomping Professor Slytherin would do anything at all.

Livius clearly disagreed and made an effusive remark to that effect while Harriet lowered him to the ground. She found herself a nice, flat rock to sit on while he went off in search of something to eat, and she watched the last flicker of his spiked tail whisper through the grass. She amused herself with the image of him sneaking up on a gnome colony like a giant monster out of a bad Muggle film.

Muffled complaints rose from her cloak pocket.

“Calm down, calm down,” Harriet mumbled, sticking her hand into the wriggling cloth folds. As expected, tiny fangs sank into her skin, and Harriet grunted as she entangled the golem snakes in her fingers and lifted them out.

Kevin bitesss!

Kevin gets left behind next time if he doesn’t let go.

The tiny green snake looked up at Harriet, and finally realized he was not attacking a terrible monster. He unlatched his jaw with a pleased hiss, inspecting his new handiwork, plus the minor white scars around her knuckle. She released the golems, and Howard immediately curled himself into a comfortable puddle of yellow coils while Rick attacked a bit of dowdy clover. He bemoaned the bitter flavor.

“Bunch of numpties,” Harriet giggled, three curious snouts turning in her direction. She hunched lower and withdrew a single piece of Honeydukes’ chocolate, unwrapping the foil to crumble part of it into bits. The chocolate smudged her skin. “Here.”

Rick and Kevin jockeyed for position to get their snack first while Howard waited, though Harriet didn’t know if that was patience or if Howard simply didn’t have a good grasp on what was going on. Either way, she fed him his piece and stroked his scales with a pleased hum.

Harriet slipped the last bite into her own mouth and savored the sweetness melting against her tongue. Her thoughts swirled around one another, worries about Slytherin meshed with upcoming school assignments. She had a project for Ancient Runes, and her less than stellar showing in Transfiguration might result in detention if she didn’t pull herself together. The strangeness between her and Snape persisted, even if it’d become more bearable and less tense. She found herself remembering the Dark Mark marring his forearm at odd moments.

Harriet propped her chin on her folded knee and splayed one hand in the grass, Howard coming to rest across her fingers while Kevin reared up and hissed at her thumb. She pretended to attack, wiggling the digit, and he retreated into a patch of dandelions.

It’s just my thumb, dummy. Don’t be afraid.

Kevin isss not afraid! Kevin will…?” Flustered, he poked his nose out from the dense green leaves.

Kevin will bite?

Kevin will bitesss!”

Harriet snorted. “Thought so.”

Suddenly, a shadow’s cool, amorphous weight fell over her, and Harriet blinked, lifting her head to peer at the black, transparent shape giving her shade.

“Thanks,” she said after a pause, feeling the curious pressure of Set’s presence buzz against her awareness.

It had been a while since she’d seen Set as anything more than a passing flutter on a wall, or a slight flicker underfoot. It seemed the more Harriet surrounded herself with others, the less space the creature found for himself and the less he appeared. She didn’t know if she was happy or sad about that.

Set had been a constant in her childhood, the only friend to a friendless little girl who’d known very little kindness in her life. He’d been good to her, and also cruel—exacting. There was no arguing with an incorporeal shadow creature, and though he’d often acted in Harriet’s best interest, sometimes he didn’t. Sometimes he pushed her in ways she didn’t want to go, dragged her bodily if she refused. Sometimes Harriet felt an odd stirring, little bursts of fear like a lighter struggling to ignite in the hollow of her gut. Sometimes Set scared her.

She’d done passive research on what he might be in the past, but with friends like Elara and Hermione, Harriet found it challenging to discover new information without piquing their curiosity. Besides, she’d unearthed very little, and even that minuscule amount had pointed her in less than desirable avenues of thought.

Draco dormiens nunquam titillandus, Harriet mused. Never tickle a sleeping dragon. She let the issue lie.

In the present, Harriet dropped her chin back to her knee and chewed on her lower lip, the shadow steady and unmoving overhead. “What should I do?” she asked aloud, though she knew better than to expect an audible response. “Should I give Professor Slytherin my name or not?”

Set didn’t answer. He disappeared, the sun returning to shine full bore on her bent neck, and Harriet exhaled through her nose, petting Howard’s head. His tongue flicked against her fingertip, quizzical. Kevin and Rick argued in the weeds, the fluffy dandelions nibbled into nothing.

Laughter and the clomp of footsteps startled Harriet, and she looked up in time to catch a glimpse of blonde hair and tanned skin before a trio of older girls came sneaking over the garden wall, freezing when they spotted Harriet. For an awkward second, they all stared at each other as if waiting to see who’d speak first.

“Oh,” said the one with long curly blonde hair as she relaxed. “It’s just that weird Slytherin fourth-year.”

The other two girls laughed in relief, and Harriet bristled. She had to scour her memory to remember the blonde girl was Petunia Squabs, and the shorter witch with brown hair and pink eye shadow was Ursula Hinde, the both of them Hufflepuffs in their seventh year. The third girl with her black hair tied back in a smooth ponytail was Sorrel Fogs, a Ravenclaw in the same year.

“What was your name again?” Squabs asked with a snap of her fingers. Shiny lemon-colored lacquer painted her nails. One of the trio smelled like patchouli and lavender. “Potter, wasn’t it?”

“…Yeah.” Harriet wondered what in the world they meant by coming to this random hidden location—and then she spotted the rumpled packet poking out of Hinde’s jumper pocket. Hinde noticed and stiffened, then smirked as she took the packet out.

“What’s the matter, Potter? You want one?”

Harriet scowled at the Muggle cigarettes, then at Hinde. “No.”

“Are you sure you don’t want to try?” Squabs jeered. Harriet had never liked her simply because her name was Petunia, but she hadn’t wanted to throw dirt in her face as much as she wanted to now.

“No, I don’t.”

“Then get lost.” Squabs made a shooing motion and Fogs giggled. “And don’t be a nark if you know what’s good for you.”

“I was here first,” Harriet argued. “You go away.”

Squabs scoffed. “What are you even doing out here?”

“Probably playing in the dirt,” Hinde said as she leaned on the garden wall, fidgeting with the cigarettes. “Filthy cow that she is.”

“Seriously, Potter, you’ve got mud all over your face. Have you ever heard of bathing?”

Harriet glared as they fell into their stupid, breathy laughter again, swiping her sleeve against her cheek. She didn’t know when that had happened. She must have touched her cheek after eating the chocolate.

“And look at her hair.” Fogs reached out and lightly tugged on a strand, Harriet swatting her hand away. “Do you ever brush it? Or use any kind of product? It’s so tangled and dull!”

Harriet’s face grew more red as they went on, much to the older witches’ amusement. “Leave off,” she snapped.

“Not until you go back to your dungeon, little girl.” Squabs smiled—an ugly thing that would have made Professor Slytherin proud for all its implied meanness. “Isn’t it getting close to curfew for you?”

It wasn’t; it was the middle of the afternoon yet, on the weekend, no less. If not for Livius, Harriet would have grabbed her golems and gone on her way to avoid these three bints. Instead, she needed to wait for the Horned Serpent to come back, and the seventh-years needed to be gone by then.

“Are you sure she’s a fourth-year, Pet?” Hinde asked. “She’s so small; she looks like a firstie.” The witch made a gesture with her hand to indicate a flat chest, and Harriet bit the inside of her cheek to keep quiet.

“Yes, she hangs out with that Black girl and the buck-toothed cow who’s always in the library.”

Fogs groaned. “Merlin, I hate her. She’s always shushing everyone!”

“At least the pair of them look like they know the right end of a scrub-brush. Or how to use a razor.”

Harriet felt the urge to cover what bit of her legs was visible between her socks and the hem of her skirt. With everything on her mind, she hadn’t given much thought to shaving or keeping her hair tidy.

“Doesn’t your mum teach you anything, Potter? Or is she as manky as you are?”

A tight, painful sting stabbed into Harriet’s chest, heat pricking at the back of her eyes. She kept her jaw clenched so tightly it wobbled.

It was Fogs whose pretty face lost its bright, gloating grin first, and her brow furrowed. “Oh, shit,” she hissed. “Didn’t the Potter family—you know?”

“What?”

Fogs mimicked a half-arsed choking motion and drew her finger across her throat. “During the war?”

An uncomfortable expression crossed Squabs’ face, and Harriet thought they might have buggered off right then, scolded by their own faux pas—if Squabs hadn’t looked down and seen the snakes coiling about Harriet’s ankles. She shrieked and jumped backward.

“Holy Helga! That is so disgusting! Potter, you’re such a freak!

“Ew, are those real?!”

“Are there more around?!”

As the three seventh-years drew back closer to the wall, Harriet crouched and gathered the golems together, hiding them in her cupped hands. “If you don’t fuck off,” she snarled, voice threadier than she wanted it to be. “I’m going to go find Sprout and tell on you.”

Squabs stopped her pointless shrieking and stared Harriet down. It wasn’t difficult, considering she had considerable height on the younger witch. “You wouldn’t dare. Don’t be such a baby.”

“She’s right over there.” Harriet jerked her chin in the direction of the wall and the visible tops of the greenhouses beyond. “I’ll tell her you’ve got contraband.”

Hinde seemed to remember the packet of cigarettes in her hand and shoved it out of sight. “Merlin, just let the weird little bitch have the spot,” she grumbled. “I am not getting another letter home because she tattled to Sprout.”

Put out, the three witches boosted themselves back over the low spot on the garden wall, tossing a few final nasty words for Harriet as they went. Harriet waited until she couldn’t hear them anymore before sitting again, the snakes in her hands demanding to be put down so they could play. Harriet did so, but kept her arms folded on her knees.

Once or twice, she rubbed her sleeve against her cheek.

Livi returned ten minutes later, sated and full, oblivious to his mistress’ poor mood as he allowed her to gather him up over her shoulders again and tucked himself beneath her loose blouse. As she fixed her cloak in place, Harriet could feel the lazy creature settling in for a nap, and she sighed.

Harriet started back toward the castle, going over the wall, along the gravel path, and across the lawn. She kept her eyes fixed ahead of her all the while, her gait stilted and stiff. She felt keenly aware of her lumpy cloak, the dirt on the hem, scuffs on her shoes, dust on her white socks from clamoring about a dusty castle.

Potter, you ’re such a freak!

She’d heard it before. She’d heard it more than her own name as a child—so why did it bother her to hear it again?

It doesn ’t matter. It doesn’t.

Stepping inside the castle brought relief from the heat outside, Harriet sidestepping around students lingering in the entrance hall as she headed for the dungeons. She wanted to get out of her extra layers and so rushed toward the dormitories, but had to pass by Snape’s office on the way. Unfortunately, the towering berk stood outside the door arguing with Auror Moody, crowding the whole bloody corridor.

“I don’t see how it could possibly be pertinent for you to search my office or quarters,” Snape sneered, one arm outstretched and resting on the wall as if to bar the gnarled wizard passage. “I’ve been a respected member of Hogwarts’ staff for fourteen years. You have no reason to toss my cell, as it were, Moody.”

“I’ll be the judge of that,” the Auror grunted. “Gotta make sure you’re not keeping up old habits, eh, Snape?”

Harriet drew level with the pair and tried to slip past. Moody’s hand shot out and startled a squeak from her when he grabbed her shoulder.

“Dumbledore know you’ve got that snake, girl?”

Shocked, Harriet gawked at the wizard and found his mismatched gaze fixed on her torso. Harriet looked down to see if Livi had revealed himself but saw only the clasps of her black cloak buttoned up to her throat. None of the golems had wriggled out of their pocket.

Snape looked at Harriet as well, annoyed by the intrusion—and then his expression darkened, black eyes sparking like struck flint in the hard angles of his face. He grabbed Harriet by the scruff of her robes.

“Hey—!”

He yanked her behind himself and stepped between her and Moody, Harriet nearly tripping on the long hem of his robes as they eddied around her legs. “Go to your dorm,” the Potions Master ordered, jabbing one impatient finger in the direction Harriet had intended to go all along.

“I—.”

Go.”

“Yes, sir.”

She scuttled without further argument and didn’t even pause to look back. Harriet cleared the far corner and missed seeing Snape slam the growling Auror into the wall.


A/N:

Harriet: “I got picked on.”

Elara, sharpening a knife: “Show me who.”

It wouldn ’t be a school without a couple of mean older girls to apply some peer pressure.

Also, from Canon: “Nice socks, Potter,” Moody growled as he passed, his magical eye staring through Harry’s robes.

Listen Moody, Snape is about to throw hands.

Chapter 177: the man of many masters

Chapter Text

clxxvii. the man of many masters

 

The duel lasted for only a minute before the Headmaster descended and tore the two wizards apart.

“What has gotten into you, Severus? Alastor?” Dumbledore demanded, his wand in hand as the white glimmer of his Shield Charm faded in the dungeon’s dim light. It was just as well he’d come along. If another Auror had wandered across Severus trying to hex the face off Mad-Eye Moody, he would have ended up in Azkaban and dead within a fortnight.

Moody stuck his wand back into the brace on his arm. “Just had ourselves a disagreement, Albus,” he growled, and Severus noted how his magical eye rolled to point at him through the side of the wizard’s skull, more than likely staring at the scorch mark on the wall.

Severus brushed his knuckles against his own abraded cheek, smearing what little blood had come to the surface. He said nothing.

Unsatisfied with Moody’s answer and Severus’ silence, Dumbledore flicked his wand and threw open the nearest door, which happened to lead into the Potions Master’s office. The three wizards filed inside.

“Nice space, Snape,” Moody commented with a harsh, jeering lilt to his grating voice, gesturing at the jars of preserved ingredients. “Very welcoming for all the nasty little snakes you recruit for your master.”

Again, Severus said nothing. Instead, he stood with his back to a set of shelves and gripped one of the wooden’s ledges, willing himself to bite his tongue and not fly off the handle. He wouldn’t allow himself to be baited in such a gauche manner. He wouldn’t.

“Alastor,” Dumbledore said, sharp and cutting, not a twinkle to be seen in his narrowed eyes. He lit a fire in the dormant grate to give more light to the dim, eerie space, though Severus wished he left it to the dying candles alone. Then at least he didn’t have to see Moody’s ugly face quite so clearly.

The Headmaster stepped away from the hearth once the flames had risen properly and leaned against Severus’ desk, eying the two wizards who stood as far from one another as they could in the enclosed office. “I would have one you give an accounting for your behavior in the corridor. We cannot have allies drawing their wands on one another, and most certainly not in the school with children about.”

Mad-Eye snorted. “Strange allies you’re keeping, Albus,” he said as he picked up one of the jars and inspected it, placing it back in the wrong spot. “Seeing what I did makes me wonder what other contraband this one is letting the brats bring into their dorms.”

Dumbledore turned a quizzical look to Severus, who ground his teeth and restrained himself to simply jabbing a finger in Moody’s direction. “He saw the snake Potter keeps.”

The Headmaster’s expression cleared. “Oh,” he said. “Dear me, have I not mentioned it before, Alastor? Harriet has a rather unique familiar. I am fully aware of its existence and the precautions she takes in caring for it.” He frowned. “I must confess, I do not understand why this resulted in violence.”

“You did not let me finish,” Severus snapped. “He saw the snake Potter keeps under her attire, not because she flaunted the wretched beast. Had I not known of the snake beforehand, I wouldn’t have had any idea what this letch spoke about.”

“What’s the issue, Snape? You’ve an eye of your own, don’t you? Haven’t told Albus what you can see with it, eh?”

If he hadn’t been in the Headmaster’s presence, Severus would have struck the Auror. “It detects the presence of magical glamors and concealments,” he spat, voice rising until he was shouting. “It does not look through a young girl’s clothes!

“Enough,” the Headmaster said, but Moody got in his parting shot.

“So you say. Don’t know if I trust you on that. It’d be my guess you’ve been enjoying your own private show at your students’ expense. It seems the kind of thing your lot would do.”

Severus lunged.

A spell from the Headmaster caught him high in the chest and flung him back hard into the shelves. The force of it knocked the air out of him, and Severus staggered, fighting the instinctual reaction to wince as the pain swelled and ached under his skin. Jars hit the floor. Betrayal rankled, colder than the stunned silence that followed, harsher than the snap of broken glass under his boots.

“Severus—.”

He gathered his robes about himself and left.

Severus—!”

Let them have the sodding room. Let Dumbledore burn everything inside—let the two codgers lock themselves in and starve to death. He didn’t care.

Departing the dungeons, Severus had to stop at the top of the stairs to catch his breath, tucking one finger into his cravat and giving it a hard, fruitless yank. Students meandered in the open foyer, meaning he didn’t linger in place long. He didn’t know where he was headed, so long as it was away from the Headmaster.

He burned two hours needlessly patrolling, taking points and assigning one detention for the sheer displeasure of crossing his path. Severus’ mind paced in circles, and though he willed it to, the anger and displeasure did not dissipate. Nevertheless, Severus pulled on his mental shields until they rolled over him like the morning fog, and the hard glint in his eyes dulled to unrelieved black.

He passed a pair of Aurors on the fifth-floor stairwell, neither paying him any mind as they chatted by the open casement window and neglected their rounds. It was all a farce anyway, a transparent ploy through which Gaunt thumbed his nose at Dumbledore and Slytherin and kept his foot in Hogwarts’ door. It mattered little if they patrolled or not.

The golden pins on their lapels glinted like honey in the afternoon sunlight.

The sight of Aurors often filled witches and wizards with a sense of relief; their guardians had arrived, ready to fend off prospective evils and keep their poor, wretched selves safe from the travesties of Dark magic. Severus did not share in that opinion, not in the slightest. The presence of Aurors inundated him with a horrid well of ineffectual rage, spite, and no little amount of fear.

He did not recall much of his time in Azkaban. He didn’t recall anything from that time period really, but Severus remembered the terror and grief best of all, two weeks in a malignant haze, dragged by unkind hands, thrown and kicked and spat upon by wizards in maroon robes.

Mad-Eye had been there, he thought. The bastard had a distinct, memorable voice, and now he thumped around the school like a spare nightmare for Severus to trip over.

The door to the sixth-floor staff lounge swung in on well-worn hinges, and Severus almost groaned aloud to find Slytherin inside, seated at the best table by the window.

Of course. Of course, I can’t catch a break.

Red eyes flicked in Severus’ direction, lingering upon his reddened cheek, then returned to his work.

“Sit, Severus.”

Given little choice in the matter, the Potions Master assumed what dignity he could and crossed the lounge to the table, seating himself in the chair opposite Slytherin. The wizard paid him little mind at first, finishing the essay in his hand and topping it with a bored, indifferent ‘T’ before glancing at Snape.

“Having an enjoyable afternoon?”

A soft huff left Severus. “Marginally so, my Lord,” he drawled, adjusting his sleeves. “Though, I did have a slight disagreement with the Headmaster.”

“And he’s such an agreeable person.” Slytherin flicked to the next essay, dipping his eagle quill in the inkwell. He made for an odd picture, very collegiate in his meticulous robes with the work of his students settled before him, still crimson-eyed and sinister, fair hands spotted by flecks of ink. “Well? What is the problem with dear Albus now?”

Severus blinked, freeing himself of his introspection. “He seems unbothered by the liberties the Aurors feel free to take in the school.”

“Hmm.” He lifted his gaze to Severus. “Which Auror, in particular, has caught your ire?”

Snape’s lip curled. “Mad-Eye.”

Slytherin laughed—a cold, mirthless sound that raked against Severus’ spine, and he regretted opening his mouth in the first place. Pieces of the truth fed the lie of their relationship, but some part of him felt guilt for taking his honest frustration against Dumbledore and giving it to Slytherin. He didn’t want to give anything of himself to this wizard.

“Moody is a paranoid relic,” Slytherin said as he flicked to another essay, an unspoken spell from his fingertip laying the rolled parchment flat. “A perfect counterpoint for Dumbledore and a loyal little poppet to stuff in his pocket. Though, he has his uses, making noise in Gaunt’s ear and stumbling the misguided fools in the Ministry.” Another faint, humorless laugh. “Poor Severus. Did you really believe Dumbledore would take your side over one of his real loyalist’s?”

There it was. The Dark Lord’s unfailing propensity to find a sore spot and drive the dagger in deep. It was what he preyed upon, the glinting, vulnerable diamonds in a person’s soul, small things that bought loyalty and turned ears to his mouth—but Severus had grown wise to his schemes. There’d been no sides in his argument with Moody and Dumbledore; just a flash of spellwork, a throbbing ache in his back, and a mouthful of swallowed vitriol.

“I’ve long since moved past any need for Dumbledore’s approval, my Lord,” he said, lacing his hands together on the table. He met the other wizard’s gaze and held it without challenge, the flat, unnerving monotone of his own voice and expression untouched by Slytherin’s scrutiny. “I am merely aggravated the Auror continues to seek access into my laboratory.”

He did not tell Slytherin the truth about the confrontation. Truly, Severus doubted he would or could care, that grasping the exact dearth of privacy when under Moody’s eye was beyond what nebulous scraps of empathy Slytherin emulated. Severus couldn’t decide if the wizard even had a real body under those robes. Perhaps he was simply a morass of snakes piled atop one another.

Now I’m being ridiculous.

Slytherin returned to his work, and Severus’ mind ran circles around itself, his thoughts harried and angry but contained beneath the sleek, unyielding surface of his Occlusion.

He’d ruin Moody’s magical eye if he caught him looking at Potter again—at any of his students—with more intent than was absolutely necessary. No threats. No going to Dumbledore for permission or prevaricating like a Gryffindor hopped up on bravado and stupidity. Just action.

“Ah,” Slytherin sighed aloud as he turned to the next parchment in his stack. He repeated his silent spell to straighten the roll, and his finger lingered on the edge, sliding upward to tap the tail of the familiar writing on the page. “Miss Potter.”

Severus did not react to the usage of the girl’s name. He turned his wrist ever so slightly so the Vow’s scarring would not catch the light from the broad window.

“I must confess, I am disappointed she’s not brought me her name yet for consideration. I do wonder what is holding her back….”

Severus said nothing.

“Perhaps I should be overjoyed by her circumspection. So many of them jumped at the opportunity without a single thought toward prospective consequences. She’s a very odd girl, Potter. Very audacious. Her magic is…sharp, if ragged. Hmm. A pity.”

Severus knew he should interject, that he should urge Slytherin to approach the girl again and give her a perfect chance to comply with Dumbledore’s suggestion. It was what being a spy meant, maneuvering pieces, creating avenues. Albus asked Potter to enter Slytherin’s competition, and Severus should facilitate that request.

Still, he kept silent. Something weak and anxious fluttered under his heart, and it recoiled from any notion of opening his mouth. Did they not see how tired he was? Did they not look at him and realize how little he wished to be in this position? That, despite all attempts otherwise, he was not a stone tool?

A sudden spasm clutched his left arm, and Severus gasped against his will, bringing the limb closer to his chest. Or, he would have, had Slytherin not grabbed him by the wrist with all the speed of a striking snake, yanking his hand across the expanse between them. A simple flick of his thin, untried fingers split Severus’ sleeve, and a second incantation brought the loathsome Dark Mark into view.

He could not conceive of what Tom Slytherin thought whenever he forced Severus to show the Mark like this, why he needed to see the cursed thing writhe within his unwilling servant’s flesh. Each time the spasm came, Severus grew more and more terrified as the pain ascended closer to a true Summons. It’d grown darker over the weeks, the sting more acute.

“You will go to him when the time comes,” Slytherin murmured, leaving no room for argument—however preposterous that would be—as he curled his fingers under Severus’ forearm. “And you will play the good puppet just as you do with Dumbledore. But remember, Severus—.” His nails bit into his skin, bearing down until blood welled. “You belong to me.”

The pain in the Mark eased into the mundane ache of the minor, half-circle wounds. “Of course, my Lord.”

Slytherin released him then, leaving streaks of red on his wrist and the hewn edges of his buttoned white shirt. He tugged the parchments out from under Severus’ limp hand, bloody fingerprints on Potter’s essay, and took his leave. Severus remained where he was, still quiet, his arm and back and chest all pulsing in time with his rapid heartbeat.

He whispered the spell to hide the Dark Mark again and watched it disappear.

If only everything were that simple.

 

xXx

 

He was still sat in the empty staff lounge when Dumbledore came upon him. The Headmaster stood in the doorway for a long moment to study Severus, the lowering sun at the window gilding his unmoving frame, his sleeve split, a cup of cooling tea before him.

The door shut with a gentle thump, and the Headmaster sighed.

“I’ve spoken with Alastor,” he told his Potions Master. “He has agreed to adjust the enchantments on his eye to preserve our students’ privacy.”

Snape scoffed under his breath.

He heard the scuff of soft-soled shoes cross the floor, and the weight of the Headmaster’s hand settled on his shoulder. “Severus, I must apologize for my actions earlier. I did not intend for the spell to be quite so forceful, but I cannot accept you threatening bodily harm against our allies over a simple misunderstanding.”

Severus exhaled and fixed his sleeve. “You needn’t apologize, Headmaster,” he said, voice cold. He shrugged off the hand and stood. “I have come to expect such treatment from my masters.”

Severus departed from the room.


 

A/N:

Tbh, no I don ’t think Moody’s some horrid perv, just incredibly paranoid, and incredibly judgmental of Snape. But this is Snape’s perspective on him, so it’s going to showcase his worst attributes.

Slytherin: “Potter would make an excellent candidate, don’t you agree?”

Severus: *slowly sinks to the floor and oozes down a drain*

Slytherin: “….”

Slytherin: “I didn’t know he could do that.”

 

Chapter 178: from the air, from the depths

Chapter Text

clxxviii. from the air, from the depths

 

Harriet stood and squinted at herself in the bathroom mirror for a long time.

The face peering back from the fogged glass was thin with a narrow nose and eerily green eyes. Her wet hair stuck to her skin, and the fringe curled over her brow, a mess of tangles and wild cowlicks. Spots of acne dotted her chin and forehead here and there, and her scar crept spider-like from her skinny shoulder, ropey white lines skittering over her chest, neck, and jaw.

Her ears didn’t stick out too far, and she had a stubborn set to her jaw. Her brows lowered sharply over her eyes, and her teeth were fairly unremarkable; white but slightly uneven, her lips somewhat pale and chapped by the cooling weather. The residents of Privet Drive used to say she had a shifty face, and Harriet never really understood what they meant until she started school.

An impatient knock sounded on the closed door. “Are you ever going to come out of there? We’re going to be late!”

“Gimme another minute.”

“You said that five minutes ago!”

“Well, give me five more then.”

“Honestly!” Footsteps thumped away from the entrance.

Harriet studied the things cluttering the counter. Each girl in their year had a shelf allotted for their bath things; Pansy had more junk than anyone, little bottles and vials and packets always overflowing across the stone surface around the sinks. Katherine Runcorn had her own standing mirror with a dozen reflective bits that looked like something out of Divinations, and Elara had an embroidered black valise hiding her medical potions.

Harriet’s mouth flattened into a tight line as she studied her own shelf, which held one half-empty bottle of shampoo, a school-issued bar of soap, a little pouch for feminine products, a toothbrush and paste, and a boar-bristle brush in need of cleaning. She knew she had some other things in her trunk—a cream for her scar, some unguent against Dark magic and bruises, a potion for headaches nearing expiration—but nothing that needed to be added to her shelf.

She picked up one of Pansy’s vials—a thin glass ampule about the size of Harriet’s finger filled with a swirling pink-colored cream. The print on the glass proved too small for her to read, but Harriet thought the gunk might be age-proofing serum.

“She’s fourteen, for Merlin’s sake,” she muttered, putting the vial back in place. She looked at herself in the mirror again.

In the weeks since Harriet’s confrontation with the three seventh-years, she found she couldn’t quite forget their words or their harsh, jeering faces. They stuck in her mind like the last bit of mess at the bottom of a scorched cauldron, and no matter how Harriet chipped away at it, the needling laughter persisted.

“Potter, you’re such a freak!”

She shouldn’t care what someone like bloody Squabs and her cronies thought. She didn’t!

Harriet eyed her hair and the cowlicks and made an effort to flatten the worst offenders. They persisted despite the water and her best ministrations.

Glaring at her reflection, Harriet looked away, then dragged on the rest of her uniform and pushed her glasses onto her face. She fussed with the sleeves until they laid straight, and she tucked in her shirt. She did every button up to the top and tightened the tie as it was meant to be, though it felt strangling. She straightened her robes until they fell even on both sides and the folds turned at the right angles, pulled back at the collar and edge to display the barest inch of the inner lining. Finally, she clipped the brooch at the top.

She looked once more at her plain face, lacking any form of makeup or funny creams, her hair still disobedient and her expression vaguely sour. A sigh escaped Harriet as if released from the very bottom of her soul.

Stop thinking about what they said. They ’re just jealous munters, the lot of them.

Jealous of what? asked a nasty voice in the back of her mind.

“You look very nice,” said the mirror. Harriet’s shoulders slumped.

“Thanks,” she mumbled before escaping the room.

Hermione must have gone ahead, as no one else yet lingered in the dormitory aside from Elara, who lay partially sprawled across the foot of her bed, perusing a letter as she waited for Harriet. She folded the top flap of the letter down and raised a brow at the younger witch’s tidy appearance but didn’t mention anything.

“Are you finally ready to go? We’ve missed breakfast.”

Harriet grunted in affirmation and went to grab her satchel.

“What’s had you preoccupied lately? I’ve never seen you take so long in the lavatory to get ready in the morning.”

“Don’t worry about it.” She tightened the strap of her satchel and made to head out the door when her toe caught the edge of something solid sticking out from under the foot of Hermione’s bed. “Ouch! What in the world is that?”

Elara rose to gather her bag and glanced at the fat-bellied cauldron Harriet had almost bludgeoned her leg on. The black surface had a curious green sheen on it, like the back of a snake, though that may be the color of the sunlight coming through the lake.

“Oh. She finally managed to talk Mr. Flamel into sending an Embolized Cauldron.”

“Is that what that is? I thought Mr. Flamel would have sent it right off.”

“Apparently, it’s rather dangerous. He wanted her to make her case for it and outline what she wants us to use it for.”

Harriet let out an aggravated sigh and kept walking. “I love the witch, but we’re going to end up burning the dorms down, and I know I’m going to be the one blamed.”

They left the dorms and ascended through the dungeons, hurrying into a light jog past the Great Hall in their rush to make it to Charms. They clattered through the door without a minute to spare, earning a chiding word from Professor Flitwick and a miffed look from Hermione.

“You didn’t save us spots!” Harriet hissed, seeing Hermione seated between Malfoy and Zabini.

“I tried! I didn’t know if you two were going to stop mucking about and leave the dorm,” she snapped in return, glancing at Professor Flitwick as the short wizard began writing on his chalkboard with magic. “You were almost late!”

She said this as if it were a terrible crime, and Harriet huffed, resisting the urge to kick Malfoy in the shin. He looked much too smug, the prat.

“Miss Potter, Miss Black. Find your seats, please!”

“Yes, Professor.”

Grumbling, Harriet went to the open desk by Crabbe and Goyle, while Elara crossed the room to sit with the Ravenclaws. Harriet dropped her bag with a bit more heat than needed, which earned another reproving look from Professor Flitwick that she chose to ignore.

“Good morning, everyone! I hope you are well-rested and finished your assignments, as we’re ready to tackle Summoning Charms today! Now, to begin….”

Class started, and the lesson proved diverting enough for Harriet to forget her worries and lighten her mood. Goyle had smuggled in half a slab of Honeydukes’ best fudge, and he begrudgingly shared with Crabbe and Harriet after they needled him to no end. She exchanged notes with Elara using the Switching Spell—until Professor Flitwick gave her The Look, which meant the jovial wizard knew exactly what she was doing and was reaching the end of his patience.

Harriet winced and hunched down at her desk and concentrated on the lesson.

 After half an hour, she’d learned the spell well enough to Summon Draco’s chair from under his backside. He tried to retaliate by Summoning her wand, and Harriet cackled, the Charmed silver with the Honor Among Thieves enchantment warm on her wrist.

Of course, Professor Flitwick took exception to her causing mischief, which resulted in Harriet losing two House points and having to quietly read a selection from their textbook for the rest of the period. Malfoy wore a smarmy smirk—until Terry came over to Hermione’s desk and they traded off Summoning books from each other’s hands.

Malfoy didn’t appear quite so happy after that.

Professor Flitwick called Harriet back when the lecture ended and assigned her extra homework, both as a punishment for her poor use of class time and because she made such sufficient progress on mastering the spell. He was excited to see her proficiency expand. Harriet could only sigh and thank him.

“You have seemed distracted of late, Miss Potter. Is everything all right?”

“Yes, Professor.”

“I know your Head of House can be…erm, difficult to talk to if you have a problem. You can always come to me or Professors McGonagall and Sprout if you need! And Professor Snape, of course. He used to be Head of Slytherin House.” A strange, troubled expression flickered through Professor Flitwick’s eyes. “For a time.”

Harriet cleared her throat and fidgeted with the extra assignment in her hands. “I know, sir. Thank you, but I’m fine. I promise I’ll pay better attention in class.”

“Well, so long as you’re sure….”

She made her excuses, and though still concerned, Professor Flitwick dismissed her. Harriet shoved the parchment into her satchel on her way out the door, and she ran along the corridor. She stopped in the vaulted stairwell, stuck behind the crush of bodies heading to the lower levels. It seemed much of the school was headed to the foyer.

That ’s odd. Why aren’t they going to their next class?

She studied the back of the heads in front of her and recognized one of the younger Slytherins. She tapped Gabriel Flourish on the shoulder, and he blushed scarlet as he turned around to look at her.

“What’s all this? Don’t you second-years have Defense next?”

Flourish quickly shook his head. “No—I mean, usually, yeah. But didn’t you read the announcement on the common room board?”

Considering Harriet had barely made it Charms on time, she hadn’t loitered about to read whatever could have been added in the evening. She waited for Flourish to go on.

“The—the other schools are coming today. They’re supposed to arrive after first period.”

“Oh. Brilliant, thanks.”

Harriet kept with the crowd until they spilled through the main doors out onto the grounds, the grass still sparkling with morning dew and perilously slick underfoot. Professor McGonagall stood not far off spelling mud from the backsides of young Gryffindors who’d fallen in the muck.

“Thanks for waiting for me,” Harriet grumbled to her friends as she found them off to the side. They stood on the low part of a stone retaining wall, kept clear of the mud and running feet. “I didn’t even know about all this nonsense.”

“What did Flitwick want?” Elara asked, ignoring her jibe.

“To give me extra homework.”

“Extra homework?” Hermione gasped. Her gaze honed in on the satchel hanging off Harriet’s shoulder, a clear trace of greed glittering in her eyes.

“It’s in my pocket, you daft woman. I’ll show it to you later.”

Before Hermione got the chance to ferret through Harriet’s pockets, Professor Slytherin came stalking over like a boggart out of its closet and started gathering his students, forcing them into orderly lines. Harriet noticed the other Houses doing the same—but that did not explain how she landed next to Professor Slytherin in the line when the rest of the teachers lingered in the back.

She made to shuffle away, and his hand landed on her shoulder.

Oh, fuck.

Harriet stood still, stiff as stone, and refused to fidget or look up at the Defense instructor. Though his grip remained genial, a certain weight in his fingers felt restrictive, and she wondered what she could have possibly done now to earn his attention.

“The Beauxbatons delegation is approaching!” Professor Dumbledore informed the students at large.

Much chatter and excitement resounded among the crowd as the flying speck swooping low over the forest grew larger and larger until they could discern the shape of great, winged horses and a hulking carriage. Many of the younger students gathered in the front gasped aloud as the flying steeds descended, and Harriet flinched when third-year Galen Lament jumped back and trod on her feet. She curled her lip at the mud on her robes and splattered on her socks but said nothing.

She recognized the golden crest of the French school emblazoned on the carriage’s huge door before the flying horses landed and the carriage eased to a halt. She also recognized the towering figure who exited; Madame Maxime couldn’t be mistaken for anyone other than herself.

Many students gasped at the satin-clad giantess, the Headmistress shrugging off the gaucheness with an easy, practiced grace. Professor Dumbledore moved without hesitation to greet her, sweeping into an elegant bow that had many of the first-years giggling.

“Madame Maxime! How wonderful it is to see you again!”

“’Eadmaster Dumbledore. ‘Ow do you do?”

As they exchanged pleasantries, the Beauxbatons students started slipping out of the carriage, using a bronzed set of steps to get down that their Headmistress had bypassed. The older teens dressed in powdery blues and navies stared at Hogwarts’ high walls and turrets with trepidation. They shivered and crossed their arms, the light, fluttering silk of their robes not quite up to the October weather in rural Scotland.

A few other French adults aside from Madame Maxime joined her and Dumbledore or lingered by their cold students. One of the shorter, dark-haired wizards Harriet remembered being called Professor Henchizo, but she couldn’t place any of the others. She thought she recognized one of the teenage blonde witches from her stay with the Flamels in France.

What was her name? Flo? Flora?

It did not take long for Durmstrang to arrive. A disturbance rippled over the placid surface of the lake, and Harriet watched the beginnings of a mast slice through the water, followed by the rigging and the gray shadow of a massive ship cresting like a breaching whale. The crowd cheered and shouted at the spectacle, and Hermione bounced in place, undoubtedly thinking about what kind of magic went into a vessel like that.

“How do they preserve a habitable environment under the water?” she whispered under her breath. “Did they take examples from Muggle submarines? What kind of Charms would actualize the pressure? Can it actually sail? Does it work like a real ship, or is it operating purely on magic—?”

“Hermione, remember to breathe,” Elara sighed.

The boat came to a rest in the shallows, and people began to disembark.

“Ah, here comes Igor now,” Dumbledore said, giving a name to the wizard who headed the procession walking from the shoreline. Harriet had to admit, Igor didn’t quite match her expectation for a headmaster of a school noted for its Dark magic. He was tall and thin and white-haired, his goatee oiled and his bearing almost reminiscent of Lockhart’s in its pompous, exaggerated movements. His tone was as unctuous as a snake oil peddler.

“Dumbledore, my dear fellow! So nice to see you!”

 “Professor Karkaroff, the pleasure is all mine.”

The two wizards shook hands—and Professor Slytherin’s fingers shifted ever so slightly on Harriet’s shoulder, fingertips pressing into the soft material of her robes. She’d almost forgotten about him and jumped when he moved. Slytherin scoffed.

The Durmstrang students followed up the slope at a more sedate pace, better dressed for the weather in their burgundy, fur-lined cloaks and thick-soled boots. Their three extra professors didn’t look interested in joining Karkaroff with Dumbledore; they hung back, discomfort in their nervous postures, one of the older witches looking as if she very much wanted to get back on the boat.

A sudden whisper went through the Hogwarts students when Karkaroff called one of his charges over. The boy—more a man, really, broad-shouldered and tall despite his duck-footed gait—scowled at Karkaroff’s back but went to him all the same.

“Viktor’s got a bit of a head cold…I’m sure you don’t mind if we head in….”

“That’s Viktor Krum!” hissed fifth-year Finn Stein from behind Harriet. Next to him, Caia Verpia let out a small, eager shriek

“Merlin! Do you think he gives out autographs? Does he have a girlfriend—?”

“Be quiet, you vapid girl,” Professor Slytherin snapped. “Before you embarrass yourself.”

“Isn’t he a Quidditch player or something?” Hermione whispered to Draco—when in the world did he get there? The sneaky prat—and Malfoy looked at her as if she’d lost her marbles.

“He’s one of the best Seekers in the world, Granger! He played at the World Cup!”

“Oh, yes. I remember now. I didn’t know he was still in school.”

The Durmstrang students trailed after their Headmaster, followed by the Beauxbatons professors and their charges, with Hogwarts coming last of all. As her House started to move, Harriet made to shimmy out from under Slytherin’s grip, but his hand remained in place, and so too did Harriet.

Swallowing her nerves, she turned her head to glance up at the wizard.

Slytherin observed her with the kind of blasé amusement one might grant a twitching bug with its legs torn off. Harriet felt quite like a bug without its legs, wanting to wriggle away from there but helpless to go.

“Erm, d’you need something, Professor?”

He took his time responding, bracing his hand with just enough pressure to force Harriet to turn a step in his direction, her fear roiling in her empty stomach. “You haven’t given me an answer yet, Miss Potter. It’s rude to make people wait. Very unwise.”

“I—sorry, Professor,” Harriet stuttered, unable to help how her eyes jumped about the grounds, searching for assistance. Merlin, where was Professor Snape when he was needed? Had he even come out of the castle?

Sorry is not an answer.” His grip tightened.

“Yes,” Harriet sputtered before she could stop herself, before the cowardly part of her being jerked her feet out from under her and had her run for the castle. The word came out of her mouth, and her heart leapt in horror. Bloody hell! “My answer, sir. Is yes. I apologize for taking so long.”

He released Harriet at last, his smile faint but present. “Very good, Miss Potter.”

Harriet thought she might vomit on her shoes. She reminded herself that what she’d done couldn’t be undone, and she had Dumbledore’s support on her side. She needed to remain calm and in control of her emotions; Slytherin fed on reactions like a Dementor fed on despair, and she’d already given too much of her unease away.

So, Harriet cleared her throat and squared her shoulders. She pretended the wizard in front of her didn’t scare the wits out of her and smiled. But, more than anything, it probably looked like a grimace.

A hand brushed hers, hidden by the sleeve of her robe, and Harriet startled. A second one gripped the other.

“Professor Slytherin,” Elara drawled, cold and indifferent. “I would also like to enter your competition.”

What?!

“And me!” Hermione interjected, beaming sweetly, though the hand that gripped Harriet’s felt cold and clammy. “Is that all right, Professor?”

Slytherin arched a brow, but he didn’t offer any resistance to their inclusion. “Of course,” he said. “I do hope you’re prepared for the…challenges ahead.”

By then, much of the school had retreated inside, and Slytherin followed the final, lingering dregs without another thought toward Harriet or the others. Harriet gripped Hermione and Elara by the hands so tightly, she could feel the tremors running up her skinny arms.

“What in the fuck d’you think you’re doing?” she demanded, her voice breaking on the final word, forcing Harriet to swallow. “Why did you do that?!”

Elara shook her off and rubbed at her palm, returning feeling to her fingers. “Why did you?” she retorted. “Because Dumbledore said so? Last I checked, the competition was open to everyone in Slytherin.”

Harriet didn’t understand. “But it’s—! It’s going to be dangerous!”

“And you thought we’d let you go it on your own?” Hermione huffed, adjusting her heavy bag on her shoulder. “Don’t be ridiculous, Harriet. You haven’t any idea what kind of qualifications Slytherin is going to impose, and having us with you might prove to your benefit.”

“But—but!”

Harriet didn’t have anything else to say. She didn’t have any other choice but to be caught in the stream of her friends’ logic—because as she’d just told herself, there was no going back. They were in this together now, for better or for worse.

“Come along, we’re due for an early lunch. I wonder where the Durmstrang and Beauxbatons students are going to sit. Do you think they’d answer questions about their curriculum? Oh, I’m so curious about what kind of lectures they give in Durmstrang! It must be fascinating how they navigate the uses of Dark magic and balance the well-being of the student body….”

Hermione turned heel and started toward the entrance hall. Seeming to understand she was still in shock, Elara retook Harriet’s hand and pulled her along after them.

“We’re not going to leave you on your own,” she said lowly. “Whatever Slytherin…Riddle means by making this competition, you won’t face it alone. Understand?”

Harriet’s only answer was to squeeze Elara’s fingers.

“Good. Now, let’s go get Hermione before she starts harassing the visitors for a day-by-day breakdown of their lives. God help the poor, unsuspecting fools….”


A/N: My headcanon for the Triwizard schools is that Durmstrang and Beauxbatons had to have brought some of their own professors along to teach their students. They couldn ’t possibly have all (or a large chunk) of their oldest students missing school for the majority of the year. They would have had to qualify for a self-study program basically, and even then, they’d still need professors for assistance.

Chapter 179: the four champions

Chapter Text

clxxix. the four champions

 

The excited chatter followed the crowd like a loud thundercloud through the foyer into the Great Hall. At first, Harriet expected a new table would be added for the visitors, but when no such table appeared, the Durmstrang and Beauxbatons students joined the Slytherin and Ravenclaw tables respectively, which meant tight quarters during lunch. Harriet squished between Elara and sixth-year Adrian Pucey, who smelled like manure from Herbology class.

Once settled, Dumbledore made some rather lengthy introductions for the foreign staff that mostly went over Harriet’s head. Her attention turned instead to the group of new students and eying the Aurors dotted about the hall’s peripheries, taking note of where Gaunt’s Guardians lingered. She never liked being in the same room as them.

When she did look back toward the High Table, she noticed something curious. Headmaster Karkaroff took his seat and happened to turn his head, and he caught sight of Slytherin four chairs down—Slytherin, who’d been staring at the bloke for awhile, and whose mouth unfurled in a cruel smile when he made eye contact.

Karkaroff paled so drastically, Harriet thought he might pass out.

“I hope you will all join me in making sure our guests feel welcomed while they stay with us here at Hogwarts,” Dumbledore continued with a gentle smile. The Durmstrang students appeared curious about their surroundings—more so than their Beauxbatons counterparts, who were cold and rather disdainful in Harriet’s opinion. Having been to their school before, she guessed they probably found Hogwarts relatively modest in comparison. After all, they didn’t have gilt chandeliers and twinkling ice sculptures on display.

The Headmaster invited them to eat with a sweeping motion of his hand, and the dishes filled themselves on the long table. Harriet wriggled closer to Elara to avoid Pucey’s arm and the less than pleasant odor. The taller witch huffed in frustration, glared from the corner of her eye, and started dishing things onto Harriet’s plate to spare herself from reaching arms and thrown elbows.

As lunch started, Harriet surveyed the hall again, and more than a dozen faces kept turning to stare at the Slytherin table—or, more precisely, at the back of Viktor Krum’s head. Most of the people in Harriet’s House had crammed themselves as close to the Quidditch star as possible, and many of the witches whispered furtively to their friends, giggling and fluttering their eyelashes.

Harriet peered at the bloke as well, trying to figure out what the fuss was about. Oh, she thought him being a professional Quidditch player at such a young age was brilliant and wondered if he’d share stories about the games he’d played, but otherwise, Krum appeared surly and unwilling to be there. Peregrine Derrick tried asking him a question, and Krum ignored him, concentrating on his meal.

A flutter of silvery hair caught Harriet’s attention, and she watched as a Beauxbatons witch crossed from the Gryffindor table with a dish of bouillabaisse and returned to the Ravenclaws.

“Hey, Elara?”

“Yes?”

“Don’t we know her?” Harriet pointed a blatant finger, and Elara looked up—only to slap Harriet’s hand down out of sight, a brilliant red glow flushing her face. “She told us off that one time! Remember?”

“Stop pointing, brat.”

“You don’t remember?”

“I remember, now stop pointing.”

Harriet rolled her eyes and returned to her lunch and her observations of the Durmstrang students along the table. Eventually, the meal dwindled, the last goblets of pumpkin juice enjoyed, and Professor Dumbledore rose for his seat at the High Table to approach the winged lectern again.

“Ah, now that we are all sufficiently fed and watered—it is time, at long last, for the Triwizard Tournament to officially open. Before we bring in the judge—.”

“Oi,” Harriet whispered to Elara. “I didn’t know they were picking the contestants tonight.”

“They’re not,” Elara replied. “Not until Hallowe’en.”

“Then who’s the judge? Are they going to be skipping about Hogwarts all week?”

“I don’t know, just wait and listen.”

Harriet brought her attention back to Dumbledore, who had turned to the staff entrance by the upper dais, through which Filch came dragging a heavy wooden casket. Everyone watched him bring the casket to Dumbledore, who thanked the caretaker before Filch nodded, scowled at the students, and hobbled his way out the staff entrance.

“Now, then. At the end of the week, on Hallowe’en, three champions will be chosen to compete in the Triwizard Tournament. Those selected will represent the very best qualities and abilities of their school, and will be bound by magical contract to compete in three daring—and dangerous—challenges.”

Dumbledore paused for effect, and the students turned to one another, whispering in speculation until the Headmaster raised his hand again.

“It will not fall to any one person to undertake such a daunting task in selecting the champions. Instead, we will be relying on the magic of the Tournament’s traditional judge; the Goblet of Fire.”

A twitch of his wand had the large casket opening, and from it rose a goblet—a huge goblet, roughly hewn of wood, but otherwise unremarkable aside from the size. Then, Dumbledore lowered the Goblet onto the closed casket—and the rim erupted in blue flames. Several of those seated closest to the dais leaned back from the brush of heat.

“Anyone of age who wishes to be considered need only put their name and their school upon a slip of folded parchment and add it to the Goblet. The Goblet will be relocated to the entrance hall, where it’ll be freely accessible this week to those wishing to compete. Other precautions will be added to ensure no one under the age of seventeen will be able to enter their name, should the temptation strike them.”

He turned his gaze toward the Gryffindor table, where the Weasley twins seemed most put out by this news.

“Classes for Hogwarts are canceled for the rest of the day, and I hope you will take this opportunity to introduce yourself to our guests and get to know one another. After all, this is a wonderful opportunity to learn about the world at large, and the many things we share with one another. But, for now, I will dismiss you from your lunch and bid you all a pleasant afternoon. Good day!”

 

xXx

 

By Thursday, four days before Hallowe’en, Harriet was already tired of this Tournament and eager for it to end.

The visiting students had an understandably shaky grasp of English for the most part and shared only a passing interest in interacting with anyone from Hogwarts. They spent much of their days in class with their own professors. The Beauxbatons students preferred to haunt one of the halls on the third floor cleared out and cleaned for their usage, all the hearths inside always kept at full bore. The Durmstrang students could be found outdoors or on their ship, unbothered by the crisp October weather.

Girls—and a fair number of boys—kept sneaking off to the lakeshore in-between lessons searching for Viktor Krum. The Quidditch star could occasionally be found on the track or out relaxing on the rocks, enjoying the sun. Harriet had seen him there, surrounded by witches, and she wondered if he ever got tired of that.

Truly, Harriet’s gripe against the Tournament had nothing to do with the visitors. It had everything to do with Neville bloody Longbottom.

“Well, naturally Dumbledore had to add the Age Line around the Goblet,” he said for the umpteenth time in Potions. “Could you imagine the shame when a younger student defeated the best and brightest from both Durmstrang and Beauxbatons? Ha! They’d be right mad when that happened!”

Harriet thought she might vomit into her Weedosoros brew—either that or suffocate under Longbottom’s massive ego. She glared at the back of his stupid head.

“And you think you’d be picked, Longbottom?” Malfoy sneered from the table where he worked with Hermione. “Of all the students at Hogwarts? The only class you’re the top in is Herbology.”

“Yeah, and? You think you’d be chosen, git?”

“I’m not stupid enough to enter,” Malfoy hissed. “Unlike some people, I’m not desperate for a thousand Galleons. Are you, Longbottom? Spend too much coin keeping your worthless name relevant?”

Their bickering continued until Elara, next to Harriet, let out a loud, annoyed sigh and stopped pretending to dice ingredients. She palmed her wand under the desk and, with a subtle whisper of “Accio,” summoned Finnegan’s wet Jewelweed from the table in front of the Prat Who Lived. The gloppy mess sailed backward—right into Neville’s face.

“Ten points from Gryffindor,” Snape said as the class laughed.

The weeds fell from Longbottom’s face and splattered on his shoes. “I didn’t even do anything!”

“Let it be a lesson in paying attention to your environment.”

“That’s not fa—.”

Snape swept closer and arched a brow at Neville. He wisely chose to shut his mouth.

Harriet smirked as she stirred her potion—and nearly jumped out of her skin when Snape leaned over to put his face closer to Elara’s. “Detention, Black,” he whispered. “Don’t let me catch you doing that again.”

Elara didn’t protest, only rolling her eyes when the dungeon bat had turned away. “Worth it,” she muttered.

“Merlin, anything to get him to shut up,” Harriet added. “D’you know he was signing autographs for the Beauxbatons witches yesterday morning?”

“Mhm.” Elara toyed with the paring knife, poking a root. “I heard Krum refuses to hand out any.”

“What, really?”

“Did you want one?”

“Not especially.” Harriet snorted. “I kind of wanted to see if he’d talk about Quidditch, but I don’t want to be mistaken for one of those bubble-headed ninnies fawning after him. Ugh.”

“Merlin forbid Harriet Potter like someone. The horror.”

“What is that supposed to mean?”

Elara didn’t answer her.

 

xXx

 

Hallowe’en arrived with great fanfare, the Hogwarts staff going out of their way to decorate as much of the castle as they could. If it impressed the visiting students, Harriet didn’t know; as it had in past years, the day remained subdued for the orphaned witch. Thoughts of her parents and what might have been never seemed far away.

Remus canceled his morning class with the fourth-year Hufflepuffs and Slytherins so he could take Harriet to Grimmauld Place. From there, they gathered Sirius and went to Godric’s Hollow.

“Your house used to be there,” Sirius said, pointing out an empty lot of browning grass. “I didn’t know they tore it down, though I imagine the deed to the property is in your vault.”

Harriet didn’t want to think about that. Should she be upset they demolished her childhood home? The house where her parents were brutally murdered? Maybe. The thought felt like another droplet into the stirring waters of her old, tired grief. Just another fact she’d never really understand what to do with.

They visited the graveyard and left white carnations on the marker her parents shared. Harriet stood there for a long while, listening to the soft noises of the sleepy village going about their day, Sirius’ hand on her shoulder. Then, he and Remus started to share remembrances about her parents—mostly her dad—and Harriet felt lighter hearing the old stories.

Then, Sirius brought up the Potions Master.

“You know, your father and Snivellus used to hate one another,” Sirius told her apropos of nothing as they walked toward the Apparition point. Harriet turned to look at him.

“Really?”

“Yeah. They competed for the top place in most of our classes. ‘Course, Snape never had a shot at being Head Boy, loathsome git that he is, and everyone always thought he was soft on your mum. We used to prank the bastard like mad.”

“You did—what?”

“Just a spot of mischief. We once pantsed him down by the lake with his own spell. The school talked about that for years afterward.” Harriet’s dawning horror showed, and Sirius backtracked. “He was being a right foul cretin, mind. Deserved everything he got. He called your mother a—.”

Sirius might have said more, but he glanced toward Remus and saw the dark, foreboding expression on the other wizard’s face. He fell silent.

They returned to Grimmauld Place, then left through the Floo to Remus’ office at Hogwarts. He called Harriet back before she could depart to share a cup of tea, and they sat at the sofa by the window, drinking Earl Grey brought by a helpful house-elf.

“What Sirius spoke of—the things we used to do to Snape—were wrong,” Remus said as he studied his tea and exhaled. Weariness deepened the gentle lines of his face, and the sunlight coming through the glass at their back caught the edges of his scars. “He was by no means a pleasant fellow, but that doesn’t excuse our pranks. Our…harassment.”

“Why did you do it, then?”

“I can’t speak for James or for Sirius, really. I can speculate that Sirius was maybe jealous of Snape’s ability with magic—or, being from a family that never taught him any better, he simply disliked Snape for his appearance and his attitude. Maybe I shouldn’t mention this, but Severus was rather…poor, then. It was reflected in his clothes and his hygiene.”

An uncomfortable moment passed in which Remus sipped his tea and Harriet pretended to do the same. She knew Sirius and Snape hated one another, obviously. She should have realized the same would be true of her dad.

“I think James was simply jealous of Snape’s friendship with your mother. Oh—did you know they were friends? I am not sure Severus would have revealed that….”

“I know,” Harriet said, ignoring the lurch of feeling that came with the memory of confronting the Potions Master with the same information. The Dark Mark flickered behind her eyelids.

“James was sweet on Lily even from our first year. Beautiful and brilliant, Lily was. No one could figure out what she saw in Snape or why they remained such close friends for so long….”

Remus trailed off, and Harriet considered the strange puzzle that was Severus Snape and Lily Evans. She didn’t know much of her mum, obviously, but Harriet dared to guess she knew enough about Snape to say that Lily must have liked his dry wit, his determination, and his steadiness. All the things Harriet liked—used to like—about the wizard.

She scowled at her cup. She decided her mother was a nutter.

“As for myself, I don’t have much of an excuse to give. Severus was intent upon discovering where I disappeared to once a month, and it…frightened me. I lashed out, or I didn’t stop James or Sirius—or other Gryffindors—from tormenting him. Some part of me knew it was wrong, but it never occurred to me how wrong until it was almost too late.” Remus set his cup back in its saucer on the narrow coffee table. “I simply don’t want you to think that James would condone what Sirius said were he alive with us today.”

“He wouldn’t?”

“No. He wouldn’t. He and Severus were on their way toward reconciling their differences by the time James passed on. Or, I should say, some of their differences.” Remus smiled and reached out to pat Harriet’s arm. “I want you to know that though James may have made questionable choices in his youth, he was—. He devoted all of his energy to being better. He wanted to be someone you and your mother could be proud of.”

The sunlight rippled in Harriet’s drink. Amber streaks glittered on the rim, and she stared at them as she recalled James Potter’s voice telling Lily to run at the cost of his own life.

Go, I’ll hold him off!

She didn’t think she could ever ask anything more from her father.

The rest of Harriet’s day lacked the same cloud of sadness that encumbered her morning, thinking instead about what kind of people her parents might have been, and what Remus meant by ‘until it was almost too late.’ She pictured Sirius and how his mouth twisted around the word ‘Snivellus.’

Would her dad and godfather have hated her because she grew up neglected and unloved with ugly hair and glasses? Because she was a Slytherin? Would they have picked on her because she wasn’t like Petunia Squabs or other, normal witches?

It reminded her of running from Dudley’s game of Harry Hunting. Of how he’d tell their teachers or the Dursleys it was only “a spot of fun,” or “a silly prank,” while Harriet stood to the side with bloodied knees, a scratched face, and broken glasses.

“Are you coming, Harriet?” Hermione asked, and Harriet blinked, realizing she’d stopped in the middle of the Transfiguration corridor, staring at nothing. Their last class of the day had gotten out moments before. “The Feast is starting soon.”

“I’m coming, I’m coming.”

“You’ve been off since this morning. Do you…do you want to skip dinner? I’m sure we could ask Mably or Dobby if they’d be willing to get us food for the common room….”

“Nah, I’m fine. I always have a lot on my mind when it’s Hallowe’en.”

Whether or not the excuse truly placated Hermione, they nonetheless continued to the Great Hall. The smell of food already drifted from inside—pumpkin and cider, woodsmoke something sweet like honey or burnt sugar. The House tables had been removed in favor of smaller, circular tables scattered about the room, huddled under Conjured chandeliers floating in mid-air. Living bats swept about the rafters, and jack-o-lanterns the size of cars bordered the open doors.

In the middle of it all, on a raised dais, the Goblet of Fire waited.

“Hey, you three!” Ginny Weasley waved from a mostly empty table near the front of the Hall, away from the High Table and the Goblet. “Over here!”

“Oh, brilliant,” Harriet said as they made their way to her and Luna. “Thanks, Ginny.”

“This must be another Dumbledore’s efforts to make us all mingle,” Elara commented with a gesture at the table. “I don’t believe it will work as he thinks it is.”

More and more people began to filter into the hall, cheering and greeting their friends. Despite Elara’s words, many of the Durmstrang and Beauxbatons visitors found themselves sitting with Hogwarts students, and they didn’t look entirely put out by it.

“Oi, let me run our bags down to the dormitory. There’s not enough room for them,” Harriet said, popping onto her feet to throw her own satchel over her shoulder. Elara handed hers over, then Hermione—Harriet grunting under the unexpected weight. “Save me a seat, please.”

“I will,” Elara said.

“Be back in a tick.”

Staggering for a moment, Harriet mustered her strength and hurried from the Great Hall before it became too crowded. She broke into a light jog once she reached the dungeon steps, and when she made it to the Slytherin dormitories, she didn’t stop to sort out their bags. Instead, she dropped all three on her bed before departing.

It was on the top step above the dungeons, just outside of the foyer’s welcoming light, that Harriet felt eyes resting upon her person. She paused to look around—and froze when she met the red-eyed gaze of the Minister for Magic.

He appeared much as he had when Harriet last saw the wizard: pale, sinister, dressed in high-collared, emerald green robes with the golden buttons gleaming. A small smile unfurled on his lips when he realized Harriet had spotted him, and he approached. Harriet considered running for the dormitories, but she remained still.

There’s people right there, she reassured herself, watching the mix of students and adults cross the foyer toward the Great Hall. He can’t do anything. Not here, not at Hogwarts—.

“Miss Potter,” Gaunt greeted. “How nice to see you again.”

“Minister,” Harriet acknowledged, her eyes never rising above the notch of his collar. She eyed the door to the Great Hall. It wasn’t far, but she would have to pass perilously close to him, even if she ran. She didn’t think it was wise to run from the Minister for Magic in public either.

“You’re a very difficult witch to find,” Gaunt said, tipping his head to the side. “It’s almost as if you have something to hide.”

“Erm….”

A pair of hands landed on her shoulders, and Harriet flinched—then flinched again when she peeked behind herself and discovered Professor Slytherin smiling at her. It wasn’t a kind smile. Not in the slightest.

“I see you’ve met Miss Potter, Marvolo,” Professor Slytherin said, his fingers squeezing Harriet almost to the point of pain. “One of my more promising students, who I hope you aren’t thinking of poaching for the Ministry.”

“I wouldn’t dream of it.”

“Excellent. Then you’ve no need to bother her. Have you lost your way to the Great Hall?”

Gaunt’s smug grin had dissolved when Slytherin appeared from the dungeons, and their red eyes met somewhere above Harriet’s head. The enmity thickened in the air, a cold, leaching miasma. “Tom,” he acknowledged with a derisive, sharp tone. “I was only having a word with your student.”

“Hmm, interesting,” Slytherin replied as if it were anything but. He leaned into Harriet, putting his face closer to her ear. It was surreal how he didn’t seem quite so tall as he had in years passed. “Go find your little friends, Potter. Get out of my sight.”

His hands released her, and Harriet did as told. Head down, she darted for the Great Hall’s open doors, and ignored how Minister Gaunt tracked the motion, how his hand twitched against the darker fabric of his robes as if to reach out and stop her. Whatever he meant to do, Harriet didn’t know, as she ran for it and didn’t stop even when she plowed through a group of first-year Hufflepuffs.

“Miss Potter!” Professor Sprout chided. “Do watch where you’re going there!”

“Sorry, ma’am!”

Harriet didn’t turn around or pause until she once more reached the table with her friends, all but throwing herself into the vacant seat. Much to her surprise, it was the only vacant seat, their once quiet corner now crowded by familiar and unfamiliar faces.

“Where did this lot come from?” she asked Hermione once her heart slowed down. Next to the other witch sat Terry and Anthony Goldstein, and next to them was a sullen Draco, plus Crabbe and Goyle having a good laugh at his expense. Ginny and Luna sat by Elara, and on their other side were Fred and George and their friend Lee Jordan. Across from Harriet was Viktor Krum, of all people, and one of his friends. With him came a flood of twittering girls who made excuses to pass by the table.

“I guess they had nowhere else to sit,” Hermione said with a slight shrug. “Though I do wish they’d stop with the giggling. Goodness.”

As if he’d heard them speaking of him, Krum stopped brooding long enough to glance up at Harriet. He noticed her attention and smiled, which startled a reciprocating grin from her, though it felt more like a grimace on her tired face. Harriet quickly looked away.

“I ran into the Minister,” Harriet murmured for Elara’s hearing. As expected, the other witch almost dropped her cup of evening tea in alarm. “He startled me by the dungeon steps. Slytherin came along and got me out of it.”

“Well, never let it be said the slithering fiend wasn’t good for something,” Elara grumbled, returning to her tea. “I imagine Gaunt’s here for the Goblet ceremony.”

“Yeah, I forgot he might show up.”

Eventually, the hall filled to capacity, and Dumbledore rose from his accustomed seat to introduce the feast. He also introduced Gaunt—seated on the far side of the High Table from Slytherin—and a man Harriet recognized from the Headmaster’s Pensieve, Barty Crouch.

Unbidden, her eyes snapped to Snape seated by Slytherin. The Potions Master appeared bored, but he didn’t once look in Gaunt or Crouch’s direction.

“Fred, George—is that your brother?” she asked the twins, indicating the bespectacled redhead seated at the very end of the table by Crouch.

“That’s him,” Fred said with a nod. “He landed an internship with Crouch in International Magical Cooperation.”

George added, “The old bigoted tosser doesn’t even know Perce’s name. Keeps calling him ‘Weatherby.’ Percy hasn’t corrected him yet.”

Harriet shook her head.

The feast commenced, platters of scrumptious food and a plethora of sweets rolling across the tables, though the day’s events had stunted Harriet’s appetite. She couldn’t bring herself to drink or eat much when she knew Gaunt’s attention kept landing in their far corner of the hall.

Fred and George distracted her with conversation about their newest experiments and inventions, prototypes and ideas they wanted to develop with Harriet’s investment. They also told her about their experience with Dumbledore’s Age Line.

“We brewed an Aging Potion,” George explained, winking at Ginny’s disapproving scoff. “We’re a few months out from being of age, so we only needed a small sip.”

“It was bollocks.” Fred stabbed his pot roast, frowning. “We stepped over the Line and got thrown out instantly.”

“Don’t forget the beards, Freddie. Pomfrey spent hours spelling those off of us. We looked like Dumbledore for half a day.”

Harriet found the story hilarious, but Hermione was less impressed. “That’s what you get for underestimating the Headmaster,” she said. “He would have taken an Aging Potion into consideration. It’s not a difficult brew.”

“Lighten up, Granger.”

“Dumbledore had a good laugh. He came down to watch a few of our other, err, less than successful attempts. I think him and McGonagall were taking bets over whether or not we’d figure it out.”

It felt good to laugh after such a stressful day.

When the food dwindled and the last sweets disappeared from their trays, Professor Dumbledore stood again and vanished the remnants. He approached the dais holding the Goblet and, gilded in the wavering blue light, he appeared like a wizard out of the Muggle storybooks.

“It is time,” Dumbledore said, the Great Hall falling silent as they watched with bated breath and the Goblet’s flames built higher around its rim. “When each of our three champions are chosen, they will rise and venture into the chamber beyond the hall.” He indicated a door behind the High Table that had always been closed in Harriet’s recollections. It now stood open to the Trophy Room.

He snapped his fingers once, and magic rippled, dimming the floating candles and golden chandeliers. The Goblet glowed brighter, the whole of the hall thrown into its cold, haunting illumination. Bats chittered overhead, impatient feet shuffling on the floor.

Suddenly, the blue flames swelled into white, and Harriet blinked against the searing light. She missed when the first contestant came from the Goblet, as by the time she opened her eyes, Dumbledore already had the charred bit of parchment in hand.

“The champion for Durmstrang…is Viktor Krum!”

Krum rose from their table amid the rampant applause and went to the far door, showing no emotion on his stern face.

The Goblet flared again, Harriet squinting.

“The Beauxbatons champion is…Fleur Delacour!”

One of the blonde witches stood from a table filled with other Beauxbatons students. She flipped her pretty hair behind her shoulder as she departed the Great Hall.

“Who do you think it’s going to be?” Elara asked as they waited for the last champion to be announced.

“Dunno.” Harriet hadn’t paid much attention to who’d shown interest in the Goblet this past week. All she knew was if a Slytherin’s name came out, their Defense professor would be livid.

The light glared white again, and everyone held their breath as Dumbledore caught the parchment. “The Hogwarts champion…is Cedric Diggory!”

The Hufflepuffs in attendance leapt to their feet and screamed their joy as Hufflepuff’s Seeker rose, red-faced and grinning ear to ear. Harriet clapped as well; she’d always found Cedric the good sort and often ran with him on track around the lake. Better him than one of those nasty seventh-years like Squabs and her little gang.

When the applause slowed, Dumbledore raised his hand for quiet and began to speak. “Now that our contestants have been selected, they will receive further instruction concerning the upcoming tasks and what is expected of them. I hope you will all show your champions support as they endeavor—.”

The Goblet flared white yet again.

Murmurs broke out among the spectators, and a fourth piece of parchment rose from the fire. Dumbledore grabbed it as he had all the rest, though his smile had disappeared.

“What is happening?” Hermione whispered.

Harriet didn’t know. An inexplicable pall of dread came over her, and she could not look away as the Headmaster unfolded the parchment. He read what had been written there.

Neville Longbottom.”

The confused murmuring grew louder still, and it soon morphed to angry speculation and hissing as Dumbledore repeated the name, and the Boy Who Lived staggered from his seat. For once, Neville didn’t look cocky or assured. He looked stunned.

Harriet took a breath. To her, it felt as if the ghost of a grim, horrid fate had passed her by.


 

A/N: I paraphrased some of Dumbledore Goblet speech lines from canon. Typically I don ’t like to do that, but there’s only so many ways to introduce the tournament.

Chapter 180: filthy blood

Chapter Text

clxxx. filthy blood

 

“It simply isn’t possible.”

The book came closed with a harsh snap!, setting loose a cloud of ancient dust.

“Not probable in the slightest.”

The second book dropped onto the first, followed by a third and a fourth.

“It’s impossible!

Hermione huffed another harsh, irritated breath and scowled at the books as if they’d personally insulted her.

“Hermione,” Elara said across the library table, looking up from her Charms essay. “Will you kindly leave it alone?”

“No!” Hermione argued, lowering her voice when a passing Madam Pince shot them a look that could have scared the skin off a Shirvelfig. “I will not leave it alone! I want to know how he did it.”

“Can you at least let me work on this in peace?”

“You should have finished that two days ago.”

“And you should be rereading the Arithmancy chapter.” Elara sighed. “Does it really matter how Longbottom got his name in the Goblet?” she asked, tracing her thumb along the feathered edge of her quill. “It’s done. The contract is apparently inviolable, and he has to compete. That Karkaroff man tried to pull Krum in a huff, insulted or blowing smoke. Krum’s stuck in the Tournament too, according to Crouch.”

“How do you know this?”

“Wayne Hopkins in Hufflepuff. Who heard it from Cedric.”

Puzzled, Hermione nonetheless shook her head to clear her thoughts and get back to the subject at hand. “It does matter how he managed to pull it off. Listen, I know Fred and George Weasley are—.” Honestly, Hermione didn’t quite know the word to describe the irascible red-haired Gryffindor duo. She took long enough to speak that Elara supplied her own.

“Annoying?”

“Well….”

“Mean-spirited?”

“I wouldn’t go that far—.”

“Rude?”

“Yes, yes,” Hermione said, crossing her arms. She gave another testy huff that had Elara smirking toward her parchment. “Whatever else they are, the Weasley twins are quite clever with their spellwork when they put their mind to it. If they couldn’t figure out how to get past Dumbledore’s Age Line, I want to know how Longbottom—Longbottom! Of all people!—managed to do it.”

Elara gave another disinterested shrug of her shoulder, and Hermione exhaled through her nose, wishing her friend understood her desire. Longbottom was not crafty. She wouldn’t consider him stupid or untalented, but she often thought of Neville as the only student in the group who got a study guide before the test; his name—his persona—had an advantage.

She remembered reading about the Boy Who Lived in the summer before she arrived at Hogwarts. She’d mostly shut herself in her room—decadent as it’d been with the Malfoys—and studied. She’d read everything she could get her hands on, including The Rise and Fall of the Dark Arts and the many, many pages extolling Neville Longbottom. Their savior.

She recalled a single paragraph, added like a chapter footnote; “James and Lily Potter were both subjected to the Killing Curse by V— on the evening of October the 31st. V— ruined their residence with a Blasting Curse, overlooking the Potters’ daughter, who survived in the wreckage.”

Most of the books that touched upon the war never bothered to mention the Potters at all. Wasn’t it funny, how fate and history worked? How Salazar Slytherin existed in the annals as a crazed, hateful bigot, when he’d been nothing more than a man in love with a woman and his people. How Harriet Potter existed as little more than an unnamed daughter to two people caught in a madman’s crossfire, when she’s=d survived the Killing Curse not once, but twice.

So no, Longbottom was not crafty. He was not clever. He was not anything, really; a fairly unremarkable wizard, aside from his massive ego, given resources and training not available to others. Nevertheless, he’d gotten past the Goblet, which meant he’d gained the ability or information from someone—and that someone was capable of subverting Dumbledore. Hermione wanted to know who.

“Hey, Hermione! Hey, Black.”

Hermione looked around from her introspection and found Terry Boot approaching their table—specifically the chair at her side. Hermione sat straighter. Elara scoffed under her breath.

“Hello, Boot.”

“Hello, Terry,” Hermione greeted, clearing her throat when her voice wavered. “Are you having a good afternoon?”

“Yeah, good enough.” He settled his satchel on the table and slid into the chair, smiling at Hermione. It was a smile that turned Hermione’s face a delicate shade of pink and had Elara quietly cackling. That cackling cut off with a thud—Elara scowling at Hermione after catching a kick to the shin.

Meanwhile, Terry studied the spines of the books Hermione had grabbed, opening the top one to the title page. Terry—unlike Longbottom—was clever, and so he needed no further coaching to put two and two together.

“Trying to figure out how Longbottom got past the Age Line?” he asked. Hermione blushed again and wished her face would stop doing that. It was ridiculous.

“Yes,” she said, eying Terry. She wondered if he’d think her silly too.

“You know, he says he didn’t enter. He says he thinks someone else entered him who wants to see him compete. Naturally, he said it in a bit more…high-handed manner.”

“Really?”

“Really. But I’m not certain he’s telling the truth.” Terry leaned closer in that universal gesture of having something interesting to say, and Hermione reciprocated. “In History of Magic, him and Weasley weren’t sitting together. And I heard from Seamus that Ron got angry about Neville not telling him how he entered.” Terry leaned back again, though he propped his arm over the top of Hermione’s chair, still facing her. “Anthony and I talked about it, and Padma heard from Parvati in Gryffindor that Longbottom seems to be playing both sides. He wants to be the victim who had no choice and the clever clogs who got past Dumbledore.”

“Well, that doesn’t clear anything up at all,” Hermione muttered.

“And the Hogwarts gossip mill continues to grind us all to dust,” came Elara’s droll response. She punctuated her statement with a sharp flick of her quill across her parchment.

“Not much on gossip, Black?”

“No.”

“Come on. Everyone likes to hear about a rumor now and again. I bet you gossip just as much as the rest of us.”

Elara rolled her eyes. “I don’t gossip. I gather information.”

“Mhm,” Terry said as if this very much proved his point. Hermione couldn’t disagree with him, though the “information” Elara gathered proved true more often than not.

Elara levied Terry a blank look. “Will you two desist in your flirting and let me finish this essay?”

Hermione immediately sucked in a funny breath and swallowed wrong, resulting in her choking on her saliva. “Flirting?!”

Shhh!” Madam Pince hissed from the stacks.

Terry’s cheeks pinked, but he told Elara, “Fine, we will, if you’re going to be such a curmudgeon,” and stood. “Would you like help putting away your books, Hermione?”

For her part, Hermione’s heart leaped to her throat, and she swore to Merlin she was going to hex all of Elara Black’s socks chartreuse when she got back to the dorms. Instead of answering, she nodded and returned Terry’s bashful grin. They both grabbed a stack of dusty old tomes.

She pointedly ignored Elara’s murmured, “Finally,” as they left.

“Merlin, she’s prickly,” Terry said as they walked. They both did an awkward half-step, jostling the books. Hermione felt hyper-aware of how their elbows brushed. “I find it hard to believe you’re friends. Oh—not that I dislike Black! You’re just…a lot warmer than she is.”

“Elara’s lovely when she wants to be. I’m incredibly lucky to have her in my life.” Hermione paused to take one book and slide it back on the proper shelf. “She’s just being difficult because she put off her Charms essay so long. Her and Harriet got into a row about Harriet stealing clean jumpers from Elara’s trunk and—well, anyway.” She cleared her thoat. “You think Neville’s lying about entering the Tournament? Or that he did enter?”

“I’m not sure. Neville—I know he’s the Boy Who Lived, and he’s a good fellow, but I…sometimes he seems so full of it, doesn’t it?” Terry lowered his voice to a whisper so as to not be overheard. Though many Slytherin spoke poorly of Longbottom, the predominant sentiment in Hogwarts and the Wizarding world at large was pro-Boy Who Lived. “He’s been telling his friends and the Headmaster he didn’t enter, all while winking at others about how someone must be eager to see him win the Tournament.”

Hermione didn’t suppress her eye roll.

“I would say…hmm. I think he doesn’t know what’s going on any more than the rest of us.”

He returned one of the books, and Hermione handed him another to put next to it. “But who would enter him?” she wondered aloud. “I don’t believe his ridiculous suggestion for an instant about it being a fan or such rot. It had to be someone who could get past the Age Line.”

“What about one of the older students? He’s friends with the seventh-year Gryffindors.”

“Yes, but you forget that he’s not simply the Hogwarts champion; he’s a fourth champion. The Goblet was tampered with. It had to be. A magical artifact that’s been used for centuries doesn’t just suddenly decide a school need an extra competitor.”

“It’s quite old, Hermione. Perhaps the Charms have gone off.”

“No, I don’t think so. I’m sure Dumbledore—and the Ministry, for that matter—would have checked the Charms beforehand, lest they look foolish in front of the foreign dignitaries.” She tapped her chin in thought. “The person might have confused the Cup into believing there were two Hogwarts champions, and Neville’s name appearing is a fluke. That’s quite a coincidence, though. Hmm.”

She remained quiet as she and Terry dispensed with the last of the books she’d borrowed. Worthless, the lot of them. “Or…they confused the Cup into thinking there was a fourth school and entered Neville as the only name under it. That way, he was guaranteed to be chosen.”

“But why would someone do that?”

“I’m not sure.”

As she considered that train of thought, and Terry seemed to waffle over something he wished to say, a group at the end of the aisle they passed caught Hermione’s attention. She paused—then grabbed Terry by the arm so they could both hide by the shelf and peer around the corner.

“Look at that,” she whispered.

“What am I supposed to be seeing?”

“That!”

Terry leaned and craned his neck, bemused. “What? Potter?”

“Yes!”

Harriet stood by the shelf with her satchel hanging off her shoulder as if she’d been on her way to meeting them and had been waylaid. A dozen short heads surrounded her, small hands holding up scribbled parchments or asking for directions to reference material or other questions. Harriet did her best to answer them, all the while looking wide-eyed and baffled by the attention.

“It’s uncanny,” Hermione said as she watched her best friend. “They’ve been following her, asking for help in every subject—from Slytherin mostly, but Ravenclaws too, and Hufflepuffs. She’s like a mother duck accruing very irritating and inconvenient ducklings.”

Terry snorted and tried to hide his laugh in his hand. “For tutoring? I didn’t know Potter offered tutoring.”

“Well, not officially. She’s much more accomplished than she’d let you think, especially with past content.” A shadow of disbelief flickered through Terry’s face, and Hermione raised a brow in challenge. “Really. She’s very knowledgeable.”

“I’m not doubting it.” Terry fidgeted with his sleeves, and Hermione stared at the knot of his Ravenclaw tie, clearing her throat. “As interesting as it is that Potter’s adopted a flock, I, um, wanted to ask you something. Would you—?”

Terry cut himself off, blinking.

“What is it?”

“Is—is that the Minister?”

Hermione whipped herself around to find the Minister for Magic in all his horrid, refined glory standing in the Hogwarts library.

What on earth is he doing here?!

She nearly toppled into Terry and was certain he received a face-full of hair when she flipped her rampant curls back over her shoulder. Hermione stiffened her spine.

Harriet was still fending off the first and second years, her voice just barely audible.

The Minister would never lower himself to slink, but Hermione thought it an apt word for how he made his way down the wide aisle separating the stacks. He kept his hands behind his back and surveyed the tables, absent his entourage or anything that would mark as other than another staff member at a glance. Busy with their schoolwork, no one seemed to notice him.

“Minister Gaunt!” Hermione greeted—her voice loud, resounding in the usual quiet of the library. Gaunt whipped his head around and glared at her with frank frustration while Madam Pince came darting out of the archives in high dudgeon. The old witch spotted the Minister and blinked.

Hermione peered from the corner of her eye toward the group of murmuring children crowding the far end of the shelves, away from Gaunt’s point of view. Harriet had dashed for the doors.

“Minister Gaunt, excuse my outburst. It’s nice to see you again,” Hermione told the wizard with the widest, most fake smile she could muster. Terry stood next to her, suddenly uncertain with Gaunt’s attention solely fixed on Hermione.

“Miss Granger,” Gaunt said as he approached. “There’s no need to make a scene. How pleasant it is to meet once more.”

“I didn’t know you’d be at Hogwarts today, sir. The Headmaster made no mention of it.” She opened her eyes wide, pretending faux-guile. “I’m sure it was only an oversight on his part.”

Why was he here? Several days had passed since the announcement on Hallowe’en, and so Hermione guessed Gaunt meant to use the Tournament to meddle as much as humanly possible. It made for a perfect guise to get onto the school’s grounds.

To see Harriet? To get closer to her? To observe?

“Of course. Or it could be the fault of my Undersecretary. He’s terribly overworked, you see. It makes poor Fudge…nervous.” Gaunt’s lips flattened as he pursed them and smiled. “It is an unfortunate side effect of my work that I often make people nervous.”

There was a threat there of some sort, though Hermione didn’t know the extent of it. Maybe he only meant to menace; he certainly did that well. Sweat beaded on the back of her neck despite the relative chill in the drafty library.

“I imagine it’s a trying career, being Minister. Very demanding.” Hermione nodded along with her own words. “Especially in the wake of the Dark Lord, right on the heels of Grindelwald’s uprising. I doubt anyone would blame you for wishing to retire and get away from the stress.”

Terry flinched. He didn’t have any context to this conversation, but even he could recognize how borderline improper Hermione’s comment had been. “Hermione….”

She nudged his shoe.

By now, Gaunt stood barely a foot from them, and what measure of courage Hermione had summoned to shout his name and notify Harriet of his presence had flagged. His blood-red eyes glinted in the candlelight, ghastly and cold, his expression unvexed and untried. He was a man of confidence—a man looking upon a little girl he could crush under his heel.

Hermione refused to yield.

“Ah…you would do very well in the Ministry, Miss Granger,” he softly said. Gaunt leaned forward and added in an undertone, “It’s a shame about your filthy blood.”

Hermione didn’t react as the wizard swept away in an elegant swish of emerald green and expensive cologne. Instead, she grit her teeth and swallowed the need to retort. Nothing would come of it.

Nobody believes nasty little Mudbloods anyway.

Terry had watched the Minister leave, and he turned back to Hermione, confused. “What did he say? I didn’t quite catch it.”

“Nothing,” she replied. “Nothing important.”

Was it possible Gaunt had entered Neville’s name? When would he have had the chance, and to what end? The incident had not reflected well on the Gaunt administration, especially in the Department of Magical Games. They appeared incompetent at best, dishonest at worst.

“Hermione?”

If not Gaunt, then perhaps…Voldemort? The Triwizard Tournament was notorious for danger in the past, and many champions had died during the trials. Perhaps this was another frankly elaborate attempt on Neville’s life.

“Err…Hermione…?”

But then, how would he have managed it? It wasn’t as if the Dark Lord could stroll through the front gates and pop a little curse on the Goblet of Fire in the middle of the entrance hall.

“Sorry, Terry. What were you saying?”

Terry shifted his weight from one foot to the other, his face red again. “I wanted to ask if, well, you’d like to go to Hogsmeade some time? With me, I mean. Just us.”

All thoughts of Dark Lords and muddled Goblets and fake boy saviors left Hermione as her heart slammed into her sternum. A tingle seemed to spread from her toes to the top of her head. “Really?” she asked, biting her lip.

A bashful smile turned Terry’s mouth up as he nodded.

“I…I would like that, yes. I would love to go.”

“Good.”

He reached out, hesitated, then touched her hand. Terry’s fingers curled over it for half a moment—and then Madam Pince, who’d watched the debacle with the Minister, cleared her throat. Terry snatched his hand back.

“I should be off. Anthony probably thinks I got lost,” he said, scratching his cheek. He had a single dimple when he smiled, his mouth hitching slightly higher on one side, and Hermione didn’t know why it fascinated her so. “I’ll see you around?”

“See you.”

She watched him leave—one backward glance over his shoulder that sent flutters through her middle. Hermione kindly told the butterflies in her stomach to stop being silly, and took a deep, centering breath. She told herself to return to the table and concentrate on her schoolwork.

Still, Hermione waited until Terry vanished from sight before she left.

Chapter 181: wing and claw

Chapter Text

clxxxi. wing and claw

 

As the days of November tricked by, Minister Gaunt continued to make several visits to the school, which was quite unfortunate for Harriet. She formed the habit of keeping the Argonaut’s Atlas close at hand—which meant leaving her necklace of bones out for others to see. Harriet earned more than her fair share of strange looks and funny murmurs.

For the most part, Harriet kept to the common room. She read novels, worked on schoolwork, or spent long hours worrying about what nonsense Professor Slytherin was devising for his prospective apprentice. She read over the younger students’ essays for the sheer want of something productive to do.

Classes intensified slowly but surely in preparation for the exams at the end of term. Their professors had begun to make noise about the OWLs, impressing upon them the importance of scoring well on the tests at the end of their fifth year, as it directly affected their future choices and careers.

That all seemed so very far away to Harriet.

She had more free time than her friends, considering she only had Care of Magical Creatures and Ancient Runes for electives and had the good sense not to take the beast that was Arithmancy. What free time Hermione did have she spent making eyes at Terry Boot from Ravenclaw like a smitten Mooncalf.

“I do not,” she’d snapped when Harriet pointed it out. “Don’t be ridiculous.”

Ridiculous or not, Hermione did claim she and Terry had decided to go to Hogsmeade together when the next trip arrived.

Elara, meanwhile, had been in a mood, especially when those witches from Beauxbatons flounced by their table. She grumped and growled and even snapped at Harriet, which wasn’t wholly outside of the usual, except all Harriet had done was ask if she was all right.

So, while her friends spent what little recreational time they had mooning or brooding, Harriet spent hers worrying about Professor Slytherin or helping younger students with their homework. Some days, Harriet wandered outside and ran on the track, now void of Quidditch players due to the postponed season. Sometimes she visited with Hagrid and had tea or helped him in his garden.

Today was such a day, Harriet kneeling by the half-giant’s vegetable patch, spreading manure and soil over spring roots to insulate them for the winter. She wouldn’t say this was her preferred way to spend an afternoon, but the highlands had few pleasant days left, and she liked the sunshine. It felt nice. Uncomplicated.

“That there’s a new plant I got off a Niffler breeder in Cornwall. Helped him out with problem and he was grateful,” Hagrid said as he used his trowel to bury the peculiar roots. “Camelot Kale. Grows as big as a ‘orse, and the Threstral herd will love ‘em when foaling season starts again. It’s a good supplement for ‘em.”

Harriet scraped muck from her dragonhide gloves. “Can people eat it too?”

“Wouldn’t recommend it. It’s bitter as vinegar and the leaves have a fleshy texture.”

Scrunching her face, Harriet continued to spread the manure, then sat back with an exhale. She could see fat birds perched on the edge of Hagrid’s hut, looking down into the garden, speculating when they could come and scavenge. Their beady eyes watched Harriet’s every move.

“How’s Hermione and Elara? They haven’t stopped in for a visit in a while.”

Harriet complained for a bit about homework and classes and her friends being silly. She grumbled about Hermione spending her free time with the Ravenclaws and Elara being unconscionably grumpy while creating issues with Sirius back home. Harriet’s godfather made several requests for her to nag Elara into taking his correspondence while Elara cooly replied she’d write to Sirius when she needed to. Harriet felt like an owl flitting between the two in their bizarre, passive-aggressive game.

“Sirius was always a good lad,” Hagrid said as he shoveled soil into pots bigger than Harriet was tall. “But I can’t imagine he’s all there in the ‘ead after all those years in Azkaban. Nasty place, Harry. Don’t know a single witch or wizard who wasn’t a bit funny after spending time there, no disrespect intended, ‘course.”

Harriet looked up at Hagrid and shaded her eyes against the sunlight. “D’you know Sirius well when he was a student?”

“Oh, as well as I ever get to know the students who try to sneak off to the Forest.” Hagrid huffed under his breath as if lost in memory. “Him and James and Pr’fessor Lupin used to break into the broom shed and give themselves free run of the grounds. It felt like a full-time job just keeping that lot from flying off after lessons.”

He hadn’t mentioned Pettigrew, and Harriet thought that a deliberate choice. Remus and Sirius often chose to omit the rat from their old stories, and she guessed anyone who knew them from their schooldays would do the same.

Thinking of Sirius as a teenager reminded her of the conversation they’d had on Hallowe’en.

“Hagrid? Did you know Professor Snape as a student?”

“‘Course I did. Bit of an unfriendly mite, but he always came around looking to learn about the creatures what went into his potions. Didn’t get along at all with the boys in Gryffindor there, especially your dad.” Hagrid suddenly clammed up, rubbing a rueful hand through his beard. “Probably shouldna said that….”

Harriet stood and knocked muck from her trousers and stripped off her gloves. “You haven’t said anything I didn’t already know, Hagrid. It’s okay.”

The more she learned about her parents—James in particular—the more Harriet wondered how much of their memory had been lightened by their tragic deaths, and if the people who remembered them only saw James and Lily through rose-colored glasses. As she got older, she realized people had a lot of depth to them, whether for good or for bad, and it made her feel…conflicted. As if she’d never really ever know her parents, not even through stories.

A commotion drew Harriet’s attention over the fence and across the grounds toward the path leading from the lake. The high-pitched giggling heralded the appearance of Viktor Krum jogging on the track, trailed by a group of witches doing a terrible job of being inconspicuous. He trudged along at a steady clip and paid his entourage no mind. His path took him from the lake and upward toward the castle itself, right by Hagrid’s hut.

Harriet watched him run past. As he did so, the Quidditch star turned his head in her direction and winked.

Confused, Harriet glanced up at Hagrid, who had paused in his work to watch as well. The giggling witches were doing a lot less giggling as they tried to keep up with Krum on the incline. They huffed and wheezed the entire way.

“Why’s Krum winking at you?” Harriet asked.

Hagrid shook his head and guffawed.

“What?”

The guffawing increased, and Hagrid patted Harriet on the back. The force sent her toppling into the garden bed’s freshly laid manure.

She still didn’t understand what was funny.

When the bell rang, Harriet stepped into the hut to wash her hands and grab her satchel, then bid Hagrid goodbye as she headed inside for lunch. She crossed the sweeping lawn, the grass beginning to brown for the approaching winter, and started up the wide steps to the entrance hall. She had only just entered the doors when she spotted Luna Lovegood standing by herself, seemingly lost in thought.

“Hey, Luna,” Harriet greeted her. “Whatcha doing?”

“Hello.” Luna blinked and focused, tucking the long strands of her pale hair behind her ears. “I was looking for my shoes.”

Only then did Harriet glance down and notice Luna’s bare feet on the flagstones.

“What do you mean you’re looking for your shoes? Where did they go?”

“They have a habit of disappearing. Between you and me, I think Nargles are responsible.”

“Nar—?” Harriet stuttered, still peering at Luna’s bare toes. Initially, she wondered if there was some heretofore unknown creature going around nicking trainers and if she should be worried about her own footwear, but then she understood the most likely culprit was probably far less mythical. “Oh.”

Harriet pulled her wand out and performed a Summoning Charm with frustrated fervor. A clatter somewhere from the direction of the main stair vault sounded, then two pairs of shoes with the laces tied in a knot came flying at her, Harriet holding up her arms to cover her head. They bounced off of her and hit the ground.

“There we are,” she said, breathless, picking one up. “D’you want me to show you a spell I know? I think it’ll keep the, um, Nargles off your things.”

“Could you?”

Harriet handed the shoe over and, disregarding the smell of lunch drifting from the Great Hall, taught Luna the same hex she used to dissuade anyone with sticky fingers from touching her trunk. Luna stuck a pair on her feet—sans socks—with a pleasant hum when finished.

“That’s much better. Thank you, Harriet.”

“You’re welcome.” She questioned if she should have a word with Boot or Goldstein about the Ravenclaws nicking Luna’s things. She couldn’t be sure it wouldn’t backfire and make the issue worse if she stuck her nose in it.

Luna picked up her second pair of brogues and suddenly looked at Harriet as if she hadn’t realized she was there before. “Do you want to help me with a project after curfew? Daddy wants me to ask the Merpeople about sightings of Nessie in the highlands for his paper.”

“Nessie? Doesn’t, err, Nessie live in the Loch Ness?”

“Well, everyone needs a vacation.”

Harriet wasn’t a hundred percent certain what Luna meant by that, and yet she decided not to question her further on it. “You can’t talk to them during Care of Magical Creatures?”

“Not during this time of the year.”

Oh, that was right. Harriet remembered the Merpeople only came up to the shore to help the class in the spring, otherwise they stuck to deeper waters during the day. Once winter set in, they wouldn’t come to the surface at all.

Despite knowing Hermione and Elara would have kittens if they knew what she was agreeing to, Harriet told Luna, “All right. That shouldn’t be a problem.” She could use her Invisibility Cloak and the Atlas if needed. “Though, if we get caught out by Snape, I don’t think either of us will see daylight ever again…”

 

xXx

 

Luna and Harriet set a time to meet after dinner before curfew, and they wandered out into the grounds before night set in and any professors could order them inside. They sat by the lakeshore on a sheltered outcropping of rocks and shared bacon butties scavenged from the Great Hall, chatting about classes and Luna’s life outside Hogwarts as the sky darkened.

“So why doesn’t the Quibbler do articles like the Prophet? I mean, stuff on news and events, not the rubbish made-up stories they use as filler,” Harriet asked, picking at the hard crust of her sandwich. “It’d be nice to read something that isn’t fake all the time.” Or controlled by Gaunt’s Ministry. Though, could she really vouch for the Quibbler’s authenticity? Xenophilius did write some rather odd pieces.

“Daddy’s considering it,” Luna admitted with a sage nod. “He’s experimenting with articles about unexplained disappearances and deaths in Muggle towns. There’s been quite a few in the smaller villages of Yorkshire, you know. A few bits and pieces of the missing people have turned up, but nothing more. How curious.”

Harriet grimaced at the imagery. “D’you think that has anything to do with magic?”

“Maybe. Daddy thinks it could be vampires, or a new type of magical sickness that the Ministry is covering up. He needs more evidence before writing anything up.”

Their conversation turned to lighter topics until one of the Merpeople passed by, and Luna was able to stand on the pebbled shore and ask her questions. Really, speaking with the Mers meant playing a bizarre game of charades unless you were willing to dunk your head underwater, and given the cooling weather, Luna refrained. Harriet sat back on the rocks with her feet kicked out as she waited and watched the distant, lowered sails on the Durmstrang ship ripple in the breeze.

Strangely enough, as she stared at the foreign school’s floating vessel, Harriet noted movement on the shore. She blinked and leaned forward to better see around the foliage—and there she spotted Durmstrang’s Headmaster walking swiftly toward the forest. He had a nervous look about him, his shoulders high and the top of his white hair gleaming in the moonlight. He cast a furtive glance around himself as he snuck into the trees.

What is he doing?

Harriet stood and knocked the dirt from the back of her robes. She pulled her Invisibility Cloak free of her pocket as she did so, and called to Luna, “I’ll be back in a minute.”

The distracted Ravenclaw waved her off, though the Merman flicked his luminous eyes in her direction. “Okay.”

Striding toward the water, Harriet quickly shouldered the Cloak and broke into a jog along the shore, pebbles and sand crunching under her school shoes as she went. Once at the place Headmaster Karkaroff had disappeared, she slowed her stride and made sure the Cloak’s hood was in the place. She searched for the suspicious bloke and found him a few meters ahead, stumbling through the bracken and underbrush, cursing in a low, foreign tongue.

Knowing she’d more than likely regret the decision, Harriet followed him.

Why is he out here? she wondered as she took out her wand and kept it aimed at Karkaroff’s back. Surely Dumbledore warned him about the Forbidden Forest? Bloody hell, it’s called FORBIDDEN. Did he think that was just a suggestion?

Harriet didn’t have a solid reason to trail Karkaroff, but the whole debacle with the Goblet of Fire had been far too peculiar in her opinion, and because she usually became the target of peculiar things, Harriet thought it best to ensure he wasn’t up to anything nefarious.

He saw Slytherin and nearly soiled his britches, she reminded herself, fingers tightening around her wand. Nobody looks at that tosser like that unless they know who he is.

They did not travel far before voices echoed in the trees, and Harriet hesitated as the vibration of something heavy hitting the earth shook under her feet. Karkaroff paused as well, taking in a startled breath before continuing forward at greater speed. He seemed to know what he was looking for.

At first, Harriet couldn’t make sense of what she saw between the thinning trunks ahead of her. Silhouettes flickered back and forth, chased by muffled shouts and sudden gouts of flame. Something hit a tree with enough force to topple it, the ghoulish cracking of wood raising the fine hairs on the back of Harriet’s neck. She forgot about Karkaroff as she darted behind one of the bigger pines for cover and peered around it, her stomach doing somersaults in her middle.

Scales glittered in the light of the burning brush, and Harriet swallowed a yelp when one of the dragons in the clearing opened its vasts wings, leathery skin catching the air with low whumps of noise. Four dragons gathered there, surrounded by wizards and massive crates. As Harriet watched, several of the wizards aimed their wands at a dragon with a long, blue snout and struck it with several bright red beams of light. The dragon snorted out smoke before settling in the dirt.

Harriet had seen many things at Hogwarts—including a bloody Basilisk bigger than a lorry and as long as a small train—but she’d never seen something quite as fearsome as a dragon before.

“Merlin’s bones,” she breathed, fingernails digging into the tree’s bark. Karkaroff skulked through the tree and stared at one of the beasts until its head whipped about in his direction, and the Headmaster scuttled back under cover. A tail whipped out and cleaved branches.

In the shadow of one of the crates, Harriet noticed Hagrid chatting with a redheaded wizard. She studied the wizard, squinting against the glaring light—and recognized him as Charlie Weasley, whom she’d met earlier that summer at the World Cup.

“Is that—is that Madam Maxime?” Harriet spotted the woman standing behind Hagrid, looking on enraptured as another of the massive creatures was brought down into the singed grass. Hagrid laughed at something Charlie said, his booming voice carrying despite the ruckus, and Madam Maxime touched his arm. “Is this his idea of a ruddy date?”

“It would make for a thrilling outing.”

The voice spoke a few scant inches from Harriet’s ear, and she shrieked. “Ah!” Her weakened knees went out from under her, and she ended up sprawled in the dry pine needles. “Bloody hell, Luna! You scared the life out of me!”

The younger witch smiled. “Sorry. I got worried when you didn’t return, but I see you found something much more interesting to investigate.”

Harriet grumbled as she stood, tugging prickly bits of foliage off her backside. The Invisibility Cloak’s cool fabric slid against her face, and she turned on Luna. “How did you even find me?”

“Your hand was sticking out. I almost missed it, but it’s not often you see a tree with hands.”

Aforementioned hand had planted itself against the tree’s trunk for balance, and Harriet realized it must have slipped out when she touched it the first time. Careless of her. “Never mind that. Hurry, get under here before Karkaroff sees you.”

Luna slipped beneath the Cloak with her, and together they stood for several minutes in silence, watching the dragons and their handlers. One witch broke off from the group to put out the little fires that had sprung up in the scuffle. The air smelled of smoke and rotten eggs.

“I guess we know what the first task in the Triwizard Tournament will be,” Luna said.

“What do you mean?”

“Well, there’s four dragons. Four dragons, and four champions. They must be from a reservation on the continent.”

She had a point. Harriet studied the dragons again and counted them again—each a massive, winged creature wreathed in horns, fangs, and claws, the earth scorched in great swathes where their flames had escaped their mouths. The largest of the dragons still fought the wizards, and its outstretched wings almost passed the tops of the trees.

Harriet shook her head and couldn’t help but rub a hand against her brow. Large bursts of spellwork struck the dragon for a final time, and it fell. The earth rolled underfoot. “Merlin, this is mental. Let’s hope if someone has to be eaten, it’s Longbottom.”

Luna laughed.

They didn’t linger for much longer. Curfew had only passed an hour before, and if they hurried, they’d get inside before the professors started patrolling. Luna hummed the entire way back, unconcerned with the prospective trouble hanging over their heads or thoughts of the Triwizard Tournament’s dangers. Harriet thought the Ministry might really be barmy if they meant for students to face dragons. What if one of them got burnt to a crisp?

“Here, I know another spot inside,” Harriet told Luna, leading her to a place she’d found and noted on the Atlas last year. The way the short cliff abutted the castle wall made it easy to hop onto the roof and get inside through the first-floor window, though Harriet gathered it wasn’t well known because of how isolated that particular wing of the castle was, and because most witches and wizards weren’t physically inclined. Still, she found it handy, and it provided a discreet entrance into the school.

She caught Luna’s hands when the younger witch jumped and almost slipped off the roof’s edge. Harriet pulled her upright, then checked the Atlas to ensure the corridor was clear. Merlin forbid they sneak in and cross paths with Gaunt. Or Slytherin. Or Snape.

Harriet shuddered.

“Thank you for coming with me.”

“Hmm?” Harriet replied, studying the Atlas. “Oh, right. You’re welcome. I hope you got enough information for Xeno’s article.”

“He always looks forward to your letters, you know. I do too.”

Harriet pried open the rusty window and ushered Luna inside first, then followed, having to hold the Atlas in her teeth for a moment. The blue light brightened the otherwise dark corridor, and the dusty portrait of a horse in a ruff nickered at their intrusion.

Harriet spat the Atlas back into her hand. Hugh’s skull rattled against the Erkling spoon. “Right, we best be off before it gets much later. I think Slytherin puts a ward over the common room door before he goes to bed just to catch students out….”

Harriet felt a tug on her sleeve and paused to look at Luna.

“You’re a good friend.”

“Err…you too?”

Luna grinned, her wide, pale eyes peering at Harriet with an intensity that was honestly a bit startling. “It’s nice to have a friend aside from Ginny. She’s very popular. I’m not.”

“Bollocks to being popular. People don’t much like me either, Luna. It’s not a big deal.”

“You’re wrong.” Luna let go of her sleeve. “They talk about you sometimes, the Slytherins in my class.”

Harriet couldn’t have been more confused if Luna suddenly accused her of being blue and belching marshmallows. “Wh—what? What do they say? Why?”

Luna didn’t answer, persuing another tangent of thought. “My House doesn’t like me. Not after my first year.”

Harriet suddenly remembered the diadem’s image, and unease rippled in her veins, Riddle’s smarmy laughter haunting her ears. “They’re berks if they can’t forgive you for something you couldn’t control. Riddle’s a monster, and you didn’t do anything wrong. You didn’t.”

Shrugging, Luna replied, “People can’t forgive what they don’t understand,” and though she appeared unaffected, Harriet thought Luna might be sad. That didn’t sit well with her.

“Listen to me,” Harriet told her, touching her shoulder. “There are a lot of tossers in the world, and they’re always going to be tossers whether we like it or not. But I’m your friend, and so’s Ginny—and Hermione and Elara, when they’re not being prats.”

“I think she’s in love with Terry.”

“Hermione? Probably. Makes me nauseous being around the pair of them.”

Luna nodded. “Thank you, Harriet.”

“What are friends for, right?”

Footsteps sounded in the dim corridor behind them, and Harriet quickly stuffed the Atlas out of sight. The slow, unmistakably adult tread started in their direction, and Harriet and Luna exchanged one final look before making a run for it.

They didn’t mention their conversation again. If the third-year Ravenclaw girls kept getting their shoes hexed into ashes by some mysterious person for the next week, then Harriet didn’t know anything about it.

 

 

Chapter 182: sportsmanship

Chapter Text

clxxxii. sportsmanship

 

“You did what?!

Hermione’s shrill voice broke the stillness within their dormitory and earned several miffed complaints from the other witches sharing the space. Harriet winced.

“What’s your issue now, Granger?” Pansy asked from her carrel, which had been covered in little jars and sachets and vials instead of books. She had a thick beige cream spread over half her face and looked up from her glowing mirror to glare at Hermione. “Can you stop your annoying shrieking?”

“Why? Do you require total silence to apply that nonsense to your skin?” Hermione retorted, blissfully ignoring Harriet’s previous comment about trailing a stranger into the forest and stumbling upon four livid dragons. “Does noise distract your idiot brain from that insipid beauty regime?”

Pansy frowned, taken aback by Hermione’s sudden vehemence. “Where do you get off talking to me like that, you frizzy-haired bint?”

We live in this dormitory too, and you can’t dictate when and where we get to make noise!”

“The rest of us deserve peace and quiet in the evening, not a rendition of your buck-toothed cackling!”

Tempers were high tonight, though Harriet wasn’t sure what had crawled up Pansy’s nose. Daphne went to Parkinson and muttered in her ear, while Tracy and Millicent had done the clever thing and retreated to their beds, shutting the curtains. Elara had a hand fisted in the back of Hermione’s dressing gown to keep her in place, while Runcorn was halfway through painting gaudy blue lacquer on her nails, watching the spectacle with interest.

Harriet sighed. Livi poked his nose out from under her bed’s skirt, the excitement in the room gaining his interest, and Harriet knew they needed to quiet down before her serpent got too interested. Sheer luck had spared her dormmates from discovering him despite sharing quarters for nearly four years.

“All right,” she groused, pulling out her wand. Harriet was the only one still dressed in her uniform, having just sprinted through half the castle to reach the dorms and escape whichever staff member had almost caught her out. “Go back to smearing muck on your face and we’ll quiet down.”

Pansy eyed the wand, then glared at Harriet’s face. “You wouldn’t dare.”

Harriet raised a brow and gave her wand an idle twirl. It was a bluff; she didn’t need the trouble that would come along with riling Pansy and getting a prefect involved, but Pansy finally huffed and turned around. Daphne rolled her eyes and went back to the lavatory.

Harriet tossed her wand onto her bed. “Keep your voice down, Hermione, blimey. If one of those lot finds out I was out after curfew, they’ll tell Snape in an instant.”

“And what were you doing out so late?” Hermione demanded in a whisper. “You know it’s dangerous with the Minister making any excuse he can to pop by the school!”

“Let’s be honest. It’s dangerous even without that berk going around.”

From her spot sitting on the edge of Hermione’s bed, Elara said, “Take this seriously, Harriet,” and Harriet stuck out her tongue. Hermione gathered her familiar up into her arms and stroked his fur with agitated motions, Crookshanks purring like mad.

“Did you miss the bit where I told you about dragons being on the grounds? That’s much more interesting than breaking curfew.”

“Dragons,” Hermione said with a downward twist of her lips, as if she’d tasted something gross. “What are they thinking, using dragons? I thought the Ministry was intent on keeping the Tournament as safe as possible—and as safe as possible does not include dragons.”

“There was always going to be some danger involved,” Harriet said as she plopped onto her own bed, fishing Kevin out from where he attempted to hide in her pillowcase. The golem wriggled in her cupped palm, tongue flicking wildly, maybe smelling her previous proximity to the dragons in question. “But what d’you suppose the champions are meant to do? Surely they’re not going to have to kill them?”

“Oh, goodness no.” Hermione shook her head. “That would break several international laws on the protection and preservation of endangered magical species. The Department for the Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures wouldn’t allow the dragons to come to harm for a game.”

Elara blew a short breath through her lips, but if she had something scathing to say about the Ministry, she kept it to herself. “It’s probably like the stories.” When Hermione and Harriet turned to her, puzzled, she explained. “They used to let us read fairy tales in—where I was before. Well, if the stories had strong Christian allegories in them, that is. In several versions, there’d be dragons, and the main character would need to steal from its hoard.”

Hermione considered this information. Harriet, meanwhile, asked, “What’s the Christian allegory in stealing from a great ruddy lizard?”

Elara shrugged one shoulder. “The evils of greed, I suppose.”

Harriet snorted.

Not long afterward, she rose and gathered her things to use the bathroom and get ready for bed. She spent an inordinate amount of time flattening her hair, the fringe refusing to lie flat, and as she studied herself in the mirror, Harriet suddenly recalled how she’d come to find the dragons in the first place.

Of course, she hadn’t forgotten who she’d followed or seen, but she hadn’t considered the implications of their presence until now. Karkaroff and Madame Maxime had both learned about the dragons, which meant the Headmasters of both Beauxbatons and Durmstrang knew about the first task. The champions were meant to be kept in the dark about their upcoming trials—but Harriet doubted Delacour or Krum would be walking into things blind.

Really, she shouldn’t care. She had far too many more pressing concerns, including Slytherin and her first impending Animagus transformation attempt. She needed to wait for the first lightning storm of the season and concentrate on her meditations, but Harriet already felt sick to her stomach when she thought of all the ways it could go wrong. The Triwizard Tournament should be the last thing on her mind. She shouldn’t care a wit if the other schools cheated.

Still, the competition loomed like a thunderhead over Harriet’s head that evening, humming in the background of her unsettled dreams and dimming her mood in the morning. The more she thought of it, the more irritated she grew. Dumbledore wouldn’t tell anyone about the task; no, he might twist rules here and there, but Hogwarts’ Headmaster never liked handing out unfair advantages. Neither Diggory or Longbottom would have a clue what they were about to face.

Harriet stabbed her eggs with unintended gusto, startling first-year Basil Shacklebolt into slopping pumpkin juice down his front.

The task would begin tomorrow morning. Harriet scowled at her food as the owls delivered the morning post, and she flicked through her letters—one from Narcissa Malfoy, Lockhart, and Mr. Flamel, the latter dropped by his eye-catching raven. She stuffed them away in her robe pocket to sort later and cut her eyes down the table toward Victor Krum. Unfortunately, he chose that moment to lift his head, and he caught her looking.

Harriet returned her attention to her plate.

Breakfast came to an end, and Harriet gathered her satchel with the others, turning her path toward the dungeons.

“Double-Potions is always a nightmare,” Elara grumbled as she swilled the last of her tea and pulled a face at the cooling dregs. “Four hours in the frigid dungeons, listening to Snape lecture amid the most odious smelling concoctions known to man. I loathe it.”

“We’re brewing the Somnus Lucidity Draft potion today.” Hermione had a skip in her step, her eyes bright and determined. “It’s devilishly difficult, according to the text. The layering of the various liquid viscosities is going to be especially challenging. The potion is supposed to make the imbiber more receptive to portents in their sleep—not that I strictly believe that’s possible.”

Elara let out a loud, annoyed sigh. “Spare me the Divinations tirade this morning, Hermione, please. I will need what energy I have to make something even mildly acceptable today. Snape will have me in Remedial Potions on the weekends if I don’t improve my grade.”

They crossed paths with a group of Hufflepuffs, the bright yellow of one girl’s scarf catching Harriet’s eye. She stopped so quickly that Elara almost ran into her.

“What are you doing?”

“I just need a second—.”

She turned and called out to the older students. “Hey, Cedric!” They paused, and Harriet suddenly found herself the center of attention, the three seventh-year Hufflepuffs girls—including Ursula Hinde and bloody Petunia Squabs—sneering as she approached Diggory.

Cedric smiled at her, and the expression warmed his chiseled face and gray eyes. The witches at Hogwarts had always fawned over him, Harriet knew. He was handsome and friendly, a tall, marginally well-off pure-blood from a decent family who’d been Quidditch captain and did well in all his classes. A catch, really.

He’d always been kind to her when they met, most often on the track by the lake, matching pace to chat for a while as they ran. Sometimes his kindness irritated Harriet because ungrateful cows like Hinde and Squabs took advantage of it. She thought Cedric too naive for his own good.

Professor Dumbledore once told her Hufflepuffs are brave enough to be kind even when it’d be easier to hate. Harriet could understand the sentiment, but that didn’t stop her from disliking how unforgivably soft it made some people.

Hinde leaned in and whispered something in Squabs’ ear. Squabs smiled, her perfectly glossed lips twisting. “Nice shirt, Potter.”

Harriet didn’t answer her, though she did glance down for half a second. A bit of yolk speckled her blouse—most likely splattered when she stabbed her eggs. Harriet’s cheeks warmed against her wishes, and Squabs and Hinde snickered.

“Did you need something, Potter?” Cedric asked.

“Er—yeah. Can I talk to you for a moment? Alone?”

Squabs and Hinde and the third witch Harriet couldn’t recall the name of started to whisper in earnest, their eyes fixed on the side of Harriet’s face like javelins as she gestured Cedric over to an alcove several meters off. A statue once resided there, gone now, nothing remaining aside from a cracked plinth and the shadow of an old nameplate. It was private enough they wouldn’t be overheard, at least.

“Dragons,” Harriet said without preamble, peeking about to make certain no one was listening. “The first task is dragons.”

Cedric blinked, and his eyes widened as the hand holding his bag’s strap tightened. “Wh—? What do you mean, dragons? How do you know?”

“Because I’ve seen them,” Harriet stressed. She was going to be late for Potions at this rate. “They’ve got them on the grounds in the forest, keeping them sedated.”

“And how do you know they’re for the task? No one’s supposed to know beforehand.”

Harriet snorted. “Well, Krum and Delacour know. I saw Maxime and Karkaroff there. And I can’t be entirely certain they’re for the task; it’s not like I had a nice chat with the handlers, did I? But there were four of them, and do you see any other reason to import four dragons from the continent when your task is tomorrow?” Diggory didn’t appear entirely convinced, and Harriet wanted to smack the twit on the head. She might have if she weren’t so short. “Elara reckons they’re going to have you steal something from it because of the laws against harming dragons. So you’re most likely going to have to distract it or outmaneuver it—which I don’t recommend, by the way. They’re huge.”

Cedric mulled this information over, shifting his weight from one foot to the other. Eventually, he decided Harriet must be trustworthy enough to believe, as he said, “Thank you—but why tell me?”

“What do you mean, why tell you? Krum and Delacour know, of course.”

“Why not tell Longbottom?”

Harriet couldn’t help herself—she laughed. The sound earned vicious glares from the Hufflepuff witches, and Harriet’s own friends—waiting farther off—raised speculative brows.

“If Longbottom wants to strut about pretending he’s the cleverest sod in the world, and that the Goblet selected him because he’s too special to pass by, then he can find the information out for himself. I want Hogwarts to win, not Neville Longbottom.

“You’re…not a fan of his, are you?”

Harriet sniffed. “He stalked me for the better part of a year, thinking I was the Heir of Slytherin.”

Whatever Diggory thought she might say, that wasn’t it. “What? Really?” he sputtered.

“Really.” Harriet leaned to the side to peer down the corridor, fewer and fewer people lingering as class drew closer. “I need to go.”

“Right. Me too.” Cedric stepped out of the alcove and gestured for Harriet to go ahead of him. “Thanks for the info, Potter.”

“You’re welcome.”

She passed Squabs on the way back to her friends, and the older witch hissed something Harriet didn’t catch. She pretended not to care.

“What was that about?” Hermione asked with a nod toward the backs of the retreating Hufflepuffs. Harriet shrugged her shoulders.

“Oh, just having a quick chat is all.”

“No—not Cedric. I know what you were doing there. What was that between you and Petunia Squabs?”

Harriet’s mouth scrunched into a grimace. She hadn’t told her friends about her run-in with Squabs, Hinde, and Fogs, or the nasty things they’d said about her. She’d much rather try to forget it ever happened.

Nearby, Greengrass and Parkinson had stopped to see the scene unfold, and they shared knowing looks. “They probably thought you were going to ask him to the dance, Potter,” Pansy said. “That’s what we thought, anyway. I wanted to see you get rejected.”

“Get stuffed, Parkinson.” Harriet frowned at her, confused. “But what are you talking about? What dance?”

“The Yule Ball, of course.”

“That what?”

Again, Daphne and Pansy exchanged looks, flipping their glossy hair, and Harriet hoped they got told off by Snape for not tying it back. “The Yule Ball. It’s traditional for the Triwizard Tournament to include a seasonal ball that you have to attend with a date. I thought Granger already read everything there is to know about the competition.”

All eyes shifted to Hermione, who blushed and cleared her throat. “I paid more attention to the rules and laws and past tasks. There was no mention of any ball.”

Pansy’s eyes rolled. “Typical. What else did you think the dress robes were for?”

“What dress robes?”

“Our letters this summer included a dress robe requirement! Merlin, are you three dense?”

Harriet’s stomach churned like an untended cauldron, her breakfast threatening to make a reappearance. “We never read the page about the clothes! It’s the same every bloody year!”

“Hmph. This year it was different.” Pansy tossed her hair again and stuck her short nose in the air. Something like triumph glinted in her eyes, and Harriet knew she felt vindicated after their confrontation last night. “No dates, no robes. I bet you don’t even know how to dance! You’d better start thinking about it. Yule will be here before you know it, and you don’t want to be the only loser not in attendance.”

Pansy and Daphne pranced off, pleased with themselves, while Harriet and the others followed. One glance at her friends showed they wore the same grim expression she did.

Suddenly, Harriet was looking forward to the Yule holidays a lot less.

 

Chapter 183: fibbing

Chapter Text

clxxxiii. fibbing

 

Not a word was exchanged between the three witches as they sat through a very long and very complicated lecture in Potions that morning. Elara took dedicated notes—she had to, as her essays were the only component floating her dismal marks in the class—but her mind wandered as she watched Snape’s slow, methodical pacing in front of the blackboard.

Of course something as dated as the Triwizard Tournament would have a ball. It seemed the want of wizarding society to mark events with balls and dances and festivals—be it Yule or Imbolc or Ostara. It brought together witches and wizards, high in spirit and energy, a perfect time for communal casting—at least, in the old days.

Now, it was simply a ball, a chance for everyone to dress up and ask their crushes to dance.

Elara felt sick to her stomach.

Snape ended his lecture with his usual biting remark on their dearth of talent, but it mostly went unheard as stools scraped the stone floor and bodies slumped toward the ingredient cupboard. Elara didn’t move, allowing Harriet and Hermione to retrieve the items. With her luck, she’d cause a catastrophe if she touched anything.

“Bloody tournament,” Harried hissed as she slapped a slip of Erumpent skin on the table. Though much less volatile than the creature’s horn, sparks still spat from it and earned a sharp “Potter!” out of Snape from across the room. Harriet flung herself onto her seat. “Who decided we had to get dress robes?!”

“Lucinda Thomsonicle-Pocus,” Hermione said, balancing several bottles of different oils. One bottle took the chance to escape and began floating toward the ceiling, but Hermione jumped to catch it before it got too far.

Gesundheit,” Harriet snarked.

“Don’t be that way. Madam Thomsonicle-Pocus is a member of the Board of Governors and is responsible for generating and ratifying the student lists every year.” Hermione lined the bottles by their cauldron. “I guess we can write Mrs. Malfoy and see if she can assist us in finding something on a Hogsmeade weekend. Gladrags is a tad pricey, but the sooner we look, the better selection we’ll have….”

Elara noted Hermione had neatly glossed over the fact that none of them had dates, nor did she clarify if they wanted to attend this travesty. Their less than middling social clout probably demanded they go whether or not they desired to, lest they become true House pariahs. They were already considered odd; Elara didn’t want their standing to devolve into freakish anytime soon.

She closed her eyes and kneaded her brow.

“I can’t go to Hogsmeade,” Harriet said.

“What?”

“I didn’t magically gain a guardian over the summer to sign the permission slip.”

Hermione sputtered and shoved her hair aside. The curls had begun to swell already as cauldrons were set over open flames. “But what about Sirius? He’d signed mine for this year—and he’s your godfather!”

“But not my guardian. He can’t be my legal guardian without filing paperwork at the Ministry. Dumbledore says that particular office is being watched. Closely.”

“And? What does it matter; once he’s your guardian, he’s your guardian!”

“You’d think that, right?” Harriet looked around and, noticing Finnigan and Thomas at the table behind them were trying to listen in on their conversation, lowered her voice. The floating oil slipped from Finnigan’s hand and rose to the ceiling. “But apparently, Gaunt’s been waiting for that.”

“How do you know? Or, well, how does the Headmaster?”

“I think he knows someone in the department. I asked about it, and he said this, err, clause? There’s this clause in family law about former Azkaban prisoners, where the Ministry can contend their suitability as a parent or guardian.”

“But he’s my guardian. That doesn’t make sense.”

The unspoken sentiment that the MPA had very little concern for a guardian’s suitability passed between them, and Elara heard Hermione grinding her teeth.

“If the Ministry decided Sirius wasn’t suitable, which would most likely happen, then I’d have to go back to my prior guardians.” Harriet sighed as she fished through her potions kit and pulled out her goggles and dragonhide gloves. “And I can’t go back to my guardians because they’re—y’know.” Muggles. And rubbish human beings. “So I’d become a ward of the Ministry.”

Elara and Hermione could not mask their shivers. “I still cannot fathom why he is expending such effort on your part, Harriet.” Hermione’s gaze flicked across the classroom toward Snape, who had come down from his desk to answer a question for Nott. “Yes, he wishes to know what happened in front of the Mirror of Erised, but to what end? Surely he understands you don’t know what happened any more than Selwyn or Professors Slytherin or Dumbledore. So why expend Ministry resources and—and act like a creep?”

“Intuition,” Elara muttered, and when Hermione raised a brow, she rolled her eyes and explained. “While you might disparage Divinations, others do not. Intuition and instinct are powerful factors for witches and wizards.” She flicked one gloved hand toward the potion they’d barely started. “Like this mess. I would say if Gaunt and the Dark Lord are connected in some manner, we should assume something in the Minister—however minuscule—recognizes Harriet.”

“That’s absurd,” Hermione said, though her face paled and her voice lacked conviction.

“Is it? He doesn’t strike me as a particularly rational man. If he were to follow an inkling that told him Harriet was important, or that the secrecy around her residency and background elicited more inspection, would he not behave as he has been? Like a dodgy conman trying to pull her under his thumb so he can finally get a good look?”

Neither Harriet nor Hermione replied, both lost in the thought as they considered Elara’s words. Harriet started pulling on the goggles and gloves, grumbling.

“Still doesn’t change the fact that I can’t go to Hogsmeade and buy my weight in Honeyduke’s fudge.” Then, she smirked. “Well…not legally, at any rate.”

For want of something to do, Elara picked up their cauldron and brought it to the sink, filling it with water from the spigot shaped like a gargoyle’s mouth. As the cold liquid sloshed, Snape swept by and hissed, “Do something besides stand there like an idiot, or I’m failing you for the day.”

Elara turned her head to meet his dark eyes—a surprisingly easy task, given they were nearly the same height now. It was their unspoken agreement that Snape would allow her to skate by as Harriet and Hermione’s partner so long as she appeared busy and refrained from blowing up his classroom.

“Yes, sir.” She cut off the water, and Snape slid away, snapping at Longbottom to mind his ingredients. Elara returned to the table and placed the cauldron on its rack before Hermione, retreating to her seat.

Harriet started in on the Erumpent skin, slicing it into slivers, goggles and gloves in place to protect herself from the stray sparks. Others in the room did the same, and soon the air smelled heavily of sulfur and pepper. The odor gave Elara a headache.

“Regardless of Hogsmeade, are you going to write Narcissa?” Hermione asked as she measured lungfish oil and dripped it into the warming water. “She’ll be able to find you something without you there.”

“That’s what scares me,” Harriet snorted, handing her knife to Elara so she could wipe it clean. It was about all she could do in Potions most days. “No, I think I’ll write Mr. Flamel and Perenelle and ask.”

“Why not Narcissa?”

“If I have to go to this stupid ball, I don’t want to be dressed up like a pure-blood twit.”

Elara took exception at that—after all, she intended to let Mrs. Malfoy help her pick out her clothes, and she was a pure-blood. Her temples pounded. “Can we stop talking about the wretched dance?” she demanded. The venom in her tone earned a startled look from Hermione and Harriet. They both nodded and concentrated instead on the potion.

The remainder of class passed in a similar manner, the trio of witches silent aside from the occasional remark about their project, Hermione enthralled by how the different oils layered atop one another and the boiling water beneath. A rounded metal sieve went over the cauldron’s top when they came close to being done, the finished product floating upward like strange, amorphous helium bubbles. It was caught in the sieve and carefully funneled into their sample vial.

Predictably, Seamus and Dean managed to explode their own brew, which meant Elara, Harriet, and Hermione ended up with gunk splattered against the back of their robes.

Snape’s snarling did little for Elara’s headache.

“I’m going to change,” she said as soon as the bell rang for lunch. “And get some fresh air.”

“All right. Want me to save you anything?”

“No. I’ll ask Mably if I need something.”

She left before Harriet or Hermione could say anything else, or before Snape had a chance to dismiss them, given he was busy trying to heal the burns on Seamus’ face. She returned to the dorm, shed her ruined robes, and yanked a spare pair from her wardrobe. Her throat felt tight, the collar and tie seeming to cut into her skin, but Elara refused to undue the buttons.

The Yule Ball. It ’s traditional for the Triwizard Tournament to include a seasonal ball that you have to attend with a date.

Elara hadn’t even heard of the stupid ball until this morning, and now it lurked in her head like a loathsome rat the size of York.

You have to attend with a date.

The air bit against her cheeks as she stepped out the front doors and went down the steps. Elara deliberated whether to head toward the lake or around the castle, but decided the wind coming off the water would probably wreak havoc on her asthma. She instead turned along the path toward the greenhouses.

She walked in silence, hands shoved into the pockets of her robes, passing a group of fifth-year Ravenclaws rushing toward lunch. Exhaling, Elara hurried a few more paces and stepped off the path into the planter cloister to avoid the Slytherins trailing after the Ravenclaws. She didn’t particularly care about seeing them, but she didn’t want Verpia and Barlow starting any gossip about her wandering on her own.

Standing in the arch’s shadow, watching the older students pass, Elara waited. From behind her, she heard a voice.

It spoke quietly, and not in English, so at first, Elara didn’t realize someone else was in the cloister with her. When she did, she froze, then slowly turned to see who she’d interrupted.

Elara would recognize that silver hair anywhere. Even in the dim glow, it glimmered like starlight, and when Fleur Delacour flipped it back behind her shoulder, she saw Elara and paused in her reading. There was a book—a textbook by the looks of it—open in her lap, and next to her sat a girl of no more than seven or eight with the same silvery hair. They sat on one of the overturned stone planters like a bench. A yellow magelight hovered at her shoulder.

Heat crawled up Elara’s neck, and the tight, choking feeling in her throat returned. “Ah, hello,” she said, voice breaking. She coughed into her hand once. “I’m sorry, I didn’t realize anyone was over here.”

Delacour gave a small, entirely too poised sniff. The younger girl said something in French, something nervous, and Delacour gave her hand a small, reassuring pat.

Elara wondered if Delacour remembered her from their brief meeting at Beauxbatons. No, probably not; Elara had experienced a growth spurt over the summer, and why would Delacour remember one of two strange foreign students who visited her school for one evening? That was foolish.

It couldn’t be comfortable in the cloister. A persistent damp lingered and clung to the stone walls, and because the space mainly found use as a storage area for the containers Sprout didn’t use, it didn’t have any proper places to sit.

She shouldn’t care. It wasn’t any of Elara’s business where Beauxbaton’s champion chose to spend her time.

“Why are you here?” she blurted, cursing herself. “As in here, in the cloister? There’s plenty of space in the library if you need a place to study or read.”

“Hmm. It iz too noisy there. It iz too noisy everywhere. You Hogwarts students are too boisterous and intrusive. It iz impossible to find a place where we will not be bothered.”

Her brusque reply helped abate the blush on Elara’s face, and she returned Delacour’s cool look with one of her own. Still, that didn’t stop her from spewing more words before she could stop herself. “There’s a better place near the greenhouses. More comfortable, instead of what is essentially a garden shed.”

A delicate pink flush touched Delacour’s cheeks, then vanished just as quickly. She snapped the book shut. “Very well. Come, Gabrielle. Nous irons avec elle.”

The little witch, Gabrielle, nodded and hopped to her feet, followed by Delacour, who held her hand. Delacour glanced at Elara, then away, fussing with her hair.

“This would not be a problem if the accommodations at Hogwarts were not so…primitive.”

“Yes, unfortunately, we can’t seem to afford gilding every torch bracket or featuring marble fountains in every classroom.” The corner of Elara’s mouth hitched as she remembered the brief tour of Beauxbatons and the obscene wealth displayed therein. She felt less uncertain of herself, at least for the moment. “It’s just this way.”

She stepped out of the cloister onto the path again, heading toward the greenhouses. Delacour and the girl followed.

“Which are you, then?”

“I beg your pardon?” Elara asked, glancing over her shoulder.

“Which of ze…Houses?”

“Oh. Slytherin.”

“I do not understand zis custom.”

“Do they not have Houses in Beauxbatons.”

Non. It is a silly thing. We are taught by age group, and then…par garçon ou fille.”

That sounded bloody awful to Elara, but she kept her opinion to herself. Delacour may not believe in the House system, but she surely was as prissy as any Slytherin.

“I didn’t know Beauxbatons accepted students so young,” Elara commented. Delacour’s blue eyes flashed, and her lips compressed into a fine line. When she spoke, her voice was frostier still, an impressive feat, and her accent thickened.

“Zey do not. Not zat it is any of your business, but Gabrielle iz my little sister, and our maman cannot watch her during the year. Madame Maxime is generous enough to make an exception for her.”

Elara didn’t reply as they came to the gate leading into the greenhouses. She led the way along the stone wall, walking farther in until they reached a point almost halfway between the glass enclosures. She stepped into the area between greenhouses eight and nine.

“Oh,” Delacour said, blinking as she saw the stone courtyard with its benches and tables, surrounded by blooming bushes of vibrant flowers. The area smelled much too fragrant for Elara’s allergies—already she could feel her nose tickling from pollen—but she could admit it was lovely. “It is…it is acceptable,” Delacour sniffed.

Elara glanced at her from the corner of her eye. “Quite.”

Gabrielle muttered a shy “Merci!” and took her book—a book of basic Charms for children—from her sister, and skipped to a table. Delacour turned to Elara.

“Yes, merci. It is adequate, your help is appreciated.” She tucked her hair behind her ears. “I did not catch your name.”

“It’s Elara.” Elara cleared her throat again as her stomach tightened, and the air in her chest felt thin, paltry. The uncertainty returned again, and her palms felt sticky with sweat.

It’s because she’s part-Veela, she told herself. She has to be. It’s Veela magic.

Veela magic isn ’t supposed to work on women.

Guilt swelled hot and miserable in her gut, and Elara hated it. She hated the echoing voices of the sisters at St. Giles’ talking about sin and aberrant behavior and how they dug into her skin like burrs.

She lowered her eyes to the ground and took a sharp step back from Delacour, refusing to think of how her shampoo smelled like jasmine, or how she seemed to glow in the sunshine. In doing so, Elara brushed her arm against a dark-leafed plant. It shivered and started to shriek.

She thinks you’re pretty!” it chorused, sending Elara’s heart plummeting to her knees. “She thinks you’re pretty!

The bush next to it howled, “She thinks you’re ugly! She thinks you’re ugly!

Elara yanked her wand out and started throwing vicious Silencing Charms over the foliage, shredding a few flowers in the process. By the time she turned, red-faced, to Delacour, the French witch looked very smug indeed. Elara flinched.

“Do mind the Fibbing Mums and Wholesome Holly,” she managed to say. She almost dropped her wand as she tried to tuck it away.

Oui. One tells lies, and one tells the truth, yes?” Delacour tipped her head and tapped one finger against her lips as if in thought. She smiled, her teeth bright and straight, her eyes glittering with mirth she hadn’t displayed earlier. “Oh, but which plant is which, I wonder?”

Elara gathered what courage she had and quickly hurried away.

 


A/N:

Later, Sprout finds Elara in the Chrysanthemum Courtyard, strangling the flowers. Sprout backs away without a word.

Chapter 184: from unlikely quarter

Chapter Text

clxxxiv. from unlikely quarter

 

The best part of waking early on the day of the Triwizard Tournament’s first task was opening the paper to find a scathing article on Neville Longbottom.

It was written pleasantly enough, the tone upbeat, but as Harriet scanned Rita Skeeter’s story on the Prat Who Lived and spooned honey into her porridge, she spotted instances of Skeeter making blatant, demeaning digs.

“She said he’s twelve,” Harriet snorted, reaching for her tea. “And that he’s a poor boy struggling against a witch and wizards so much more talented than himself.”

Malfoy, across the table, laughed. “The rest of the Prophet eats out of Longbottom’s hand, but Skeeter’s never fed into the Boy Who Lived mania.”

“Don’t sing her praises. She feeds into it just fine when it suits her needs,” Elara interjected from Harriet’s side. She leaned closer to read the article beneath the large photo of Longbottom, Krum, Delacour, and Diggory. “Why is the majority of this about Longbottom? Is it not meant to be an exposé on all the champions? She doesn’t even mention Diggory.”

“Maybe he should be thankful for that. Merlin knows what she’d say about him.” Harriet turned the page. “Oh, here she wrote that Longbottom had tears in his ‘sparkling eyes’ when he talked about his dead mother. That’s a bit shit to bring his mum into things. It’s also a bit shit I can’t tell if Skeeter’s lying or if Longbottom really decided to talk about his mum like this.”

“You shouldn’t take anything Skeeter says as true,” Hermione reprimanded. She then eyed Draco. “And you shouldn’t find blatant lying in what is supposed to be a reliable news source funny.”

“Get off it, Granger. I’m mocking Longbottom, not the sanctity of the written word. The Prophet is hardly a bastion of truth.”

“It should be, considering it’s the main source of information for Magical Britain.”

Harriet ignored the bickering between them as the rest of the post arrived, Sirius’ owl Galahad—or Gally as Harriet called him—fluttered down to settle a letter before her. She stroked his tawny plumage as Elara nicked the paper from her hand and kept reading the article.

“You’re much better behaved than Cygnus. Mean old bastard,” Harriet murmured to the bird, feeding it a nibble of bacon. She said it to tease Elara—but Elara had her eyes fixed on the paper’s photo. She noticed Harriet watching after several long seconds, then quickly folded the Prophet closed, shoving it out of sight.

Odd ….

Casting Elara a final, strange look, Harriet turned her attention to Sirius’ letter.

 

Harriet—

It ’d be a lie to say your last letter made me happy. I think if I were younger, running off into the Forbidden Forest to find a horde of dragons would sound like brilliant fun, but Merlin kid, reading that nearly gave me a heart attack. I had to have a sit and a tipple before writing this.

Don ’t go getting involved with the Tournament. Dumbledore’s had a word with the old guard about keeping our ears to the ground, which means the Headmaster is more suspicious about goings-on than he lets the public know. In particular, you and Elara and Hermione need to keep away from Igor Karkaroff. He’s a Death Eater—a real one. He was caught by our Ministry but released when he named others, and I don’t know the details, but he managed to wriggle his way into Durmstrang for protection. There’s nothing more dangerous than a desperate man, and though his return to Britain isn’t permanent, Karkaroff will be desperate to either prove himself or escape the Dark wizards he back-stabbed. Just like Peter.

On a lighter subject, the Prophet ’s supposed to cover the Tournament’s first task, but remember to send me a letter with the good details. We can’t trust that rag to cover anything worth a damn. Outside spectating used to be allowed in the past, but current restrictions bar the public from attending, and Dumbledore’s keen on keeping strangers off the grounds as much as he can.

Remember to keep your nose clean, but not too clean. A letter home here and there about some mischief just lets me know you ’re alive.

Tell your god-sister I ’m still waiting for a reply.

Lots of love,

Sirius.

 

Elara glanced at the parchment and the owl now preening his bright feathers. “What does he want?”

“He wants you to write.”

Elara sighed. “I’m working on it.”

Harriet hummed, nodded. “He says Karkaroff is a Death Eater,” she murmured, brow furrowed. “I didn’t remember before, but…Dumbledore mentioned him once. Just the one time this summer when he talked to me about…about Snape.” She fiddled with the parchment’s corner, curling it in and then flat again. Gally gave one last click of his beak and took flight. “I only bring it up because Sirius pointed out Karkaroff named people to get out of an Azkaban sentencing, and Dumbledore told me he ratted on Snape. I knew he was a sketchy bloke.”

Harriet and Elara glanced at the High Table, at the Potions Master seated by Slytherin. Snape was chewing on his toast and marmalade, clearly bored, but he felt the eyes on him and scowled. The two Slytherin witches quickly looked away.

As the rest of breakfast passed, Harriet considered Sirius’ warning and the presence of Karkaroff by Professor Dumbledore. She didn’t see him about much outside of meals or crowds; he skirted Slytherin at all costs, and if he had any sense in his head, he’d avoid Snape too. Harriet couldn’t help but clearly remember Snape had been the one to find the dead body in her tent in 92’; he knew how to make someone disappear, and Karkaroff should watch his own backside.

Could Karkaroff be behind Longbottom’s addition to the competition? Harriet wondered. But what would be his motivation? Was he trying to off the Boy Who Lived and earn the Dark Lord’s regard? Or his leniency?

Harriet didn’t know, but even in her head, the theory sounded patchy.

The time came for the crowd to depart the Great Hall, though not before the champions left, called out by Ludo Bagman in his ridiculous robes cut too small for his less than slim figure. Longbottom looked green, but Diggory flashed a slight grin toward the Slytherin table before running after the ex-Quidditch professional.

Soon enough, the Hogwarts students clamored to their feet and followed the directions of the Aurors out into the overcast morning. Moody stood at the doors, sweeping the throng with his swiveling blue eye. Harriet braced herself against the sudden brisk chill when she walked past him into the mist. Their path took them toward the outskirts of the grounds, not far from the Quidditch Stadium, to a spot where the Forbidden Forest and the cliffs met. Seemingly overnight, a new arena had been constructed on the spot.

It’d been made in a circular formation, but the rocks and rough terrain meant the stands were only connected by a few rickety rope bridges, and the seating congregated in clusters. All of this had been covered by colorful tarping, and farther away, settled on the sweeping lawns, waited a large, domed tent.

“Do they mean to bring dragons…in here?” Elara muttered in an undertone, lest they be overheard by the other students. Harriet could empathize with Elara’s skepticism; one glance around proved the stands were made of little more than wood and flapping canvas. Nothing appeared particularly dragon-proof.

“Err….”

Whether or not Harriet wanted it, she had no choice but to move with the crowd, lest she be trampled by it. She and her friends climbed the spiraling steps upward until they emerged again higher in the gray light of day. The soft hiss of wind coming off the lake rippled through the banners hanging from the awning and played cold fingers across their cheeks.

The arena below stretched wide and large over the rocky tors and crags, the far side bracketed by the dense trees of the forest, a tunnel leading into the undergrowth. Several of the dragon tamers Harriet had spotted before now lurked on the bottom level of the stands, barely hidden from the arena itself, and a thick, glimmering ward stood between the stands and the inner area. In the very center of the arena rested a large nest shielded by broken rocks and charred wood. Huge eggs cluttered the nest, in the middle of which stood a golden egg glinting in the weak daylight.

In the distance, Harriet heard something inhuman scream, and the people around her exchanged nervous glances.

Harriet stuck her hand into her cloak’s pocket and fished about. She withdrew the item she sought—and also a curious red snake who was most certainly not meant to be there.

“Oh, bloody hell,” Harriet murmured as she brought Rick closer to her face, cupping her fingers to hide her mouth. “What are you doing here? You’re supposed to stay home with the others.

Rick isss sssneaky!

You certainly are.” Huffing, Harriet shifted the Omnioculars and extended Rick to Hermione. “Here, hold him.”

“Wh—?” Hermione opened her hands on instinct and jumped when warm coils slipped into her palms. “Harriet! you can’t just drop snakes on people, for pity’s sake!”

“Hasn’t stopped her before,” Elara muttered.

Harriet ignored them both, instead fiddling with the Omnioculars until she got the settings right. She pressed them to her glasses and squinted, searching the other stands.

“What are you doing?”

“Looking.”

She spied Professor Dumbledore and the other school heads in what she presumed was the box meant for the announcer and judges. With them sat several other teachers, though she didn’t see Snape or Slytherin, not that they were whom she sought. Harriet scanned the faces of the Ministry people—finding Bagman, Crouch, Percy Weasley, and the Undersecretary, Fudge. The bloke couldn’t be mistaken under his green bowler hat.

She didn’t, however, see Gaunt.

“The Minister’s not here,” she said, relieved, as she handed the Omnioculars off to Elara. Hermione returned Rick, and Harriet caught Malfoy’s dubious glance from the other side of the bench, his eyes fixed on the golem.

“What are you looking at, Malfoy?” she demanded.

“Since when do you have a snake, Potter?”

“Since when do you ask so many questions?” She quickly stuffed Rick into her pocket again and cleared her throat. “Mind your own business, you pointy-faced ponce.”

“Speccy cow.”

“Doxy-brain.”

“Naff minger.”

“Bell end.”

Will you two be quiet?” Hermione snapped. “It’s starting!”

Harriet fell silent—though not without giving Malfoy the bird, which the prat decided to ignore as he sat forward and stiffened his spine. She almost missed when Malfoy used to take the bait, but now he always minded his stupid manners, especially around Hermione.

“Ladies and Gentlemen!” Bagman’s voice boomed out, eliciting a stir of excited applause. “Welcome to the first task of the Triwizard Tournament! Our brave champions will be required to show their daring, their agility, and their magical prowess when they face today’s challenge!”

 At Bagman’s pronouncement, a large, Charmed curtain got pulled aside from the far side of the area, where the darkened tunnel met the forest’s mouth. The clattering of claws upon the rocks sounded—and the audience shrieked in alarm when a slender, vivid emerald dragon came slithering out.

“A Common Welsh Green,” Hermione said, her eyes wide in interest as the large lizard sniffed the air and quickly honed in on the nest, circling it. “They’re native to Britain and can still be found wild in Wales from time to time, along with the Y Ddraig Goch. They tend to avoid humans.”

One of the bookish, bespectacled Slytherin second-years—Emile Elderberry, Harriet remembered—turned in her seat to stare at Hermione, addressing her in a thick Welsh accent. “My gran says they’re still dangerous in the countryside.”

“Oh, definitely. But many of the recorded incidents of damage inflicted by Common Welsh Greens in the last century or so is against livestock, pets, or herders attempting to protect their flocks.” Hermione narrowed her eyes. “Hmm. I think it’s a female. A nesting female. Clever.”

Ludo Bagman cleared his throat. The Welsh Green snorted, clearly disliking the noise, but did not abandon the nest. “It will be the task of each champion to face one of four dragons and retrieve the golden egg in the center of the dragon’s nest!”

“Looks like you were right, Elara.”

“I often am.”

Harriet shook her head, grinning.

The appearance of the first champion was marked by the sudden, if muted, bang of a cannon going off. The cheering riled the dragon, and paltry plumes of smoke rose from its tapered nostrils as its head turned back and forth on its long, slender neck. Harriet thought it was a beautiful creature and, for a mad moment, desperately wanted to try speaking to it in Parseltongue. A voice that sounded suspiciously like Hermione’s reminded her dragons were lacertilian—lizard-like—and not at all close to snakes. It would be a lot more interested in snacking on her than it would be in having a chat.

Fleur Delacour stepped out into the arena from an entrance somewhere below Harriet, dressed in fitted, dark-blue dueling robes with her name neatly stenciled in silver across her shoulders. Her pale hair had been caught in a tight plait, and though she tightened her jaw and tossed back her head, Fleur did not appear surprised to see a bloody dragon waiting for her. Maxime had obviously informed her about the task.

Next to Harriet, Elara leaned forward ever so slightly.

Fleur whipped out her wand and cast a spell over herself. “Misceo Omnia!

At first, Harriet thought it was a Disillusionment Charm, but Delacour didn’t disappear. A murky mist dripped from her head to her toes, and Harriet felt as if her eyes kept slipping off the French witch, which was a disconcerting sensation.

“A Muddling Charm,” Hermione whispered in her ear. “A seventh-year spell that makes it somewhat harder to discern a person through any of the five senses.”

Delacour paced along the arena’s outer edge and neared the dragon, who was still distracted by the crowd and Bagman’s loud commentary.

“Oh I’m not sure that was wise!” the man cried when Fleur tripped on a rock and the dragon’s head tipped in her direction. Luckily, it didn’t spot her—or, it did and didn’t perceive her as a threat just yet. “Oh…nearly!”

As Delacour neared the creature’s flank, she slowed down and used more caution as she drew her wand and began to use an incantation, speaking too low for anyone to hear.

“What spell do you reckon that is?” Harriet asked Hermione, not letting her eyes leave the field.

“Judging by the downward, semi-circular motion moving both clockwise and widdershins…a hypnotism spell. But I’m not sure one of those would work on something like a dragon. I certainly wouldn’t bet my life on it in a competition….”

Several minutes passed in which the audience held their breath and nothing seemed to happen, but the dragon grew more and more sleepy, its long neck bending downward until it at last curled about the nest and fell into a deep slumber.

Delacour stuck her wand between the front buttons of her dueling robes and moved quickly now, running for the golden egg. The spell obviously wouldn’t last long.

“Careful now…!” Bagman chanted as Delacour stepped around the dragon’s prone legs. Harriet wondered if the French witch could even hear the old windbag over the surging beat of her own heart. Harriet’s heart was certainly beating fast, and Elara’s gloved hand dug into her knee tight enough to leave bruises.

The Common Welsh Green drew a deep breath and exhaled a sleepy sigh. Unfortunately for Fleur, that included a small burst of sparks that caught her sleeve on fire.

“Good lord, I thought she’d had it then!”

But she did have it, yanking the golden egg from among the cluster even as she doused her burning arm in water from her wand. The crowd cheered as Delacour held up the egg and left the arena. The dragon minders made quick work of rousing the creature and removing it, which involved levitating the eggs out the tunnel and luring the dragon into following. New eggs replaced the old, a fresh golden egg set up, and the arena was ready for another contestant.

“Of course Karkaroff would give so few points,” Elara complained when Delacour’s scores were revealed. “He’d give Krum perfect marks even if his head was lopped off.”

“I’m sure Fleur would be so happy to know you’re defending her honor.”

Elara elbowed Harriet in the ribs—or, rather, the chest, given their height difference.

Oof.”

“Don’t be a brat.”

“Steady on, Merlin….”

Diggory was the next person to come stumbling out into the rocky arena, joined by a dragon Hermione called a Swedish Short-Snout. As the name would suggest, the dragon had a short snout—and the prettiest scales Harriet had ever seen. They rippled in the light like the ocean’s surface, a mixture of blue and green and silver, and they gleamed brilliantly when cerulean fire dripped from the creature’s maw.

Diggory tried to distract the dragon by Transfiguring a rock into a dog and sending it running for the tunnel out of the arena. The dragon seemed interested—until it wasn’t.

“Idiot,” Harriet hissed, fists clenched in her lap. “It’s a reptile; they can’t see for shite. It looks like a dog, but it’ll smell like a rock!”

“What do you expect from a Hufflepuff?” Draco sniffed. “Not a brain to be found in the lot of them.”

Cedric did manage to reach the golden egg—receiving a nice face full of sweltering fire for his efforts.

“Twit,” Harriet sighed after he left the arena on a stretcher—lucid but faintly smoldering—and Bagman announced scores. He’d gotten one point more than Fleur, and Harriet attributed that to sexism, given what a shoddy mess he’d made of it. Delacour at least walked out under her own power, and her plan had actually worked.

The next dragon was slightly larger than the Common Welsh and Short-Snout, and brilliant red in color. “Technically, it’s a wyvern,” Hermione explained to Elderberry, who listened to the explanation with rapt attention as the new dragon scuttled toward its nest. It had a strange, ungainly way of moving. “The wings of the Chinese Fireball are attached to the forelimbs. Hybridization became all the rage in the sixteenth century with dragon-breeders, and wyvernism is a dominant trait. The separate, detached wing trait has become extinct in several species.”

Viktor Krum received the most considerable applause by far when he appeared, Hogwarts students included in the raucous cheering of “Krum! Krum! Krum!” He wore dueling robes like the others, trimmed in Durmstrang red, his haughty scowl prominent as he considered the Fireball. The dragon, in turn, considered the Bulgarian wizard, and a thin, forked tongue slashed in his direction.

Krum shuffled his feet, gravel crunching as he took a better stance. He tightened his grip on his wand, then snapped out a spell Harriet didn’t catch the incantation for, the syllables foreign, probably something taught exclusively at Durmstrang. A net burst from the wand’s tip—a metal net, and in an instant, it wrapped itself around the dragon’s head, caging it in. A moment later, a chain from the net’s end staked itself to the ground, and it yanked the Fireball’s head into the rocks. The dragon shrieked—the same shriek that had sounded before the task began.

Krum walked into the nest and picked up the golden egg.

“Some very quick spellwork from Mr. Krum!” Bagman said as Viktor departed the arena, duck-footing it back outside. Karkaroff cheered louder than anyone else, his voice booming with “Well done, Viktor!

“Tell me he didn’t come into the task having researched that specific spell beforehand,” Hermione scoffed, arms crossed. “Though, Mr. Bagman is correct. That was very cleanly done.”

The minders released the dazed and furious Fireball, her departure taking longer than the prior dragons as she seemed much more interested in eating Krum than following her eggs. Eventually, the Fireball gave up, and her lingering shrieks faded into the distance.

Harriet and the others waited for the last dragon to be revealed. She didn’t think Neville could top Krum’s scores, but he could do better than Cedric. Had anyone told him about the task? She wouldn’t put it past Diggory to have a sudden flash of conscience and share the news with Neville.

They reset the arena a final time—with one odd difference. A chain not unlike the one Viktor used got pinned to the arena’s middle, just to the side of the nest, and it trailed off into the dubious dark of the tunnel. It clinked and rattled.

“Why d’you think they have this one chained?” Harriet asked, and Hermione could only give her head an uncertain shake.

“Maybe it’s a breed more prone to flying. The others seemed interested in staying by the eggs, but perhaps this one’s maternal instinct isn’t as strong. Dragons are unique in having any maternal instinct at all; most reptiles eat their young, magical or not.”

Harriet pulled a face and shivered.

A low, thrumming growl preceded the dragon before it came slithering into the light, seeming to drag the inky shadows along with it. Harriet drew in an audible breath as she saw the beast emerge, twice the size of any dragon they’d seen so far, covered in perilous horns and scales as black as night. It hissed, menacing and furious, flaring its leathery wings.

“Holy cricket. That’s—that’s a Hungarian Horntail,” Hermione stuttered, her face paling. “Why on earth would they bring that here? They couldn’t have thought—.”

“What’s wrong with it?”

“It’s the most vicious kind of magical creature there is! They’ve been hunted almost to extinction because of how violent they are!”

The Horntail stalked the arena’s edge, testing the chain, butting its large, scaly body against the ward. The ward shuddered and blinked under the weight dragging along it. Several people screamed as it leapt skyward—only to be yanked down by the chain, landing with an earth-shaking thud on the ground by the eggs.

“They weren’t expecting four champions,” Elara said, apropos of nothing. Her grip on Harriet’s knee tightened again, and Harriet wiggled in discomfort.

“What?”

“Preparations for the Triwizard Tournament started months ago. Remember it being mentioned at Beauxbatons last Yule? I think Henchizo brought it up. They started arranging the events before then…so when a fourth champion was chosen, they would have needed to find another nesting dragon on short notice. Instead of a nice, calm Common Welsh….”

A gout of flame burst from the massive Horntail, and Harriet jumped.

Longbottom’s entrance didn’t receive the same excited cries and clapping Krum’s did. Instead, people booed—Durmstrang, Beauxbatons, and Slytherin for the most part, but the Hufflepuffs joined in, and so did the Ravenclaws. The sound echoed around the impromptu stadium in a deafening chorus and drowned out what support the Gryffindors offered.

Harriet stayed silent. She didn’t like Longbottom. She wanted him to lose and thought his ego could use a good puncturing—but he appeared very young just then, standing in his new dueling robes, stunned motionless by the sight in front of him. He deserved to lose, but not to be heckled when about to face something that looked as if it had snuck its way out of hell’s depths.

No one had told him about the dragon, obviously. The noise irritated and enraged the beast, restless twitches arresting its huge, muscled body. The Boy Who Lived looked petrified.

Fear or no, he stepped forward under the menacing glower of the beast and raised his wand.

Stupefy!”

A red streak struck the dragon—and did nothing.

“You’d think after the ruddy Basilisk, he’d know magical creatures are resistant to spells….”

He remembered that fact after the first spell and turned his attention to the terrain, hitting the rocks with all manner of Charms and rushed Transfigurations that fizzled out as soon as they landed. A stray hex struck the dragon’s eye, infuriating it. The Horntail lunged, Longbottom fell back—and the chain jerked the Horntail to the ground.

The obstacle enraged the creature. It lunged again and again, and the minders exchanged alarmed glances as its wings unfurled, and it bellowed out a roar that hurt the ears of everyone listening.

And then—.

Hot flames surged to life, pouring scalding and red hot on the chain until it glowed like the north star, then snapped. People screamed, the minders running out from their positions, slinging spells the dragon dodged. It threw itself to the side, slamming its tail against the ward hard enough to crack and buck it. One of the stands tipped and started to collapse, students yelling.

“What in God’s name are they doing—?!”

The Horntail jumped, powerful wings outspread, and Harriet thought it meant to take flight—but the eggs remained in the arena, and so too would the dragon, though not without tearing it to shreds first. It thrust its wings downward in a knowing manner, and the fierce draft scattered the minders, bodies rolling across the rocky ground.

The dragon lunged again—this time at the stands Harriet and her friends sat in. Of course, no one was seated any longer. All Harriet could hear was their screaming and the ominous, spine-chilling creaks and cracks of the Horntail scaling the scaffolding. Too many bodies ran for the narrow opening to the stairs, and suddenly—.

Suddenly the snout of a fifty-foot dragon crested the railing, and one leering, yellow eye peered in at the scuttling humans. The slender pupil contracted.

Two students still stood at the front, frozen in terror.

Move!” Harriet shouted. She dove over the benches to grab both boys by their robes—a distant part of her mind noting it was Gabriel Flourish and his scrawny mate Walt Murton.

Harriet—!”

Yellow light crawled up the dragon’s throat like magma about to crest the earth, and Harriet had her wand in hand, gasping, “Aculei Ignis!

The spell sucked the flame from the dragon’s mouth, and it expelled a sulfurous cloud of ash. The sweltering heat seared the air in Harriet’s lungs, and she tried to hold her breath, watering eyes squeezed shut tight, feeling the wood beneath her tremble with the Horntail’s mounting growl—.

Sweaty hands grappled at her arms, attempting to pull her and the boys back—.

Furious footsteps pounded over the connecting bridge, and suddenly Snape burst into the box, out of breath with his wand out, already alight with a spell. “Protego Flammae Totalum!

A thick, nearly opaque shield caught the next burst of dragonfire. The explosion rocked the stands and nearly tore the Horntail from its chosen roost. Stunners rained upon its scaly hide from the field, but the creature persisted.

Slytherin was at Snape’s heels. He stepped around the Potions Master, unsmiling, something like malice alight in his horrid red eyes. He held up a slim, soft hand, no wand in sight, and magic spilled from his outward-facing palm. A blast of violet color burst from him—and Harriet recoiled at the vile feeling that followed. Dark magic licked against her skin like careless, hungry teeth.

The spell broke Professor Snape’s shield as if it were paper. It cleaved through the Horntail’s skull—and Harriet looked away from the abrupt halo of blood and unmentionable bits, knowing the sheer noise of bones being crushed would haunt her dreams for years to come. The Dark spell left a resounding silence in its wake. Harriet’s ears popped.

Only minutes had passed since Longbottom first stepped into the arena. A few swift, simple minutes was all it took for everything to go to pieces.

As the slaughtered dragon arched away, falling, its claws tore the awning. Colorless daylight seeped through the rips, and in that light, Harriet looked up through stinging eyes to see Professor Slytherin still standing with his hand held out.

Blood misted his handsome face—and a savage grin full of white, too-sharp teeth split his mouth wide.


 

A/N: A few of Bagman ’s comments are from the book, CH: 20.

I was considering the canon scores for this task and I have no idea what kind of drugs those judges were on. Krum destroys half the eggs? Tie for first, obv. Cedric does half-assed Transfiguration the dragon doesn ’t go for and gets roasted? 2nd! Fleur successfully puts her dragon to sleep and inadvertently catches her skirt on fire because she didn’t anticipate it snoring ? Last. Wth is that? I demand a recount.

It ’s noted in canon how something always goes wrong in the trials in past Tournaments, and I can ’t believe that it’s only in modern times they’d think “Welp, better add some more safety precautions!” I think having to include a dragon twice the size and considerably more vicious than the others could possibly throw the precautions the Ministry put into place.

Slytherin: “Oh yeah. I ’m the good guy this chapter.

Snape: “What is this world coming to.”

Chapter 185: distracted

Chapter Text

clxxxv. distracted

 

When the dust settled and heads were counted, it came as a surprise to everyone involved that no one was seriously injured in the Tournament’s first task.

The minders had been bruised and scuffed from their tumble across the rocks, but the one to suffer the worst injuries was actually Snape. Harriet hadn’t noticed it at the time, but the wizard had gotten closer to the fire than she’d thought. For a week afterward, white, potion-soaked bandages peeked out from the end of his tight sleeve. He docked points from anyone caught looking.

One of the seating boxes had toppled when the Horntail struck the supports, but quick action from Professor Dumbledore saw them gently settled on the ground without a bruise to be shown. His action on the far side of the arena was why he didn’t come rushing toward the dragon—that, and Snape and Slytherin were by far the youngest on the staff, able to run the distance over the connecting bridges faster than anyone else.

Longbottom escaped with nothing but a few scratches—and a massive bruise to his swollen ego. They awarded him five points for the sheer grit of entering the arena and showing up, but nothing more, not when he failed the task and left the golden egg behind. People snickered and mimicked choking noises wherever he went, and an article in the Prophet had decried the whole scene as a horrible thing for a child to endure. While Harriet didn’t necessarily disagree with that, the wording in the paper made Longbottom out to be a pampered, snot-nosed toddler.

A stirring of guilt came over Harriet when she recalled Longbottom’s face—the pale, sweaty sheen of sheer terror when he looked at the Horntail for the first time. Could she have saved him from that? Could she have prevented the whole nasty mess if she’d simply told Longbottom what to expect and what to prepare for?

Hermione said it wasn’t her fault. Elara told her she was being an idiot. Still, Harriet could relate to the stunned trepidation of being faced with a massive, seething magical creature and not knowing what to do. She didn’t have it in her to feel glee when Longbottom failed; she felt only guilt and pity.

The death of an endangered creature on foreign soil sparked an international incident. However, Slytherin—like the snake he was—managed to wriggle by without consequence, no matter his blatant usage of Dark magic in front of hundreds of witnesses. Remus told Harriet over tea about the different clauses and provisions that came with being a Defense Master and a Defense professor at Hogwarts. Those caveats included exceptions allowing Slytherin to use Dark magic and deadly force in defense of the school.

Murdering a dragon about to cook half of his House apparently fit those exceptions. Harriet and most of the people who’d been seated in the box with her ended up smeared in Equill-Emollient for two days from their proximity to the spell, the Dark magic sticky as a thick, cloying syrup. Exposure to it filled her nightmares with black-scaled creatures shifting in the dark, sibilant voices laughing in her ear.

Sometimes, when she woke, she found Set silhouetted against the bed hangings. She would feel a nebulous hand against her neck.

Life otherwise went on undisturbed in Hogwarts, especially for the student body. New buttons popped up in the population, sporting the words “SUPPORT CEDRIC DIGGORY!” and “THE REAL HOGWARTS CHAMPION.” Harriet had a hunch Malfoy had either facilitated or funded their making, but he kept mum on the subject, especially when Hermione saw them and frowned.

Rumor in the school had it that some parents had thrown a fuss over the Tournament and wanted it canceled after their children had been threatened. However, their anger didn’t much faze the Ministry. That and the Tournament—by magic, law, or tradition—could not be canceled. Apparently, they hadn’t been lying when they said once a person’s name came out of the Goblet, they had to compete until the Tournament ended and the Goblet went out.

Three dragons returned home to their Romanian sanctuary—and a fourth stayed in Scotland. According to Hagrid, the officials disagreed for several days over what to do with the slowly smoldering corpse, whether or not its pieces should be returned to Romania or left in Scotland. They finally decided to inter the dragon in the Forbidden Forest. Several potioneers from the Guild of Ethical Potioneering and Standards—including Professor Snape—were allowed to harvest the necessary bits, like scales and claws and the igneous stones formed by dragonfire in its belly. Ollivander was given the heart.

Harriet leaned on the battlements and looked out over the twilit grounds. She folded her arms and hunched her shoulders, lost in thought about the Horntail as she watched its burial. Naturally, she couldn’t see the actual burial taking place, but she’d watched local and foreign officials flit out of the trees for the last hour, joined by centaurs and Professors Sprout and Grubby-Plank. Birds continued to rise from a grove of trees in the distance, disturbed from their nests. Their screaming cries echoed for kilometers.

Harriet traced the tiny, ancient grooves weathered into the stone, the pitted surface smooth and almost soft after a thousand years. She kept thinking about the magic she saw, kept remembering the black corona around Slytherin’s hand, the weighty press of its presence before it exploded outward. Many people in the common room—mostly the blokes—had been impressed, and they talked in awe-stricken voices about the power Slytherin had shown. There were envious.

Harriet wasn’t envious, or impressed. The display left her with a lingering sense of dread and revulsion—like watching someone swing a hammer at a rodent’s head. The same shock, sickness, and fear overcame her. There was nothing magical about it, nothing to be admired in wielding spells like a bloody club. She didn’t want to learn from him. She didn’t want her magic to resemble Slytherin’s in any way.

Footsteps turned her head, and Harriet straightened when she spotted Viktor Krum walking toward her. What’s he doing up her? she questioned. The foreign students didn’t have much of a reason to go this high in the school, not unless they went to visit the Astronomy Tower for lessons.

“Hello,” he greeted with a sharp nod of his head.

“‘Lo,” Harriet returned, puzzled. “Can I help you with something?”

“I vas coming up here for some air,” Krum said, turning his head to see the grounds, or maybe he meant to find what Harriet had been staring so intently at. He wore the buttoned Durmstrang uniform and his fur-lined cloak, the thick collar turned up against his neck. “It is a beautiful school, yes?”

“Huh?” Harriet blinked and gave herself a good, inward shake. Brilliant. Just brilliant, Potter. “Oh, yeah. But it’s, um, better in the summer. A lot…brighter then, innit? November and December are a bit drab.” She cleared her throat. She realized she still stunk of Lyre-flower from the Equill-Emollient and hoped the air carried the smell off. “Is—is Durmstrang nice looking?”

“It is. It is also very cold.”

Harriet fidgeted, nodding despite knowing nothing about Durmstrang or its supposed temperature. She knew it was in Norway—which was more than most everyone knew, but Mr. Flamel had no such compunction about keeping the location a secret. Krum smiled, a slight hitch of his mouth at the corner more than a full grin, and Harriet again wondered what on earth he could want.

“You did brilliant in the first task,” she blurted. “With the dragon. That spell with the net was great. You deserved first for that.”

“Thank you. I vas happy vith the result, though it is too bad about the Horntail.”

“Oh, well. I guess it’s a shame, but I didn’t much fancy being turned into charred bits.”

Krum laughed, a deep noise that matched his rough, Bulgarian baritone. “You are Harriet Potter, yes? They say you are a talented vitch. A Quidditch player?”

“I was—before. A Quidditch player, that is. I’m still Harriet. And a witch. Still a witch. Not sure about talented.” Why couldn’t she turn off her sudden babbling? Morgana help her. “But no, not a Quidditch player now. There was—err, my guardian decided I couldn’t play anymore. Not at school.” Harriet decided not to drag old history about the team and her ignominious dismissal into the light. Merlin knew it made her sound like an incompetent flyer. She ignored the bit about people apparently telling Krum things about her. “I was a Seeker.”

“Like me?” he pointed to himself.

“Yeah!” Harriet grinned, a bashful blush on her cheeks. “I saw you at the World Cup. That feint at the end was something else.”

Krum propped an elbow on the merlon and leaned against it. He didn’t appear all that interested in talking about Quidditch despite having been the one to bring it up. “I must confess I vas interested in talking vith you. I see you often in the library with the little ones when the Headmaster sends us there for material.”

“…yes? I do a spot of tutoring when they need it. Nothing much.”

“I find that admirable.” Krum shrugged. “I like it. Not many take the time to help others.”

Harriet fidgeted, her face still pink, a nervous feeling making her stomach flip. Viktor Krum thought she was admirable? Bloody hell.

He asked her about her classes and expressed his own interest in Charms and Defense. He told her about the subjects he studied under Karkaroff, and though it occurred to Harriet to question him about the potentially scheming Death Eater daylighting as a Headmaster, she enjoyed the reprieve from darker, uglier conversation.

That reprieve came crashing to an end when a hand settled on the back of her neck.

“Good evening, Miss Potter. Mr. Krum,” Professor Slytherin said as he made his presence known, slithering out from the shadows cast by the lowering sun cutting hard upon the castle’s walls. His hand weighed cold and heavy against her nape, his presence coming to stand at her shoulder. Harriet couldn’t see his face, but she imagined it was unpleasant. He did not sound pleased.

“Err, good evening, Professor Slytherin.”

The fingers pressed in ever so slightly. “Mr. Krum,” Slytherin said instead of replying. “I do believe the castle doors are due to close for the night. It would be in your best interest to be on the other side of them before then.”

Krum’s expression flickered, the scowl he often sported in public coming to settle on his dark brow. “Yes, Professor.” He nodded to him, then to Harriet, granting her a close-lipped smile. “Good night, Harriet.”

Krum departed while Harriet remained behind, feeling the total weight of Slytherin’s displeasure settle on the back of her head. He did at least release her neck and pace around her instead of standing at her back, but Harriet couldn’t quite bring herself to meet his eyes.

He stunk of Dark magic. It magnified the smell of Lyre-flower until Harriet choked on it.

“Do not become distracted, Potter,” Slytherin told her, his tone cold, biting. “Especially by a tawdry, terminal romance.”

The light flush on her cheeks drained away, and her eyes jumped to his on their own. Krum hadn’t been interested in her, had he? No. That was silly. Nevertheless, embarrassment at being told off by Slytherin, of all people, made Harriet angry.

“That’s not—. I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

Sir.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about. Sir.”

Slytherin scoffed, still considering her. “No, I don’t suppose you do. I stand by what I said, however. Now is not the time to be distracted by pointless pursuits.”

“Yes, sir.”

“You showed initiative during the Ministry’s little…game.” He made a dismissive gesture with one of his hands, then folded them together before himself. “Moreso than the others who chose to gawp at their impending doom.”

She remembered the disgusted look he’d thrown Flourish and Murton after he’d killed the dragon and turned to leave. He hadn’t checked on anyone. Instead, he left Snape to tend to the students, despite Snape’s blackened arm. “They were scared,” Harriet defended, voice quiet. “They’re just second years. They don’t know—they haven’t seen—.”

“Ah. They’re not like you, are they, dear Harriet?” The acrid smell of Dark magic intensified as he leaned forward ever so slightly, and his red eyes gleamed. “They haven’t seen what you have. I suppose it takes more than a dragon to frighten you, Miss Potter. After all, they didn’t see the Basilisk, did they? They didn’t kill Quirrell—.”

“I didn’t—!”

Slytherin raised his voice. “They didn’t kill Quirrell, and those poor, precious boys get to go home when the term ends to their mummy and daddy’s open arms. Unlike you.”

His mockery burned in her middle, crawled up her throat like clawed hands threatening to burst out of her mouth. She wanted to strike him. She wanted to punch him, no matter how ineffectual it would be, for bringing up her mum and dad when it was a monster wearing his face that took them from her.

Slytherin stared and didn’t blink. She couldn’t tell if he was amused or furious—if he meant to strike her across the face or give her arm a friendly pat. “Would you like to know a secret, Miss Potter? A secret, just for you.”

“…what is it?”

“You and I share that in common. No mother or father waited at home for me, either, and my peers mocked me for it.” He smiled as he had when the dragon died, when the blood splattered across his face and dripped onto his robes. “I assure you, they did not mock me for long. I made certain of it. Use that as a strength others cannot understand, and think very carefully before you turn that little baleful glare on me.”

Harriet swallowed and looked down. Sweat beaded her palms, and she wiped them against her robes. “Yes, sir.”

He studied her for another moment, then flicked his wrist, his wand appearing in his pale, slim hand. Harriet flinched, but Slytherin only pointed the wand at his opposite hand and incanted a spell. A brief snap of light later, and he held a black envelope.

“I will be holding the first trial for the apprenticeship soon. This is your invitation.”

Slytherin held it out to her between two fingers, and Harriet accepted it, though she wanted nothing more than to drop it over the battlements and let the night swallow it whole.

He stepped around Harriet then, ready to depart, and Harriet held her breath. The edge of his cold robes brushed her arm as he passed much too close, and the lingering hiss of his voice told her, “Do not disappoint me, Potter.”

He vanished the way he had come, only the soft thump of a door swinging shut marking his passage. Harriet waited until she knew he’d gone until she exhaled a shaky breath—and brought her fist down hard on the stone merlon. The pitted surface scraped her skin, leaving her knuckles raw and bloodied, but Harriet ignored the sting.

In her other hand, she held the envelope. Her fingers tightened upon it until the edges crumpled, and the birds continued to scream in the distance.


 

A/N:

Harriet: “Slytherin’s invitation is on black parchment.”

Elara: “…”

Hermione: “Slytherin is a goth girl, confirmed.”

Chapter 186: the invitation

Chapter Text

clxxxvi. the invitation

 

Crickets played in the weeds as the students gathered by the paddock to wait long after night had fallen.

They stood in disparate groups with their backs turned to the cold December wind coming off the mountains, their shoulders hunched, surrounding jars of Bluebell Flames that glinted like a line of will-o’-the-wisps. The air cut through the Forbidden Forest, and the resulting moan rustling in the leaves sent anxious tremors down Harriet’s spine.

Each person present had an invitation in their pocket, black parchment with whorls of silver ink passed over the top.

Despite there being no apparent danger, Harriet’s heart beat a fast, uncomfortable rhythm inside her chest, and she couldn’t help fidgeting with her spectacles and gloves. She noticed her friends fidgeting as well—Elara wringing her hands in the long sleeves of her cloak, Hermione chewing her lower lip raw.

“You don’t suppose he could have waited for spring to have this nonsense?” the latter huffed through chattering teeth, drawing herself closer to the Bluebell Flames floating between their group. Around them, the snow had begun to stick to the brown blades of grass, and Harriet knew by morning, the grounds would be white with powder that wouldn’t melt until April.

A low sigh escaped Harriet as she reached again to pat her pocket, feeling the invitation inside crumple slightly beneath the weight. “It’s gone past nine now,” she said. “D’you think he’s forgotten all about it?”

Elara shifted and pulled her invitation out, rereading it by the cold blue light. There really wasn’t much to it; every letter had the same engraving, giving a place, a time, and no explanation beyond a command to attend if they did not wish for their chance at the apprenticeship to be forfeited. Truly, Harriet had considered feigning illness—or trying one of the prototype sweets the Weasley twins had told her about that made you sick when you ate them. Fred and George hadn’t worked out the kinks, but she thought it might be worth bleeding out from the nose just to not be here.

Blowing white air between her chapped lips, Harriet turned her attention from her worries and studied the others gathered at the paddock.

Of the oldest Slytherins, Derrick, Craft, Bragge, and Crowle had shown, Derrick and Bragge deep in conversation while Crowle kept darting nervous glances toward the castle. Craft, the tallest and leanest member of their group, leaned on a post, dozing.

Numerous sixth years had also arrived; Vuharith, Pucey, Hawkworth, and Dread followed Lestrange like rats listening to a dark, smirking piper. Pucey didn’t appear convinced of this endeavor and kept exchanging discomforted glances with Hawkworth. The latter Harriet knew to have ambitions in the Ministry and was surprised to see here.

Some had come from the fifth years—Prefect Sterling, the Carrow twins, Darker, and Grim—and two others from Harriet’s own year had shuffled out into the grounds with them. Zabini and Nott sat on the fence not far from them and didn’t speak to one another. Nott darted many covert looks in their direction but didn’t move.

The only students from the younger pupils present were Volatile Vandran and Reinhold Burke, third years. As far as Harriet knew, they were best friends, and Vandran was always a bit of a mouthy bint when she asked—ordered—Harriet for help with Defense essays. Burke never requested any assistance, and Harriet felt his distaste for half-bloods kept him away rather than a lack of need.

“He’s going to send us into the forest,” Elara muttered, grimly pulling her cloak’s collar higher against her cold ears.

Harriet murmured, “Oh, fuck,” in answer, because it had only been a few months since she’d been chased by a ruddy werewolf through these very same trees, and she had little interest in repeating the experience. She peered upward at the sky leaden with gray clouds.

“It’s the new moon,” Hermione said, interpreting the shift in her attention. “It’s why it’s so wretchedly dark.”

The mentioned dark crept up from the lower lake and those thick, rocky cliffs, so much so Harriet thought it looked like spilt ink seeping closer under the flecks of white snow. Coupled with the wind, it created a bleak, sinister backdrop for what would undoubtedly prove to be a bleak, sinister task.

The hour had only just gone for ten, the low, peeling chimes from the clock tower swallowed by distant thunder as Professor Slytherin made his appearance, approaching from the trees rather than the castle. A collective shudder went through the group as the professor’s unnerving gaze raked across them.

“Good evening,” he intoned with all geniality of a hungry vampire. “How nice to see so many of you eager to better yourselves. Ambition is, after all, a key facet of our hallowed House.” Slytherin folded his hands before himself, his skin pale as ice against the night, his head seeming to float above the black void of his body. “Follow.”

He turned and walked into the trees.

A surplus of uneasy shuffling happened as the students glanced about. Perhaps Slytherin sensed no one had followed because he came to a sudden halt—and everyone moved before he could turn around again, an abrupt grim foreboding telling them it would not be good if they didn’t heed his instructions.

Harriet, Hermione, and Elara came last of all, staring into the thick undergrowth as the muddled shapes of their fellows moved farther into the darkness. Harriet swallowed her nerves and went first, though her hand lingered at her opposite wrist, gloved fingertips tracing the edge of her wand. She had considered bringing Livi, but none of them had any inkling of what Slytherin might require tonight. She didn’t want her familiar to be hurt.

Slytherin’s still a professor, Harriet reminded herself. He can’t lead us into a nest of Acromantulas and leave us there.

That didn’t stop the sweat from building on her neck. It laid like thick, frigid slime against her skin, and Harriet wished to be back in the dorms, in a nice, hot bath. It’d be a wonderful night to sit in the tiny spare room of her trunk and Charm the warming stones for her snakes. She could sit with a good novel and read by candlelight, warm and comfortable.

The wind bit at her bare ears like a wild dog, and Harriet flinched.

Slytherin did not take them far. They came to a stop in a small, barren clearing, a place Harriet thought she might have helped Hagrid feed Thestrals in the past. No Thestrals lingered now, no creatures at all to be found but for the distant, glassy eyes of watching owls—and their Defense Professor, of course.

“This will be your first trial. Your first attempt to earn my…regard.” Slytherin’s head tipped as he looked at different students, his attention lingering longer in some places, less in others. “I handed each of you an invitation. Present them now.”

Chilled hands shuffled through layers of cloth, and each person in the clearing held up a black slip of parchment.

“Excellent. I warn you now not to lose it. The consequences could be…quite dire.”

He chuckled, a sound that could rival the wind for its coldness, and some of the older students chuckled as well. Harriet wondered what in the blazes they thought was so funny; standing in a cursed forest with a murderer wasn’t her idea of a chipper evening.

“Tonight, I will be asking you to show me your cunning, and your resourcefulness.” Slytherin extended his arms as if to encompass them—and the trees—in his hold. “In a moment, I will depart. It will be your task to find me.”

Low murmuring broke out, and Hawkworth sputtered louder than the rest. “You’re joking.”

Slytherin’s eyes cut toward him. “A question, Hawkworth?”

“Sir—but, I—.” Hawkworth cleared his throat and ran a hand through his blond hair. “The Forbidden Forest is dangerous, sir. You can’t expect us to explore it—at night.”

“Oh, I don’t expect anything, boy,” Slytherin said in the same level tone he’d used so far. “You are all here of your own volition. This is an extra-curricular activity, and if you find you haven’t the stomach or the nerve for it, you may return to your bed.” He tossed a limp, bored gesture back the way they’d come. “But you need not worry. Those of you who are…incapable will not find yourselves in overt danger. The invitations are Charms so you cannot be lost, and several house-elves have been deputized to return you to the castle should you run into mortal peril or test my patience overmuch.”

Harriet wondered if she could plop herself down on the shriveled grass and wait for an elf to bring her back inside. She’d probably freeze to death waiting.

Slytherin retrieved his wand and gave it a wave, a series of sharp, complicated flicks accompanying the appearance of an opaque ward surrounding the clearing. The heavy magic prickled against Harriet’s skin, and she swallowed—or attempted to, her mouth gone dry with nerves and unease.

“After I step away, the ward will persist for ten minutes more, keeping you here. Afterward, you are free to come and find me.” Slytherin returned his wand to his robes. Harriet studied his face from the corner of her eye, and his mouth unfurled in a slight, smug grin, the one he usually wore when he was about to get his way.

“He’s up to something,” Harriet murmured to Hermione, who pursed her lips.

“He’s probably thinking about the Matagots he’ll unleash to chase us down once he’s out of sight,” Elara snorted. “I don’t much care to consider what he thinks mortal peril includes.”

Harriet didn’t either.

“Once the trial is complete, I will examine how well you acquit yourself this evening and make my decisions from there,” Slytherin continued. “Some of you will receive a second invitation to the next trial. Some of you will not.”

His gaze jumped to Hawkworth for an instant. Lestrange snickered, and though Hawkworth grimaced, Harriet didn’t think him upset.

Slytherin made his departure without any great fanfare, casting one lingering look over the clearing before leaving, headed deeper into the trees. Voices rose as soon as he vanished beyond the ward—the loudest among them being Lestrange.

“This will be simple,” he said. “What a joke. A simple Point Me Charm is all anyone with a brain would need.”

“It has to be more complicated than that,” Bragge insisted. “Or…well, he might simply want to cut the needless chaff.” The upper years looked at the younger students—pointedly Harriet’s year, and two in the year below.

Bragge might have been right, considering Harriet was the only one of their number to learn the spell, and that had been by chance, picked it up after Snape had hissed it during their mad plight through the forest. It wasn’t overly difficult, but the movement and grip had to be precise, and none of the youngest students knew it.

A sudden thought occurred to Harriet, and she froze. That won’t matter. The Point Me Charm won’t work.

Hermione repeated her unvoiced comment aloud. “Professor Slytherin’s name isn’t actually Tom Slytherin,” she uttered. Only Elara and Harriet could hear her, the others too caught up in the excitement as time whittled away and ward grew thinner. “That Charm won’t lead them anywhere. The professor knows that.”

The ward gave out, its pale white light dissipating into the sullen gloom like moths fleeing a dying flame. The others scattered, Lestrange and Bragge at the forefront while others moved with less certainty, fear heavy in their expressions as they considered the trees. Only Harriet, Elara, and Hermione refused to move at all.

“There’ll be a trick to this,” Harriet said when the last student—Craft—dwindled into the shadows. “Y’know, Dumbledore once told me Riddle has a dramatic streak to him, and Slytherin loves his theatric rubbish. I don’t want to play his stupid game of hide-and-go-seek.”

“Oh, I think Bragge probably has the right of it,” Hermione replied, her words muffled around a yawn. The jar of Bluebell Flames still hovered at her shoulder, dutiful as ever, and Elara reached over to take it and warm her stiff fingers. “He’ll need to cut the unwilling or undedicated out of the running first. The fact that the Point Me Charm doesn’t work adds a perfect twist for him, and it’ll make the overly confident people, like Lestrange, stumble. It’s humbling. Professor Slytherin always wants to humble people.”

“Twit,” Harriet scoffed aloud. She propped her hands on her hips and stretched for a moment, working heat into the cold muscles of her legs, and again she looked into the forest. Did Slytherin truly expect them to search for him in the dark of night here? If Harriet had learned anything from last year’s Defense curriculum, it was that Dark creatures prowled best during the new moon.

“Should we make a go of it?” Elara said, still holding the jar. “Not that I think he’ll cut Harriet even if she sat here for the rest of the night, but perhaps we should at least make an attempt.”

“Well, I’m not bloody stumbling about, looking for that great sanctimonious arsehole.” Harriet shuffled her clothes about until she could pull the Argonaut’s Atlas out from under her snug collar. The bones clattered against the glass as she settled it in her hand.

“I’m not certain that will work,” Hermione told her. “Given Professor Slytherin isn’t—well, entirely himself. I haven’t tested how the Atlas would react when trying to focus on more than one person at once.”

“Good as time as any. Non Ducor Duco.” The Atlas expanded, and Harriet retrieved her wand to give it a solid tap. “Search: Tom Riddle.

As Hermione had expected, the Atlas did not react well when attempting to find a man who apparently inhabited more than one body. The lines within the glass kept flickering and seizing, the whole of the lens heating quickly as the Charms tried to read and sift through too many places and areas unknown. However, the magic seemed to prefer displaying somewhere it had read and ventured before, so Harriet noticed familiar landmarks and labels popping up again and again.

Hermione rushed forward, wand out. She gave the glass a solid tap before it could overheat. “Refine Search: Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.”

The images settled, though the heat persisted, and the Atlas shuddered as if uncertain of what commands they had given. Harriet studied the map, the blue light gleaming white and silver against her glasses. Finally, she realized what she was seeing and yelped in dismay.

“That bastard’s back inside!” she told the others. “Look, right there. He’s in his classroom!”

Hermione and Elara bent their necks to study the map as well. “But that doesn’t make sense,” Hermione said. “Why on earth would he drag us out here to search for him if he’s inside?”

It was then that Elara covered her face with her palm and groaned, and Harriet quickly came to the same conclusion as well. What a nasty trick. “It was a ruse,” Elara told Hermione. “He never actually said ‘find me in the forest.’ He said, ‘find me.’ He could have given the order at any place but used our preconceptions and nerves against us by using the Forbidden Forest.”

“That’s—brilliant, but also quite cruel.”

“Would you call Slytherin a nice man, Hermione?”

“I don’t care what you call him,” Harriet grumbled as she returned the Atlas to its shrunken state and tucked it away under her shirt once more. She shivered when the brass rim, chilled by the air, touched her skin. “I’m getting out of this awful weather.”

The trio of witches tromped back out of the trees, then across the thickening blanket of snow forming upon the quiet grounds. They ran into Filch in the entrance hall and were quick to flash their invitations as an excuse. Slytherin must have told him to expect students coming in from outside at this late hour because the caretaker only leered at the gaudy bits of black paper and allowed them to move on without a word.

“D’you suppose we just knock?” Harriet asked when they reached the Defense classroom. She didn’t want to go in there. She hadn’t wanted to pass this trial at all, though she knew the importance of doing so. “Or stand out here and wait…?”

Elara reached for the knob and opened it without further dithering, forcing Harriet to muster her nerve and enter the classroom.

Slytherin looked to be in the middle of pouring himself a nice warm cuppa when the sound of the hinges caught his attention, treating them to the rare sight of surprise on the man’s otherwise blank face. He set the steaming pot aside. At once, he seemed both annoyed and entirely too pleased.

“Misses Potter, Black, and Granger. What a surprise.” A simple snap of his fingers conjured three more white cups, and a second snap pulled three chairs closer to his desk. Slytherin poured more tea while Harriet and her friends approached despite their reluctance, and Harriet took the cup that floated toward her hands. “I didn’t believe anyone would realize to return inside so soon.”

Harriet mimed drinking her tea—blowing on the surface, giving it a slight swish—but she never let it pass her lips. She wasn’t going to answer the professor until Elara nudged her shoe, and she remembered her friends had come to support her in getting Slytherin’s apprenticeship, meaning Harriet had to be the one to bear his attention.

“Err—. Well, I hope I’m not being too familiar in saying this, sir, but you don’t strike me as the kind of blo—wizard who much fancies sitting on some half-rotted log in the middle of a midnight snowstorm.” Harriet set her cup aside and cleared her throat, avoiding Slytherin’s gaze. The cold had barely dissipated, and she could not help the longing glance she threw toward the unlit grate on the wall.

A moment later, and a fire blazed there. Harriet shut her eyes and swore quietly to herself.

“And so these assumptions on person led you to abandon your quest and return indoors?” Slytherin asked. He had his wand out again, and it twirled between his pale fingers, graceful in its slow revolutions.

“No, sir. Your orders were to find you. There was no mention of the Forbidden Forest or any search of it.” She fidgeted. “Sir.”

Slytherin stared at Harriet for several minutes—several long, and very uncomfortable minutes in which Elara and Hermione failed to earn so much as a blink in their direction. “Very clever, Miss Potter,” the wizard said at length, his tone soft, almost affectionate. Terror wormed in Harriet’s veins, negligible for now, but she would probably vomit her supper later from the stress on her nerves. “Very clever indeed.”

Slytherin leaned back in his chair and crossed one leg over the other, steepling his narrow fingers. “Finish your tea, girls,” he told them. “We’re in for a long wait.”


 

A/N:

Slytherin: “I’m so tricky and smart. They’ll never figure this out—.”

Harriet, walking into the room: “Surprise, bitch.”

Chapter 187: a quiet man's anger

Chapter Text

clxxxvii. a quiet man’s anger

 

The harsh clicking of the vials being jostled together complemented Severus’ black mood.

What didn’t complement his mood was the presence of Albus Dumbledore lingering at the door to his lab. Or, on second thought, perhaps it did. There the man stood in his spangled attire, appearing far too saintly for his own good, and the sight of him after yet another long, sleepless night kindled impotent rage in Severus’ chest.

The bitter cold outside had left his hands chapped and dry. The skin had split along his nails, and Severus had already ruined one potion this evening from blood contamination like a foolish amateur. He longed to settle in a hot bath or in his bed, but dawn kissed the horizon already, and he had classes to teach.

And miles to go before I sleep, and miles to go before I sleep.

“The trial went much as you would expect,” he said to the Headmaster, refusing to look up from his work. The metal ladle clanged against the inside of the iron cauldron, and the ice-blue liquid hissed thin rivers of steam where it sloshed against the surface. Severus dribbled the concoction into vials already slotted into the wooden holder. “Most of the participants stumbled about in the dark, barely able to hold their wands straight from stuttering in terror until Slytherin called an end to the farce.”

Severus saw Dumbledore nod from the corner of his eye. “And the injuries?”

“The house-elves you bade him to make use of prevented anything catastrophic. I fished Vandran and Burke out of a pond they fell into after treading on the thin ice. Sterling managed to get kicked in the chest by a Thestral, and Crowle burned herself like an idiot attempting to make a torch.” A rough grunt left Severus, and he added in a nasty tone, “And of course, I’ve been brewing multiple batches of Frost Bite Salve to administer for the rest.”

Dumbledore exhaled. “Nothing terrible, then,” he murmured, and Severus didn’t mention how he’d nearly been clawed to shreds by an Acromantula as he stalked the forest, making sure none of the idiots wandered too far. House-elves were efficient but not particularly clever or aware of nuances. Neither Dumbledore nor Severus had trusted them to fully comprehend what imminent danger for underage witches and wizards. Hence, Severus had spent the night tromping through bracken and praying a Centaur didn’t use him for target practice.

“How did Harriet do? Miss Black, Miss Granger?”

Severus scoffed. “They never went into the forest. They cheated with that little toy of theirs and returned to the castle within minutes of Slytherin doing the same.”

Dumbledore stroked his beard, watching as Severus poured the last trickle of salve into the waiting vials and shoved the rack aside to cool. The Potions Master hefted the cauldron from its iron rack and walked it to the sink.

“I find myself unsure as to whether I should be pleased by their ingenuity or worried they performed too well.” The old man chuckled, though he lacked his usual chipper attitude. “Ah, perhaps both, then.”

Severus ignored the comment. “As I said, this trial was much as we expected it would be: an easy way for Slytherin to cut those he deems unworthy of his time.”

“How many advanced?”

“Thirteen of the original twenty-one. Crowle, Dread, Sterling, Darker, Grim, Zabini, Vandran, and Burke will not be receiving another invitation. He’s put out over Dread’s less than spectacular showing and—in his own words—believes Crowle could be put to better use somewhere else. Overall, those he truly wishes to test made it through his petty game.”

“And when will he hold his next trial?”

“For the most part, he intends to mirror the timeline of the Tournament. He believes it will keep Slytherin House’s attention on itself rather than participating in the school at large.” The first rule of any abuser: isolation. Severus had witnessed Slytherin’s slow needling for years, the painless pins he slid into his puppets without their awareness, and how he formed wedges between his chosen and the rest of the student body. He isolated them, then adored them, showered them with praise—and then, of course, perpetuated the actual abuse. The kernels of disappointment sown like poisonous weeds, the small hexes, the shoves, the slaps, the curses—.

Severus swiped his thumb across his brow. His hands burned from the cold despite the sweat beading his skin.

“What do you assume he will do next?”

“What do you assume, Headmaster?” Severus snapped, his eyes flicking to Dumbledore for one moment, then away. He ran water into the soiled cauldron, then flicked his hand at the rack of similar vessels, a new cauldron replacing the first. Severus’ wandless magic proved less than stellar at the moment, meaning the cauldron fell with a resounding thud and cracked the stone worktop. “I doubt you wish to hear the postulations of your servants.”

Dumbledore closed his eyes for a moment, whether in irritation or a bid for patience, Severus couldn’t tell. The man had always done remarkably well in concealing his emotions when he wanted to. “I do not regard you in such a manner. I have not, and will not, think of you as such.”

“Of course, Headmaster.”

“Severus.”

“I do not know what he will do. Frighten them, I assume. He hasn’t the time for breaking in frightened dogs.”

Severus.”

“Did you require something else?”

“I would appreciate it if you looked at me, my boy.”

Severus paused in his work for long enough to allow his eyes to rise to Dumbledore’s in a manner they hadn’t for several weeks. Not since the Headmaster spelled Severus into a wall in his own office.

“I have apologized for what occurred between you, myself, and Alastor. I cannot apologize again for my behavior if you are unwilling to accept my sincerity. But I will not have you thinking you are a servant, Severus.”

“No? I only need to pretend to be one, then?” Snape’s lip curled, his body turning toward the workbench. “How unfortunate that playtime never seems to end. When do pretend and reality cease to be separate entities, sir? Is it still pretend when I have to debase myself at every opportunity to simply fucking exist?”

Dumbledore stepped away from the door, closer to Severus, who stiffened on instinct as if about to be struck. But Dumbledore had never struck him—not as Slytherin did on the regular, or how Riddle used to before the war ended. Perhaps it was because of that fact that Severus could not bring himself to let go of the Headmaster’s actions in his office. He’d felt the bruises and betrayal sting in harmony for over a week.

“There is only one master of Severus Snape,” Dumbledore said, his blue eyes keen and unrelenting. He settled his hand over Severus’ chest, just above his heart. “And he is a good man.”

Severus stared at the older wizard for several seconds more before he had to look away. He retreated to the workbench and summoned ingredients from the lab’s open storage, muttering an excuse about needing to brew more potions.

What bullshite, he thought, morose. I’m never my own master.

Whether or not Dumbledore would take the hint and leave remained a mystery, as a moment later, a heavy knock landed upon the door. Severus didn’t know who it could be at this impossible hour—Filch, perhaps, or a prefect with an emergency to report. Not Slytherin. He had other miens of summoning Severus if he desired to do so.

Sighing, Severus dropped his potions knife and went to the door. “What now?”

He didn’t know who he expected, but it certainly wasn’t Nicolas Flamel.

“Oh. So zis is the right room,” the Frenchman commented as he passed Severus without waiting for an invitation. Severus blinked. Flamel carried a soft, parchment-wrapped package that he set aside on a table as he took in the lab and came to face Dumbledore. “Ah, Albus. Your Deputy Headmistress told me where I could find you. Very helpful woman, Minerva is.”

It was strange to see the Headmaster taken aback. Apparently, he hadn’t been expecting Flamel’s visit. “I will have to thank her, then. Forgive me for asking, but what are you doing here, Nicolas? Is everything all right? Is Perenelle well?”

“Perenelle and I are in good health, oui.” Flamel leaned against the table at his back as he spoke and crossed his arms. Severus didn’t know the man very well; they’d been introduced, briefly, in the summer and had crossed paths on occasion in Grimmauld Place. Severus had the impression Flamel did not much care to interact with people he had no intention of getting to know and that Severus himself fell into that category.

Still, for all his lack of personal knowledge on the wizard, even Severus could hear the frosty note in Flamel’s tone, the irritation that vibrated from his stiff shoulders under his waistcoat and plain brown cloak. Moreover, the look he directed toward Albus was decidedly unfriendly.

Severus closed the lab door and returned to his workstation, turning his back to the room.

“I have ‘ad a letter,” Flamel began, speaking slowly, precisely. “And it told me a very strange tale. A curious story about a competition—but not zee Tournament, as it were. No, zis competition is being held by Slytherin, and Harriet has been encouraged to enter.”

“Ah. I had expected Harriet to write you earlier.”

Non. This letter was not from Harriet. I zink the sender preferred to be anonymous. I expect, like most children, she did not wish to inform her guardian she was about to do somezing incredibly stupid.” Severus thought it telling that Dumbledore made no objection to Flamel referring to himself as Potter’s guardian. He heard the alchemist step closer to the Headmaster. “À quoi penses-tu? Huh, Albus? C’est de la folie!”

Dumbledore exhaled. “Calmez-vous, s'il vous plait, Nicolas—.

Non, je ne vais pas me calmer!” Flamel shouted. “You are going to get that poor girl killed, Albus, mon Dieu! Tell me your reasoning for encouraging this, for I cannot see it. I cannot see why you would risk her in zis manner!”

“Our best chance at protecting Harriet from him is to ingratiate her into the protection of his counterpart—.”

“Protection?! Connerie, Albus!” Something shattered, and still Severus kept his back to the room less he be sent from it like an eavesdropping child. “He protects nothing! Not even his own being! Il le casse comme du verre! Careless, cruel boy!” Flamel panted for breath, the strain in his voice evident. “I worry more about what Slytherin will do than I do Riddle. He is an immediate threat.”

“You are not giving Harriet enough credit. She is young, and she is a child, as you say, old friend, but these are not shields she can hold against her enemy. They are not barriers that have stopped Tom in the past, and we—I—have failed her too many times to deny her the ability to defend herself. We cannot always protect her when our own time is limited.”

Severus had heard the same arguments from the Headmaster before and would hear them again before all was said and done. But Albus Dumbledore did not understand what it meant to be Slytherin’s, what it felt like to have that pale hand at your arm or on the back of your neck. What it felt like to have that wand turn toward you, never knowing what spell might come flying at you next.

Severus knew—and Potter would too, if this madness persisted. She would not escape unscathed. She may learn from him, she may even learn enough to protect herself, but one day Slytherin would slip, would get angry, and he would hurt her, just as he hurt Severus. Severus might have relegated himself to being Slytherin’s whipping boy, but the girl—.

His fingers tightened about the knife in his hand.

“You are forgetting somezing. What of ze curse, Albus? What will being in his presence do? Et si cela aggravait l’Horcr—?”

Dumbledore cleared his throat, interrupting Flamel. “I’m afraid our dear friend Severus here speaks French as well, Nicolas.”

Je me fiche de ce que le garçon entend.” Flamel released a heated breath, and parchment crinkled as he picked up his package again. “Snape! See me to ze castle doors.”

Severus considered telling the alchemist to shove it out his arse, as he wasn’t a tour guide for stroppy dunderheads no matter their fame, but he simply set the knife aside and turned. “Very well.”

To Dumbledore, Flamel said, “We will continue zis conversation later. You should expect a Howler from Perenelle, I fear. She is not happy with you, or with me for that matter.”

Dumbledore nodded, resigned, looking older than he usually did in the murky green light of the lab. “Of course, Nicolas. I look forward to hearing from you.”

Ça va, Albus.”

Severus opened the door, his expression bored, and Flamel passed through it with nary a glance at the thoroughly chastised Headmaster. However, Dumbledore did spare Severus a raised brow on his way out, to which Severus returned a brief glower before allowing the door to slam shut again.

Flamel refrained from speaking until they’d reached the head of the corridor, at which point Severus could feel the shorter man’s eyes burning a hole in the side of his face. They slowed to a stop.

“And you, boy?” Flamel said. “What do you make of zis? Are you pleased enough to watch ‘arriet walk into danger mortel if it means you are not in her place?”

At first, Severus did not reply, though the angry retort that rose to his mouth threatened to burst out on its own. “My name,” he drawled. “Is Professor Snape. Not boy. Have a care, Master Flamel.”

Oui? Ah, but you see, you will always be a boy to me.” A hard expression passed the usually jovial countenance of the alchemist. “I have walked zis earth for more than six hundred years, and I am not fooled by zis face of yours, where you act like it does not matter. Or that you are not afraid. I know better. I am no fool.”

“No, you’re a relic.” Severus stood several inches taller than Flamel and so had to bend his neck to hiss at the other wizard. How dare he say I’m afraid. How dare—! “You’re a doddering old fence-sitter who’s spent much of his time skirting the field, never daring to get deeper in mud drowning the rest of us. So you condescend when it pleases you, calling me boy, coming to scold Dumbledore while we’ve lost body parts to this fight. Where were you when I had to cut off the rest of Albus’ cursed arm? Where were you when my eye melted out of my fucking head?”

Flamel frowned.

“You dare to presume—dare to come here and turn your nose up at me as if I have not bled enough for this cause? It didn’t matter to you before, Flamel, but you’ve six hundred years to your name and no legacy, and now you’ve found something you wish to keep, something worth more than the gold and the years you’ve taken for granted. Six hundred years, and you can do nothing for the girl as you shove off this mortal coil, nothing but watch her suffer just like the rest of us poor, simple mortals.”

Severus sucked in air, not realizing he’d gone breathless with fury, that his heart pounded against his ears like falling hammers. Flamel’s dark eyes studied Severus as his snarled retort echoed in the corridor’s confines. Luckily, no one would be about at this hour, not even Slytherin. It was not yet time for him to come crawling out of his lair.

“You are a cruel boy, much like Riddle,” Flamel muttered. “But perhaps it takes a cruel boy to betray one ally and write a letter to another, hmm?”

Severus froze. “I haven’t a clue what you’re on about.”

Non? As I said, I am not a fool. You wrote me ze letter when Harriet did not.” Flamel heaved a tired sigh. “Perhaps you are right, and maybe one day you will be cursed to know how age can make you…négligent. How it can leech empathy from you as years pass, and it becomes very hard to care. Until suddenly you do, and yes, the years before do not matter quite so much then.” Flamel grimaced, a haze of slow, meandering grief lingering in his gaze. “She has a way about her, ‘arriet. She has seen very little compassion or joy in her life, but she does not hesitate to extend it to others. The world has not turned her bitter, or angry, or entitled. Where others ‘ave sought me out for what I could give to them, Harriet Potter wrote to me to give of herself. She gave her sympathy, her regret. She did not want eternal life, or gold, or power. She wanted magic stories. She wanted tales of faraway places, tales about people falling in love, or outsmarting silly villains. She wanted stories as proof the world was still beautiful beyond ze little slice of Hell Tom Riddle saw fit to bequeath her.” Flamel shut his eyes, deepening the lines about his face, then opened them again. “It seems I ‘ave become ze mortal man who cannot keep someone he cares about from harm.”

The pair of wizards levied each other a dark look and did not speaks for a moment. Still, the corridor hummed with silence, and somewhere in the back of his mind, Severus wondered what in the world Albus was still doing in his lab. Maybe he took the Floo out. Or was waiting to badger Severus more on his return. Merlin spare him the latter.

“You wrote ze letter to tell me of the competition because you care, yes? Because you hoped I would change Albus’ mind. I was not sure at first. I thought maybe Monsieur Black or ze werewolf did it. But non.” The corner of Flamel’s mouth tipped upward. “It is a curious curse scar you have on your right wrist, Severus.”

Severus twitched said wrist at his side so his robes covered it.

“I imagine others ‘ave not noticed. You are not a man who invites scrutiny, and Albus’ eyes are not what they used to be—but mine? Mine are still as perfect as ever.”

“I have many scars, Flamel. They do not need you to make up fatuous little narratives for them.”

Flamel held a hand up as if to ward away Severus’ barbed tongue. “Évidemment.” He narrowed his eyes and studied the Potions Master again, his gaze flickering from his black boots, to his scarred hands, up to his austere face and lank black hair. Severus did not like the feeling of being scanned for defects. He had many of them. “I can trust you to take care of her, oui?”

“I do not need your trust or opinion to do what is right.”

Non, I said nothing of what is right. I trust Albus to do what is right, even if it is hard. Even if it means endangering Harriet in a stupid competition neither of us agrees with. You? I trust you to protect Harriet, even if it means protecting her from what is right.”

He suddenly thrust the package he’d been carrying into Severus’ chest with enough force to knock the air out of him. Severus clutched at it despite himself, wheezing.

“Zat is for Harriet, from Perenelle. Her dress robes. Be a dear and deliver them for me, yes? I am needed at home.”

Before Severus could protest being reduced to the role of carrier owl, Flamel walked off without him, taking the stairs with the speed of a much, much younger man. Severus cursed under his breath and wondered if hexing world-famous alchemists in the back was at all sporting.

Probably not. That didn’t mean Severus didn’t try, however.


 

A/N: Officially half-way through 4th year.

Severus briefly quotes Robert Frost: The woods are lovely, dark and deep, / But I have promises to keep, / And miles to go before I sleep, / And miles to go before I sleep . ” There’s some depressed/almost suicidal allusions in the poem that fit Severus’ grim mindset.

Chapter 188: one time in arithmancy

Chapter Text

clxxxviii. one time in arithmancy

 

“That’s them, isn’t it?”

“Those three there? No! Really? I wouldn’t have guessed.”

“Really! They don’t seem that impressive, do they?”

“Are you sure they’re the ones who beat out Crowle and Dread in the competition?”

“They beat out everyone. They’re only fourth years!”

“Merlin.”

Hermione pretended she couldn’t hear Aron Lambkins and Cadence Coil’s rather loud whispering as they passed the pair of older Slytherins in the hall. It had been the same everywhere she, Elara, and Harriet went for the past few days—furtive conservations and judging gazes, disbelief and curiosity in equal measure. Being in the common room was almost unbearable.

In retrospect, it hadn’t been the best idea to so thoroughly thwart Slytherin’s first trial. It hadn’t occurred to Hermione to consider what the others would think when they finally stumbled into the Defense professor’s classroom and found them there drinking tea with Slytherin, Harriet feigning sleep because Professor Slytherin would not stop staring. What had been a simple—perhaps even deceptive—move on their part, reading the Atlas, seemed a mysterious and astonishing feat to others.

As a result, Hermione and her two friends had spent the last two days as subjects of curiosity in their House. People speculated on how they’d performed better than seventh-year Iola Crowle, sixth-year Darren Dread, and the fifth-year prefect Mathilda Sterling. Hermione didn’t have an answer for them. Neither did Harriet or Elara.

The worst scrutiny came from Accipto Lestrange, who expressed his interest with more malice than anything else. He had, as Professor Slytherin counted it, come in sixth place. Linden Craft came in fourth, though Hermione theorized he’d gotten tired of the forest and had abandoned the task for the comfort of the castle, inadvertently following them into the classroom some forty minutes later. In fifth came Desdemona Bragge, who didn’t arrive at the castle before Lestrange, but who, according to Slytherin’s Charmed invitation, managed to cover a much vaster area of the woods than poor, bitter Accipto. Lestrange had thrown a fit when he found out.

Hermione tried to understand Professor Slytherin’s metric, but he hadn’t chosen to disclose whatever guidelines governed his choices. In her opinion, it was all a farce; the wizard had his eye on certain students, and he’d game the system to ensure they made it as far as he saw fit. The first trial had been designed to make the overly-confident stumble and the under-prepared fail. Slytherin would have assumed Harriet, Elara, and Hermione would come together and be that much more likely to recognize and puzzle through his rouse.

Hermione was under no illusion that Professor Slytherin had any further use for herself or Elara beyond ensuring Harriet made it through to the final stages of his little social experiment. Hermione was a Muggle-born, free-thinking, and a woman. The latter might not factor too much in Professor Slytherin’s recruitment, but it didn’t play in her favor. Elara may have the pedigree and familial connections he preferred—but she was difficult. Complicated. Obstinate. She didn’t have the…right temperament.

Harriet, on the other hand, was the orphan of an old Noble House, brilliant in Defense, and impressionable—as far as Professor Slytherin knew. He wouldn’t find her easy to sway in the long run. Her morals and ideals were more fixed than anyone else’s, but Harriet could lie and pretend if needed. She could smile, call him sir, and all the while despise the wizard for his connection to her family’s death.

Hermione chewed on her lower lip and stared daggers at the floor. They waited by the door to Arithmancy for Professor Vector’s arrival.

“If you’re trying to set that stone on fire, there are better ways to go about it.”

Blinking, Hermione raised her eyes to Harriet’s. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

Mhm.” Harriet readjusted her spectacles and craned her head to peer down the corridor. “Boot’s coming.”

Hermione didn’t turn around. She didn’t—but she may have peered more intently from the corner of her eyes than she usually did. Terry came to stand next to her a moment or so later, one hand on the strap of his school bag, the other casually tucked into his trouser pocket.

“Hi, Hermione,” he said, smiling. “Black, Potter.”

“Hello, Boot.”

The grin on Elara’s face was far too smug and knowing. Hermione scowled at her before addressing Terry. “Hello! How are you?”

“I’m good. Did you finish the assignment? I had to leave the last question blank.”

“Oh, I got through it. We had to use the Chaldean method for that one.”

Terry smacked his forehead. “I should have realized it. Let me guess; a lack of nines?”

Hermione chuckled. “Yes. It was cleverly hidden though, enough to make the Pythagorean method almost viable—.”

Harriet let out a loud, bored groan. “Okay, I’m leaving.”

“It’s your fault for not taking the class. You would understand the fascination then,” Hermione scolded.

“I don’t want to take this class. Two plus two should always equal four, Hermione.”

“It does! Usually. But, well—.”

“Goodbye, Harriet,” Elara interrupted before Hermione could go on a tangent about sequential reductions and Vibrational numbers. “Don’t you have children to tutor?”

“You say that like we’re not fourteen.” Harriet stretched, arms above her head—a green snake tail visible in her shifting sleeve for a moment before it disappeared. “And no, I’m going to go hide so I don’t have to listen to bloody questions about Slytherin’s task. Ugh.”

By then, Professor Vector came around the corner, carrying her usual bag bursting with scrolls and spare bits of parchment, threatening to come unraveled at the seams. The professor had proven her propensity before for dragging unwitting students into her classroom even if they weren’t on her roster, so Harriet quickly fled in the other direction. Hermione straightened and followed Professor Vector into the classroom.

Terry leaned closer as they took their seats in the odd, rounded configuration facing the blackboard. Heat tinged Hermione’s cheeks, and she told herself to stop being ridiculous right this moment.

“She seems a bit squiffy, isn’t she?” he murmured in her ear, nodding toward Professor Vector. She noticed the professor had Charmed the lenses of her spectacles darker, and her graying hair looked as if it hadn’t been washed.

“No,” Hermione whispered back. “I think she’s just tired.” To herself, she added, and perhaps a touch hungover. Poor Professor Vector should watch her wine consumption while working on matrices so late at night.

“Either way, she’s going to stick us with revisions today. Just watch.”

Terry was correct, as Professor Vector did assign them revisions for the day’s lesson as she slumped at her desk and made a valiant effort to remain awake. Hermione sighed and set her homework aside. She took out her textbook and opened it before her.

Really, she had too much going on to revise the same Arithmancy sequences again, and it seemed most of the class shared that sentiment as they retrieved homework for other classes or fell into quiet, muted conversations. Hermione’s mind started ticking over the same thoughts it’d been considering in the hall—Harriet, Professor Slytherin, and the nasty web he weaved.

“So,” Terry said as he glanced away from Professor Vector. “Would you hate me if I asked what happened with the trial all of you Slytherins have been whispering about?”

Hermione waved a hand in a half-hearted gesture. “They’re being dramatic and silly. Nothing happened, really.”

“Really?”

“Well. He set us the challenge of finding him, yes? But first, he led the group to the Forbidden Forest with the implication he would be hidden inside of it.”

“Let me guess, he hid in his office instead?”

“Clever. Not many people guessed it.”

“From an outside perspective, it sounds like something he’d do. He’s not a straightforward bloke at all.” Terry shrugged. “So, what happened? With you and Potter and Black? Did you pass his test?”

“Yes.” Hermione squirmed in her seat. “We were perhaps slightly dishonest in how we went about it, however.”

She slipped her Atlas out of her pocket and held it out for Terry to see. While she and her friends had decided to keep the Atlas a secret for the most part, Terry already knew of it. In fact, he’d helped Hermione muddle through some of its earliest Charms.

His brow rose. “Oh, I see. Has it been working well, then?”

“For the most part. It’s still having the problem where the sheer amount of information stored makes it difficult for search commands that aren’t readily apparent or specified. If they can’t be specified, it’ll heat until it shatters.” Or sets something on fire again.

“Hmm.” Terry leaned on his arm and turned his gaze toward the window, his face soft in the warm, early afternoon light. Hermione found herself fascinated by the dimple in his cheek until Elara—whom she’d quite forgotten sitting in the seat next to her—scoffed.

“Don’t be difficult,” Hermione hissed.

“Wouldn’t dream of it.” Elara reclined as much as the stiff desk chair would allow and flipped to the next page in her book. If Hermione wasn’t mistaken, it was one of Harriet’s Muggle fantasy novels.

Terry snapped his fingers, having had an epiphany, and Hermione whipped around to face him again. “What if you relayed the information through a probability sequence?” he said, eyes bright. “It would render decisions faster.”

“If the Charms passed through a probability sequence every time we opened the Atlas, it would—.”

“No, no. Not every time. What if you had it reckon the numbers as the information was input? The Vibrational numbers of dates, for example. Then Character, Heart, and Social numbers for people. If the Charms could be written to run those numbers through a probability sequence and then pull them through Pascal’s Pyramid, the Atlas could better predict movement and information before it’s written.”

“The sheer amount of input would be hypothetically staggering,” Hermione muttered, her mind working fast. “Critically so. It may only exacerbate the issue by needlessly compiling worthless data. But if I were to wrap the original circumdo ward in a second circumdo ward and write the equations directly into that….” Terry had potentially pointed out a means for the Argonaut’s Atlas to not only sort information in a new fashion but to also predict specific trends—to detect the probability of behavior when people meet in certain places, at certain times, at certain dates. If Hermione could deduce a method to keep the reactive heat from building to intolerable levels as the Charms functioned—. “You’re brilliant, do you know that?”

Terry flushed scarlet but looked very pleased with himself.

“Harriet would vomit to hear all this talk of arithmic rendering and probability,” Elara commented.

“Well, she can vomit after she thanks Terry,” Hermione said with a grin, dragging a fresh roll of parchment from her bag along with an inkwell and sharpened quill. “Enjoy your book. I have notes to take!”

It turned out to be a very productive period after all. Hermione wrote down what Terry suggested and quickly began scribbling in her own thoughts and questions underneath, jotting down books and pages she would need to reference in the future. Unlike Divinations, Arithmancy could be beautifully precise in its numbered sequences and relays—but it was also easily disruptable in a way Divinations, with all its nonsense static predictions, wasn’t. She would have to fashion a way in which variables wouldn’t quite literally blow the Atlas up in their faces.

Hermione did discover something…odd while she worked. Wanting to test how the map feature would react to newly imposed equations, she opened the Atlas to the image of the Great Hall, and as she flicked her wand over the glass and muttered spells, she glanced down to see the little dots crossing through. Given the hour, she’d expected the space to be mostly empty and it was, with a few exceptions.

One dot belonged to an Auror, Gawain Robards, and by his slow continuous motion, Hermione gathered he was on patrol. Another dot following not far behind was Barty Crouch, and she wondered what business could bring one of the Tournament judges to the castle.

Then, Hermione forgot all about Barty Crouch when she spied Rita Skeeter meandering about without a care in the world. She knew for a fact Skeeter and all other reporters had been banned from the grounds when a task wasn’t in session, so what on earth was she doing prancing about the Great Hall in broad daylight? Why hadn’t the Auror, Robards, done anything?

Something peculiar is going on.

Time passed quickly after that, and it seemed only minutes later that Professor Vector stood from her desk, mumbling in a daze, to dismiss them for lunch. Hermione returned the Atlas to its proper size and to its proper place in her pocket, rolling her notes up. Already prepared to leave, Terry capped her ink and handed it to her. A pink flush grew in his cheeks.

“So…are we still on to go to Hogsmeade next week?” he asked.

“What? Oh—yes, of course,” Hermione replied, nearly crumpling her tidy parchment rolls when her hands spasmed. “I have a, um, appointment first. I have to get my dress robes for the Yule Ball.”

Merlin! Hermione winced. I shouldn’t have mentioned that. Oh no, what if he thinks I’m hinting at something? Am I hinting at something? Am I coming on too strong? Why isn’t there a reliable book with answers for situations like this?!

“Err, speaking of the Yule Ball….” Terry scratched the back of his head and wouldn’t meet Hermione’s gaze. She had the sudden horrible premonition that he’d already asked someone to be his date—or some witch got the courage to ask him first. Oh, why hadn’t she thought to do that? Who wouldn’t want to go with Terry? He was smart and absolutely charming, with his lovely soft hair—.

“Hermione?”

And his smile. He was so kind and thoughtful—.

Hermione?

Startled, she blushed. “I—I’m sorry. I was distracted for a moment. What did you say?”

Behind her, Elara snorted into her gloved hand, and Hermione swore she’d hex the witch for bearing witness to her embarrassment once they were alone.

“I asked if—Black, do stop laughing, for Merlin’s sake,” Terry huffed, face red. “I asked if you’d like to go to the Yule Ball with me.”

“Yes!” Hermione all but shouted. Then, in a quieter voice, “I mean—sure, of course. If you’d like. Because I would like. To go, that is. With you.” She cleared her throat. “Yes, Terry, I would love to go to the Ball with you.”

Before Terry could say anything else, something shattered from the next row over, and Hermione turned her head to see Draco half-bent over his satchel, his inkwell seeming to have slipped through nerveless fingers. He paid no mind to the sticky black mess seeping across the stones under his shoes as he stared at Hermione in horror.

She frowned. “Are you all right, Draco?”

Sputtering, he straightened and said, “You’re going to the Yule Ball with him?”

What was he on about? Was it such a surprise Terry might want to ask her out? Because she wasn’t beautiful? Or pure-blooded?

Hermione opened her mouth to give Draco a piece of her mind, but Elara already had him by the arm, pulling him off balance into her side.

“Come along, cousin. We’ll be late for lunch. Apparently, you’ve already eaten some foot, but let’s see if your appetite can be spared.”

“But—.”

Elara all but frog-marched him out to the corridor, forgetting the mess on the floor and one of Draco’s unpacked textbooks. From the front of the classroom came Professor Vector’s loud snoring as she slipped back into a heavy slumber.

Terry blinked as he looked from the door to Hermione. “You have bizarre friends.”

“Yes,” she sighed. “I do.”


A/N:

Elara: “You and Krum should start a boyband.”

Draco: “We should? Really?”

Elara: “Your first song can be ‘She Doesn’t Realize I Exist.’”

I had to learn how arithmancy works just to write this chapter. Will I ever use it again? Who knows, but it ’s trapped in my brain now.

Chapter 189: prepared

Chapter Text

clxxxix. prepared

 

The letter came for Harriet as lunch was due to end, and she sat outside in Slytherin’s Redoubt, watching the snow layer across the grounds in papery sheets.

She didn’t notice Fawkes at first, her attention fixed instead on Kevin coiled in her palm, her fingers cupped to protect him from the snow. He was in the middle of listing all the snacks he favored and wanted to eat, several of which Harriet knew he’d never tried. He spent too much time listening to Livi, but he was definitely Livi’s favorite. The Horned Serpent didn’t like Howard, who could rarely be stirred to do more than snooze, and Rick thought himself the ringleader of their little den.

Fawkes made his presence known with a loud squawk, the noise muffled around the letter held by his beak. Startled, Harriet flinched.

“Steady on….”

She reached up to the bird perched on the parapet and took the letter, offering the leftovers from her bacon butty. Fawkes brightened at this exchange and hopped down to Harriet’s knee. She squirreled Kevin away in her sleeve as the phoenix started in on picking over the food wrappings.

“Ow, Kevin—no biting! Merlin’s beard….” Harriet grumbled, turning the letter over in her hands to peel back the Hogwarts seal. She already suspected the letter was from Professor Dumbledore, and she wasn’t wrong.

 

“Dearest Harriet,

I would like to request your presence in my office at your earliest convenience for an important discussion. I will, of course, need to excuse you from your afternoon Defense lesson.

 

“Brilliant,” Harriet grinned, continuing.

 

“Though I don’t believe our discussion will take very long, you might find it necessary to take the period for reflection. Or perhaps a nice walk around the grounds, or a visit to the kitchens. The elves are working on a particularly tasty trifle. Whichever is your preference.

Professors Snape and McGonagall will be joining us for our meeting.

Yours,

Albus Dumbledore.

- P.S., Have you tried the Singing Sorbet?

 

Harriet folded the letter again. She was happy to miss Defense; she took any excuse she could to get out of Slytherin’s lessons, even going to Madam Pomfrey once to fake a case of the sniffles that had the matron rolling her eyes. However, she didn’t know what Professor Dumbledore wanted to talk to her about, and that had her on edge.

Maybe something about the apprenticeship, she thought, frowning. Maybe he’s changed his mind, and I don’t have to try anymore. I could only be so lucky.

Parchment rustled, a buckle clinking. “Oi!” Harriet snapped, yanking her satchel away from Fawkes’ inquisitive beak. The phoenix had moved on from the sandwich scraps to Harriet’s bag, and he came away with a carefully wrapped package of Honeydukes’ Best Fudge. Harriet made a grab for it and caught a wing in the face as Fawkes took flight.

“Daft bird,” she muttered under her breath, nursing a sore nose. Kevin peeked from her sleeve to see if he was safe, and Harriet plopped him into her pocket.

The corridors remained mostly clear as she returned inside and shouldered her satchel. Harriet considered going to find Elara and Hermione to tell them where she was headed, but she didn’t know where they’d be now, if they’d still be in the Great Hall or if they’d have moved on to wait in the Defense corridor. Harriet didn’t want to run across Professor Slytherin and have to explain how she’d be missing his class.

As she neared the library, she passed a group of Durmstrang students, and one of their number broke away from the others. Harriet looked up, adjusting her glasses, and Viktor Krum waved at her.

She almost turned around to see if he was waving at someone behind her.

“Hello,” Krum said as he crossed the corridor and approached Harriet. Some of the other Durmstrang students turned to see where Krum was going, and Harriet felt as if her feet had been hexed to the floor, an anxious flush rising to her face.

“‘Lo,” she returned.

“It is nice to see you. You have not been in the library lately.”

“Yeah, I’ve been avoiding the inquisition.” When Krum raised a puzzled brow, Harriet hurried to explain. “Oh, it’s a, err, House thing. A lot of annoying questions. I’m hoping it’ll die down by next week.”

“This is good. You vill be back soon then, yes?”

“Yes?” Harriet fidgeted with the letter still tucked in her hand, thumb running along the folded edge. “D’you want to study sometime? I’m only a fourth year, but if you need help with something….”

Krum smiled, though he shook his head. “No. That vas not what I meant. I vas hoping to ask if you vould go to the village vith me next veek.”

“The village? You mean Hogsmeade?” What did he want in Hogsmeade? And, more to the point, why would he ask Harriet to go with him? Surely he could go on his own or with some of the other Durmstrang people. “D’you need someone to show you around?”

Krum blinked and then scratched his cheek, looking awkward. “No…I vanted to go vith you.”

A strange noise left Harriet. It could only be described as disbelief mixed with a gasp—and perhaps a note of a groan. Regardless, it was definitely strange and Harriet rushed to cover it. “I can’t go to Hogsmeade,” she blurted. “I don’t have permission.”

A furrow deepened the skin between Krum’s thick brows. “I am not familiar with this rule.”

“We have to have our guardians sign our permission slips to get into the village,” she replied. “Mine, um, didn’t. So I’m not allowed.”

“They do not allow you to play Quidditch, and they do not allow you to go vith your friends to the village? They are very strict.”

“Ah, yeah.” She forced a laugh. Blaming her non-existent guardians for her life’s stricture came perilously close to the kind of blatant lying that made Harriet uncomfortable. “Sorry.”

“Is it not possible for you to visit at all?” Krum shifted from one foot to the other. “Vould you take a walk vith me, then? That day?”

“Sure. There’s great places to walk on the grounds.”

“Then it is a plan.” One of the Durmstrang boys said something in a foreign language—Bulgarian most likely—and Krum’s eyes flicked in his direction. “I have to go.”

“All right. Bye.”

“I vill see you soon.”

Krum left with his classmates just as the bell rang, Harriet watching him go before she shook herself into movement, heading for the stairs. It was as she climbed, still holding the letter from Dumbledore, that a comment from Slytherin drifted through her thoughts.

Do not become distracted, Potter. Especially by a tawdry, terminal romance.

She stopped mid-step as her eyes widened. Had Viktor Krum asked her on a date? Surely not. Surely that wasn’t how someone went about asking a person out, but as Harriet stared into space and tried to visualize how she would ask someone on a date, she came up blank.

Oh no, she thought. What was she meant to say? What was she meant to do? He couldn’t possibly have meant what Professor Slytherin said he meant. No. Impossible.

“You there!” one of the stuffy portraits on the wall called to her. “Get you along now! You are to be late for your lessons!”

Harriet grumbled a snarky reply but kept it to herself. Annoying the portraits never did anyone any favors.

She made it to Dumbledore’s office without further incident, though she did take the long way to avoid Filch when she spotted Mrs. Norris lurking. She approached the gargoyle, and when she reached it, Harriet glanced at the letter in her hand again.

“Singing Sorbet?”

The gargoyle leapt aside, and Harriet took the spiral steps upward. She could hear muffled voices inside the office before the door opened.

“Harriet,” Professor Dumbledore greeted as she came inside. He sat behind his desk while Professor McGonagall occupied one of the seats in front of it, the pair sharing a plate of shortbreads and a pot of tea. Snape, as usual, chose to stand off to the side, glowering at the white flecks coming to rest on the window’s glass.

“Hello, Headmaster,” Harriet said. She gave the scene a nervous look over as Professor McGonagall set aside her steaming drink. Fawkes, on his perch, had chocolate smudged on his beak, the carcass of Harriet’s once carefully wrapped morsel of fudge left on his food tray. “Am I trouble, sir?”

“No, no. Nothing like that.” Dumbledore placed his cup on its saucer, and a gentle wave of magic returned the whole tray to its service. “Would you like to have a seat?”

Harriet sat in the chair by McGonagall, though once she sat down, she almost wished she could stand again. McGonagall wore her usual stern expression and didn’t appear much pleased to be there, but Harriet didn’t think she was angry. Snape kept his back to the room.

“How are your studies going?”

“Fine,” Harriet replied, fidgeting. “I think my marks are okay.”

“I’m told they’re excellent.” Dumbledore smiled, and Harriet could have died from shock when no argument or derisive snort came out of Snape. McGonagall cleared her throat. “Ah, but allow me to get to the point of your visit. What are your thoughts on Professor Slytherin’s first trial?”

Harriet shrugged one shoulder.

“A verbal answer, Miss Potter,” McGonagall scolded.

“I don’t know what to say, Professor.” Harriet usually did her best not to spend time ruminating on Slytherin’s behavior. It did her little good attempting to understand the motives of a madman. “He was trying to prove he’s clever and make everyone else look stupid. It was underhanded to make us think we needed to search the forest—but I reckon we can’t expect anything else from him, can we?”

Dumbledore nodded with her words, a serious expression sharpening the lines around his eyes. “Yes. For all that he may appear careless at times, Professor Slytherin has motives for everything he does. He often employs petty games or wordplay to incite different reactions from people. He has often reminded me of a child being cruel to a pet to see how it will behave in distress, and like a child, he lacks a conscience. I believe the Muggles would call him a sociopath.”

From the window, Snape stirred ever so slightly, dark head tipping toward the Headmaster so he could give one curt nod.

Harriet studied Dumbledore before allowing her gaze to drift over the walls and the spectating faces. Her mind churned back to the encounter she had with Slytherin on the ramparts. What reaction had he been looking for when he decided to tell her his “secret?” He’d wanted something, but what exactly?

“I won’t say you were lucky in the trial. Luck would imply a certain serendipity, and I do not think luck has driven you and Misses Granger and Black to create your marvelous invention. I imagine you made it precisely for situations such as that, and that is not luck. That is good prudence. It is prudence I wish to discuss with you this afternoon—prudence in moving forward in Professor Slytherin’s trials.”

McGonagall shifted in her seat, biting back a half-uttered word, and Snape turned from the window.

“I wish for you to accept extra tutoring from those of us gathered here, Harriet, to help you succeed, both in these trials and in your future. Professor Slytherin will seek ways to test you in his apprenticeship, dear girl, and I would not send you to face those tests on your own.” The Headmaster drew in a breath and released it in a low sigh. Fawkes warbled once in the background. “Voldemort will return. I will arm you with every protection I can to protect you from his evil.”

Harriet could only nod, the knot in her throat tightening at his mention of the Dark Lord. She didn’t want to think about him returning. It filled her with a cold, unearthly dread that turned her limbs to lead and woke her in the dead of night. She kept remembering Slytherin’s outstretched hand and the blast of Dark magic tearing through the Horntail’s skull. Did Dumbledore really think she could ever match a wizard like that?

The muscles in Harriet’s chest drew tight. Numbness buzzed in her skin.

“Harriet?”

“So is—is this going to be like an extra class?” she stuttered, forcing the words out. Dumbledore observed her over the tops of his spectacles before answering.

“Of a sort. We would have to arrange it around our schedules and yours, and I do not believe the meetings would be planned far in advance. The four of us will need to make concessions of our time.”

Snape scoffed, looking away from the Headmaster. “As if we’re not busy enough.”

“Severus.”

The Potions Master went silent.

“What will I be learning?”

“Transfiguration,” McGonagall said, earning a wince from Harriet. “It is an effective tool when properly utilized against your opponents, and not easily countered.”

“I’m terrible at it.”

“You are not.” Her voice came out sharp as a whip, and Harriet flushed. “I would not waste my time nor yours if I thought your energies better spent elsewhere, Miss Potter. I will tutor you, and you will do well.”

“We are not concerned about your ability, Harriet,” Dumbledore told her. “You’re a very capable witch.”

“I don’t feel like it sometimes, sir.”

“Every child who steps into this school starts on the same foot, and to do well, they need only have the willingness to learn.” Dumbledore leaned back in his chair, propping more of his weight on the armrest, hand folded under his chin. “Though it may be hard for you to imagine, those of us present were all eleven at one point in our lives, and our education began here at Hogwarts. Yes, we have many more years of practice tucked into our belts than you do, but our foundations were built here. We had our strengths and our weaknesses, and our professors helped us become the people we are today.”

“And the Dark Lord, Professor? He went to Hogwarts, too.”

“He did indeed. When he was still Tom Riddle, he was an exceptional student. He was curious, eager. If not for the Darkness that tempted him to become the creature called Voldemort, he could have done great things for our world.”

At the wall, Snape shuddered at the name and shook a spasm from his left arm.

Harriet listened to what Dumbledore said, but she could not forget the years that separated them, the experience. She had to be better—do better—now, not in ten or twenty years. She wasn’t sure she’d survive ten or twenty years. The reminder didn’t inspire confidence in her heart.

“I wish to introduce you to more situational magic,” Dumbledore continued. “I often find witches and wizards can underestimate the importance of flexibility in their spellcraft, and how such flexibility may help them overcome obstacles and more powerful adversaries. We’ll speak more on that when the time comes. Professor Snape will be working with you on your dueling.”

“Fighting,” Snape corrected without missing a step. “If she was meant to duel, Flitwick would be here. Not me.”

Dumbledore allowed the correction with a tired tilt of his head. Harriet wondered what was wrong with Snape and the Headmaster. The former could be a right bastard, but he usually showed more deference to Professor Dumbledore.

“D’you know what Professor Slytherin’s going to make us do next?” Harriet asked, not meeting Dumbledore’s gaze. “For his second trial? How many trials is he gonna have?”

“Three,” Snape said from the window, the word cold and hard. “He will test your convictions next. He will want someone malleable enough to bend to his wishes, but Slytherin has no use for cowards—aside from target practice.”

Severus.”

“Do you want me to lie to the girl?” he snapped at Dumbledore. “You were the one who compared him to a child earlier. And like a child, if he finds he has no further use for her, he will toss her aside. He will grow careless.”

“Harriet’s situation is unique. She has our support.”

Snape sniffed. “How wonderful. Do you truly believe your support will spare her—or me—when he finally grows bored enough to kill us?”

No one spoke aside from McGonagall’s severe, startled inhale. In the silence, Snape gathered his robes about himself and departed without further word. Harriet noticed his gaze had refused to settle on any person in the room for as long as he’d been there, but it touched on Harriet once as he passed. He disappeared out the door in a dramatic flap of black wool and harsh footsteps.

Dumbledore cleared his throat. “I know it is a difficult thing we are asking from you, Harriet,” he told her with sincerity. “We are asking you to give much of your effort and to take risks we would usually dissuade you against. If I did not think becoming Professor Slytherin’s apprentice would serve you well in the long run, I would not encourage you down this path.”

“I know, Professor.” Harriet stared at her hands, at the letter now deposited in her lap, the edges rumpled from her anxious handling. “May I go?”

“You may, if you wish.”

Harriet stood and adjusted her satchel over her shoulder.

“You are free to come and speak with me whenever you need, Harriet,” Dumbledore said as he stood to see her out.

“My office door is always open as well,” McGonagall added. She remained in her seat, looking grim, as she reached again for the tea.

Harriet was lost in her own thoughts as she left the Headmaster at the door and rode the spiraling stairs to the gargoyle. She knew it had been too much to hope that Professor Dumbledore would change his mind and tell her she could drop out of Slytherin’s competition. Some part of her, however distant, thought learning new magic from the Albus Dumbledore would be brilliant—but in a more immediate sense, Harriet just felt scared.

Scared she would fail. Scared she would disappoint those trying to help her. Scared she’d drag her friends—her family—into danger and wouldn’t be able to protect them.

I don’t know what I’m doing, she thought, shoulders slumped. But I can’t give up. I won’t.

Harriet heaved a sigh and shuffled her feet, trying to decide if she should brave waiting in the Defense corridor for Hermione and Elara, or if she should just go down to the dormitories.

“Potter.”

She yelped and jumped away from the shadow peeling itself away from the wall. The shadow resolved itself into Snape, who gave Harriet a thoroughly unimpressed look as she clutched her chest. He had waited for her.

“Merlin!”

“Stop with your histrionics,” he quipped.

“You scared me!”

He ignored her glower. “Tell me, Potter. Have you and your wretched little friends been helping yourselves to my stores again?”

“What? No, we haven’t!”

Snape’s eyes narrowed. “If you’re lying to me….”

“I’m not,” Harriet insisted, annoyed. “We haven’t taken anything from you.”

He continued to scowl for another moment, then made to sweep by her and leave. The conversation in Dumbledore’s office came rushing back to her, overwhelming, and Harriet couldn’t stop her hand from grabbing the edge of his robes, stopping him in his tracks.

Harriet let go. Snape didn’t like her, and she didn’t like Snape—but he was honest, brutally so, and less prone to fits of optimism like the Headmaster. “Professor,” she said slowly. “D’you…do you think I can actually do this? That I actually stand a chance?”

Though Harriet had already released him, he snatched his robes farther from her, putting more space between them. “Don’t ask stupid questions,” he retorted. “You’ll be fine.”

“Really?”

“Did I not just say so? You should be far more worried if I discover you’re lying to me about stealing my ingredients.”

“I’m not lying.” Harriet crossed her arm. “I would just ask.”

His dark eyes flicked over her face, then away. “Go away, Potter.”

Harriet hesitated, but Snape clearly had nothing else to say, and neither did she. She cast the Potions Master one final look, then left.


A/N:

Dumbledore: “Ah, Harriet, here for our important discussion.”

Harriet: “I think Viktor Krum asked me on a date.”

Dumbledore: “An important discussion that can wait for the TEA TO BE SPILLED.”

Chapter 190: intention

Chapter Text

cxc. intention

 

“He said what?”

Elara’s voice echoed in the Aerie’s portrait room, seeming to bounce upon the solid walls with the strength of her incredulity.

“Which part didn’t you hear?” Harriet replied, her tone fairly tart. She sat sprawled in her chair across the table, her face set in a moody frown, back-lit by the low fire built into the belly of the hearth. Her equally moody familiar partially curled in her lap, the rest of his long body limp upon the floor, threaded through the chair’s legs.

Elara would never say anything to her, but Harriet appeared particularly sinister in that lighting.

“The part where Viktor Krum might’ve asked me on some kind of date, or the part where Dumbledore assigned me extra lessons?”

Elara said, “The former,” just as Hermione said, “The latter.” They turned to glare at one another.

“Don’t be ridiculous,” Hermione told her. She had her sleeves rolled up past her elbows, using a folded flannel to rub prepared unguent on the inside of Nicolas Flamel’s Embolized Cauldron. Two books lay open to the side, the pages thick with bookmarks. “Professor Dumbledore’s lessons are a much more pressing issue! Honestly, Elara, I’m surprised you disagree.”

Elara arched an unimpressed brow. Truly, she assumed Dumbledore’s proposed lessons were an inevitability; she’d wondered a few times over the years when he’d decide Harriet needed private tutoring suited to her skill set. Her Defense ability far out-stripped anyone in their year, and—with training—Elara thought she could be the best in the school.

No, Elara did not think Dumbledore’s decision was particularly noteworthy. What Viktor Krum said was.

“What did Viktor say to you?” she asked, lacing her hands against her middle. She ignored Hermione’s betrayed look.

“He asked if I would go to Hogsmeade with him. I didn’t realize what he meant at first—reckoned he needed a guide or something, I don’t know.”

“What did you say?”

“Well, even though I thought it’d be wicked to spend time with the Viktor Krum, I told him I’m not allowed in the village. It’s not a lie, but I’m not gonna sneak out of the castle just to show him around.”

“You’re not going to sneak out of the castle at all,” Elara corrected her, the words sharp.

Harriet grumbled. “Anyway, he asked if I’d walk around the grounds with him instead, and I said sure. He doesn’t mean like a—a date. That’s rubbish.”

“Of course he means like a date, Harriet. You’re being silly. You’ll have a lovely time with him, I’m sure.” Hermione cracked the seal on a potions-grade gallon of purified water and dumped the contents into the cauldron. “But never mind that. Did Dumbledore say what you would be learning?”

“I dunno,” Harriet said, her attention torn as Livius lifted his head and hissed something, Harriet tracing her fingertip along his nose and the upper crest of his gem. “McGonagall said Transfiguration because I’m rubbish at it, and I didn’t understand what Dumbledore meant by ‘situational magic.’” She paused. “Snape’s going to duel with me.”

Elara doubted that would play out well. Snape and Harriet’s relationship was less than amicable still, what with Harriet often back chatting the man in Potions while Snape did his utmost to ignore her. Elara didn’t envy her having to cross wands with him.

Hermione stoked the flame beneath the cauldron, fire curling over the phosphorous dish. “When?”

“Dunno.”

“Did you think to ask any questions? You’re being very vexing.”

“I was a tiny bit distracted by the overwhelming dread of having to be Slytherin’s bloody apprentice.”

Hermione huffed. “I’m still certain he won’t be able to hurt you. Not as his apprentice. It would break the rules of the Defense association, the C-triple-M.”

“You place far too much trust in their authority,” Elara interjected. “And in Slytherin’s restraint.”

“I’m trying to help her nerves, not exacerbate them,” Hermione quipped. The water began to boil, a fine spray of bubbles curling against the sides, and Hermione turned her attention to it. “It’s ready.”

“Are you sure you’re not going to melt something this time?”

“Fairly certain.” She retrieved the metal tongs from her potions kit and her own Atlas from her pocket. Before Elara could remind her that failure would result in a rather embarrassing letter to Flamel asking him to buy another lens from L’allée Du Jardin, Hermione dunked the Atlas into the water. After a moment, she withdrew it, and it seemed none the worse aside from the water dripping from the glass.

“Is that it?” Harriet asked.

“Now we have to see if it worked. Can I have one of your Atlases?”

Elara eased hers from her robe pocket and unclipped it from its silver fob chain, sliding it across the table to Hermione. She set it by her own, leaving space between the two, and retrieved her wand.

Appare Vestigium.”

Colored lights bloomed, foggy like blood in water, swirling along the table’s surface and cascading over the three of them. White veiled Hermione, shot through with blue stains, and Harriet had an odd, gray cowl over her head and a pool of green that circled and writhed above her chest. Livius glowed a brilliant indigo. Only Elara’s hands fell within the range of Hermione’s spell, and they had been gloved by a nacreous black haze.

Elara moved her hands and dropped them into her lap.

Considering they sat in a room comprised of magic and were, tangentially, under the effects of a Shrinking Charm, everything in the spell’s path lit up with color. Elara’s Atlas burned brightest of all. Next to it, however, Hermione’s Atlas remained untouched. In fact, it resembled a lump of coal in a bouquet of gemstones.

A wide smile split Hermione’s face. “It worked!”

“What does that do?” Harriet asked, sounding a touch impatient. “I’m not seeing the point.”

“Well, Embolized things aren’t detected by magic, because the process contains their magic within their own vessel. They appear Muggle, for lack of a better word. Here, try Summoning mine.”

Harriet did try, to no success. Hermione nodded.

“It’s easier to hide, and it’ll help the magic contain itself. It can’t be Summoned, cursed, or otherwise touched by magic—though there is an enchantment I’ve researched called Thief’s Downfall that will temporarily nullify the effect.”

“But will it affect the sharing aspect between the three? And the magic connecting them to the hydra vellum in the Aerie?” Elara asked.

“No. Those spells are written into the Atlas. We could think of it as a roadway leading to and from the lens, and the Embolization covers both the Atlas and the roadways.”

Elara watched as Hermione repeated the process with her Atlas, then came around the table, opening it to demonstrate how the adjustment hadn’t changed anything. “I still need to figure out the probability ward Terry told me about,” she said, tucking her curly hair behind her ear. “Theoretically, it should work as we proposed. The Arthimancy equations should chain to the second circumdo ward just fine. However, something in it seems to…I’m not sure how to describe it. The Atlas resists the ward.”

Frowning, Elara crossed her arms, tilting her head back to consider Hermione. “How so? It’s an inanimate object; it should not resist anything.”

“To tell the truth, I’m not entirely certain.” Sighing, Hermione leaned her hip against the table. “I can only guess it’s because the idea’s diametrically opposed to the Atlas’ purpose, and the…blood magic has given it a touch of will. The Atlas records facts, and the probability ward isn’t generating real information, rather information that might be real based on logical likelihoods. That said, statistical probabilities still aren’t reality, and if the magic resists being paired—Harriet, what are you doing?!

While Elara and Hermione had been talking, Harriet had unseated Livius and went to the cauldron. She’d taken the tongs in hand—and instead of dipping her Atlas inside, she’d dunked her wand.

Elara and Hermione stared in open-mouthed horror, waiting for the explosion—the explosion that never came. Harriet pulled her wand back out and shook the excess droplets from it.

“It’ll be nice not having to deal with that buggering Trace during the summer,” she said, giving the wand a swish, sending a small hex at the floor. She realized they hadn’t said a word aside from their initial outburst and paused, looking up. “What?”

Hermione sputtered. “That—you didn’t know it would work!”

“I just watched you dunk the Atlas twice over like a bloody biscuit! A wand is less complicated than that! It’s a bit of wood!”

Elara didn’t know what annoyed Hermione more, the fact that Harriet had a point, or the fact Hermione hadn’t thought of it first.

“It was still dangerous!” Hermione came over to study the cauldron, then Harriet’s wand, her lip close to teetering into a full pout. “Though, you are brilliant. I can’t believe I didn’t consider applying the same treatment to our wands….”

Smug, Harriet proceeded to repeat the process with her Atlas, and Hermione dipped their wands. By then, Harriet went off to hop on the ottoman by the hearth and have a discussion with Salazar Slytherin’s portrait, Livius draped over her shoulders, and Hermione pronounced that their cauldron had reached the end of its life.

“That’s why they cost so much and why we couldn’t get our hands on one,” Hermione lamented as she gave the cooling liquid a final stir. The motion brought up blackened emulsion from the cauldron’s sides, rife with thick bits of metal shavings. “The tempering agent rapidly begins to eat through the cauldron once it reaches a certain temperature, and the liquid needs to remain at that temperature in order to work. Damned if you do, damned if you don’t….”

She started to clean up the mess, and as she did so, Elara pulled one of the loose sheets of parchment off the pile they left on the rather messy table. She began to write a note in her sharp, exacting script, and didn’t finish until the wall clock they’d dragged in from another room in the Aerie warned them that curfew was approaching. Elara folded the parchment in half and didn’t bother with sealing it.

“Here,” Elara muttered to Hermione, tugging on her sleeve before she could follow Harriet from the lounge. She handed Hermione the folded letter. “Give this to Narcissa when you see her at Hogsmeade.”

“What? What is it?”

“My measurements and what items I won’t tolerate. I trust her opinion beyond that.”

Hermione’s brow furrowed. “But I don’t understand why you’re giving it to me. Why not hand it to her yourself?”

“Because I’m not going to Hogsmeade. I’m going to stay with Harriet.”

“Are you still on that? Don’t be silly!”

“I’m not being silly.” Elara met her eyes, her mouth pressed into a firm line. “Am I ever anything close to silly?”

For that, Hermione had no answer.

 

xXx

 

Harriet was surprised to see Elara waiting for her in the common room that weekend long after the others had departed for the village. The shorter witch wore her best uniform—meaning it lacked stubborn grass stains or the spots where the house elves had repaired spell damage and potions accidents. Over it, she’d thrown one of the cloaks she’d gotten from the Flamels with real gold clasps and her favorite Slytherin scarf.

Elara had noticed Harriet had been paying a lot more attention to her appearance of late, and not because she seemed to care overly much. More like she felt embarrassed over creases in her shirt or a bit of dirt on her cheek. Elara suspected one of those wretched Hufflepuff cows had said something off-putting, and if she found out which one, she’d curse their makeup to give them hives.

Pausing, Harriet blinked and asked, “What’re you doing here?”

Elara stood, brushing the front of her fur-lined robes so they laid flat. “I thought I’d join you on your walk today.”

Harriet still looked surprised—her brows drawn together in a puzzled little furrow—but she smiled and nodded. “Brilliant. We’re supposed to meet him down by the lake. Oh, bloody hell, I’ve got a snake in my pocket—.” She started to hiss imprecations at the slithering creature poking its head from her cloak, and Elara coughed to cover the sound lest the portrait above the hearth overhear. Harriet retreated to the dorms and returned a moment later. “Let’s go!”

They departed through the mostly empty corridors, and Elara grimaced at the first frigid breath of wind that hit her face as they opened the castle doors. Without a word, she shifted into her Animagus form, and the change immediately cut the harsh cold in her lungs. Elara shook her fur out, and steam curled from her nose.

“Should I pop by a shop and buy you a collar?” Harriet teased, wiggling her fingers as if threatening to pet her. “A nice pink one with a big bow—.”

Elara nipped her leg—but not before Harriet’s gloved hand closed around her ear and gave it a good scratch. It embarrassed her to admit how nice that felt as a dog.

They tromped through the fresh layer of snow, neither girl nor dog heavy enough to break through the top crust more than a few inches, leaving faint impressions in their wake. Elara could smell Krum before they found him—a whiff of male and sparse cologne intermingling with the harsher scent of the frozen water and distant trees. He stood at the water’s edge, shoulders hunched, scowling across the lake toward the moored ship.

“Hey, Viktor!” Harriet greeted with a wave, and Krum turned.

“Harriet,” he replied, mimicking her wave, his gaze dipping to the large black dog standing by her side. Elara had reached her full height over the summer, and the size of her Animagus reflected that growth. Her head cleared Harriet’s hip. “I did not know Hogwarts allowed dogs.”

Harriet side-eyed her, the corner of her mouth twitching. “Don’t mind Snuffles. She’s a special case.”

Elara considered biting Harriet in the backside.

“I see….” Krum looked her over again as he straightened his posture, smiling at Harriet. “You look very nice.”

“Thanks! You look nice too. I like your cloak.”

It was a large cloak edged in fur, complemented by heavy straps across the Bulgarian’s chest to keep the weight well-distributed. Elara imagined they needed them in the bitter winter winds up north.

They shared a few words of small talk concerning school uniforms and the weather as Krum gestured for them to start walking along the shore. With a sniff, Elara followed.

Hermione had asked her that morning why she was intent on coming with Harriet, and Elara hadn’t had a good answer for her, not one she wanted to voice aloud for fear of her sentiment being misconstrued. It was not an answer she wanted to utter within ten yards of Harriet’s hearing.

Viktor Krum was an international Quidditch legend, a celebrity, and now a Triwizard Tournament champion who’d dominated in the first task. He was eighteen, fit, foreign, and trailed by enthralled, twittering witches every single day he stomped about the school. It was not an exaggeration to say he could have his pick of any woman he wished.

In contrast, Harriet was fourteen and skinny, her hair a wild mess when left to its own devices, and to the world at large, she was a nobody. Her identity as the real Girl Who Lived was a closely kept secret. For all that Elara loved her, she was not blind to how others perceived her god-sister.

No one recognized Harriet’s intelligence until she quoted a spot of literature out of the blue, until she helped you solve a problem you’d been stuck on for hours, or until they saw her marks rivaled Hermione’s and Boot’s and any of the Ravenclaws.

Strangers knew nothing of her compassion before she offered a helping hand, or before they stopped judging her for her House and her jagged, narrow-eyed stare.

Because she didn’t brag, no one realized how talented Harriet was in any school of magic she set her mind to. They didn’t value her curiosity or her excitement. They didn’t see the goodness in her heart that flickered like a new sun, shedding warmth on those who got close to her.

Frankly, those who did not know Harriet assumed she was unexceptional because she did not allow herself to shine—and Elara wanted to know what an eighteen-year-old professional athlete about to graduate saw in an orphan girl who, on the surface, did not seem like much.

As she paced behind the pair, grimacing at the feeling of wet sand smooshing under her paws, Elara pondered if her assessment was overly harsh, if she wasn’t giving Krum credit for being more insightful than his grim, flat expression and brusque manners alluded. Harriet seemed happy; the cold gave her cheeks a healthy pink tinge as she chatted, and Krum smiled as he listened.

A painful prickle went through Elara’s chest, the image of silvery blonde hair and pale, pretty eyes flickering in her mind. A French voice lilted in her ear.

It’s not the same, she told herself. She would be fifteen next month—fifteen, emancipated, tall, and rich. And a witch, she added, wilting. A witch, unfriendly, cold.

Elara ignored the pain and physically shook herself, knocking snowflakes from her pelt. Harriet glanced over her shoulder and smirked.

No, Elara hadn’t been able to answer Hermione this morning—and she would never dare say any of her thoughts for fear Harriet would think she was disparaging her. She wasn’t. Elara loved Harriet, and she had seen her hurt more times than she could count, had woken in the dead of night remembering how she screamed under the Cruciatus, scared by the ghost in her eyes after she’d seen Fenrir Greyback die. So Elara would stay, even if it proved a silly endeavor, because if Viktor Krum touched one unmanageable hair on Harriet’s head without the best of intentions, then Elara would sink her teeth into his hand.

“I am still sad ve could not go to the village,” he said to Harriet as they continued through the shrouded wood at the edge of the forest. The silhouette of Gagwilde Tower could be seen over the treetops, its edges blurred by roving mist. “I am told there are many nice places to have lunch.”

“Mhm! My friends always bring me back a Butterbeer from the pub, and it’s my favorite! And Honeydukes has amazing sweets.” Harriet rubbed at her neck, a tell-tale sign of her nervousness. “Sorry about that. You should be able to go the next visit, yeah?”

“But I vill not be able to go with you.”

Harriet rubbed at her neck again and Elara rolled her eyes. As a dog, the look went unappreciated.

Krum paused as they neared the limits of the trail, getting nearer the Sunweather Courtyard and the shadow of the Gagwilde. Snow had gathered on Harriet’s shoulders, and Krum brushed it off. Harriet didn’t seem to know what to do with her hands. “I vanted to ask if you would go to the Yule Ball with me?”

Harriet blinked like an owl who’d flown into one too many windows and remained silent for far too long. Elara thumped her hard in the thigh with her tail.

“Oh! Um, yeah? Err—sure? I mean yes, that would be lovely. Thanks.”

Krum rested his hands on her shoulders. His palms dwarfed her, his dark eyes intense below his thick, black brow. Elara made a sound louder than a growl but not quite a bark, and Krum’s gaze flicked to her. His hands slid from Harriet’s shoulders to her elbows.

In the distance, the bells tolled from the clock tower and echoed across the grounds, though the snow deadened the sound. It startled Harriet into moving, her face redder than before, her eyes wide behind her snow-flecked spectacles. She stepped back, and the ice crunched under her boots.

“We should get back to the school,” she said, swallowing. “Professor Dumbledore doesn’t like when students wander out this far.”

“Ah, all right.”

They turned to walk back the way they came, arms almost brushing, and Krum’s hand came out to catch Harriet’s own. Following behind the pair, Elara saw how Harriet stiffened, and her shoulders crawled up toward her reddening ears.

Idiots, the pair of them, Elara thought with a snort. She bounded to Harriet’s other side and let the embarrassed girl touch her head, nervous fingers fidgeting with her ears.

“Thanks,” Harriet whispered. Krum glanced at her, then away.

The bells tolled again, and the snow fell in earnest.

Chapter 191: the yule ball

Chapter Text

cxci. the yule ball

 

Harriet decided she must have gone utterly barmy when she agreed to go to the Yule Ball with Viktor Krum.

As the day approached and final exams for the term loomed, every other word out of anyone’s mouth seemed to concern the dance. People were desperate to find dates at the last minute, with younger years trying to convince their older peers to invite them while those in the middle made gross, simpering faces at one another or giggled like morons.

Some of the little prats she tutored kept asking Harriet if she meant to attend and who she’d be going with. The first time Izumi Takagi stuck her nose in the air and broached the subject, Harriet was struck with the sudden uncomfortable realization that no person in their right mind would believe she’d been asked by Viktor Krum.

So Harriet ignored the question whenever it came up, just as she ignored the package Snape had dropped into her hands from Mr. Flamel. It had found a place in the bottom of her trunk, unopened, and now Harriet had to dig it out and face the music.

Two days before the ball, Professor Slytherin summoned the entire House to one of the roomier halls in the dungeons and told them he’d be teaching them to dance, lest they embarrass him with their awkward stumbling. He had tutors on hand for the lesson, but somehow Harriet still ended up having to take a turn with the bastard, hating every second of it.

She did well enough, resisting the urge to step on Slytherin’s toes, though the longer she danced and the more she watched the others, the more Harriet remembered she’d have to do the same thing in front of the entire school. The thought filled her with dread.

Harriet threw herself into revisions, willing time to drag and for the exams to take forever. Unfortunately, they ended right on time, and as the very same day their holiday began, Harriet woke to the unpleasant voices of her dormmates excitedly getting things ready for the ruddy dance.

We should be going to Grimmauld, she thought, glum, glaring at the blurry canopy overhead. We should be going to Grimmauld with Remus to see Sirius, not being ninnies for a stupid ball!

“I thought you’d be more excited,” Elara told her as she attempted to get Harriet out of bed past noon. Instead, Harriet laid like a sullen sloth, refusing to move, resisting her friend’s more pointed poking. She’d resisted all morning, stirring only to accept a bit of breakfast and lunch from Mably’s concerned hands. “What with your date being Vi—.”

Harriet sat up in a flurry of mussed sheets, slapping a hand over Elara’s mouth.

“Don’t!”

Elara yanked her hand off, scowling. “Don’t grab me.”

“Don’t say his name!”

Sighing, Elara used her height to lever Harriet off the mattress and onto her feet, the shorter witch refusing to stand upright under her own power. “What is the matter? You do realize everyone will know you’re going with him in just a few hours, yes?”

Harriet slumped, and Elara caught her by the upper arms. She didn’t want to be reminded. People were going to make fun of her, think it was a pity date—and maybe it was. She couldn’t rule that out either.

“You’re heavy,” Elara grunted, giving Harriet a shove so she’d sit on the end of her own bed. Across the room, Greengrass and Parkinson huddled by Pansy’s overburdened carrel stacked with makeup while Runcorn sorted through the absurd collection of shoes she carted to school every year. “Come now, you’ll have a lovely time. He’s lucky to be going with you.” She brushed Harriet’s fringe from her eyes. “Harriet…do you like him?”

“Who?”

Him, you ninny.”

“Oh. I dunno. I guess? He’s not much for talking really. I asked him if he’d like to play a pick-up Quidditch game, and he said he’s more concerned with training for the Tournament right now.”

Elara gave her a strange look. “That’s not…precisely what I meant.”

Harriet slumped over on her side in the rumpled duvet and balled-up blanket. “Who are you goin’ with, then?”

“Draco.”

Draco?

Elara shrugged, unbothered. “We’ve no interest in one another, obviously, and it spared him from Parkinson’s claws.”

Harriet rolled enough to see Pansy, who had her nails painted and pointy. She giggled.

“He’s a male relative, and it’s only ‘proper’ he escort an untended witch in his family.” Elara formed quotations with her fingers, her eyes dangerously close to rolling in disdain. “Besides, we both know the person he’d rather take has other commitments.”

From the bathroom, they could hear Hermione having a rather heated row with the enchanted mirror.

“Go get her before she breaks it again. The prefects will have our heads….”

Elara left, returning with Hermione, who had half of her hair drenched in some kind of slick potion and grumbled irritably under her breath. “What are you still doing in bed?” she demanded of Harriet, who had the presence of mind to sit up. “You need to start getting ready! Go bathe, for goodness’ sake!”

“Fine, I’ll go. Merlin,” Harriet snapped, grabbing her dressing gown from the footboard.

“Don’t forget to use the leave-in conditioner.”

Harriet considered not doing as told just to spite the command, but she knew that was silly and knew being purposely difficult meant everything would only be worse. She wondered if drowning herself was an option, but her friends would no doubt come to drag her out eventually.

When she returned, dripping water but decidedly more awake, nothing much had changed aside from Hermione now being at the mirror hung on the inside of her wardrobe. Elara had a comb in hand, helping spread the goopy potion through her thick curls.

Harriet made motions toward throwing herself back into her bed, but Hermione stopped her.

“Harriet, do you have your robes?”

“Yes.”

“Where are they? We haven’t seen them yet.”

Harriet sighed, a short breath exhaled through her teeth. “I haven’t either.”

What? You haven’t checked them?”

At that point, nothing could dissuade Hermione from badgering Harriet, who acknowledged she had to get the bloody robes out at some point or else hide under her bed with her snakes. Face scrunched, she undid the latch on her trunk and fished for the wrapped package.

The commotion drew the attention of their dormmates.

“Is Potter actually going?” Pansy said, coming over to stand by Elara, her eyelids heavy with thick black mascara. “Who did you trick into that? Did you have to ask Filch as your date?”

“‘Course not,” Harriet replied, distracted as she searched her trunk. “I couldn’t tempt him away from his one true love. What time are you meeting him, Parkinson?”

A snort escaped Greengrass, who quickly covered her nose and blushed. Pansy scowled.

Harriet managed to get the wrapping off the package and saw nothing but a great deal of silky dark gray fabric, and when she shifted it, something glittered and clicked against itself.

“Does that even fit you?” Runcorn interjected. “It looks too big for your scrawny frame.”

Puzzled, Harriet unearthed a sleeve—or what she thought was a sleeve—and the more stiffly cut edge of the bodice.

“It’s such an old style!” Pansy taunted, snatching the sleeve from Harriet’s hand. A firm tug dragged more of the dress robes from the packaging, revealing the embellished design on the shoulders, a burst of leaves in gold seeming to drip and flutter along the dark silk and brush along the tall collar. “Did you borrow this from your nan, Potter?”

“Where’s yours, then?” Elara demanded as Harriet yanked the sleeve back into her own hand and stuffed it into the packaging. “I think you’re jealous, as I’ve seen the gold in your earrings. They look like synthetic Muggle nonsense.”

“Shut up, Black!”

Harriet abandoned the main room and returned to the bathroom, lugging her package along behind her. She tore off the rest of the parchment wrapping and found a pair of simple black slippers tucked into the bottom. Inside one slipper was an envelope, and when Harriet peeked inside, she found matching jewelry.

Deciding to grab the dragon by the tail, Harriet shed her dressing gown and shoved the robes on over her head.

She felt the Charms in the stitching tighten and flex as the cold silk slid against her body, and Harriet shivered as the hem puddled around her bare feet. Peering into the mirror, Harriet thought the robes looked elegant—much too elegant for her. The gathered material of the skirt rippled from the sash studded in diamonds, and the bodice fit close to her chest. The color appeared a shimmering silver where the light touched it, but otherwise remained a very dark gray. She’d already noted the gold on the shoulders but not the clear crystals gleaming on the edges like dew on the leaves, interspersed down the long, flowing length of the sleeves. The gold returned on the trailing hem like autumn leaves kicked and stirred by passing feet.

Harriet touched her sternum, one finger trailing the neckline’s sharp, low dip. It was shaped like an open-ended diamond, rounded at the bottom over the bodice. Considering her flat chest, the cut didn’t show much at all—nothing aside from the spidery limbs of her scar crawling out from under the slope of the sleeve covering her shoulder.

Your hair is a nightmare, dear,” said the mirror in that annoying, gently chiding tone it preferred.

“I know.”

A bit of concealer would go a long way for that scar—.”

Harriet grabbed her shoes and the envelope before leaving the bathroom. She ignored the looks she got marching back to her bed.

Hermione did a double-take as she passed, and a dollop of potion plopped onto the floor. “Oh, Harriet!”

“I know. I look ridiculous.”

“No! You look beautiful!” Hermione gushed. “That gown is lovely.”

“Robes, Hermione,” Elara corrected as she came over, fixing how the fabric settled on Harriet’s shoulders. The Charms in the fabric flexed and shifted as they adjusted.

“Is there really a difference?”

“Enough to be noted.” Elara drew her fingertips along Harriet’s back to point out how the stitching and design varied from a traditional gown. Harriet wriggled in place.

“It’s too long. I gonna trip on it.”

“No, you’re not. Here, let me see this.” Elara took the envelope from her and sorted through the contents—gold rings and matching bracelets—to find a simple satin loop. “You put this here around your wrist, like this….” She pulled it onto Harriet’s skinny arm and adjusted the size. “And it attaches here on the hem so you can lift the train and dance.”

Harriet huffed air through her nose at the thought of dancing, but she didn’t say anything to her friends.

“You should have done your hair first.”

“Why? What’s wrong with doing my hair like usual?”

That question received no verbal answer, just a little shove toward Hermione’s mirror and the waiting brushes and combs. In due course, she found herself caped with a towel over her shoulders, grimacing as Sleekeazy’s Hair Potion dripped along her scalp and flattened her hair.

Harriet had a better appreciation for how long routines could take after trying to be tidier with her own appearance, but she’d underestimated how much work went into preparing for something like a ball. There was plucking and pulling, finicky depilatory spells, and Charms to lift and keep things contained. Usually, when the fourth-year Slytherin witches were forced to spend any amount of time together, they couldn’t stop sniping and snarling at one another, but with the dance looming, they came together to help one another.

Elara fixed her hair, weaving it into a loose plait, the strands smooth and compliant under the weight of the potion and excess conditioner. A whispered bit of Transfiguration had white, soft petaled flowers threaded through the loops. Parkinson and Greengrass stood by while Harriet smeared the makeup Narcissa Malfoy had bought for her over her face until they could take no more and intervened. Pansy was a dreadful cow, but she had a much better eye for cosmetics.

When the hour grew late, and Harriet had a moment to sit and fiddle with her trailing sleeve, she peeked into a mirror. The girl returning her gaze didn’t look familiar; the wildness of her hair had been pulled back and shaped into something approaching beautiful, and the little spots of acne along her chin and forehead had vanished completely under the Charmed concealer. Only smooth, faultless skin remained.

The concealer hadn’t touched the curse scar. If anything, it made the disfigurement poking out above the collar’s top and across the open front look all the more bright and livid, like bright white cracks spreading through porcelain.

Her eyes loomed, bright and sharp, edged in black liner applied by Elara’s steady hand. The shadow on her lids glinted, matched by the shine of pale gold and diamonds on her earrings, the gems Charmed to line the outer edge of her ear and hang from her lobes, catching the light.

“You really shouldn’t worry about anything tonight,” Hermione told her as Harriet stood at her side, holding hair clips for her to take. “You look beautiful, and your robes suit you.” She took another clip to pin back a wayward curl.

Harriet hummed a soft, noncommittal noise. “I know. Thanks.” Hermione took another pin from her hand. “Did Mrs. Malfoy pick out your robes?”

“Yes—her and the nosiest shop assistant I’ve ever seen in my life.”

Hermione’s robes looked more like a dress than Harriet’s, with ruching over the bodice and delicate cream-colored lace covering the partially transparent sleeves that trailed from her elbows. The edge of the sleeves had a slight scalloping that matched the lace, and the white satin gown rippled down to a pair of pretty, winged heels. Harriet had no idea how she walked in. The slick potion she’d combed through her hair had tamed the frizz and transformed the bushiness into large, sleek curls. Hermione used the pins and clips to pull the wayward strands out of her face.

Elara, in contrast, looked almost as if she wore school robes—until she shifted, and the overcoat parted enough to reveal the dark burgundy beneath, the expensive cashmere embroidered with silver closures all the way up to her throat. The sleeves eclipsed part of her hand, but didn’t hang or trail like Hermione’s and Harriet’s. Shapes moved on the silk lining of the overcoat like bodies of hidden sea creatures roving through murky water. It didn’t have the flashiness of Pansy’s blue, fluttery robes or Runcorn’s green ball gown, but Harriet knew just enough about clothes to understand Mrs. Malfoy must have spent a small fortune on Elara’s outfit.

Eventually, Harriet got tired of the noise and Millicent’s noxious perfumes, so she decided to brave the common room to wait. The corridor was full of witches in and out of their dorm rooms, trading clips and makeup brushes, pins and extra clothes. Those younger students who couldn’t attend hung around in bunches, looking on with curious or envious faces. They swarmed Harriet, cooing over her robes until she managed—red-faced and anxious—to extract herself.

She found Malfoy seated on one of the sofas, his shoulders slumped under his fancy clothes.

“Hey, Potter,” he said, surprising Harriet with his somber, muted tone. He didn’t even look up as she came to perch her hip on the furled sofa arm next to him.

“Malfoy,” she acknowledged, fidgeting. “Where’re Crabbe and Goyle?”

“Waiting for their dates in the entrance hall.”

“Oh.” She wondered who the lumbering pair had managed to ask out. One practice dance with Vincent had nearly crushed Harriet’s poor toes. “Looking forward to the dance?”

“You’re an idiot.”

Malfoy glowered at his hands folded between his knees, slouched forward enough for his pale hair to fall toward his scrunched brow. He had one of his family rings on, and for a moment, he looked overwhelmingly like his father. The image cleared when Harriet blinked, but the impression remained.

“Oi, you’re the idiot moping here like your whole life is over,” Harriet snapped. She kept her voice low enough not to attract attention from the other wizards milling about the room—and she chose to ignore the moping she’d indulged in this morning. “You know, if you hadn’t been a coward and asked her yourself, she would’ve said yes.”

More witches filtered out from the girls’ corridor, some finding their dates, some mingling, some headed for the common room entrance and the passages beyond. Hermione and Elara followed as well, the former reminding Harriet of stories about faerie royalty. She looked bright as sunshine next to Elara’s black outfit.

Draco raised his head enough to look at her, then away. His hands tightened into fists.

“Don’t be stupid, Potter.”

 

xXx

 

Nervous sweat tickled the inside of Harriet’s palms. She wiped them on her long sleeves as she walked, feeling closed in by the bodies surrounding her as the Slytherins joined the Hufflepuffs and moved toward the entrance hall. Her heart beat too loud for her to hear much of anything else.

The castle doors had been flung wide, revealing a cluster of hedges and flowering bushes warded against the falling snow, tiny tea lights floating in the air. Harriet had never seen so many people clustered in the entrance before, and never in such a wide array of colors and fabrics. The wizards mostly dressed in dark tones, though a few had chosen brighter hues, and a lot of the Durmstrang wizards and witches had chosen robes in scarlet and vermilion. They made for a bright, garish picture against the somber stone walls.

Krum stood off to the side with the other champions and Professor McGonagall dressed in her emerald green robes with a matching hat. The doors to the Great Hall opened and admitted the crowd.

“Champions over here, please,” McGonagall ordered, her officious voice rising above the laughter and clamor. “Mr. Krum, where is your date?”

“She is coming.”

“Well, she had best arrive soon. The champions are meant to enter together—.”

Harriet sidled closer and bumped her arm, earning a severe glance. She felt quite like a startled, wide-eyed owl peering up at McGonagall.

“Ah! Here she is,” Krum said. He studied her from head to toe—and Harriet didn’t miss how he lingered on her scar longer than was polite.“You look beautiful, Harriet.”

“Thanks,” Harriet replied with an uncertain smile, her hands still damp and her heart threatening to run for it. “You—your robes are nice, too.”

As Krum held out his arm for her to take, Harriet surveyed the others. Fleur stood with Roger Davies, a seventh-year Ravenclaw who couldn’t stop staring like a gormless twit at the side of her head, though Fleur, in her floating, ethereal attire, hardly seemed to notice. Diggory grinned at Harriet, waiting with Cho Chang, the Ravenclaw Seeker, and Longbottom was with a seventh-year Gryffindor Harriet couldn’t recall the name of. He stared at Harriet in apparent horror.

The severeness in the professor’s face flickered into surprise, her eyebrows creeping toward her hairline. “Oh, well. Very good, Miss Potter. If you would all form a line and follow me….”

The champions trailed McGonagall into the Great Hall under a gale of applause. Harriet refused to look left or right at the spectating faces, but she managed to see how shimmering veils of sparkling frost adorned the walls, the faerie lights dripping with the falling snow from the enchanted ceiling. It looked glamorous, in her opinion, and magical.

Taking a breath, Harriet turned her head to survey the head of the room and the table awaiting them. She cursed under her breath.

“Is something the matter?” Krum asked.

“No,” Harriet replied, glaring at the Minister for Magic. “Everything’s fine.”

It seemed an inevitable force of fate, or some miserable magnets of the universe, led Harriet and her date to the free seats by Gaunt. She could have switched with Viktor—but that would have put her by Headmaster Karkaroff, which was hardly a better option. Karkaroff was already into the wine, his hand shaking around the goblet as he gulped it down.

“Miss Potter. Aren’t you a vision,” Gaunt commented as Harriet sank, unwilling, into her chair. His usual attire never failed to impress, but the cut of his robes for the evening looked all the more intimidating, the golden pin of the Guardians stuck to his lapel. “Won’t you introduce me to your date?”

Harriet did so, mumbling, and Gaunt and Krum shooks hands briefly before Krum sat down. Karkaroff reached over to squeeze his arm, and Krum grimaced at the force of his bony fingers pressing too close.

On the other side of Gaunt, Harriet caught Dumbledore’s eye, and the Headmaster gave her an encouraging smile.

“How are your studies going, Miss Potter?” Gaunt persisted despite Harriet’s clear reluctance to speak. “Are you expecting good marks when they’re returned?”

“Yes. Sir.”

For the briefest instant, their gazes met. Harriet had been desperate for someone else to interfere, and her eyes happened to cross his on accident. At that moment, Harriet felt an immense cold pressure on her face, like a chilled pillow being held to her nose and mouth. Her breath caught, she jerked away on instinct, and the pressure faded.

Gaunt made a soft tsk sound and straightened in his seat.

Dinner commenced with Dumbledore ordering by speaking to his plate. Her interaction with Gaunt had frazzled her so much that Harriet ordered the same thing as the Headmaster despite having no appetite. She made vague eating motions with her fork, stirring meat gravy into her potatoes and green beans. She chanced a glance over the other tables and didn’t fail to notice the incredulous looks and blatant whispering.

Merlin ’s balls.

“D’you have Chris—Yule at Durmstrang?” she asked Viktor, grasping for something to say. She poked her porkchop. “Or do you go home at the holidays to be with your family?”

“Ve have many decorations at Durmstrang, like here. The Yule is an important holiday for us.”

“Really? I’ve read the solstice has significance for—.” She paused. “Different kinds of magic.”

“Yes. Ve have rituals that must be done.” Krum spooned some borscht into his mouth.

“Do you decorate the same? Well, not like this, cos’ this for the Yule Ball. But Hagrid usually brings in trees.”

“I think Hogwarts is nicer. Very homey.”

“Now, Viktor,” Karkaroff interrupted. “Show some pride in your school! Durmstrang may not be as public as Hogwarts, but it boasts its own beauty.”

Gaunt scoffed ever so slightly and sipped his wine. Harriet had never been exposed to the Minister for such an extended period of time, so she’d never noticed the similarities between him and her Defense professor aside from their uncanny likeness. Gaunt had the same arrogant set in his posture as Slytherin, and they drank from their goblets in the same manner. Gaunt seemed more high-strung, however, like a live-wire who suffered the presence of others only on the meagerest bit of patience.

“Zis is nothing compared to Beauxbatons,” Fleur declared with a flourish of her hand. Her accent sounded thicker than usual, and Harriet wondered if she was putting on airs for her dumbstruck date. “Poudlard iz so drafty, and we would never put up with zat dreadful poltergeist! Of course, ze Palace iz glamorous. We have ice sculptures zat look as if they were made of diamonds, and ze walls—.”

“I’ve seen it,” Harriet blurted before she could think better. She gave her poor food another stab with the fork and blushed when all eyes at the table turned to her.

“Ah!” Madam Maxime snapped her fingers. “I ‘ave seen you before! You are the ward of—Nicolas!”

No one else probably noticed the brief hesitation, but Harriet did. Gaunt had stilled next to her, and his head jerked up to stare at Maxime. Harriet silently thanked her lucky stars for the woman’s circumspection.

Nicolas?” the Minister said aloud, softly, slowly, weighing the name as he began to ponder.

“Mr. Weasley, where is Barty this evening?” Dumbledore asked, acting as if Gaunt hadn’t spoken. “I would have thought he’d be eager to attend the festivities.”

“He’s been terribly under the weather,” Percy replied with a superior nod of his head. “The stress of the Tournament must be getting to him, I’d say. He hasn’t been quite right since the World Cup….”

Krum kept looking at Harriet. “Do I have something on my face?” she whispered.

“No. I simply think you are lovely.”

Harriet turned bright red and fumbled for her pumpkin juice, ignoring the anxious twisting in her stomach, thinking about what Elara had said that afternoon. What had she meant? Did Harriet like him? What did liking really mean?

Needing a distraction, she looked around the room again.

At one of the other staff tables, Hagrid sat wearing the ugliest suit Harriet had ever seen. He gave her a thumbs up and continued making eyes at Madame Maxime—who made eyes right back at him, fluttering her lashes with her head set into a coquettish tilt.

The whole world ’s gone barmy….

Harriet almost spat out her juice when she scanned another table and spotted Snape dressed in his best robes like everyone else, his black hair tied back in a low queue. She didn’t think she’d ever seen the bloke’s ears before, and it felt weird to realize he had ears, that he was anything other than a dark, looming storm cloud who had no business having ears or those long-fingered hands or broad shoulders. She preferred thinking of him as a spooky omen out of a storybook rather than a person of flesh and blood.

Next to Snape, Professor Slytherin leaned slightly toward the Potions Master and spoke in the general direction of his ear. Whatever he said, Snape didn’t seem all the interested, not that he ever did.

Movement caught Harriet’s attention from the last staff table, and she blinked when she found Remus seated next to Sirius. The latter cared nothing for propriety and boldly waved across the aisle, his smile wide and bright. Harriet returned the wave, and she couldn’t help her impish grin when Sirius held up a camera and pointed at it. Remus continued eating his dinner, ignoring his date’s antics, though his lips quirked slightly.

Harriet thought she could already hear Elara’s groaning.

A hoot interrupted the clatter of cutlery and faerie wings, a black owl coming to land on the table before the Minister, a letter tied to its leg. Expression pinched with annoyance, Gaunt wiped his mouth on his napkin and took the letter with a sharp tug. The owl set flight once more. Gaunt scowled as he read.

“Bad news, Marvolo?” Dumbledore asked. If someone didn’t know the wizard, they might have missed the slight mockery in Dumbledore’s airy tone, and as Harriet turned to look at him, she swore he winked. Had Dumbledore arranged for the letter to arrive?

“It appears I must cut my visit short, Dumbledore,” Gaunt said, snapping the parchment closed once more. A wordless spell disintegrated it into ash without a flame, and he tossed it onto his plate. “If you’ll excuse me.”

Harriet breathed a quiet sigh of relief when Minister Gaunt Summoned his cloak and departed, ignoring the speculative looks following his path through the room. She didn’t care what urgent business had interrupted his scheming and only hoped it kept him preoccupied for the rest of the evening.

Good riddance.

“A shame,” Percy commented. “I had hoped to bend the Minister’s ear for a moment on a new bill about cauldron regulation….”

Well, maybe Gaunt should have stayed if it meant getting bored half to death by Percy Weasley and his cauldron bottom thickness legislation.

Too soon, the last bite of treacle had been cleared from the platters, and Dumbledore rose to his feet, bidding everyone else to do the same. A simple wave of his wand vanished the tables, and the band came in through the staff entrance onto the dais where the High Table usually sat. The lighting shifted, dimmed, and a somber melody was struck.

“Come,” Krum said as he placed Harriet’s hand on his arm. “The champions lead the first dance.”

“Great….” Harriet muttered, glad she hadn’t eaten much of anything. The anxious feeling returned as she gripped Krum’s wrist as tightly as she could, knuckles turning white, and tried to stop her stomach from turning itself inside out.

The whispering intensified.

“Isn’t that Potter, the Slytherin?”

“Why did he ask her to the ball?”

“Her robes are so old-fashioned—.”

“She’s only a fourth year!”

“Merlin, that scar is hideous—.”

“She’s so strange—.”

Harriet ground her teeth and pushed the noise away. She reached inside herself for the concentration she used in Defense, when she had to ignore the Gryffindors and Slytherin and the bite of bruises to do her best. Krum led them into the first step of the dance, and the rest followed swiftly after.

She was surprised by Viktor’s grace; he flew like he was meant to be in the air, but on the ground, he walked rather duck-footed and had a rough gait. Harriet had half expected to have her toes smushed, but he danced well, like the pure-blood twits she’d practiced with in Slytherin’s class, if not better. He made it easy for Harriet to follow, the pair twirling among the others in a seamless waltz, soon joined by more students and staff. As the floor filled, the tension in Harriet’s spine lessened.

She spotted Elara nearby with Draco, who’d pulled himself out of his funk enough to give Elara a proper dance. Farther away were Hermione and Terry. They couldn’t seem to stop smiling at one another, and a certain glow hung in the air, oblivious and happy.

The song came to an end, and Harriet went to step back and go to Elara, who’d dropped Draco’s hands and looked ready to leave the dance floor. Krum gave her hand a sudden, tight squeeze.

“Ouch,” she said, not because it hurt but rather because he’d startled her. Harriet glared.

“I am sorry,” Krum replied with a slight dip of his chin. “I did not realize you meant to go.”

“It’s all right.” Harriet shot him an askance look, as he still had her hand in his.

“One more dance? Please?”

“Okay….”

Harriet allowed herself to be swept into motion again, the music still slow enough for a gentle waltz. Unfortunately, she didn’t enjoy the second dance any more than she had the first. She could still feel the weight of too many eyes upon her, and Krum’s hand gripped too tight as if he thought she’d dart away at any second.

The second song ended, and as the next started—a livelier beat—Harriet thought Krum might not let go, but Sirius chose that moment to invite himself over. The grin he wore reminded her of his Animagus form—all sharp, hungry teeth. “May I dance with my god-daughter, Krum?”

“Of course.” Viktor dropped her hands and nodded. He said something after that, but the wail of instruments and Sirius’ quick tug pulled Harriet away before she could hear.

“He’d better be treating you well,” Sirius told her, a slight frown playing over his mouth. He looked better than he had when Harriet last saw him, his complexion less pale and his cheeks less sunken. The hand under her own felt warmer and heavier with muscle. The harshest callouses had been worn smooth. “I can have a word with him if you need me to.”

“He’s fine, Sirius. We’re just here as friends. Er, I think.” Harriet wasn’t sure on that part. She couldn’t imagine he wanted anything more with her, and thinking about it didn’t get Harriet giddy or bubbly like Hermione got when she chatted about Terry. It just made her feel ill. “You didn’t say you were going to be here in your last letter!”

“Maybe I’m just keeping you lot on your toes.” Sirius tipped her a heavy wink, and Harriet laughed. “I want pictures of you and your god-sister and Hermione. Go grab your surly Seeker over there, and we’ll round up the others….”

Sirius got his pictures—and then some. Others saw the flash and click of his magical camera and suddenly wanted pictures of their own, begging for a quick shot they could send home to their parents or save for the memories. He was quickly overwhelmed, and Harriet was sure he’d end up playing the impromptu photographer for the rest of the evening.

“Serves you right,” Remus told him, though he stayed by Sirius’ side. “You could have waited until later.”

“Don’t be a spoilsport, Remus….”

Terry whisked Hermione back into the thick of things as the band—the Weird Sisters—started playing more modern songs and most of the staff quit the floor. Harriet followed Elara to the refreshment table, eager to reach the sidelines.

“I can’t believe Remus brought him,” Elara grumbled as she picked up one of the short crystal glasses filled with red liquid. Flitwick hovered nearby, watching the table, but Harriet could spy the Weasley twins hidden behind a convenient curtain. She wondered how long it’d be until the punch bowl was spiked. “I thought he was going to chase me down with that wretched thing.”

“I think it’s nice,” Harriet admitted. “We wouldn’t have pictures if he hadn’t bothered, and Morgana knows I’ll probably never wear something like this again.”

Elara snorted and shook her head, taking a sip of her drink.

“D’you think my dad would’ve done something similar?” A small, fond grin broke across Harriet’s face as she imagined the possibility of James Potter crashing the party with her godfather. She didn’t know him very well, but she thought it sounded like something he’d do.

Elara paused. “I’m sorry he’s not here for us to find out.”

“S’alright. Do you reckon Mr. and Mrs. Flamel would like some of the photographs too?”

“Yes. Yes, they would.”

They stood and watched the others for several minutes. Elara said Draco had gone off to sulk, and Harriet didn’t see Viktor, not that she wanted to dance more. She much preferred lurking to being the center of attention.

Elara stiffened as silvery laughter filtered past them like the shaking of wind chimes. Fleur Delacour giggled at something Roger Davies said and sent the Ravenclaw off to get her a drink, flipping the glossy wave of her glowing hair. Elara stared at her, unmoving, and her eyes seemed to gaze a million leagues away.

Harriet turned from Elara to Fleur and back again. She arched a brow. “You know, she’s a bit of a haughty priss,” she commented. “Very high-maintenance.”

Elara shrugged one shoulder and finally moved to lower her cup to the table. “I know,” she replied, clearing her throat. “I think I like that about her.”

Harriet laughed, and Elara cracked a sheepish grin as a blush colored her pale face. A buzzing noise passed by Harriet’s ear, and she batted away a beetle that must have gotten in through the open doors and was probably fleeing the hungry faeries. “You should ask her to dance.”

Sighing, Elara’s expression slipped, and she shook her head. “That isn’t proper.”

“Bully to what’s proper. I still think you should ask, and bollocks to anyone who says different. It’s nobody’s business but yours.”

Elara smiled again, but the gesture didn’t light up her expression as it had before. Rather, she looked sad. “Don’t worry about me,” she said. “Your date is looking for you.”

“He’s not my date,” Harriet grumbled, but she did turn to find Krum had come in search of her. She decided to take her own advice and not care quite so much about what others thought of her, so she returned to dance with Viktor when he offered, liking the faster, louder music. Elara joined them in the crowd soon after.

Another hour passed before Viktor took her hand and led her back to the refreshment table for drinks. George Weasley wagged his brow as she passed and whistled. “You might want to skip the punch, snakey cousin.”

Harriet took that to mean Flitwick had finally nodded off and he and his brother had managed to spike the bowl, so she opted for water instead. Viktor didn’t let go of her hand, and in lieu of leading her back toward the others when they returned their glasses, he nudged her toward the entrance and the cold, beckoning air.

“Come,” he said, bringing the back of her hand to his mouth to kiss the back of her knuckles. Harriet jumped as if shocked, her skin burning. “I wish to show you something.”

“I—! What—?” Harriet’s mouth made a mess of the words she meant to say—though, if asked, she wouldn’t have a clue what those words were in the first place. Viktor Krum had kissed her. It’d only been her hand, and only for a moment, but it’d been a kiss. Bloody hell. Did he mean to really kiss her? Was this a real date?

Her chest felt tight, her hands clammy.

They stepped into the scant moonlight on the front steps, the snow melting where it met the wards overhead and the season-defying foliage grew. Krum’s thumb swept against the backs of her fingers.

Harriet thought she should go back inside. She should. She didn’t want to leave her friends. Did that mean she didn’t like Viktor? Should she keep following him? She didn’t know. She couldn’t think.

“I—. I don’t—.”

A shadow crossed the path, and someone stepped out from a break in the hedges. The tea lights illuminated Professor Slytherin’s haunting face in weak, warbling light—enough to glint like blood in his ghoulish eyes.

Eyes now locked on Krum’s hand holding Harriet’s.

“My, my,” he said. “What have we here?”


 

A/N:

Snape: Has ears.

Harriet: “And I took that personally.”

 

Chapter 192: of cathedral tunes

Chapter Text

cxcii. of cathedral tunes

 

The afternoon before the Yule Ball commenced, Severus Snape found himself incredibly busy.

While he imagined his students and colleagues occupied themselves with primping and preparing for the evening, he stood in a barren field somewhere in the middle of Suffolk, wearing a stranger’s face.

He hadn’t been able to ascertain the exact reason Gaunt had his cronies gallivanting through the area. His intel with the Guardians had always been lacking in some ways, his position too removed from any pertinent contacts working in the Minister’s circle. However, the pin he had stolen off a neglectful Guardian several years ago, coupled with vague whisperings, still gave him indications of Gaunt’s plans from time to time.

He didn’t know what precisely these bottom-feeding political degenerates had been sent to search for and monitor because they didn’t know. Though often rash and at times explosive, Gaunt did not make stupid, careless mistakes. He informed his followers only what he thought appropriate and nothing more.

Whatever their designs, Severus had put an end to it in favor of his own purposes.

A final flourish with his wand tied off the rope holding the third wizard against the stump with his two unconscious compatriots. The wizard in question groaned, blood from a busted nose dribbling into his thick mustache, and began to stir. Severus crouched on the balls of his feet, shifting in his stolen shoes, waiting.

Dawn had only been an hour old before McGonagall received confirmation of Gaunt’s attendance to the Yule Ball and passed the information to Dumbledore over breakfast, who only needed to glance at Severus for him to understand the Headmaster’s thoughts. Gaunt in the school under Dumbledore’s watchful eyes was one issue, but managing him among a horde of underage morons requiring supervision was another.

So, Severus excused himself from breakfast, went to his store room, and retrieved a half-liter of unused Polyjuice Potion before sorting through what garbled bits of information waited in his untended mail. He found a prospective name belonging to an untalented hanger-on expected to appear in today’s nefarious venture and set to pay the wizard a visit.

Of all the things he’d ever done, breaking and entering, a bit of painless kidnapping, and temporary identity theft were the least of his sins.

The Guardian in front of him rolled his head back upon his shoulder and scrunched his eyes. Slowly, they fluttered open and focused on Severus’ face—or, rather, his borrowed face.

“O’Keele?” the man grumbled, the groggy words slurred but rising sharply as his eyes cleared. “O’Keele? What is the meaning of this?!”

He jolted against his bonds as Severus smirked.

“Wh—? Traitor! He’ll have your head for this! He’ll—.”

Without saying a word, Severus stuffed the end of the man’s own tie in his mouth and let him get a good look at his face. Then, he Stunned the idiot as he had with the others and stood with a short groan. He took out his pocket watch.

He estimated they would wake again in an hour, and then take another hour to figure a way out of their restraints. Their wands had been snapped and discarded in the weeds moments after Severus ambushed the trio, so it would take them time to get free and return to the Ministry. They would find O’Keele oblivious to Severus’ attack and the entire excursion—and, from there, his estimations grew less specific. Depending on how much these dunderheads feared the Minister’s reprisal, they would eventually report to him. Gaunt, the penultimate narcissist and paranoid nuisance, would investigate the situation personally.

Severus took the golden pin from his lapel and turned it over in his hand, eying it. Without further thought, he flicked it into the stubby winter grass. Gaunt would deactivate and reissue the pins after running a check among his faithful tonight. Severus would simply have to find another one at a later date.

He cleared his magical signature from the area and started walking, eyes fixed on the horizon muddled by thick clouds. He could feel the Polyjuice wearing off in his extremities, the skin of his feet and hands buzzing and itching. He increased his pace until he deemed himself far enough away from the stump and Disapparated.

The cold slammed into Severus when he returned to the highlands, the sudden fluctuation in elevation causing his breath to hitch and his stomach to tighten. The air escaped him in a harsh white plume. Grunting, Severus grabbed a potion from his pocket and downed it, slipping the empty vial into his robes once more as the discomfort settled. The last thing he needed today was bloody altitude sickness.

His skin crawled as the Polyjuice began to wear off in earnest, and Severus stripped himself of O’Keele’s tightening robes and boots, vanishing the lot. He retrieved his own clothes and footwear from the same pocket as the empty vial and returned them to their proper size.

The snow melted under his socks, and Severus scowled.

Fuck Gaunt, he cursed, stuffing his soggy feet into his shoes and dragging on the heavy, black wool of his robes before he began to shiver. And fuck the Order for not having someone with half a brain capable of doing this instead of me!

The wards over the boar-flanked gates allowed Severus passage, and he trudged up the path toward the waiting doors of the castle.

As he reached the iced steps and used his wand to clear the stones, Severus sensed eyes upon him and straightened, glowering into the courtyard’s shadowed arch.

Fan-fucking-tastic.

He heard the crotchety bastard before he saw him, the thump of Moody’s wooden leg distinct even at a distance. Severus’ lip curled as Moody came into view, and Moody’s warped face reciprocated his disgust. His hand twitched as if it wanted to reach for his wand, but he controlled himself.

“Snape,” the Auror barked. “Where did you come slithering in from, eh?”

“It might shock you to know it’s the beginning of the school’s holiday.” Severus paused on the lowest step. Beyond Moody, he could see Pomona wrapped in thick robes clearing the snow from the ground while Filius set up the Charms to abate the chill. “I know the Ministry has difficulty telling time, but I had assumed they taught their Aurors how to use a calendar.”

“You always think yourself so clever, don’t you?”

“When one is surrounded by idiots, clever is a relative term.” Severus climbed two more steps. “I am under no compunction to hand out my schedule on a leaflet.”

Moody’s normal eye narrowed while the haywire magical one settled on Severus with unnerving intensity. “I’m watching you, Snape.”

“What a relief. With allies such as yourself, I needn’t be so concerned about my enemies.”

Without waiting for another word, Severus swept into the castle, his mood blacker than it’d been in the morning, made all the worse by the sight of the nauseating, bathetic decorations for the wretched dance. He swore if he got caught under some bloody enchanted mistletoe, he’d raze half the castle to the ground.

The staff lounge on the second floor was empty aside from McGonagall and the Headmaster, the pair seated at the larger table in the middle of the room, reviewing paperwork of some variation or another. Both looked up when Severus entered, and he threw himself into the first winged chair by the roaring hearth.

“Did you have a successful errand, Severus?” Albus asked.

Severus grunted.

“Excellent.”

McGonagall exhaled a short, miffed breath in Albus’ direction, then addressed Severus. “A parcel arrived for you during lunch.”

“And?” Any owl with a delivery for him would have redirected itself to the owlery where the house-elves attended undelivered post and relocated it to the dormitory or quarters of the respective recipient. The house-elf who tended Severus’ rooms in particular knew to place all correspondence in a receptacle that would maintain the integrity of any incoming ingredients—and contain prospective attacks and cursed letters.

It’d been a necessary addition after he lost his first house-elf.

Severus blinked when Minerva flicked her wand at the chair by her side, pulling it out so the package stashed on its seat could rise and float toward him. Severus caught it as if it were a bomb, and his expression must have been a sight because Minerva smirked and Albus struggled to keep his face neutral.

“It was hand delivered by Madam Malfoy. I didn’t know you had your friends doing your shopping for you now.”

“We are not friends,” he snapped as he peeled back a corner of the wrapping to reveal the dark folded fabric within. Dress robes. Narcissa had overstepped, but Severus had no desire to navigate the political minefield of pure-blood etiquette that went into denying or returning gifts. He had his own damn robes, for Merlin’s sake.

“Well, I wouldn’t know what else to call a woman who buys you clothing.”

The glare Severus shot her could kindly be called unfriendly at best.

“Come now, Severus. She was only being thoughtful. I don’t imagine you’ve actually taken the time to buy your own dress robes.”

“I see no reason to supplement my wardrobe beyond its current constraints,” he retorted.

“A shame. You could use a nice pop of color to liven yourself up.”

“I am not a half-brained adolescent attending this pointless event—only an underpaid minion who has to drag them out of alcoves all night.”

“Is this a hint that you want a raise?” Albus asked. Severus ignored him.

“You are a representative of Hogwarts, however, minion or no,” Minerva told him with a quirk of her brow. “You can’t show up in your work clothes, you’ve mud on the hem. Morgana help us.”

Severus didn’t think anyone would actually notice if he did, but he had robes—though, granted, he hadn’t worn them in quite some time. It wasn’t as if he’d changed much over the years. The school bylaws forced the staff to attend biennial physicals, and Severus’ weight only ever trended downward in periods of great stress. Otherwise, he weighed the same, down to the last kilogram.

His fingers curled into the soft edge of the parcel as he stood, letting his robes—muddy hem be damned—fall around his legs. “If you’ll excuse me.”

Severus swept toward the door, intent on the dungeons and his solitude, or what solitude he could find before the evening arrived.

“Severus.”

The Headmaster’s voice stopped him short, and with annoyance, Severus glanced over his shoulder, expecting a needling word of reprimand or another errand for him to attend.

Instead, Albus smiled. “Thank you.”

Severus didn’t know what to make of that, and as with anything he didn’t understand, it made him suspicious. Eyes narrowed, he nodded, then continued out the door.

 

xXx

 

When Severus first spoke to the Malfoys about the Yule Ball, it was under the guise of fishing for information on Gaunt’s intentions for the evening. Lucius’ esteem varied in the Minister’s eyes from day to day, but his essential status in pure-blood society meant Gaunt kept the man close and bent his ear more often than not, and on some occasions, he would impart something viable.

Unfortunately for Severus, mention of the Yule Ball turned Lucius’ posh rambling to a supercilious diatribe on the “old ways,” and how he liked to think the Yule Ball was representative of a return to those values. Frankly, Severus thought him full of shite. The Yule had once been a time to celebrate the hunt, a time of oath-making and sacrifice. The winter solstice was the night when the Wild Hunt took to the sky, and wizards in ages past would paint themselves in blood emulsions before enacting the yearly rituals to protect their lands and villages from superstitious Muggles.

Covering one’s self in velvet and a cloud of perfume was not a return to the old ways. Bloody idiot.

After bathing, Severus ripped open the package from Narcissa and pulled on the dark robes folded therein, giving little thought to the material or the style as he did up the buttons. The outer layer hung differently than his usual choice of robes, needing a brooch and chain to hold them in place, and Severus grimaced at the odd, restraining feel of the chain weighing against his chest.

As an afterthought, he sent a spell at his still damp hair to dry the strands and tie it back as he usually did before intricate brewing. He left his quarters and headed higher for the Great Hall, already hearing the milling voices of the dunderheads he called students. Severus changed directions and used a hidden staff corridor to bypass the horde and reach the hall’s side entrance. He slipped through the door.

Filius and one of the visiting professors from Beauxbatons had changed the decor, though what Severus noted most was the collection of small round tables that had replaced the typical ones. Minerva and Pomona stood by the staff entrance Severus had just sneaked through, the former handing off a clipboard to the latter as she adjusted her witch’s hat.

“And just where am I meant to sit in this mess?” he drawled as he approached the pair, both Minerva and Pomona glancing in his direction. They blinked and did a double-take. “Well?”

“Goodness, Severus. You gave us a fright.”

“Our Potion Master cleans up rather spiffy,” Sprout said with an elbow nudging Minerva’s ribs. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen you with your hair out of your face, lad.”

“You do look quite handsome, Severus—.”

Where am I meant to sit!

“Don’t take that tone with me, Severus Snape! Or I’ll transfigure you into the ass you are acting!”

Minerva finally pointed out the proper table where a few other staff members had already found their seats, and he swept over, jerking one of the chairs out. He lowered himself into it, arms crossed, and resolved himself to wait.

It wasn’t long before Slytherin joined him, already complaining about one thing or another, not that Severus gave him much of his attention. The background chatter and general ambiance drowned out his bitter, annoyed ranting. Instead, he watched Minister Gaunt as he exchanged snide jabs with Dumbledore at the main table.

Those fools are more frightened of Gaunt than I anticipated, Severus mused, picking up his goblet—only to nearly spit it out when the taste of cheap wine slipped over his tongue. Or they’re simple. It would have been better to intercept him before he reached the castle rather than after. Or, perhaps, it took the trio of bound wizards too long to get out of their ropes. Twits.

Severus was so intent on monitoring the Minister, he didn’t realize the girl next to Gaunt was Potter until she turned enough to give him a rather odd look. Then she went back to picking on her food like a little unmannered savage, ignoring her date—the Bulgarian Seeker—and his heavy stare.

Severus had no bloody idea how that had come about and didn’t care to guess. He picked up his sub-par wine and drank, ordering another.

At last, an owl arrived halfway through dinner and dipped straight toward the main table, landing before Gaunt’s plate. The Minister accepted the missive and finally, finally took his leave, and the tension in Severus’ neck and shoulders lessened with each step the wizard made toward the exit.

In his milieu of worries, at least that was one less to carry.

Slytherin’s head turned to follow Gaunt, just as Severus’ had. He couldn’t decipher the emotion in those haunting, red eyes, but it seemed contemplative, or perhaps curious. Severus knew Slytherin’s spies in the Ministry would be getting an owl before the night was over.

When the dinner ended, Severus didn’t hesitate to find himself a spot of wall to lean against, his arms folded against his middle as the band stepped out and the music began. The Tournament champions walked onto the open floor with their dates, and—unbidden—Severus’ gaze followed the Potter girl. The dark gray of her robes rippled under the warm light of the candles as she settled, uncertain, in Krum’s waiting hands.

Severus always feared that as she grew older, the girl would elicit those same echoing memories so many of her peers stirred, the after images of people from his past, most long since dead. He feared one day he’d look up, and there would be Lily, or that wretch James Potter with the same black hair and sharp, cruel sneer. He’d feared it for years, since the very day he walked into his potions classroom and turned to look at the youngest Slytherin first-year.

But, even now, out of uniform and with the shadow of adulthood pulled over her like a terrifying veil, Severus looked at Harriet Potter and saw nothing of Lily, or of James. It was not the first time he wondered if Lily had wandered out into the woods and plucked her from the Morrigan’s nest, this scrawny girl with her thin bones and unruly hair, trailing death and doom and prophecy in equal measure. She was a wild thing who’d decided she’d had enough of chatting with snakes and wanted a go at being a real girl.

Seeing her still terrified Severus, but for different reasons. Each passing day was a day in which Potter grew older, and the comfortable shield of youth wore thin to the encroaching dangers that threatened like an oncoming tsunami. One day, Potter would not be “too young for the Dark Lord’s schemes, and Severus feared that day would be the day they both died.

Everything he tried to save fell to ruin. Dumbledore thought they could protect her, and Severus didn’t know how. He didn’t. The helplessness rankled.

The music changed, more bodies shifting onto the floor as they swayed to the high shriek of string instruments. Time passed too slowly—too quickly—as he stood there, frozen, unbothered as the revelry unfolded. The inside of his left arm ached with the bitter promise of coming recompense, and it kept him up in the most lonely hours of the night. In the feathered light of dawn, he’d see the Mark swell against his pale skin like a malignant, beating heart.

On his other wrist, a white strand, a glimmer in the sun barely there, fleeting, tentative—.

Severus stirred from his depressing thoughts and turned, scanning the room. He spotted a most unwelcome presence coming his way.

“Severus,” Karkaroff whispered as he strode up to the Potions Master’s side. His furtive eyes scanned the Great Hall over and over. “Severus, we must speak.”

“As I have told you before, we have nothing to say to one another, Karkaroff.”

“It is important!”

Severus scoffed and marched away from the wizard. He left via the door he’d entered through, dodging around the band in their wild, artfully ripped attire, stepping out into the corridor so he could find any students who’d wandered out of bounds. Unfortunately, he was not alone.

“It is growing darker,” Karkaroff rushed, only the side of his arm being caught by the door when Severus slammed it. He’d been skulking around the school like a cockroach since his arrival, skittering away when too much attention shined his way. Before their argument, Severus and Albus had kept a running bet on how long it would take for Igor to bolt or come begging Albus for protection on his hands and knees. “Have you checked it? Have you seen?”

“It might seem an odd hobby to you, but I do bathe—so yes, I have seen my damn arm, you idiot.”

“It’s darker! Mine is darker!”

“And why would you think your problems concern me?”

“It will be all of our problems when he returns!”

Severus kept walking, grinding his teeth. He continued outside through the open doors, and the cold reached through the wards like a ghostly hand to brush against his face. The courtyard had been transformed into a winding maze of hedges formed by new rose bushes, and Severus didn’t hesitate to take out his wand and blast a path through the wall of thorns.

Karkaroff dogged his steps.

“You cannot think he will accept your excuses—any of our excuses for why we did not go to Azkaban—.”

Severus’ hands curled into fists, flickers of his past in the air like torn rose petals. The heavy thump of Auror fists, clinking chains dragging on his wrists, the rattling, indrawn breaths of withered creatures—.

Nearly two weeks in prison. Two weeks—all thanks to Karkaroff squealing like a pig. How dare he—.

“I have been trying to speak with you for days—.”

“And you haven’t taken my avoidance as a clear indicator of my disinterest. A pity.” Severus grabbed the back of a student in one of the maze’s many cozy alcoves and yanked him backward. “Ten points from Hufflepuff, Stebbins,” he snapped at the disheveled Hufflepuff boy, shoving him away. The girl swiftly followed, flushed with embarrassment. “Ten points from Ravenclaw.”

The students rushed toward the castle’s looming shadow and the glow of the open doors. Severus blasted another rosebush.

“I have made my overtures to Slytherin, but he will not listen to me, will not grant me an audience. Nor will Gaunt. Severus, he is returning, and if I do not have protection—.” Igor broke off as Severus extracted another amorous couple in a decidedly less appropriate state of dress from the stupid alcoves Pomona grew into her maze. Damn her and her maudlin sense of romance. The couple fled, stung by Severus’ anger, and Igor continued. “—I’ll be killed. You must put in a word for me with Slytherin!”

“Why would I do that?”

“We are friends, are we not? Allies?” Even Karkaroff didn’t sound convinced of that, though his mouth kept running. A vein throbbed in Severus’ temple. “We’ve had our differences, of course, and I’m sorry about that, but I’m serious here—!”

Unable to take another second of this conversation, Severus spun on his heels, robes flaring behind him as he grabbed Karkaroff by the throat and jerked him closer. The older wizard let out a thin, reedy breath of fear.

“Then flee, you quibbling pustule,” Severus hissed. “You are no ally of mine. I am not the coward who sung for the Ministry and sent the Dark Lord’s best to the cells of Azkaban.” His lips peeled back to bare teeth in a fiendish smile. “I have done him no disservice.”

“You’re mad.” Karkaroff shoved Severus off with shaking hands. The smell of dread and sweat rolled off of him in waves. “When he learns you’ve been serving a pretender, he’ll kill you.”

“Perhaps.” Honestly, Severus thought his chances of walking away from the Dark Lord alive hung entirely on his perceived usefulness after Karkaroff and the other free sympathizers threw most of Voldemort’s most loyal in prison. He’d bet his life on worse odds before.

“Do you really think yourself so indispensable?” Karkaroff sneered, fear and uncertainty still shadowing his thick, unctuous words. “A second-rate Potions Master crawling at Dumbledore’s heels? I am a Headmaster, and if he has no use for me, he will throw you to the wolves!”

“Are you afraid of the big bad wolf, Igor?” Karkaroff made as if to step closer, but Severus beat him to it, crowding the shorter man, using his body to hide how he pointed his wand at his throat. “You took the Mark the same as the rest of us. Has your pride abandoned you? Have you spent too long burrowing in at Durmstrang like the diseased tick you are? You shouldn’t have shown the wolf your neck if you were afraid he might rip out your throat.”

“Severus, please—.”

He jabbed his wand into Karkaroff’s chest, leaving a smoldering burn mark. “I have already told you we have nothing to speak about. Do not try my patience further. You will not like what happens.”

Karkaroff stepped back, tentatively touching the fresh burn marring his expensive robes. Something in his mind must have clicked. Maybe he finally remembered Severus had been initially recruited for his poison proclivity—or he remembered the efficiency the young Potions Master displayed when forced to dismember bodies for the Dark Lord. Whatever he recalled, a flash of terror colored Karkaroff’s face, and he departed in the direction of the Durmstrang ship.

“Coward,” Severus muttered, wanting nothing more than to turn and follow, to lift his wand arm and curse the wizard until he was soot, until he felt even a quarter of the gut-clenching terror and dread and grief Severus had felt after the Aurors came for him. He wanted to see Igor scream.

Some nebulous, dark part of Severus that had originally drawn him to the power and prestige offered by the Dark Lord was jealous of Karkaroff. It was jealous of the position the bastard had stolen with his surname and a bit of old family money greasing greedy palms. That jealousy grew more prominent whenever Severus had to turn down opportunities from the Guild of Ethical Potioneering and Standards, when he had to shelf personal research projects and give credit to lesser men and women. That part of him wanted to be someone, forever and always.

And then his responsibilities came home to roost on his shoulders, and Severus remembered there was more at stake in this world than his petty desires. In the end, his name would amount to nothing—the only son of a blood-traitor and a mill town worker, a Dark wizard, a second-rate Potions Master with too few projects accredited to his efforts, and it didn’t matter. The school would replace him, Dumbledore would find another spy, and Severus Snape would be less than a footnote in than annals of Wizarding Britain’s worst civil war.

It didn’t matter. He didn’t matter. Only—.

His right wrist began to prickle, and Severus stole away the muddled mess of emotions brought on by Karkaroff and the Ball and perhaps a touch too much wine behind the iron walls of his Occlusion. The cold grass and dirt crunched under his boots as he strode back through the maze toward the castle.

He didn’t need to go far. In fact, Severus needed only reach the mouth of the maze at the courtyard’s end to find the girl hand in hand with her surly date, Slytherin looming over the pair with barely restrained displeasure.

When Slytherin spoke, his tone was at its softest and most dangerous, a voice Severus only heard before his wand lashed out and left him with a new scar. “Mr. Krum,” Slytherin said. “Where do you think you’re taking my student?”

“Ve vere going for a valk, Professor,” Krum replied, unmoved by Slytherin’s voice. “That is not against the rules.”

“Ah.” A subtle twist of Slytherin’s wrist sparked enough magic to yank the couple’s hands apart, and Severus saw the bright pink of a fresh burn on Potter’s palm as she cradled it to her chest. “Move along, Mr. Krum.”

“Professor Slytherin, I—.”

“Shut up,” Slytherin snapped at Potter before addressing Krum again. “Return to the dance or move on to your vessel, boy.”

Krum hesitated, his gaze jumping between Slytherin and Potter. “Vill you be all right, Harriet?”

“I—.”

Go.”

The boy retreated indoors, back to the music and inviting chatter, while Potter remained behind, her elbow suddenly captured in Slytherin’s unyielding grip. He hauled her closer, and the girl gasped.

“That hurts—!”

“Shut up,” Slytherin snapped yet again, tightening his hold as he leaned nearer the girl’s face. “Did you not understand me last we spoke, Miss Potter? I was very clear in my expectations. Do I need to repeat myself?”

Stubborn, the girl said, “We were going for a walk. Can everyone else go for a bloody walk except for me—?”

Her words cut off with a sharp breath, and Severus knew Slytherin must have curled his fingers in, pressing harder.

“Don’t swear at me like a filthy Muggle,” he told her. “Whatever fleeting association you’ve formed with Krum, end it. Are my instructions clear enough on this point?” When Potter nodded, Slytherin released her. “Concentrate on your studies. I have expectations I intend for you to meet, and I will be most…unhappy if you continue to misinterpret my instructions.”

“I didn’t—.” Slytherin moved, a slight tightening in his posture, and Potter wisely closed her mouth. “Yes, sir.”

“Louder, and with less attitude.”

Yes, sir.

It was here that Severus—heart pounding with discomfort at the all too familiar arrangement—made his presence known. “Professor,” he greeted with the same intonation he usually saved for saying my Lord.

“Severus.” Red eyes cut in his direction, then away, dismissive. “Escort her back to the dormitories. Miss Potter has enjoyed enough of the festivities.”

The girl didn’t protest, and she made a passable attempt at keeping her expression blank, if not polite. Severus swept up the wide steps to her side and nodded to Slytherin, who appeared close to hexing them both if another word was spoken. He gestured Potter forward, and they left the Defense instructor there in the spotty moonlight, heading instead toward the foreboding dark of the dungeons.

“Fucking arsehole,” Potter grumbled as they bypassed the Great Hall.

“Mind yourself.” They came to the top of the steps, and Severus’ eyes ran the length of the stairwell and back, finding no one aside from the couples in the entrance hall at their backs. “You did not know who might be listening.”

Potter hummed a small, unhappy note of acceptance as they began their descent. The torches flickered to life, illuminating the empty passage. Potter’s footsteps echoed louder than Severus’, though absent the telling click of taller heels.

For a long while, they did not speak to one another. The tension remained as it had for months now, ever since Severus opened his mouth and screamed his mistakes at the girl in June. Potter kept glancing at him with her brow furrowed like Severus was a particularly annoying puzzle she didn’t understand.

“You need to heed what he tells you,” he said into the strained silence. “Slytherin is adept at making one’s life miserable if he feels slighted.”

“I don’t see him harassing anyone else! Any of the other—contestants, or whatever.”

“They’re following behaviors he anticipates from them. You are not.”

“Because Merlin forbid Harriet Potter has a date.” She stumbled on the bottom step, swearing. “One second—.”

Severus stopped to wait, impatient, watching as the girl fixed the trailing hem of her robes through a loop attached to her wrist. He studied the outfit, finding that though the neckline was less than modest, he’d seen much worse in the Great Hall and expected Minerva had been adjusting hems and bodices all night. Narcissa would covet the outfit, having an absurd passion for all things dramatic and expensive. Diamonds and long, rippling trains sent her into raptures.

Severus did not consider fourteen-year-old girls beautiful, but he did think the robes very nice and well-suited to Potter. A classic style that did not make her look like a child trying to dress like an adult.

Potter must have sensed his attention upon her because color tinged her cheeks, and she glared. “My dormmates thought I looked weird, too. Said my robes were old-fashioned.”

“I didn’t speak, Potter. Don’t put words in my mouth.”

“You’re thinking it.”

“Perhaps. Don’t scowl, girl. There are far worse things to be than weird, as you put it.”

“Like what?”

“You could be normal. Perish the thought.”

The churlishness in the girl’s features lightened. Suddenly a short laugh escaped her, a small smile curling Potter’s mouth, and the tension clouding the air stopped pressing into Severus’ temples. He frowned, and Potter laughed again.

“And what is meant to be so amusing?”

“Nothing, Professor.”

“Hmpf.” He peered at Potter, half of her face illuminated by the nearest torch, and her wide, green eyes blinked up at him. Looking at her, the abrupt compulsion to speak overcame Severus, and the words came out of his mouth before he realized he’d voiced them. “Your mother adored strange people,” he told her, heavy and solemn. “Lily would have loved you, and not because you are her daughter. No, aside from that, and aside from her proclivity for being occasionally vapid and as superficial as any other popular student, Lily had a perduring affection for odd and awkward souls.”

Potter’s eyes widened, her lips parting. “Is that—is that why you were friends?”

“Yes. I assume so.” Severus kept walking. Potter followed.

“Did you—? Um…I mean, did you and mum ever…?”

“Not that it is any of your business, but no, Potter. There was only friendship between Lily and myself.” Friendship was a tepid word, but it sufficed. Severus considered lying just to horrify the nosy brat, but he refrained because Lily didn’t deserve such idle comments, even in jest.

“If you were friends, I don’t understand how…you became what you are.”

Severus drew to a stop again, Potter’s words thick with too much meaning, too many interpretations. She nearly collided with his back. What you are. A bitter, resentful man? A cynic, a fool, a lapdog? Spy, murderer, poisoner? A Death Eater? That was what she truly meant, and Severus knew what he would tell her, even if he should snarl at Potter to be quiet and leave him be. He knew with absolute certainty, and when he spoke, his voice came calm and quiet.

“Because we weren’t friends. For a time.”

“Why?”

“I called Lily a Mudblood.”

The girl froze. Severus turned, waited for her anger, for the hatred she first shared in his office when he bared his arm for her inspection. Her eyes shuttered, and the lightness therein dimmed while Severus continued to brace himself, waiting for it, wanting it. As if a rot festered inside him, he kept cutting at his own skin no matter the pain, scars, or blood, simply for a chance to rid himself of the poison.

The situation in his office last June had been different. He’d been upset then, harassed by Dumbledore and Slytherin, cornered by the willful girl now standing in front of him. Unlike that day, Severus was not upset, was not out of his mind, or any more harried than usual. He did not yell or shout. He spoke with little inflection and waited for the revulsion to turn on him once more.

Potter stared into his face, unflinching. She tipped her head, and the slant of light gleamed across her lenses like fire caught in the glass.

“Why?” she demanded.

“Because I was angry. And sixteen.” Because her father had been humiliating him in front of half the school for existing. Because Lily had rushed over to his rescue and to have a cheeky flirt with the boy actively ruining his life. For an instant, all Severus had wanted was to make her feel as small as he’d felt, as insignificant. The word crossed his mouth, and he’d spent the years since regretting it and making even worse mistakes.

“That’s not an excuse!

Potter’s retort echoed in the close confines of the corridor, and Severus would have worried someone would overhear if the dance hadn’t been in full swing still. His mouth opened to repudiate Potter for shouting, for having the gall to raise her voice to him—but nothing came to him. Severus shut it again. He exhaled.

“I know.”

Potter blinked, taken aback. “What?”

“I am not making excuses. I am not a child, Potter, in need of prevarication. I called your mother a Mudblood, and our association ended for several years.”

The girl’s face scrunched with upset. “You’re such a bastard,” she snapped, lashing out, her eyes bright with unshed tears. Potter turned to the wall, one hand coming to pull at the brushed curls of her hair as if she wanted nothing more than to throw that fist in Severus’ face and needed something to grab. To steady herself. A few of the delicate white flowers sown between the strands tumbled to the dungeon floor.

Potter took several breaths, her skinny shoulders heaving with the effort not to lose her temper. Severus almost wished she would. After a final deep, lingering inhale, she faced forward again and started walking. Severus remained, allowing the girl to storm off, until—.

“Are you coming or not? You’re the worst bloody escort.”

Severus hesitated, then followed, puzzled despite himself. “Do stop swearing at me, Potter, lest I begin taking points.”

“Frankly, I don’t care much about points at the moment, Professor.”

They kept on in silence, Severus’ robes hissing quietly over the stones, Potter’s shoes eliciting small, repetitive taps.

“My mum forgave you,” the girl said without looking at him, as if giving her words to the open air rather than to Severus. “My mum forgave you for all the shite you did because of what you’re doing now—what you were doing then for Professor Dumbledore, for the war.”

Severus didn’t reply. His right hand twitched in its sleeve.

“I fancy she knew better than I do, considering she actually understood you,” Potter grumbled. They neared the entrance to the Slytherin common room, and Severus readied himself to leave. “You know, Professor Dumbledore once told me guilt is a bottomless currency until you find your pockets empty and have to find something else of yourself to give away.”

They reached the blank stretch of wall barring entrance into the common room, flanked between two nondescript tapestries. “What on earth are you on about, Potter?”

She gave the door the password, and the wall parted. Inside, Severus could hear the voices of younger children who hadn’t attended the event, still up despite their blatant curfew.

Potter looked over her shoulder as she addressed him, and their eyes met.

“It means you shouldn’t try to make me angry just so you can go on feeling guilty. You can’t be guilty forever, and I don’t want to carry a burden my mum let go of years ago. Sometimes, you can have forgiveness if you’re willing to ask for it.”

Severus could only stare.

“G’night, Professor.”

“…Good night, Miss Potter.”

 

xXx

 

On the morning of the twenty-fifth, Severus sat at the single long table in the Great Hall stirring his tea, staring into the middle distance without much thought given to the chatting staff or the lone few students who lingered after the Yule Ball. Slytherin had gone off to pester one of his other retainers, and Severus had opened his obligatory gifts from the families of his students. He had nothing to consider but the idle swirl of liquid in his cup and his own troubled mind.

You can ’t be guilty forever.

Severus stirred his tea.

The morning lay undisturbed like fresh powder upon the white snowdrifts—until the crow arrived.

It came in through the open slots by the rafters where the usual owls entered, black wings spread wide as it soared to the table’s head. It landed by Severus’ hand, and he recoiled on instinct, eyes narrowed at the suspect bird and its hastily wrapped parcel.

Dumbledore, on Severus’ left, sipped his pumpkin juice in thought. “I do believe that is Harriet’s messenger.”

The bird hopped closer to Severus’ empty plate, its dull, milky eyes fixed on his face. “Severus Snape!” it cawed.

Aware of the Headmaster’s attention, Severus took the offending package and stuffed it into a robe pocket. The crow disappeared, and Albus chuckled.

Later, in the privacy of his quarters, Severus took the package out again and turned it over in his hands, brow furrowed. He tucked one finger under the parchment wrapping and tore it free, exposing the front of a book. Severus blinked at the tatty, second-hand Muggle novel, and questioned why the fuck Potter would post him a weathered edition of The Silmarillion.

Severus had, in fact, read the book in his youth when there’d been fewer demands upon his time and he’d needed distractions from his own mind. He couldn’t fathom why Potter would give him her copy, but he nonetheless began to read it again, content to sit by his hearth for one afternoon and forget the world was going to hell somewhere outside of the cold, stolid dungeons.

He still did not understand Potter’s motive until he neared the book’s end, when his stomach began to complain for lack of food, and his eyes ached from reading in the weakening firelight. He came upon the section entitled Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age, and therein he found Potter’s untidy quill marks encircling two brief passages. He leaned forward in his armchair and read aloud.

“’Of old there was Sauron the Maia….He became the greatest and most trusted of the servants of the Enemy…and for long if he willed he could still appear noble so as to deceive all but the most wary.’” Severus frowned as he turned a page. “’When Thangorodrim was broken and Morgoth overthrown, Sauron put on his fair hue and did obeisance to Eönwë, the herald of Manwë, and abjured all his evil deeds….Eönwë commanded Sauron to return to Aman and there receive the judgment of Manwë. Then Sauron was ashamed, and he was unwilling to return in humiliation, for under Morgoth his power had been great. Therefore when Eönwë departed he hid himself in Middle-earth; and he fell back into evil.’”

There, in small letters crowding the margin, was an untidy but familiar scrawl spelling the words, “No one is beyond redemption but for those too cowardly to seek it.

Severus closed the book. He sat long into the night with a strange gift from a strange girl in his hand, the inside of his left arm burning, though the weight of his right felt curiously light.


A/N: Chapter title is from Dickinson ’s 320, “There’s a certain Slant of light,” a poem alluding to the heaviness of despair as is caught and displayed by the weakness of winter sunlight. “ There’s a certain Slant of light, / Winter Afternoons – / That oppresses, like the Heft / Of Cathedral Tunes – .

The Silmarillion passages are paraphrased for the narrative (From page 307). Bit of Tolkien lore for those who don ’t know; Sauron/Gorthaur, the bad guy from the Lord of the Rings, was given the chance to surrender after his boss, Morgoth, was defeated in the First War, and it’s speculated he genuinely desired to repent, but was such a bloody coward he ran instead. The whole Lord of the Rings plot-line wouldn’t have happened if he’d returned to Valinor to beg forgiveness.

McGonagall, gasping: “Severus, you have ears—!”

Snape: “STOP IT.”

Chapter 193: on holiday

Chapter Text

cxciii. on holiday

 

The graying stairs creaked under Remus’ feet as he climbed to the upper level.

“Girls,” he said, rapping his knuckles against Harriet’s door, then Elara’s. “Come along now; we’re running late.”

He pulled out his watch to check it again, an instinct to look at the battered thing to see the moon’s position and the date. It was the morning of the twenty-fourth, the full moon was a week behind him, and Remus could only sigh with relief to be away from Hogwarts for the rest of the holiday.

He enjoyed teaching—and he really enjoyed having a steady career instead of hopping from Muggle job to Muggle job. He had no difficulties with his furry condition so long as Severus continued to provide the Wolfsbane Potion, and no one suspected him to be anything other than sickly. It meant biting his tongue and keeping his opinion to himself more often than not, but so long as he continued to blend with the auxiliary staff, no one questioned his intermittent illness.

However, with the onerous burden of the Triwizard Tournament hanging over the school, teaching the students had been a touch more difficult as the excitement often overshadowed a lecture in magical history. His fourth year Gryffindors with Mr. Longbottom proved especially disruptive, as there seemed to be a schism between the boys they had yet to resolve. The gossip in the staff lounge had it that Mr. Weasley held Mr. Longbottom’s admittance into the Tournament against him, because Neville had done little to dissuade others from believing he’d entered himself. Even after his rather…well, ignominious defeat in the first task, Ronald seemed no closer to a reconciliation with his friend.

Then, of course, came the stress of having to keep the castle secure during the event, trying to vet Aurors and Ministry officials who passed through with regularity on Minister Gaunt’s every whim. Dumbledore had the old crowd pressing their ears close to the ground, looking for any whispers they could of You-Know-Who, and the Headmaster’s insistence had Remus on edge.

So, being home after the Yule Ball with his family—as unrelated as they were: an ex-lover, a daughter he never got to raise, a dead friend’s child, a government ward, and the world’s meanest house-elf—felt very nice to Remus. Relaxing, for the most part.

Kreacher came slumping out from whatever grim corner he’d chosen to inhabit this morning. “Kreacher could help wake the Mudblood,” he croaked with a smile that meant nothing but impending mischief. “Yes, he could.”

“You are not to go into Hermione’s room,” he chastised the scheming elf, a stern finger held in the air. “You’ve been told this before.”

“Kreacher doesn’t have to listen to the nasty beast man.”

“Yes, well, the nasty beast man is the reason your master hasn’t given you clothes.” Remus raised his brows and Kreacher scowled, muttering at the carpet. “Off you go.”

Kreacher retreated, and Remus shook his head as he knocked on Hermione’s door. “Hermione, we’re due to leave soon.”

He hadn’t expected an answer, but the door popped open to reveal Hermione standing there in a nice pair of tawny robes, dressed for the day. “Good morning, Professor.”

Hermione had primarily been herself since the break had started, though after she’d written a letter to her parents, she had been more…restless. More eager to learn and jump into studying to ignore familial troubles. Remus and Sirius had both asked if she wished to visit home, if she wanted to spend Christmas with her parents, but she’d been insistent on staying at Grimmauld. Without a means of contacting Mr. and Mrs. Granger, neither wizard knew what else they could do.

“Hello,” Remus returned. “Can you lend me a hand getting those two up and about?”

“Of course.” Hermione paused and peered past Remus’ arm, worrying her lower lip. “I think Harriet was up late again, though.”

“‘Again?’”

“She’s been having nightmares and pretends to go to bed with the rest of us at curfew, but sometimes I see her wand light in the middle of the night. I think she’s worried about what Professor Slytherin is planning.” Hermione straightened and raised her eyes to Remus’. “Will you talk to her about it? She just tells us she’s fine and to leave it alone.”

“I will,” he promised. “Now, hurry along while I wake Sirius. We’re expected for breakfast, and it’s nearly brunch now.”

Remus crossed the corridor and headed higher up the stairs to the level he inhabited during the holidays. The door to his room was shut, the one next to it Severus kept locked tight, and so Remus stepped across the narrow passage to tap his knuckles against the door to Sirius’ room. When there was no response, he huffed, turned the knob, and walked inside.

Sirius lay shirtless, sprawled in his unmade made with the sheets strung about the footboard like wilting flower festoons. Remus’ foot knocked against something in the cold dark, and he bent at the waist, fingers passing over limp cloth, then the hard edge of an empty bottle.

“Merlin, Sirius,” he sighed, stepping over the laundry to reach the hearth, setting the bottle on the mantel. The fire had burnt down to the cinders in the grate, and so Remus conjured a new flame to sit atop the ashes, casting light through the room.

Sirius paused in his snoring to mutter and turn his face away from the light, reaching blindly for a blanket that had been kicked aside in the night. Dust clung to the every curve and ridge of the decadent headboard, the hangings left slack against the thick posts. A few more empty bottles had found a home on the nightstand with Sirius’ wand, which had not been placed in the specific holder meant for it. Old clothes cluttered the winged chair and carpet, never quite making it into the hamper. Remus took in the state of the room, tutting under his breath.

“Sirius, get up,” he said, smacking the outside of the man’s thigh. He still wore his trousers from the day before, and one shoe. “We’re meant to be at Andromeda’s this morning.”

Sirius grunted and rolled to his back. Remus went to give his leg another slap, well-acquainted with Sirius’ proclivity for deep-sleeping, but then his eyes caught on the glyphs and runes scattered across his skin. Each had been done slowly over time, the slow, clumsy design of half-remembered images glimpsed on book pages during lazy school days. Remus recognized enough of them to read the pillars for strength, regret, and patience. His fingers brushed the sigil nyd above his heart.

Sirius stirred. “‘emuss?” he slurred, half-asleep.

Remus moved his hand from Sirius’ chest to his shoulder, clearing his throat. He ignored the warmth in his cheeks. “You need to get up. Get washed. Andromeda’s expecting us.”

Groaning, Sirius said, “Fuckin’ hell,” as Remus waited for him to, at the very least, sit up. “S’ too early for that.”

“No, actually. We’re bordering on excessively late at this point.” Sirius got himself upright and slumped at the edge of his mattress, grimacing against the firelight. Remus sighed. “You need to drink less, Sirius. Especially when the girls are here.”

Sirius blinked at him as if he didn’t know what he was talking about, and Remus tipped his head at the collection of bottles on the nightstand. They bore Muggle labels, so at least Sirius had kept his vices out of Diagon Alley or the wizarding quarter. Magical society could be so very narrow, and Remus didn’t want Sirius’ perceived weaknesses to reflect on Elara or be used against her.

“‘S okay,” Sirius mumbled.

“It is most definitely not okay.” Hesitating for just a moment, Remus reached out to brush Sirius’ hair back behind his ear. The touch stirred the other wizard, and he turned his head toward Remus, a cheeky grin twitching over his mouth. “I worry about you here alone during the year.”

“You don’t need to. I keep myself busy—learning everythin’ I’ve missed, keeping Kreacher out of things, and I pop by Andromeda’s on the regular for tea and a chat. She updates me on what’s happening in the Ministry.” He dragged a hand through his messy hair, then across the stubble painting his jaw. “Ah, she’s going to have our bollocks for being late.”

Your bollocks maybe. I prefer mine exactly as they are, thank you very much.” Remus stood—and then grabbed Sirius’ arm before he could flop backward onto the mattress again. “Oh no you don’t. Get up. Merlin!”

Once Sirius was suitably awake and mobile, Remus excused himself and headed back down the stairs to check on the girls. The shower was running in the bathroom, Elara’s door open, and he could hear Hermione downstairs fussing with her car, ensuring the little devil got fed. Remus directed his attention to Harriet’s room, the door ajar, and he tapped against the wood.

“Come in.”

Remus stepped inside to find Harriet still bundled in her dressing gown with a fresh change of clothes next to her, waiting for the bath to be free. She sat at her desk, poking through her post, frowning in thought. There was a new frame on the corner of it displaying a picture from the Yule Ball, the one of Elara, Harriet, and Hermione squeezed together, laughing. He thought it rather telling that Harriet would rather keep a photo of her friends out than her supposed boyfriend, but that was a topic for another day.

“Good morning,” Remus said, peeking about the room for signs of a sullen reptile. He found it beneath Harriet’s desk, coiled on her feet like a faithful puppy. The Horned Serpent stared at Remus as he came closer—its unnerving eyes never straying from his form. “Did you sleep well?”

“Okay,” Harriet replied, setting her post aside. Remus noticed a large box on the floor, and as he glanced at it, the box gave a definite shake, startling him. “Don’t worry, there’s nothin’ alive in there.” Harriet yawned into her hand.

“What is in there, if you don’t mind me asking?”

“It’s from the Weasley twins. They’ve been making things, mostly joke stuff, and they send me prototypes.” Harriet bent to flip the box’s lid open, revealing a motley assortment of strange items. One spherical item appeared to have some kind of stiff little legs and had been giving the box feeble kicks, causing the shaking. “Dunno what that’s meant to be. I think it gave up the ghost before getting here.”

Remus continued to peer, puzzled, until Harriet let the lid shut again. “Not that I want to stifle their creativity, but why are those boys sending you these things?”

Harriet shrugged, and Remus sensed a deeper story with information she didn’t want to share. He didn’t think much harm could come from their silliness, so he let it go and shook his head. He considered how best to broach the subject Hermione had mentioned to him, but Harriet had her head bowed, her tired eyes set on the desk. The snake hissed something to her, head balanced on her knee, and Harriet didn’t reply.

If I ask her now, Remus thought, a small stirring of helplessness turning his stomach, she won’t say anything.

“Do you have everything ready for today?” he chose to inquire instead. “Are your snakes all right to be alone for a while?”

“Yup.”

“We’re due at the Flamels’ at midday and most likely won’t have time to stop by here after the Tonkses’.”

“Mhm. I put the gifts on the table downstairs and told Kreacher not to touch them.”

“I had better go make sure they’re still there….”

Downstairs, he found the wrapped parcels untouched on the table, though he suspected it had less to do with Harriet asking nicely and more to do with the looming threat of a rather large serpent eating Kreacher whole if the elf irritated his Mistress. Remus watched the minutes tick by on the carriage clock until all the girls arrived in the kitchen, followed at length by Sirius bearing no trace of his morning languor.

“Hurry up, Remus. You’re lagging behind!”

“Why do I put up with you?”

“My winning personality, of course. Now, through the Floo, you lot. Forty-Seven Balder Court—say it nice and clear!”

The Tonkses resided in an old Victorian house at the end of Balder Court, a lane cordoned off from the burgeoning Muggle world surrounding it by heavy wards. Several other old pure-blood families populated the homes dotting the street, many of the buildings more like manors in Remus’ estimation. It wasn’t a far journey, located just on the other side of the Thames in Camberwell, and Remus spent only an instant in the Floo before it spat him out onto a homey hearth.

“And here I thought you’d gotten stuck in a chimney somewhere,” Andromeda Tonks said as she came in through the lounge door, arching a brow at Sirius.

“Andy!” Sirius greeted, open arms, but Andromeda passed him to see the girls, bestowing prim kisses by their cheeks. She shook Remus’ hand before returning to Sirius, giving his shoulder a fond smack.

The rest of the party had arrived—a very odd allotment of distant, mostly disinherited Black cousins and Tonkses from Ted’s side of the family who were either Muggleborn or in the know about magic. Remus felt like the odd one out and naturally gravitated toward the edge of the room.

Andromeda proved an excellent host, and Remus found himself plied with spiced eggnog and light fare that came floating out of the kitchen on prepped trays. Most of the cousins were passing through on their way to other parties or relatives’ houses, stopping by to exchange gifts and well-wishes while stealing a nibble from Andromeda’s pantry. The girls gravitated to Nymphadora, who was so excited to have someone even relatively close to her age in attendance, she rushed to greet them and knocked the fairy-lit tree down. Andromeda righted it with a practiced flick of her wand.

“Enjoying your holiday?” Sirius asked as he found Remus hovering by the wall covered in framed photos. Remus eyed the cup in his hand, and Sirius huffed. “It’s just cider.”

“Hmm.” Remus sipped his eggnog. “It is nice to be away from the school for a bit.”

He half expected Sirius to come back with a retort about how Remus should be grateful for the work, because at least he got to leave the house and feel useful. Sirius’ letters usually contained at least one snappish line about wanting to do more, wishing he could do something more than keep Grimmauld livable and be a place for the girls to return in the summer. Remus thought he underestimated the value in being a soft place to fall, in creating a home when Elara and Harriet had not known what that felt like in their childhoods.

Sirius said nothing, however. He merely swirled the cider in his cup and surveyed the room of people, the smell of disturbed soot from the Floo and wafting food thick in the air. “It feels like it did before,” he softly said. “Before the fighting broke out. Quiet. But not exactly the same, because things never really went back to normal, did they?”

“No.” Remus glanced at the photographs behind his shoulder, the face of Ted Tonks smiling from beside his wife and daughter. No one, not even Andromeda, knew what had become of him, only that he—like many other Muggle-borns—had revolted against Gaunt’s Registry and fled the country. Whether he was alive or dead was a mystery, as he couldn’t risk his family by staying in contact.

“It scares the shit out of me to think about what’s coming,” Sirius confided, downing the rest of his cider. “To think about who might be missing at next year’s party, or the year after—because it’s coming whether we like it or not.” He Vanished the empty cup to the kitchen. “Have you noticed Dumbledore’s more paranoid of late?”

“Yes,” Remus admitted. “He’s privy to information we’re not, and there’s been…stirrings in less savory corners of our community.”

Sirius scoffed and made a subtle gesture in Andromeda’s direction. “She’s had a letter from her sister.”

“Narcissa, I’m assuming.”

“Well, lovely cousin Bella certainly isn’t up to sending out post right now,” Sirius laughed, the sound bitter and cold.

“I thought Narcissa and Andromeda did not get on?”

“They don’t. If Narcissa is trying to mend decades-old fences, then she’s terrified. Andy didn’t go into what she said, of course, but she vaguely alluded to Narcissa and Lucius trying to ensure their brat gets sent somewhere unaffiliated if something were to happen to them.”

“Merlin,” Remus said, and it was all that came to mind. The world kept turning, and yet underneath the thin veneer of order, it seemed everything was going to absolute hell. Even the privileged social elite were fearing for their lives. The Ministry kept pressing itself upon Hogwarts, and all the while, their Defense professor grew surlier and surlier like some primordial monster growing furious as its den was encroached upon.

“We really must be in the muck if the Death Eaters are nervous,” Sirius remarked. “It scares me, Remus.”

“It frightens me, too.”

They said nothing for a while, simply sharing space, soaking in the revelry that heated their bones as well as the fire did. Remus half-fancied that if he could stop time, he’d do it at that moment, when everything was peaceful and the snow fell outside. The horrid, wretched fears of tomorrow remained forever a day away.

There were many people who weren’t there with them anymore, but Remus was thankful for those who remained. He was grateful Sirius was free, Harriet and Elara were alive, and they’d found a best friend in Hermione. He was grateful—and sometimes that feeling made him all the more afraid to lose it all again.

 

xXx

 

They didn’t spend very long at Forty-Seven Balder Court, long enough to exchange well-wishes and gifts—which included a case of Black knives from Andromeda to Elara, a set of eight meant to be nine, passed down through the family and stolen by Andromeda many years prior. Sirius protested, but Elara kept the case to return to Grimmauld Place.

They used Apparition to depart the Tonks home for Trefhud, Devonshire, walking the rest of the way with the relatively balmy coastal breeze at their backs. Harriet was the first through the front door when they reached the house, right into the embrace of the French Alchemist waiting to greet her.

Many people crowded Flamel’s comfortably cluttered home, mostly foreigners, but foreigners from every walk of life. If his nose didn’t fail him, Remus thought a few might be werewolves. Some were definitely fae, smelling of distant places, sweet and strange, others like quiet, still swamps or brine-filled deltas. One was a vampire—red-eyed and sallow with the odor of mothballs coming off his velvet coat.

Remus felt less of an intruder here—mainly because no one was related aside from Elara and Sirius, and many of the party-goers had backgrounds in magical academia. He got caught up in conversation with a man from L’accademia di Storia Sociale nella Società Magica, a research center and archive in Rome. He spent almost half the evening arguing about magical creatures and their role in social history while Sirius sampled a bit too much wine and earned a lingering, sharp side-eye from Nicolas Flamel.

He didn’t have a chance to speak with Harriet again until it was nearly time to depart, well after dinner and dessert had been shared. He stepped outside to clear his head, taking in a deep breath of the temperate, salty air, and found Harriet sitting on the garden bench, looking out toward the dormant woods, the skeletal branches swaying against the clouded sky.

“Taking a break?” Remus asked as he lowered himself to sit next to her, and Harriet looked around, startled from her thoughts.

“For a bit, yeah,” she said, smiling. Something of the expression appeared strained, though more genuine and affable than her mood had been that morning. Flamel had passed her a book earlier with a conspiratorial wink, a book that was most likely about Animagi and their transformations if Remus were to guess. She’d enjoyed spending time with her friends outside of Hogwarts.

“Have you been sleeping well, Harriet? We’ve noticed your light’s been on later than normal.”

She shrugged her skinny shoulders. “I’ve had a lot on my mind, I guess.”

“I’m sure you have.” Remus folded his hands together between his knees, studying the garden. “It’s been rather…hectic at the school of late.”

“That’s putting it mildly.” Harriet shifted. “Remus, can I ask you a strange question?”

“Of course.”

“Why would Snape call my mum a Mudblood?”

Of all the things he anticipated her asking, that certainly hadn’t been among the options. If he were Sirius, Remus would have responded, “Because he’s a git,” and he almost blurted it out despite himself. “What—what brought this on, may I ask?”

“He tried to make me angry,” she explained, and at Remus’ confused expression, continued to explain. “You’ve noticed he does that, right? He says things to get under your skin—well, not yours so much, but definitely Sirius’. I think…he likes it best when people don’t want to bother with him, so he doesn’t have to interact, or something. I’m not sure. I finally stopped being so bloody mad at him, and he—.” Harriet expelled a heated breath. Severus had made her angry, no try about it. “Did he really call my mum that?”

Remus recalled the exact moment in his mind with considerable embarrassment. At the time, he’d been so incredibly angry with Snape for saying that word, but time and age had a way of weathering the lurid, blinding quality of outrage. He himself had been called much worse than Mudblood and had experienced things more terrible than a spat of schoolyard name calling, nasty though it might have been. He remembered what he and James, Sirius, and Peter had done to Snape, what they’d felt justified in doing. If he could still conjure the image and the sound of their classmates crowing in vicious approval, he imagined Snape could do the same.

Part of Remus thought it justified. Just look at the man Snape had become—Death Eater, Dark wizard, bastard. But how much of that was a predetermined path Remus and his friends had helped Snape along?

He looked at Harriet and realized he had only been a year older than she was now when James and Sirius had attacked Snape by the lakeside. When he’d done nothing to stop it. Not even for a moment could he imagine the girls doing anything like what they’d done, nor standing by and letting it happen.

Shame squeezed his heart.

“He did, yes.”

“Why, though? He and my mum were friends, weren’t they?”

Remus blinked. “Yes. They didn’t speak much after he said that, but before…the end, they were friends again.” He sighed, scratching at his hair, hearing the sounds of the party continuing through the side door he’d left slightly ajar. Far, far in the distance, past the music and the way the breeze pulled at the trees, waves crashed on the shoreline. “It’s not my place to defend Severus; I think he was wrong to say what he did, and no matter how…agitated he was, it should not have been part of his vocabulary. However, I will say that he was not entirely at fault that day.”

Harriet raised her gaze to look at him. Remus struggled to find the proper words, trying to wade through his own garbled emotions concerning the subject. “Severus wasn’t popular in school. He was bullied, both in his House and without, the worst of his bullies being James, Sirius, myself, and Peter.” Remus grimaced. “We were young—stubborn, opinionated. Severus bore the brunt of that, more than he should.”

Harriet continued to watch him levelly as Remus tried not to make her father sound like an utter pillock; he wasn’t, had never been. He’d been a good man, a good friend, but not one without his faults and demons. Trying to deify James would mean defending a few of the rather heinous things he’d done, mostly to Snape, but Remus wouldn’t sit there and bad-mouth James when he couldn’t defend his own actions.

At length, Harriet broke her gaze away and simply shook her head. “Boys are stupid.”

“Well, I can’t argue with that.” He paused. “Is that all you’re worried about?”

“No, but it seemed the only thing easy to fix.”

And wasn’t that the truth? Remus could think of nothing to assuage her mind when it came to Slytherin or the Dark Lord or the Minister; he could think of nothing, because similar thoughts kept him awake at night too, and nothing could abate those nightmares.

Harriet rose to her feet, brushing the cold dew from her robes. “Coming inside, Professor?”

“Yes, I suppose.”

He stood and followed her back into the inviting light of the house, leaving the night and the heaviness of old, poisoned memories behind.

Chapter 194: the morning post

Chapter Text

cxciv. the morning post

 

She sat in the belly of a plush chair, turned away from the fire guttering in the soot-encrusted grate.

“How is his progress?” she asked of the shadowed figure in the doorway. It was an ugly room that may have been nice in the past but had fallen into disrepair. Mold gathered and dripped along the top of the walls, and the wainscoting had buckled, chewed by insects and rodents. A noisy draft came whistling in from a window she could not see.

“Middling,” the figure replied. “But Dumbledore suspects nothing.”

Harriet leaned from one side to the other and felt the weight of her skin shift with her. It hung, ponderous, pulling at her bones.

Something reeked like old, rotting meat.

“Old fool,” she spat with obvious glee. “They should have put him out of his misery years ago.” The dry scrape of scales upon wood reached her ears, and a large serpentine head rose above the chair’s arm. The creature inspected her, dark tongue flickering in and out.

“Your body is failing you,” the snake told her.

A heavy sigh left Harriet, and though she tried to move her hand, it remained stubbornly settled against her lap, out of her vision. “I suppose you’re right,” she agreed lightly. “Muggles have such little use these days.”

Harriet felt herself falling farther into the chair, sinking, the room bleeding away as she plunged deeper and deeper into the dark. It swelled over her head like thick, sticky tar, and Harriet gasped, kicking, trying to keep herself above it.

Harriet.”

The thick liquid slid through her fingers, her breath coming in short, broken inhales, stuttering—.

Harriet….

She plunged under the surface and pressed her hands over her ears, curling her knees toward her chest.

You can’t ignore me, girl!”

Cold, frigid fingers encircled her wrists, and Harriet refused to open her eyes, refused to listen. Go away, she thought. Go away, go away!

The fingers tugged, tightened. “Let me in!

“Harriet—.”

LET ME IN!

“Harriet—!”

Harriet woke with a start, the book open on her lap slipping through her knees to thump upon the rug. She blinked, eyes blurry, as the all-consuming dark of her dreams peeled back in favor of the common room’s fuzzy light. It looked aquamarine in the morning glow and glistened like polished gems on the silver lanterns.

Hermione leaned closer to her, placing Harriet’s fallen glasses in her hand. “Did you sleep out here all night?”

Harriet blinked again, the edges of her nightmare still clinging to the peripheries of her mind, and she thought back. She remembered Grimmauld, then the end of their holiday and getting back on the train bound for Hogwarts. She recalled snagging one of the comfortable chairs in the common room, intent on reading just a bit more of the book Mr. Flamel gave her after her friends went to bed, but her eyes had gotten heavy, and Harriet didn’t recollect anything else.

“I guess,” she said, shifting. Someone had covered her with a blanket, and Harriet stared at it, puzzled, before tossing it aside with a shake of her head. “Err…what time is it?”

“Almost time for breakfast. Are you feeling well?”

“Mhm.” Harriet yawned and put on her glasses, looking around. Spotting her book on the floor, she leaned forward to pick it up. What was that dream? she wondered. Like most of her nightmares, the details had dissolved as soon as she woke, and every passing second took a bit more of the image away. The feeling, however, lingered. It irritated her, like an itch she couldn’t reach, a nagging anxiety she could not comprehend.

“You know you can talk to us about whatever is bothering you, right?”

“I said I’m fine!” Harriet snapped, and the moment the words crossed her mouth, she regretted them, smothering the sudden, inexplicable burst of anger in her chest. Why did Hermione and Elara have to keep asking, though? She was fine. Everything was fine. “I’m sorry, Hermione.”

Hermione straightened, a clear flash of hurt in her eyes before it disappeared. “Fine. Well, if you want to make it in time for breakfast, we need to leave soon.”

Feeling like the worst kind of friend, Harriet got up and took her book to the dorm, having just enough time to wash her face and change her clothes before she had to grab her satchel and follow Elara and Hermione out of the common room. Elara was thoroughly unimpressed with her sleeping arrangements.

“I bet Hermione five Sickles you’d been kidnapped again,” she said, deadpan.

“And you didn’t come looking?”

“I decided you would either show up by morning or Snape would have a coronary. Either option suited me fine.”

Harriet kicked her shoe.

“Get kidnapped at a decent hour, will you?”

“I wasn’t kidnapped! I was sleeping in the common room!”

“That Slytherin has regular access to. Ugh.”

Harriet paused, wondering again who’d thought to cover her with a blanket. Definitely not Slytherin. “Thoughtful” and “Slytherin” did not exist in similar spheres.

They continued to gibe one another on their way to the table, urging a bunch of first years at the end to budge up and make room. Harriet dragged a platter of toast closer to her and sighed as she picked out what she wanted to eat. Someone had thought it clever to stuff a bunch of sausages in the jam pot, and Harriet’s eye twitched as she ate her toast dry.

“Which of you idiots made a mess of the food?” Elara snapped at the first years. Godfrid, Baddock, and Pritchard looked suitably frightened, and the three boys pointed fingers at one another, refusing to take the blame.

“I wish they wouldn’t waste things like that,” Hermione muttered as the greasy mess vanished from the table, along with a tray of kippers someone had poured pumpkin juice into. “The house-elves work to make all this food, and they ruin it.”

“Privileged cunts,” Harriet said, doctoring her morning tea. Unlike anyone else at that table, she’d brushed against starvation more than once in her life, thrown into her cupboard for ‘misbehavior’ after being denied supper, then Aunt Petunia would fixate on the latest bit of neighborhood gossip, and Harriet would miss more than one meal in a row. She’d had to make do on scraps or rubbish, and it rubbed her the wrong way when the prats wasted food when it was so plentiful.

“Harriet!” Hermione hissed.

“She’s not wrong,” Elara told her. “Most of them are from well-off, pure-blood homes who don’t care much where their food comes from or who prepares it.”

“And you don’t see how—vile that is?”

“Of course I do. But we can’t very well nanny the whole of Wizarding society, can we?”

The post arrived before Hermione and Elara could have another argument over house-elves. A parliament of owls out of Diagon delivered the morning Prophet across the Great Hall, those who didn’t pay a monthly subscription fee rifling through their pockets for payment. Harriet took up her copy before the impatient bird dropping it off could knock over her tea.

Printed across the front page was an entire spread by Rita Skeeter covering the Yule Ball—and she’d somehow managed to include photos of each of the champion couples. Harriet’s name was neatly typed beneath her rather awkward image dancing with Krum.

“Oh, fucking hell,” Harriet muttered as she again heard the steady rise of whispers and felt eyes glancing in her direction. She didn’t look farther down the table where the Durmstrang students congregated, taking up room.

“How nice,” Elara drawled with her own copy open. “She wrote that you’re ‘thirteen’ and ‘obviously hunting for a partner to move up in society.’ You’re apparently a hussy, Harriet.”

“Great.” Harriet viciously turned the page—nearly tearing it—and read on. Another Skeeter article entitled “Dumbledore’s Giant Mistake” was about Hagrid and included an unflattering picture of him seemingly snapped somewhere in Hogsmeade. Skeeter stated Hagrid was a half-giant—and went on to pontificate and list far too many intimate details about Hagrid’s life.

“How could she possibly know this about Hagrid?” Harriet demanded before reading aloud, “‘Albus Dumbledore surely has a duty to ensure that the student body is warned about the dangers of associating with part-giants. ‘He’s just so terrifying and mean,” says Pansy Parkinson, a fourth-year student. “We’re all terrified to go out on the grounds alone knowing he’s out there.’ Parkinson!” Harriet shouted at the girl seated several spots down the bench. “What is this absolute nonsense you’re spewing to Skeeter?”

Pansy sniffed, picking over a roll. “I’m allowed to give my opinion to whoever I want.”

“That’s not an opinion—it’s a bloody lie!”

Harriet scanned the High Table, but Hagrid wasn’t there. He wouldn’t actually believe what Pansy had said, would he? No one feared him. Sure, Hagrid was tall and large—but put him next to Professor Slytherin, and Harriet knew exactly which person she found more intimidating.

She looked back to her friends—and Elara had gone white as a ghost, staring slack-jawed and horrified at the open paper in her shaking hands. Harriet knew the bit about Hagrid was outrageous, but not enough to elicit a reaction like that. Confused, she kept reading until she found the small article at the bottom that Elara had seen. It had a photo of her, captured at the trial during the summer.

 

 

“THE STRAYING HOUSE OF BLACK

Among the glamorous crowd of the Yule Ball, you might have been able to find Elara Black, fourteen, daughter of former Azkaban inhabitant and general lunatic Sirius Black II, thirty-five. I say you ‘might’ have been able to find Miss Black, because though she is a pretty girl, Miss Black was escorted to the event by her cousin, a Mr. Draco Malfoy, fourteen, and did not dance with any other participant. She stood to the side with her god-sister and newly minted social climber, Harriet Potter, thirteen, and made no move to accept the invitations of the respectable boys who approached her.

Though an heiress to a pure-blood House, Miss Black spent her formative years in a religious Muggle children ’s home, a St. Gile’s Institute, before her emancipation occurred in 91’. This reporter braved the facility to interview the Muggles there and came to learn several new facts about Miss Black.

‘Her father is a maniac,’ says Father Phillips, fifty-five. ‘I don’t know how they came into contact or started to correspond, but I imagine that’s where Elara got her wildness from. That man took that girl illegally and you should say that to your superiors. Reporting him to authorities has done nothing for me. They can’t find his name in the registries.’

‘The girl has the devil in her,’ says Matron Fitzgerald, seventy-two. ‘There’s something unholy about her.’

What might that unholiness be, dear reader? I became privy to information during the Yule Ball, in which Miss Black impersonated a wall flower for much of the evening. This was, in fact, because Miss Black spent the night watching and lusting after Fleur Delacour, eighteen, the Beauxbatons ’ champion and starlet of the school. Delacour danced with her date, Roger Davies, eighteen, utterly unaware she was the victim of someone’s peeping perversions.

A worrying trend has begun at Hogwarts, more and more children expressing interest in same-sex partners, much to the dread of their parents and families. ‘We’re already so small in number,’ cries Huldah Burke, forty-five, wife of Silas Burke, member of the Wizengamot. ‘It’s terrible! What kind of agenda is Dumbledore allowing to be taught at that school? Between the Muggles and the homosexuals, magic will cease to exist!’

Whether or not you share Mrs. Burke ’s sensible fears, dear reader, this reporter has to wonder what will happen to our storied families if even the Noble and Most Ancient House of Black can begin to stray? What will happen to our society if we have no heirs?”

 

Harriet couldn’t believe the rubbish she was reading. Worst of all, she could not comprehend where Rita had obtained her information. She and Hermione knew Elara liked witches in that way—but only Harriet had seen how Elara watched Fleur, and she didn’t say one bloody word to anyone!

How could the Prophet let her write about someone like this? An underage someone, no less. Did Skeeter really have no oversight whatsoever?

Elara looked as if she might vomit, and given her tendency to sick up whenever she got upset or overly stressed, Harriet thought it likely she might make a mess right on the table. Katherine Runcorn folded back the edge of her own paper and sneered at her. “You’re disgusting, Black.”

Harriet’s temper flared. “Shut your fucking mouth, Runcorn.”

In an instant, the candles overhead went out, and half the glasses in the Great Hall shattered, people shrieking as hot beverages or cold juice burst over their arms or poured into their laps. Harriet herself cursed as her scalding tea sloshed over the table’s edge and ran down her thighs.

Elara rose and bolted from the room, stone-faced and wringing her hands until Harriet worried she might break bones. She made to follow her, but Hermione laid a hand on Harriet’s shoulder. “I’ll go. You’ve got a letter.”

Harriet did have a letter, one from a shrieking owl she didn’t know who’d not appreciated Elara breaking glass while he swept in. Hermione departed, rushing after Elara, and Harriet took the note off the owl just as another came—followed by another, and another.

“What in the world…?”

It wasn’t an odd occurrence for Harriet to receive post. She liked to write others—liked to read stories from people about their lives, and though she’d spent much of her childhood afraid to ask “stupid questions,” she didn’t hesitate to reach out when she had questions about an author’s book or someone’s field of study. Sometimes they didn’t answer, though usually they did and sounded happy someone had taken an interest. Sometimes the letters even came from birds other than owls—most notably Mr. Flamel’s raven. Lockhart once sent a pair of twittering, blue-feathered parakeets who had to nap in Harriet’s hood before they could fly all the way home.

However, Harriet had never experienced such an influx of letters from so many unfamiliar—and frankly mean—post carriers before. She avoided having her fingers snapped by the first owl as she tore open the envelope and found only a brief note inside.

What could Viktor Krum possibly see in an ugly girl like you? Leave him alone!

The next contained a similar line, and the one after that added, “You’re a wretched girl for using him!

Talk sense into your god-sister! That kind of behavior is catching—!

Don’t think yourself better than a simple alley tart for using that boy—!

Viktor could never be interested in someone like you—!”

Logically, Harriet knew Hogwarts got the Prophet later than other parts of the country—namely London—but she couldn’t imagine what kind of sycophant read Skeeter’s work and immediately decided to write a supposedly “thirteen-year-old” girl ruddy hate mail! She had a dozen letters already!

Frustrated, Harriet gripped one of the unopened envelopes too tightly, and the material dissolved under her fingers as whatever glutinous, snot-like substance inside bubbled and burst. Harriet dropped the post and tried to wipe the gunk off with her napkin, but it clung to her skin and transferred to her other hand. Then, it began to burn.

“Ow!” Harriet hissed, breathless. She grabbed the nearest metal goblet of water and dumped it over her hand, adding to the mess on the table—but the substance on her skin lingered and resisted the liquid. “Ouch!”

“What is that, Potter?” Malfoy demanded. Most of her House had turned to watch what was happening, all of them eying the stinking, pus-filled envelope with revulsion.

“I—I don’t know,” she stammered.

“Don’t just sit there! Go to the hospital wing!”

Harriet stumbled to her feet—clumsy without the use of her hands—and made for the door. Her skin began to swell and sting in earnest, taking on a tomato-red hue that probably matched the color of her cheeks. She only made it halfway across the entrance hall toward the main stair vault when a familiar baritone shouted her name.

“What are you into now, girl?” Snape demanded as he swept closer from the side corridor. He must have seen her leave the hall and followed through the staff exit.

Fighting the tears in her eyes, Harriet held up her hands and all but snarled, “Some nutter sent this—this rubbish to me! Because of that stupid Skeeter article about the stupid dance!”

Snape wrapped his fingers around one of Harriet’s wrists and yanked the hand closer to his face, giving the substance a slight sniff. His eyes narrowed. “Bubotuber Pus,” he said with a sneer, letting her go. “Come.” He gestured her toward the dungeons.

“I’m going to the hospital wing!”

“If it hasn’t escaped your notice, a great number of people left for the hospital wing to get treated for burns after Black’s little temper tantrum.”

“Don’t—.”

“Pomfrey will be busy, and your hands need tending now. Follow me, Potter.”

Harriet would have done about anything to abate the burning in her skin, so she hurried after the Potions Master without further question. He brought her farther past his office to the portrait of a laconic fletcher that guarded his quarters, giving the password before they both stepped inside.

“Stay there,” Snape ordered, jabbing a finger at one of the armchairs near the hearth. Harriet sat, hands still held up, and Snape disappeared into an attached room. Despite the pain in her limbs, Harriet took the chance to glance about the space, taking in the rather woebegone furnishings and the sheer number of tomes crammed into the shelves. Honestly, it was a wonder the man hadn’t been buried under an avalanche by one of the bookcases giving out.

Harriet had never thought much about where her professors slept or what their quarters might resemble. She imagined McGonagall had a lot of tartans, and Slytherin probably slumbered in a crypt like the soul-sucking monstrosity he was. For Snape…well. He had very little permanence to him, and if he’d ever admitted to enjoying anything in his entire life, Harriet would eat her shoes. His sitting room was tidy enough—but dusty, the hearth blackened, books and scrolls and journals left forgotten on the lopsided coffee table.

The strangest thing in the room had to be the simple record player in the corner with a modest collection of vinyl sleeves stacked underneath. That was a weird thought, Snape liking music. Maybe it wasn’t music. Maybe it was just the recorded wails of his students being tortured by his exams.

The wizard returned a moment later, carrying several items in his pale hands. The door that led to what Harriet guessed was probably his bedroom and the loo snapped shut so quickly, it nearly caught the hem of his robes. Snape crouched in front of Harriet and dropped a heavy ceramic bowl into her lap without ceremony.

“Hold your hands over that.”

Harriet did as instructed—and nearly shrieked when Snape dumped the contents of a light blue bottle over her swollen, agonized skin. A garbled noise left her, and her leg jerked of its own accord as she fought the urge to fling off the substance. She kicked Snape in the shin, earning a grunt and a sharp glare.

“Mind yourself, Potter.”

“What is that stuff?”

“It is an agent meant to freeze and kill the cells within the pus before it can eat through your flesh. It will, however, remove a layer of skin. Or two.”

“It burns!”

“It will cease in a moment.”

Gasping, Harriet swore she’d find whoever sent that bloody envelope and make them eat it—right after she fed Rita Skeeter to something unpleasant, like those giant, chittering spiders in the forest. How dare she out Elara like that! How dare she claim any about her was perverse!

Snape inspected her hands, dark hair falling forward as he bowed his head. “What possessed you to open post from an unknown sender?”

“I didn’t. It ate through the parchment.” Harriet neglected to mention her squeezing it had caused the rupture. “Isn’t Hogwarts supposed to be warded against that kind of stuff?!”

“The post is warded against Dark magic. If every item that could possibly do harm were prohibited from the premises, I couldn’t very well have these potions to fix your hands, now could I?”

Harriet glowered at the snide edge in his tone. “It’s all that ruddy bint’s fault—Skeeter! How can she write that tripe and get away with it? She basically called for Hagrid to be canned, and what she said about Elara—.”

Harriet’s building rant cut itself short when Snape peeled off a large hunk of the hardened Bubotuber Pus and dropped it into the bowl. It did, indeed, rip a layer of skin off with it, leaving one patch of Harriet’s hand raw and slightly bloody. Harriet dug her shoulders into the deflated padding on the chair behind her and tried not to flinch.

“Skeeter is a leech, and simply a symptom of a greater issue,” Snape commented without looking up, continuing his task. He found a patch of gunk still spongy to the touch and poured more of the frigid potion over it. Harriet would feel more embarrassed about having her hands covered in plant bogeys if it didn’t hurt so much. “She panders to her audience. Today she’s traditional, and tomorrow she’ll be progressive. Today she’ll paint Black as a heathen, and tomorrow praise her for being brave. It does not matter to the media. Skeeter is not alone in that.”

“It should matter because it’s not progressive, it’s what’s right—and it’s not Skeeter’s business! It’s private!”

“Don’t shout at me, Potter. It’s called freedom of the press. She’s done a lot worse than nettle school girls in her ignominious career.”

Harriet clamped her mouth shut, and Snape continued to peel off the pus until her left hand was mercifully clean—if swollen to twice its usual size and covered in weeping sores. Snape uncapped a bottle of Deflating Draft and poured it into his palm before rubbing it into Harriet’s skin.

She watched him work in silence until she managed to get her temper under control. “She shouldn’t have known that about Elara,” she told him, voice quieter. She flexed her fingers at Snape’s bidding, and he dribbled Essence of Dittany over the raw spots. When it fizzled, nothing remained but a slight soreness in her muscles. “Only I knew about…about Fleur. And she wasn’t—lusting after her, or whatever rot Skeeter wrote, like a lecher.” Her cheeks tinged pink, mortified to be discussing this with Snape. “She just likes her and thinks she’s pretty. And you know Elara, she’s not…demonstrative.”

Snape raised a brow at her word choice as he commenced cleaning her other hand, and Harriet huffed. “I read!”

“I am aware. Perhaps you should spend less time speaking like a foul-mouthed guttersnipe and people wouldn’t be so surprised when something more than two syllables crosses your teeth.”

“Arsehole,” Harriet muttered. Snape pulled a patch of skin off a bit rougher than needed. “Ow, ow, ow—.”

“Stop complaining, you twit. It will be gone in a moment.”

Another splash of potion chilled a burning patch on her left palm, Harriet exhaling through her nose, reaching up to tentatively adjust her glasses with her healed hand. To distract herself, she questioned why Snape kept these potions in his rooms as opposed to his office. The blue bottle with the cold liquid that Harriet didn’t have a name for had been about half-empty when he brought it out.

Well, I guess Bubotuber Pus is a potion ingredient. We had to squeeze it out of those slippery pods in Herbology for Sprout, but at least we got dragonhide gloves then. Harriet flexed her fingers again at Snape’s command. Snape probably gets all sorts of nasty gunk on his hands when he’s working and needs the potions regularly.

She studied the crown of his head still bent close to her hands, the black hair as dark as her own falling like a gloomy curtain around his face. The scars around his left eye looked worse at this proximity as the thin white lines scattered about his lids came into focus. The eye itself looked normal, indistinguishable from the other. Not for the first time, Harriet pondered what had happened to him.

She hadn’t realized she’d been staring until Snape’s eyes flicked to her face, and Harriet blinked.

“A house-elf will screen your post until your new-found…celebrity fades.”

“They won’t get hurt like me, will they?” she asked as Snape stood and vanished the bowl from her lap.

“No. They’re not so foolish as to open potentially dangerous post from strangers without testing it first.”

Harriet grumbled at his attitude but nonetheless said, “Thank you, Professor.” Her hands felt tender and smelled strongly of Dittany, but he hadn’t left a single scar behind.

Instead of answering, Snape looked down his long nose and studied Harriet, his black eyes flat and immovable, his brow lowered in thought. Harriet shifted, a bit uneasy in his silence, and eyed the exit.

“A moment, Potter.”

Without another word, Snape swept back across the lounge and stepped into his bedroom. Harriet heard a trunk thump on the stone floor, the latch rattling as the Potions Master threw it open. He returned a second later bearing a narrow, faded box.

“Take this.”

Confused, Harriet stood and wiped what remained of the Dittany on her tea-stained skirt before accepting the box. Snape let it go and immediately folded his arms against his chest, his robes coming around him like the closing wings of a sleeping bat.

Harriet opened the lid to find a pale wand nestled on familiar velvet lining. Her own wand, before Set messed with it, had come into such a box.

“What is this for?”

Snape fidgeted—as much as he ever fidgeted, which meant his shoulder shifted ever so slightly, and the pale fingers curled over his biceps twitched. “It was your mother’s.”

Harriet nearly dropped both the wand and the box in her shock. “Mum’s wand?” It was shorter than hers and thinner toward the tip, the handle inlaid with soft designs. She could see where the wood had weathered ever so slightly from her mum’s fingers pressing into it again and again over ten years of use.

She looked at it with appreciation and gently slipped it from the dusty velvet. The magic that prickled in her fingertips felt softer than what she’d come to know, softer and less impatient. Steady and yet bubbly, mischievous.

“But I—well, I thought my parents’ wands were lost or destroyed or—locked in the Potter vault or something?”

“I don’t know what happened to Potter’s and don’t especially care. Your mother bequeathed hers to me in her will.”

“But why?” Harriet didn’t mean to be rude; it genuinely seemed an odd choice on Lily Potter’s behalf. She understood Snape and Lily had been friends since childhood and had begun reconciling that friendship before Voldemort came knocking, but why would Lily give Snape her wand?

“She knew if I was alive to receive it, I could ensure it made it into your hands when you came of age.”

“Oh.” Harriet opened her mouth—then paused, looking up at Snape, the man dimly lit by the candles that had come to life when they entered the room. That was an odd way to word that, she thought. But, then again, Snape could talk in neat little circles when he wanted to. He wasn’t a loquacious bloke, but he had a way of skirting answers that made Harriet more than a bit jealous.

“I’m not of age,” she pointed out as she gently returned the wand to the box and fit the lid back into place.

“Obviously. Lily would forgive me for thinking practicality more important than tradition.” He snorted. “Trouble is always at your beck and call, Potter—whether it be from your boyfriend’s lunatic fans or the Dark Lord. Carry a second wand with you.”

“He’s not my boyfriend.” Snape merely rolled his eyes. “I’ve never heard of someone carrying two wands before.”

“Get a brace for your leg. Seeing as our Ministry has deemed them illegal in Britain, you’ll have to write to Johannes Jonker in America. His work comes with glamors guarded against casual inspection.”

Harriet frowned and peered down at Snape’s leg, but he gave her a look that clearly said he’d never tell her if he had a second wand on his person or not. Maybe those buttons on his trousers on the side of his calf served a purpose after all.

Snape cleared his throat.

“If you’re done impeding on my time, you have a class you’re missing.” His chin jerked to the side as he looked at the mantel’s battered carriage clock. “Charms. I’m not writing you a pass. Flitwick will have to get over it.”

Privately, Harriet didn’t think Professor Flitwick would care if she arrived late so long as she apologized. He saved his sternness for students who slacked off, and Harriet and her friends had been favorites of his ever since second year when they discovered the Moon Mirrors.

“But what about Elara?”

“Leave Black to the Headmaster.”

“But—.”

Go.”

Sighing, Harriet gave up arguing and resolved to find Elara as soon as Charms ended. She hoped Hermione had stayed with her. If one person said a smart-arse comment in her hearing about what Skeeter wrote, Harriet would hex their mouths shut.

She turned to the portrait door and started toward it, stopping only to glance at Snape. “Hey, is this my Yule gift?”

Her question managed to unsettle the Potions Master. He sputtered and glared. “I—no! I do not give gifts!”

Harriet shrugged. “Whatever you say, Professor.”

Potter!”

Too late, Harriet had already stepped through the portal to the corridor beyond, and she hurried away, her mother’s wand clasped tight to her chest with her hands fully healed.

 


A/N:

Harriet: “Is this a belated Yule present?”

Snape: “Absolutely not.”

Harriet: “So it is a belated Yule present.

Chapter 195: the dog star

Chapter Text

cxcv. the dog star

 

The bottom of the bottle clinked against the top of the headstone.

“Sorry, mate,” Sirius said to the anonymous resident, patting the stone he used as a seat. It was as cold as Nimue’s heart under his backside, snow piled in clumps on the ground, though he’d done his best to clear it from the plot across from him. He could see the names James and Lily stark as day despite the flimsy light.

Sirius lifted the bottle again and held it out as if to toast the grave. “Cheers to you both.”

The cold settled over Godric’s Hollow like a heavy hand shrouded in gray clouds. It might snow again, though Sirius didn’t care one way or the other. He’d been in the old cemetery since dawn and had worked his way through a fifth of Ogden’s Best. Each steady pull from the bottle stirred guilt in his chest before it numbed the feeling. It numbed everything.

He couldn’t stay at Grimmauld. The house was too big, too empty. He’d spent the last days of the girls’ holiday formulating plans in his head to extend their time home, but there was nothing he could say, nothing he could do. Remus had to leave as well for all that Sirius wanted him to stay. For all that he didn’t want to be alone.

But that’s selfish, innit? his less than sober inner voice put in. You can’t drag others down with you, ol’ boy.

Sirius set the bottle down, scuffing the bottoms of his trainers against the ice and cold, packed earth. He didn’t know why he came here, honestly, and he certainly didn’t tell anyone how often he did. They might start thinking he wanted to join them in the ground. No, Sirius valued his life—if only because his worthless hide survived when so many more deserving people didn’t. He kept breathing because James would want him to—James and Remus, and the girls.

He knew he had places to go, people whose hearths he could haunt instead of this tired, winter-bound graveyard. Andromeda left her home open to him despite her occasional need to nag, and others of the Order were always good for an ear to bend or a pint to share. He didn’t need to be here, but Sirius came all the same, because he was lonely, because he wanted to grieve and make bad decisions without someone tutting over him.

People cared about him. They cared enough to shame him for the things he shouldn’t do because they wanted him to shrug this weight off his shoulders and move on with his life, and Sirius kept promising he would. Tomorrow. Tomorrow he’d dump the booze down the drain and stop cursing at Kreacher or rowing with Elara. “You must be the adult,” Remus would tell him. “Elara is precocious and stubborn, but she is still fourteen.

Sirius knew he had to do better because he and Remus and Marlene had agreed to bring Elara into this world, to give a person life, and twelve years in Azkaban didn’t excuse that. Had he been alive, James would have probably kicked him in the teeth.

Exhaling, Sirius tipped the bottle over and let the remnants trickle into the snow. Once empty, he vanished it. He needed to sober up, get home, or go somewhere else. He had nothing pressing to do, just as he never had anything pressing to do. Nothing but drink and worry and remember.

He started walking, shoving his hands into the pockets of his Transfigured jacket, passing through the kissing gate to the street outside. He walked by the empty lot where his best friend had died and didn’t stop to look, though the area lurked in the corner of his eye like a looming shadow. Sirius closed them until it passed.

He continued to the edge of town, using the stroll to clear his head enough for Apparition. Merlin forbid he end up Splinched and pissed at this hour in the morning. Remus would be disappointed, which was bloody worse than him being angry.

Sirius stepped between a fence and a garden shed, using the cover to disappear from Godric’s Hollow and reappear again in Balder Court. Fresh snow fell upon him as Sirius stumbled, unsteady on his feet, and nearly tossed his liquid breakfast on the pavement. He managed to keep himself upright, however, and swallowed back the nausea as he walked up the steps to Number Forty-Seven.

The elf answered the door—Sirius couldn’t remember his name for the life of him—and let Sirius inside. “Mistress is in the dining room,” the creature said with a slight nod toward the room, and so Sirius headed in that direction, calling out his cousin’s name as he went.

He found Andy seated at the head of her table, her morning tea steaming in its cup, the paper folded over her empty place setting. She had her eyes on an empty landscape on the wall, watching the painted mist crawl about the foot of the rolling mountains. She stirred when Sirius stepped into the room.

“What are you doing here?”

“Came for the excellent company, obviously.” Sirius snorted as he knocked the snow from his shoes and vanished the mess from Andromeda’s carpet. “And here I thought you said I didn’t need a reason to come visit.”

“That’s not—.” She stopped and stared at him, her black brows lowered over her dark eyes as she considered something. “You haven’t read the paper.”

“No. Been out.” Sirius sighed as he threw himself into one of the dining chairs by the hearth, soaking the heat into his chilled bones. “Why? What’s the miserable hag said now?”

Instead of answering, Andromeda merely levitated the Prophet toward him, and Sirius snatched it out of the air with a grunt. It wasn’t hard to miss the main spread, nor the twirling, glimmering photographs of the Triwizard Tournament champions with their dates. Sirius’ eyes darted down to the image of Harriet and Krum, his goddaughter looking beautiful in her tailored robes, if decidedly uncomfortable in the milling crowd staring her way.

“Wretched cow,” he murmured as he read on. Skeeter had made Harriet out to be a conniving, money-hungry tart—never mind that she was a Potter and heiress to one of the biggest fortunes in the kingdom. Never mind that Sirius wasn’t sure Harriet even liked boys, given how awkward and uncertain she’d acted around Krum. She was fourteen and had enjoyed herself far more by dancing with her friends than worrying about her date.

“Keep reading,” Andy told him, peering darkly at her tea. “The last article.”

Sirius did as she said, turning the page. His eye caught upon the words, “THE STRAYING HOUSE OF BLACK.

His heart lurched in his chest.

It wasn’t anything Sirius himself hadn’t heard growing up—the snide comments whispered from the corners of mouths, the wrinkled noses, the disgusted grunts in the back of pure-blood throats. He’d said some terrible things himself when he’d been a child and hadn’t known better—mostly to Snape, actually. Snape had been skinnier than the rest of the blokes in their year, fond of reading and brewing and always sitting with Lily. That behavior lent itself to the cruelest remarks, Sirius parroting the dogma his parents had drilled into his and Reg’s heads since birth.

It didn’t help that as he hit puberty, boys started being just as attractive as the girls in Sirius’ eyes—even bloody Snape, the tosser. It had added to his confusion, and his anger, until Sirius learned to accept himself. He couldn’t think back on the things he said without regret.

Things had changed since his boyhood, fewer and fewer people seeing same-sex couples as something “deviant.” It was even becoming acceptable for pure-blood families to openly seek surrogacy, unlike how it’d been for Sirius, Remus, and Marlene. However, dissenters still existed and probably always would in some shape or form. It was one thing for Sirius to go through a difficult, questioning period in his teenage years privately—it was quite another for Rita fucking Skeeter to splash his daughter’s possible sexuality across the bloody newspaper for all and sundry to read!

That—!” Sirius couldn’t think of a word foul enough to encapsulate his sheer rage and upset, the churning morass of sour booze and bile in his stomach crawling up his esophagus. He had the sudden urge to shift—to howl and bite and snarl, to sink his teeth into any part of Rita Skeeter he could reach and not let go until he tasted blood.

Sirius was on his feet, the dining chair skittering on the floor as he shoved it back and made for the door. He didn’t know where he was going, a vague thought of Diagon Alley and the Daily Prophet’s headquarters pinging about in his head until he remembered his daughter, his flesh and blood, and the extent of what Skeeter had printed. She hadn’t just exposed Elara’s sexuality; she’d mentioned the children’s home. Elara never spoke of the children’s home.

Sirius had only just emerged into the cold air again, stepping past the wards, when he twisted and Disapparated. The second trip proved too far for his gut, and Sirius bent over the nearest bush when he reappeared in the brutal highland weather, vomiting. The sudden shift in altitude played havoc with his lungs, and for several moments all Sirius could do was gasp and fight the black spots eating away at the edges of his vision. Sweat blossomed on his face and chilled in the frigid air.

He spat for a final time, then directed a spray of fresh water from his wand into his mouth, clearing the taste. Sirius shook his head in an attempt to clear the last of the black spots, then shoved his wand back into his pocket. He stepped toward the castle gates—and promptly found himself sprawled on his arse, gasping as he blinked at the sky overhead.

The wards, he reminded himself, the thought swimming up through the teeming worry and anger sitting thick in his brain. Dumbledore increased the wards this year.

Grunting, Sirius rolled to his hands and knees and shifted forms, the stabbing cold lessening as his hide sprouted thick fur. He made for the boar-flanked gates again, and this time he could feel the magic humming, pushing and tingling against his skin as if the wards sensed something not quite right but couldn’t get a grip on him. Sirius squeezed through the bars—stripping off a fair bit of fur in doing so—and transformed again on the other side. He still had the Prophet clutched in his white-knuckled fist.

Growling, he hurled it into the nearest thatch of gorse.

His plan hadn’t been well thought out. It wasn’t much of a plan at all, merely a sudden, unflinching need to find his daughter and stay as far away from Rita Skeeter as possible, lest he murder the witch and end up in Azkaban again. Sirius had never killed anyone in his life, but twelve years facing the same stone walls, stuck with his worst memories, listening to real murderers carouse and scream had played hell on his morals and his restraint. Sirius knew he would do it in his current frame of mind. He wouldn’t hesitate.

He headed higher, walking a familiar path toward the Headmaster’s office, the corridors all but empty aside from a few Aurors who paid Sirius little to no mind. They chatted with one another or smoked or simply slept against the walls, and Sirius rolled his eyes at their lax security. Of course, the Order already knew the Aurors had been placed there for Gaunt to thumb his nose at Dumbledore rather than for any real, pressing need. Still, it was bloody ridiculous a former convict could walk right inside without a side-glance.

Sirius reached the stone gargoyle guarding the upper tower before he remembered his need for a password, and he cursed at the blighted thing. He yanked his wand out, determined to cast a Patronus and send Albus a message—but the gargoyle suddenly leapt aside, unprompted, and Sirius didn’t question the opportunity. He darted up the spiraling steps and didn’t bother to knock on the door at the top. He wrenched on the knob and stepped inside.

Dumbledore sat behind his desk and was not alone. As if he’d known Sirius would arrive, the Headmaster had already summoned Elara—and Remus knelt by the red-faced girl’s chair. For an instant, Sirius felt a surge of anger, of jealousy, because no one had thought to get him, because Remus was here and—.

Sirius shook himself and the ridiculous sentiment from his head. He focused on his daughter and didn’t notice when Dumbledore greeted him; he waited for Elara’s wet eyes to rise and find his own. The aching loneliness he’d felt since his kids left home quelled and dimmed.

“Hey, little moon,” he said, using a name he hadn’t dared say since she was a tiny thing he could cradle in his hands. His girl wasn’t quite so little anymore and not nearly so guileless. But she was hurt, the pain visible in her slouched shoulders, clumped lashes, and worried hands. She made a passable attempt at a haughty sniff, but even that could not hold.

Sirius came to stand in front of her, one hand reaching out to squeeze Remus’ shoulder, the other gently carding through Elara’s fringe.

“I found her crying,” Remus whispered, keeping a gentle grip on one of Elara’s arms. She’d wrung her fingers so much that Sirius could see she’d torn a cuticle, blood smeared on her raw skin. “I thought it best to bring her here before sending you a message.”

Sirius gave Remus’ shoulder another soft squeeze. Elara sniffled.

“Don’t listen to anything that—woman says,” he told her, hand coming down to cup her cheek, feeling the stickiness of tears against his skin. “Any person that matters won’t give a single care for her opinions or the opinions of some old duffers on their way out.”

Elara sniffled again, eyes on her knees. “She’s right, though, isn’t she?” she said in a miserable voice. “What if—what if I don’t ever have children? I’m supposed to. The House—.”

Sirius knelt so she’d be forced to look into his face. “It doesn’t matter. You are the House, Elara, and whatever you choose to do, whatever path you follow, it goes with you. Whether you like blokes or don’t. If you decide you want kids, then you can try surrogacy or adopt or whatever you want. But you’re fourteen, for Merlin’s sake. You don’t have to think about that for a long time.”

Elara’s lower lip quivered, fresh tears welling in her silver eyes. “Girls aren’t supposed to like girls.” She spoke so quietly, Sirius almost lost her words to the cheerful crackling of the fire and the quiet, solemn breathing of the surrounding portraits.

“Look at me.” Sirius tucked his fingers under her chin and lifted her eyes. “Girls are supposed to like whoever they want to like,” he said. “And boys like whoever they like. It’s not the bloody eighteen hundreds anymore. People aren’t like those ruddy sods you lived with—not any of the ones worth the breath in their lungs.”

She rubbed the heel of her palm against her cheek, fighting to wipe the mess away despite how new tears appeared to replace the old. “How does she know about St. Giles’?”

“I don’t know.” Skeeter shouldn’t know about it. Sirius hadn’t even known the name of the place, which begged the question of how in the world bloody Skeeter managed to drag it out of the dark.

From his desk, where he’d been sitting with his attention politely directed at the wall, Dumbledore cleared his throat. “I believe Elara would benefit from visiting our esteemed Madam Pomfrey and resting for today.”

Sirius agreed, even if the expression on Elara’s blotchy face told him she had no interest in resting and probably being drugged with a Calming Draught. She nonetheless allowed Remus to take her by the hand and lead her from the room—though not before Remus turned his head to meet Sirius’ gaze with a meaningful look. Tired, Sirius nodded.

The two of them left, the door shutting with a quiet thump, and the whispers from the wall came in repressed waves.

“To think I would see the Blacks degrade in this way,” Phineas Nigellus sneered from his portrait.

“Shut up,” Sirius snarled as he gained his feet, wheeling on the painted man. “You’ve been dead for centuries, so it’s none of your business. The worst Headmaster in Hogwarts’ bloody history—and I shagged men in your ancestral home, you bigoted codger.”

Gasps resounded throughout the portrait gallery, and for a moment, Sirius delighted in outraging the stodgy old administrators. He’d always hated them, the prudes.

“Sirius,” Dumbledore reprimanded, but his tone remained suspiciously light, as if he didn’t much mind him taking a jab at his predecessors. Scoffing, Sirius dropped himself into the chair his daughter had just vacated, reaching up to rub at his temple and brow. The headache brewing there would be worse than the hangover he’d inevitably experience.

Dumbledore steepled the fingers of his only hand against his chin. “Miss Skeeter’s most recent articles have me quite concerned.”

“What? That she’s openly outing little girls to the public’s inspection?” Sirius snapped.

The Headmaster tipped his head in acknowledgment but pushed on with his point. “No. Rather, I am concerned about where she seems to be finding her information. Her pieces on Miss Black and Hagrid especially contained sensitive information not available to the public.”

Sirius rubbed harder at his brow, muddled confusion churning in his head as he tried to suppress the outrage for logic. “I…I don’t think anyone knows about the children’s home. Especially the name. I didn’t know it—Remus doesn’t.”

“Minerva would.” Dumbledore tapped his chin in thought. “After the…peculiarities of Harriet’s address came to our attention, she checked the automatically addressed letters of the other students. She would know where Miss Black’s first Hogwarts letter was sent.”

“I can’t imagine McGonagall having a nice chinwag with Skeeter.”

“No, she would not.” He lowered his hand, a sharp glint darkening the warm blue of his eyes. “I will not stand for her scavenging information from this institution, especially when the safety of certain other students relies heavily on the school’s confidentiality.”

Harriet, Sirius thought, exhaling through his nose. If Harriet’s living situation came to the attention of the Ministry, they’d take her in as a ward. She’d vanish into the system, right into Gaunt’s greedy hands.

With that, the Headmaster seemed disinclined to say anything else, and Sirius decided to take his leave. “I’m going to have a chat with Remus before heading home,” he reported to the older wizard. “Bloody well send me a message the next time my daughter’s having a crisis, Headmaster?”

“Of course.”

Sirius departed—with one final two-fingered salute to his ancestor’s infuriated portrait.

Chapter 196: a witch is a witch

Chapter Text

cxcvi. a witch is a witch

 

The snow barely crunched under Harriet’s shoes as she and her friends walked the frozen path. Ahead, Hagrid’s cabin waited at the forest’s edge, a trail of smoke rising from the blackened chimney.

It had been a rough few days. According to the house-elves, Harriet’s post continued to be flooded by nasty letters from Viktor Krum’s jealous, utterly barmy fans, and her hands ached in the cold where the new skin and muscles were exposed to the weather. As a result, Harriet had taken to avoiding Viktor whenever she spotted him ahead in a corridor or sitting in the Great Hall. Her embarrassment kept her as far from the older boy as possible.

For Elara, most of the student body didn’t care for Skeeter’s revelations—except for a few notable arseholes. Most of the snide, nasty comments fizzled out on the first day after Harriet hexed Cormac McLaggen, a particularly ballsy fifth year Gryffindor, in the face. Her spell left him bald from the neck up—eyebrows, eyelashes, and nose hair included, and Pomfrey couldn’t set him to rights yet. Harriet didn’t even mind the scolding and detention McGonagall gave her.

Katherine Runcorn made her problem known in the dorm by saying she didn’t want to sleep in a room with “someone like Elara,” to which Elara replied, “You needn’t worry. I’m not attracted to hags.”

The resulting argument dragged half the girls in their House to their dormitory, and it was only the sharp words of the prefects that kept things from escalating until Slytherin got called. Most of the witches in their year told Katherine to shut up and resented the ridiculous drama. No one wanted Snape or Slytherin to come down on their heads.

Harriet exhaled a long plume of white steam before turning her head to ensure her friends hadn’t fallen too far behind. She mounted the wooden steps to Hagrid’s hut and rapped her knuckles against the door.

“Hagrid!” she called, voice echoing across the snow-covered grounds. “C’mon, Hagrid! Open up!”

Since the debut of Skeeter’s article, no one had seen the groundskeeper about. Hagrid usually kept to himself and his business, but he’d been especially reclusive in the last days. Harriet was not about to let Rita Skeeter bully and make him feel inferior, so there she stood despite the rather cold temperature, bruising her knuckles on Hagrid’s door.

He eventually let them in, looking less than put together, the usual clutter of his cabin now encroaching on unkempt. Hermione sat him down at the table while Harriet poked about to find the kettle, and Elara muttered a few quiet incantations to float the dirty dishes into the sink and set it to run.

“No one listens to anything she says,” Hermione affirmed, patting the man’s sizable hand before he reached for the tankard of tea Harriet managed to levitate in front of him. “She’s a torpid muckraker looking to discredit anyone with even an ounce of suspected loyalty to Professor Dumbledore.”

“Great man, Dumbledore,” Hagrid said, voice mopey. Harriet gave her head a fond shake as she fussed with the kettle to make more tea.

“And he places a great deal of esteem in you,” Hermione continued to console. “People value his opinion much more than Rita Skeeter’s.”

Elara made steady progress banishing tufts of dog hair into the hearth’s belly until she reached Fang’s bed. The boarhound gave her a small, plaintive woof, and Elara pursed her lips before moving on.

Eventually, Hagrid’s mood lifted, and he set about making a batch of his favorite fudge, and the three witches snuck pieces off their plates into their pockets, lest they end up with their teeth glued together. The fire crackled, warm, and the laughter shared between them chased away the sharp rumors and rude remarks spurred by the tabloids. Hagrid’s dark eyes crinkled, and Elara smiled at one point.

Harriet had just finished the last of her tea when a firm tap sounded on the window above the sink, and Hagrid stood to open it. Fawkes ducked inside, ruffling his glorious plumage, and hopped onto the counter’s edge. He had a simple scroll clamped in his beak, and he cocked his head impatiently in Harriet’s direction.

“‘Lo,” Harriet said, confused, as she stood and reached for the letter. In extending her arm, Fawkes took his chance for a new perch, carefully curling his talons around her skinny forearm as he dropped the scroll into Harriet’s other hand. “Pushy.”

The phoenix climbed onto her shoulder as she read the note. “It’s from Professor Dumbledore. Obviously.”

“What does he want?”

“A lesson,” she said. A sudden burst of excitement co-mingled with dread in her middle. Excitement, because she was meant to have a lesson with Dumbledore, the greatest wizard of his age, and dread, because she all too clearly remembered the reason she needed extra lessons. Slytherin’s next trial would be upon them before they knew it, and Harriet had no idea what to expect.

She folded the brief note and tucked it into her pocket before bidding her friends goodbye. She stepped outside with Fawkes on her shoulder, and the heat thrown by his feathered body fought the sudden sting of the wind. Harriet shivered before setting off.

“I have a feeling you could take me straight to the Headmaster, but you’re having me walk the whole way for a reason,” she grumbled. Fawkes clacked his beak, then set about searching Harriet’s pockets, as was his wont. “Ah, I see.”

He found Hagrid’s fudge and chomped through it despite Harriet’s warnings. The phoenix held a hunk in his beak until it melted just enough for him to gobble down, and Harriet shook her head, muttering about his inevitable stomach ache being his own doing.

By the time she reached the castle, her cheeks and nose had been chapped a rosy pink, and Fawkes had polished off the fudge hidden in her pockets. The castle hummed with a simple, chilled silence, the students and staff content to stay close to their chosen hearths for the afternoon. When Harriet climbed the main stair vault and reached the third floor, Fawkes gave her collar an abrupt tug and fluttered his feathers toward the left wing. Harriet followed his directions.

“There you are, Harriet,” Professor Dumbledore said when Harriet stepped into the room Fawkes indicated. It was bare but sizable, long beams of cold winter sunlight slicing through the unshuttered windows. It had an air of disuse about it, though a house-elf must have gone through to pick up the worst of the dust. Harriet had never ventured into this room before, but that didn’t surprise her; if there was one thing Hogwarts had, it was a wealth of empty rooms.

Professor Dumbledore lounged in a cushioned Adirondack chair with a magazine of knitting patterns propped against his knee. Harriet paused in the doorway, baffled by the bizarre scene, and Fawkes hopped off her shoulder to rejoin his master.

“Sir?” Harriet asked as she took a few awkward steps inside and the door quietly shut at her heels. “The note said something about a lesson?”

“Yes, yes.” Professor Dumbledore gave her a close-lipped smile as he closed his magazine but failed to stand. A small flick of his wand conjured another Adirondack chair by his own, and Harriet sat, though she thought lounging in garden furniture an odd choice. “Today, I have an exercise to stretch your mind and your magic. Do you remember what I said I’d be teaching you?”

Harriet thought back to the meeting in his office, the memory colored by her anxiety and Snape’s burning remark on Slytherin’s proclivity to grow bored with his playthings. “Something about being flexible with my spells, sir?”

“Very good.” Dumbledore incanted a brief spell, and Harriet felt magic ripple outward under her feet. A plinth appeared with a startling pop!, and atop the plinth rested the bust of a bloke Harriet should probably know but didn’t. Another tidy flourish added a rather gaudy bow tie under the bust’s carved chin.

Harriet frowned at the Headmaster.

“I would like for you to take our friend Barnabus’ bow tie.”

Harriet’s frown only increased as she peered at the Headmaster. “Sir?”

“Many times in your life, you will come across obstacles that don’t have readily apparent solutions. Unfortunately, it’s often a failing of ours that we don’t set ourselves to think critically about problems and discover different resolutions, mistaking our first impulse as the only one. Dealing with Professor Slytherin and his contemporaries will challenge you in inexplicable ways, my girl, and it is my hope to inspire you to assess the trials ahead with flexibility—both in your spells, and in your mind.”

With that said, Professor Dumbledore waved his hand toward the bust—Barnabus, apparently. Harriet drew a breath to ask another question, then decided against it. As the Headmaster returned to his reading, Harriet sighed and faced her opponent.

She had expected something a bit more…exciting for a lesson, but she guessed Professor Dumbledore didn’t need to be flashy to get his point across. Still, Harriet huffed a small breath, hoping it went unheard, and pulled her wand from its brace.

Accio bow tie,” she said, getting the obvious Charm out of the way. It did nothing, and Harriet tried it once more to be sure, then lowered her wand. She started toward it, a mite suspicious—and not a meter away, she ran into an invisible wall and had to swallow a curse when her face collided with it, the bridge of her spectacles pressing sharply into her nose.

Professor Dumbledore hummed as he continued to flip through his knitting book.

Harriet rubbed at her sore face as she took a step back and reassessed the situation. She tapped her wand against her thigh twice, then jabbed it toward the ward. “Finite Incantatem.”

Nothing happened.

She hadn’t expected Professor Dumbledore to give her an easy task, but she also hadn’t expected to be stumped so easily. Harriet felt like an utter numpty and couldn’t help the sudden flush rising in her face, knowing Dumbledore sat nearby and watched. It was embarrassing!

Appare—err—Vestigium?”

It wasn’t a spell Harriet had ever used before, and so she didn’t quite know the proper wand motion. It revealed a wispy impression of the Headmaster’s ward, like sunlight through water, other colors Harriet couldn’t interpret smeared about the bust. Regardless of her understanding, the colored light revealed the extent of the ward, which—much to her frustration—surrounded the plinth without a gap.

Harriet stepped back once, twice, then lunged forward into her spell casting. “Ventus!

The blast of wind managed to actually pass the ward and touch the bust, but the bow tie barely wiggled.

She started to run the gamut of spells in her head, feeling at odds with the task set before her. Would Professor Dumbledore assign her an impossible assignment just to see her struggle and fail? She didn’t think so; that smacked entirely of Professor Slytherin and his desire to be the cleverest bloke in the room. There was something here Dumbledore wanted her to realize, but Harriet didn’t know what.

So far, Harriet knew nothing physical could get through the barrier; she’d Transfigured a Chocolate Frog wrapper into a long, hooked stick to no avail, and even inveigling Fawkes’ assistance proved pointless. She tried various means of Summoning, adding runes and words to experiment, but the majority of her attempts did nothing at all, and some reacted violently, leaving Harriet bruised and sprawled on the floor more than once. Trying to destroy the bust or part of the bow tie to free it did nothing.

Time ticked on, the light sliding along the floor as the sun moved outside. The futility of the exercise built into raw frustration, and tears burned in the back of Harriet’s eyes. It seemed such a silly thing to get worked up over, yet being thwarted by a single barrier and an Anti-Summoning jinx made her feel worthless. She could barely grasp her wand from the sweat building on her palm, and a stinging pain emanated from her knee, slammed one too many times into the stone floor when she stumbled.

She was meant to be cleverer than this—smarter, better. Someone capable of being Slytherin’s apprentice wouldn’t be stumped by a ward. She was wasting the Headmaster’s time—wasting everyone’s efforts. She had to do more—.

At length, Professor Dumbledore called a halt to her attempts and beckoned Harriet over to have a seat at her chair again. She’d almost forgotten the Headmaster was there and hadn’t noticed he’d set aside his reading some time ago to watch her instead. Once Harriet sat, a house-elf popped by to give them refreshments.

“The best lesson I could possibly teach you is not to become frustrated when presented with a seemingly impossible task.” Professor Dumbledore peered at her knowingly, and Harriet’s face flushed. “Even wizards as old as myself are confounded from time to time. I always find it best to take a breath, have a seat, and get something good to drink.”

Harriet sipped her lemonade, the ice clinking against the dewy glass. She hadn’t thought of how hot she’d gotten, stomping and swearing and hurling magic at the Headmaster’s ward. The drink helped her parched throat and empty stomach.

“Did you know, Harriet, when I was your age, my Transfiguration professor presented me with quite the challenge? I must admit I was rather stubborn in my youth, and I argued adamantly against the legitimacy of Gamp’s Principal Exceptions, particularly the law stating food could not be created from nothing. My professor invited me to prove him and Gamp wrong.”

“D’you manage to do it, Professor? D’you prove them wrong?”

“Oh, goodness no. I had to eat crumpets comprised of dust for a week because I was too proud to admit defeat.”

Harriet snorted and choked on her drink. The laughter eased the tension in her neck and shoulders.

“What I took away from that lesson is that magic has indelible limitations.” He smiled, eyes fond and far away. “But you can’t forget magic is not simply a tool that exists in words or in your wand. It’s part of you. It’s instinct and intuition. When you were a child, magic still happened despite your lack of these things because a witch is always a witch, no matter her wand—.” Here Professor Dumbledore peered at Harriet with intent, his blue eyes sharp and knowing. “And no matter the obstacles before her.”

Well, that’s vague, Harriet huffed in her own thoughts, but she didn’t dismiss the Headmaster’s words out of hand. Instead, she sipped her drink and prodded an idle finger against the new red bruises mottling her knees, though her eyes stayed fixed on Barnabus and his accursed bow tie.

Harriet recalled her incidents of accidental magic in her childhood with clarity, mostly because each instance usually preceded a nasty punishment—a hard cuff about the head, shouted abuse for an hour, stuck in the cupboard without food for far too long. What each burst of magic had in common was a sudden desperation or moment of intense stress—or anger. Sometimes she’d been frustrated, but those accidents usually resulted in the most inconsistent results.

Harriet leaned forward in her chair to prop her elbows on her knees and rest her chin on her folded hands. She’d seen people do wandless magic before—both on accident and on purpose. Dumbledore was the one she’d seen do it most often, but Snape did as well, the magic never as elegant as the Headmaster’s, and McGonagall could light candles or move furniture as needed in class. Sometimes Hermione would be deep in a book and reach for her tea and the cup would inch itself closer unbidden, and Elara could perform half a dozen inadvertent spells in a day if she left her gloves off.

She didn’t notice when Professor Dumbledore took his leave with Fawkes, his chair disappearing. She didn’t notice when the door shut with a muffled whisper, nor that the sun had retreated farther from the window frames. She remained lost in her own thoughts, torn between flagging irritation and softer consideration as dozens of potential strategies blossomed half-formed in her head, and Harriet discarded them one by one. She didn’t have a mind for scheming really, but she took the Headmaster’s words to heart and followed her instincts.

Sighing, Harriet ran her fingers up under her spectacles to rub at her eyes and then passed them through her fringe, gripping the loose hair in her fists before letting go.

She stared at the bust, and it stared straight ahead, unflinching.

Slowly, as if unbidden, Harriet lifted her arm until she held her hand level with Barnabus, fingers loose, curled. No epiphany came upon her—no sudden inkling or realization, simply a feeling, the same fluttering warmth that glowed gentle as spring sunlight in her veins whenever she cast a spell. The feeling kept scattering, withering, and Harriet plucked at it again and again until her lungs pressed tightly to her ribs, and her arm was no longer limp, but stiff and trembling.

She caught the feeling again, ephemeral as a flame licking her fingertips, and Harriet pressed it outward with a single wish—.

Around Barnabus’ neck, the bow tie’s corner dipped lower.

The sensation collapsed with her harsh, jagged exhale, and Harriet’s shoulders sagged under her sudden exhaustion. She breathed heavily for several moments, the nape of her neck sticky with sweat, her skin buzzing, before she looked again at Barnabus. The bow tie had moved as if invisible fingers had pinched the corner and tugged.

Harriet turned her hand over in her lap and stared at it, wide-eyed. Incredulous, she smiled.


A/N:

Harriet: “This statue is ruining my life.”

Dumbledore: *nods*

Harriet: “…we should put it in Slytherin’s office.”

Dumbledore: *nods vigorously*

Chapter 197: the muffled shriek

Chapter Text

cxcvii. the muffled shriek

 

By the time Harriet departed the room and left Barnabus behind, supper had come and gone, and curfew had settled upon the school with a tangible pall of silence.

She’d spent only part of her time trying to cast magic. After her first go at it, she hadn’t felt much up to any further attempts, so Harriet had spent the rare remaining Scottish daylight sitting cross-legged on the floor, thinking. She didn’t pretend everything Professor Dumbledore had said made sense to her, but the idea of instinct and magic going hand in hand resonated with something Elara had mentioned about Gaunt to Hermione.

Intuition and instinct are powerful factors for witches and wizards…I would say if Gaunt and the Dark Lord are connected in some manner, we should assume something in the Minister—however minuscule—recognizes Harriet.”

Did Harriet have the kind of instinct that guided the Dark Lord? The kind of innate knowledge that would make her spells better? Her magic? The thought made her scoff. Harriet didn’t have a fraction of Tom Riddle’s ability, and pretending otherwise was silly.

Still, no one in their class could deny Harriet excelled in Defense no matter what tricks Professor Slytherin played on them. Hermione once told her she was a prodigy in the subject, and though Harriet didn’t set store by that assumption, could there be something more to it? Could Harriet do better if she relied more on instinct than logic?

Hermione would thump me with a dictionary if she heard me say that.

She sighed as she picked herself off the floor and gave Barnabus one final, challenging look before leaving the room. She pushed her fingers against her temple as she went, rubbing at the skin as if she could massage the tension out of her brain. Harriet didn’t look forward to more lessons like these.

The cold pressed close as the night built outside, and she made an idle motion with her wand, sewing a Warming Charm into her cloak. It wouldn’t last long, but long enough to reach the dorms. Harriet hoped Professor Dumbledore had told Hermione and Elara not to worry about her.

She stood on the second-floor landing and paused to look across the white-cloaked grounds and the wreath of distant clouds. Harriet considered the best way to get to the dungeons and wondered who was on patrol this evening, if she had time to slip by them before getting caught out. That was when she heard the screaming.

In a moment she would later consider a sudden, stupid lapse in judgment, Harriet ran toward the screaming rather than away from it. Her heart lurched inside her chest and her wand all but leapt to her hand as she bolted. The noise came from behind a shut door belonging to the Ghoul Studies classroom, and Harriet slammed it open—

Only to find a wide-eyed Cedric Diggory in his Hufflepuff dressing gown, clutching a large golden egg.

“Merlin, you startled me, Potter,” he said as his shoulders sagged in relief. “I thought you were Slytherin for half a second.”

Harriet sputtered. “Me?! I startled you?! What’s all that screaming, then?!”

“Screaming?—oh!” Diggory jerked the golden egg closed, and the discordant shrieking cut off. “The Silencing Charm must have worn off. I lost track of time working on this. Sorry about that.” He gave his pink cheek a small, abashed scratch. “I didn’t think anybody would be about. At least, not on this floor. What are you doing out of the dorm at this hour? You’re not a prefect.”

Harriet just stared at the bloke and ignored his question, realizing she recognized the egg as the one he’d picked up from the dragon’s nest in the Tournament’s first task. “What are you doing in here listening to that in the dark?”

“It is a bit odd, isn’t it? But I can’t exactly crack it open in the middle of the common room, and I’m meant to make sense of it to figure out the next task.” Diggory traced a finger along the egg’s seam. “I’ve gotten by just fine with the Silencing Charm.”

“No, I mean—.” Harriet released an aggravated breath and ran her hand through her already mussed fringe. She needed a haircut, but that meant going to Madam Pomfrey, who always cut it funny. “Why are you just listening to it?”

Diggory lifted his head, a puzzled look crossing his handsome face.

“Don’t you take Care of Magical Creatures?”

“No? Is that relevant?”

“Bloody hell. It’s Mermish. Can’t you tell?”

“Mermish?”

“It’s—just follow me, numpty.”

If he objected to being called names by an exasperated fourth-year, Diggory said nothing. Instead, he smiled and gathered up his egg, gamely following Harriet into the corridor dressed in his night things. The room she meant to find was on the floor below, but in the wing across the castle. Reaching it required a lot of creative work on Harriet’s part, including two passages through the Moon Mirrors and waiting on an upper mezzanine for Filch to slink past.

The double doors to the solar she sought popped open with ease, revealing a dusty space holding dozens and dozens of crystal balls and—more importantly—several raised stone basins. They were flat and best resembled bird baths, though gems and runes heavily inlaid the furled rims.

“I dunno if Trelawney actually uses this place, but it’s meant to be where the Divinations professor can teach Scrying,” Harriet explained as she hopped down the wide, arching steps to the room’s belly, approaching the largest basin. It rose slightly above chest height on her, and she imagined an instructor could use it at the same time as a student. “It should suit your needs, though.”

Cedric looked around him in interest, his lips parted. “How do you know where to find all of this?” he asked in wonder. He stepped up next to Harriet as she flipped the tap’s silver handle and poured cold water into the basin. “I thought Professor Flitwick didn’t know how those odd mirrors worked?”

“He doesn’t.” Diggory stared at her, and Harriet cleared her throat. “Err, I’ll tell him eventually. I will!”

He laughed, and Harriet felt her cheeks warm. She knew he didn’t mean to do so meanly, but she didn’t much like being laughed at, especially by an older Hufflepuff. It made her think too much about Petunia Squabs and her cackling counterparts.

“You’d probably know more about the castle if you didn’t spend so much time with dimwitted cows,” she grumbled.

“What do you mean?” Diggory asked, sounding genuinely curious, but Harriet didn’t respond, instead reaching out to turn off the tap. The final bit of water dripped into the filled basin with a lingering plop!, and Harriet waved her hand.

“There. Stick the egg in—and your head, so you can hear.”

He did as she said, though the egg didn’t fully fit, so Diggory tipped it onto its side before submerging his face just past his ears. Harriet couldn’t help her burning curiosity when she saw the egg part, a soft, ethereal hum vibrating in the glowing water. She snatched her glasses from her face and plunged her head into the basin. The hollow echo of the empty stone room muffled, leaving the Mer voices to echo around her and resonate loud and clear in Harriet’s ears.

 

“Come seek us where our voices sound,

We cannot sing above the ground,

And while you’re searching ponder this;

We’ve taken what you’ll sorely miss,

An hour long you’ll have to look,

And to recover what we took,

But past an hour, the prospect’s black,

Too late, it’s gone, it won’t come back.

 

As the song ended, Harriet jerked her head back out with Diggory, both taking sharp, sudden breaths as cold water dripped down their faces. Harriet shoved her damp hair out of her eyes and wiped her face with her sleeve before replacing her glasses.

“Well,” Diggory said, a polite inflection in his voice. The water trickled down his jaw and soaked the striped collar of his pajamas. “That was unexpected.”

“Have you lost anything lately?” Harriet asked him. She shivered, figuring that dunking herself in frigid liquid while snow still lay thick outside hadn’t been the brightest of ideas. She replaced the Warming Charm on her cloak. “Anything you’ve missed.”

“No, not that I can think of.” He put a hand to his chin, gaze directed toward the ceiling. “Nothing I would ‘sorely miss,’ surely, else I would have noticed by now.”

“They haven’t taken it yet, then. They probably won’t until the day of the task.”

Cedric made a soft noise of agreement.

“Looks like you’ll be floundering about the lake for an hour. Hope you can swim, Diggory.”

He grinned, not at all taken off guard by Harriet’s rather sharp humor. “I’m sure I can figure it out.”

“Mmm, forgive me for not being certain. You could always use Gillyweed. It gives you gills and webbed toes and whatnot for an hour or so if you eat enough of it.”

Absorbing this information, Diggory studied Harriet, an incredulous line forming between his brows as he continued to smile. “Why are you helping me out?” he asked. “First with the dragons, then with this. You could have left me with my screaming egg. After a while, it almost sounds like a progressive brand of singing.”

Harriet snorted. “Well, what else am I supposed to do? Let you dither about like a flobberworm while Delacour and Krum get information from their Headmasters? Pride of Hogwarts, indeed. The Goblet wasn’t meant to pick nitwits, but here you are.”

“Isn’t Krum your boyfriend?”

Harriet glared as she crossed her arms. “He is not.”

Diggory mimicked her posture, and one of his brows rose toward his hairline. The light still emanating from the submerged egg glittered against his eyes and on the flat surface of his straight white teeth. “You’re a fiery one, Potter.”

Her nose wrinkled as Harriet’s face burned with heat. “Take your stupid egg and go away, Diggory.”

“Sure thing.”

He scooped the golden egg out of the water, making sure to snap it shut beforehand, and the light died, leaving them both standing in the semi-darkness lit only by the torchlight sneaking through the ajar door. Cedric made to leave, and Harriet couldn’t stop herself from calling him back.

“You should, I dunno, give Longbottom a hint about this. Last minute, of course, but in the spirit of…fairness.”

“I thought you wanted Longbottom to lose?”

She did. She definitely did—and yet, Harriet couldn’t quite forget how small Longbottom had appeared when stepping into the arena the first time, charged to face whatever waited for him there. She remembered the booing, and the overwhelming terror of the Hungarian Horntail breaking the chain, shattering the wards. Anything involving the Merpeople didn’t sound nearly as dramatic, and yet….

“It’d be nice if he didn’t bloody drown,” Harriet admitted. “I know his fat head is filled with air, but that doesn’t mean he can breathe underwater.”

“Ah, I see. Don’t worry. I won’t tell Neville how fond of him you are.”

“I’ll hex you with boils in unmentionable places if you do.”

Cedric chuckled and saw himself out of the room without another word. Harriet remained behind to clean up the water, pulling the plug from the basin’s belly to let it drain. She watched it go, listening to the steady drip and gurgle.

This was one of Elara’s favorite rooms. She liked watching the scrying pools, though she’d never seen anything worth mentioning; she said she liked looking to the future, whatever it might be, and Harriet always thought that rather profound for a girl so prone to nihilism. She hoped Diggory didn’t tell his horrid friends about this place and ruin it.

Harriet heaved a heavy, tired breath and turned away, following the path Diggory had out the door. It swung shut, and Harriet stopped when she heard a distinctive thump-step-thump approaching her from the alcove. The Auror Moody curled his lip as he looked at Harriet, the magical eyes whirring in its socket.

“You think you’re terribly clever, don’t you, lassie?”

She blinked. “Pardon?”

He stepped closer, and Harriet stiffened, her brow furrowing.

After his confrontation with Snape, Moody gave the impression of not liking Harriet very much, whether by his own choice or because he hated Snape and thus thought poorly of her by association. Harriet tried to keep an open mind, but sometimes the scene she’d witnessed in Dumbledore’s Pensieve would pop unbidden into her mind, and she’d remember Snape’s bowed and broken posture, the bruises littering his body. Those hadn’t been from Death Eaters. Those had come from Aurors.

She didn’t know if Moody had been a part of those responsible, and she couldn’t say she’d have been better after everything that occurred in the Wizarding war. That kind of anger needed an outlet—but Harriet couldn’t forget. The image stayed with her all these months later, visceral and haunting. It made being in the man’s presence uncomfortable.

“I heard you in there, giving the Diggory boy information about his task. That’s against the rules.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Harriet fibbed. “It’s not against any rules for me to show him the Scrying Hall.”

“And if he just so happened to drop his egg in one of those basins? That’s no business of yours, eh?”

“None at all, sir.”

Moody’s good eye narrowed, and the other ceased its restless revolutions to settle on her. “I don’t care much for unfair advantages, Potter,” he growled. “I care even less for cheating.”

“Karkaroff and Maxime will have told Delacour and Krum what to expect—and if Longbottom has any kind of wits at all, he’ll recognize the Mermish. But that’s his problem, not mine.”

Moody glowered—though, perhaps, he had no other expression, his face twisted by curses and spell-fire and overwhelming paranoia. “I’m watching you, Potter,” he settled on saying. “You and that Dark creature you’re passing off as a familiar.”

Harriet didn’t grimace, but it was a close thing. Instead, in a fit of mean-spirited mischief, she told the dodgy wizard, “I’ll tell Livi you said hello,” and flicked her damp plait over her shoulder. She ran off for the dormitories before any other annoying wizards could stop her.

 


A/N: Unlike Harry, Harriet knows about Mermish and Gillyweed because her CoMC class is taught by Grubbly-Plank instead of Hagrid. Love Hagrid, but they learned fuck all taking care of Blast-Ended Skrewts lmao.

 

Chapter 198: the animal within

Chapter Text

cxciii. the animal within

 

The odd confrontation with Mad-Eye Moody overshadowed Harriet’s late-night conversation with Cedric Diggory until the next afternoon, when she happened to glance at the Hufflepuff table for the first time that day. Squabs and Hinde had their heads turned, watching, their expressions hateful.

“Harriet,” Hermione asked, frowning. “Why are those Hufflepuffs staring at you like that?”

“I dunno.” She hurried onward without a look behind her. Hermione followed.

“Did you say something to them?” She marched forward to match Harriet’s stride. “You didn’t hex anybody, did you? After what happened with McLaggen, McGonagall said she’d suspend you for a week if you put one toe out of line—.”

“I didn’t do anything, Hermione. Blimey,” Harriet grumped. “And besides, McGonagall can’t suspend me. She was brassed off and talking nonsense; the form requires a signed acknowledgment from a student’s guardian, so you know the second word got out about me being suspended, someone would go looking for that form.”

Hermione had that vaguely dazed look she got whenever Harriet managed to surprise her. Harriet just gave her head a fond shake, and they continued on to the library.

“But—why the staring, then?”

“I don’t know, really. Probably because I spoke to Diggory last night. They don’t want their golden Hufflepuff mixing with a nefarious Slytherin, do they?”

Hermione made a noise halfway between disgust and disbelief, though whether that sound was meant for Harriet or Squabs remained a mystery. They came into the library proper, and Terry Boot stood waiting, brightening as he spotted Hermione, who forgot all mention of any Hufflepuffs and blushed scarlet.

Harriet refrained from making faces when Boot and Hermione hugged and Terry kissed Hermione’s cheek.

She left the starry-eyed pair in favor of a group of third years, including Ginny, Luna, and Galen Lament, a slightly pudgy and morose Slytherin who had a touch of Banshee blood somewhere in his family line. Harriet didn’t know when he’d started hanging around Ginny and Luna, but it was better than him following the other third years in his dorm, Volatile Vandran and Reinhold Burke. A pair of tossers, those two.

“All right, you lot?” she asked, settling at their table.

“Hey, Harriet—could you help us with this bit on Matagots?” Ginny asked, gesturing at the textbook in front of her. “We’re supposed to do twelve inches on the anatomy compared to common cats, but if we ask Slytherin, he’ll probably make us visit the pair he keeps for demonstration.”

The trio shivered, and Harriet sympathized. She hadn’t much liked Slytherin’s Matagots either, and Fay Dunbar still had scars from their lesson.

She assisted the third years, though her presence at the table seemed to ring a bell for other, younger students to come rushing over, desperate for a bit of help to finish off their weekend assignments. Harriet didn’t mind helping, especially since the information was old for her and didn’t require much thought. She could let her mind go where it willed.

“Are you really trying to become Professor Slytherin’s apprentice?” Gabriel Flourish asked as she gave his write-up for Transfiguration a glance over. Harriet paused to look at him.

“Yeah? I guess so.”

“But why? Don’t you—?” He stopped and lowered his voice. “Don’t you find him scary?”

“Of course I do. It’s—.” Harriet hesitated, knowing she couldn’t tell him the truth, and the lie pricked against her very bones. Gabriel watched her as she swallowed and grimaced. “It’s just a really good opportunity.”

He was confused; Harriet could see it in the tightness around his blue eyes, which looked incongruent on his young face. “You shouldn’t.”

“What? Why?”

“I…I heard Accipto Lestrange talking to Cassius Warrington in the loo. He said he’s going to be Slytherin’s apprentice—that he’ll make sure of it.”

“Is that so?” Harriet replied, voice flat. That wasn’t something she’d stopped to consider. “Is that what he’s been saying?”

“That’s only what I heard.”

She couldn’t claim to know Accipto Lestrange well. He and Harriet belonged to two separate, unvoiced groups in Slytherin and didn’t interact. He and his main cohort—Warrington, Dread, and Vuharith—were vocal in their admiration of the Dark Arts and smuggled the books into the school. They indulged on illegal potions—frightening, mind-altering concoctions Snape would probably kill them for if he knew they had them, and hid in the oldest derelict classrooms in the castle’s depths. Rumor had it that Lestrange had cursed a younger Gryffindor mute in his second year, but Harriet didn’t believe that. He hadn’t been expelled, after all.

What his behavior amounted to was their social circles never eclipsing aside from Lestrange’s occasional snide commentary about Hermione’s heritage and Harriet telling him to sod off. Elara ignored their relation, never wanting to acknowledge someone who openly thought Muggleborns should be culled as someone on her family tree.

Harriet’s eyes flicked back to Gabriel, and a sudden, unexpected fear crawled into her chest, a feeling like numb prickles going through her skin. “You should stay away from Lestrange,” she told him, voice low. “You and your friends. Don’t be eavesdropping on him, especially not somewhere where he could catch you out—like a loo.”

Gabriel flushed. “I’m not afraid of him,” he asserted. “We can take care of ourselves, you know.”

Harriet gave him a light flick in the middle of his forehead.

“Ow!”

“I never said you couldn’t. You and Walt need to keep your noses out of things, yeah? Concentrate on your schoolwork and leave Lestrange to be a git on his own.”

“All right….”

Their conversation ended there. Eventually, Harriet extracted herself from the table and said goodbye to Luna and Ginny, going to find her friends in their favored corner of the library. Hermione and Terry made for a predictable picture, their chairs scooted together, reading from the same textbook. Elara sat at the other end of the table in the best seat by the window, though little light and warmth came through it. Elara glanced up from a dreary-looking tome when Harriet approached and dropped her feet from the extra chair, nudging it out.

“Thanks,” Harriet said as she slumped into the seat, sighing. Her shoulders ached with nervous tension, her mind churning. “Gabriel Flourish is going to give me a bloody heart attack.”

“The second year? Why?”

“He eavesdropped on Lestrange and seemed to think that was a perfectly good idea.”

Elara’s shoulders stiffened much as Harriet’s had. Flourish was a half-blood, not a Muggleborn, but to bigots like Lestrange, a half-blood was just as bad and just as worthy of his contempt. Given a chance, what would he and his sneering counterpoint Warrington do to a little half-blood boy caught alone in a secluded place? Harriet didn’t want to know.

“Did you disabuse him of that notion?”

“I told him he and Murton need to keep their noses to themselves.” Harriet snorted. “It makes me worry, though. Them seeing me—all of us—playing into Slytherin’s games. Can’t go about saying why we really entered his stupid competition, can we? So, they’re going to assume we condone what he does, that we want to…participate.” Harriet searched Elara’s face. “And if I actually manage to become his apprentice….”

“You tell them the truth, as far as you’re able,” Elara said to her, gently closing her book upon her thumb to hold her place. “That regardless of your opinion about the wizard, being taken on as an apprentice at fourteen by one of the few Defense Masters in Europe is too much of an opportunity to pass up.”

“Is it really, though?”

“It’s definitely why Hawkworth applied despite already seeking an internship at the Ministry.” She glanced about what bit of the library was visible to them. “And rumor tells that Craft’s father is a Gean-Cánach, which means Craft is quite literally allergic to Dark magic. Pucey certainly seemed uncertain during the first trial, and Nott—.” She tapped her forefinger against her chin in thought. “Nott wants out of his house, if I had to guess, and his father is loyal to Slytherin.”

“Huh,” Harriet muttered, considering. She thought about what she’d seen that night outside the forest again and realized much of what Elara said lined up with her own suspicions. Oh, there’d been many eager participants present, but some besides Harriet, Elara, and Hermione hadn’t appeared quite so keen.

“Hawkworth and Craft won’t make it past the next trial.”

“How do you reckon that?”

“Because Slytherin doesn’t want them to.” Elara shrugged. “Craft is useless to him in the long run, and Hawkworth is too questioning because he has options outside of Slytherin’s control.”

“What about us?”

Elara shrugged again, an elegant lift of one shoulder, her gaze distant. “He doesn’t care either way about Hermione or me, and I don’t expect we’ll make it much farther. Neither of us has any true talent in defense, but if it’s possible for us to better your chances by hindering someone else, we will.”

Harriet blinked, and Elara smirked at her.

“That’s cheating.”

“And getting lessons from Dumbledore isn’t?”

“I never said it wasn’t.”

Elara shook her head and resumed her reading while Harriet slouched in her chair, elbows propped on the rests. She considered leaning back and grabbing a quick nap before Pince came around and ousted her, but Harriet’s head felt heavy with worries over Slytherin and his looming trial. She wondered if the Tri-Wizard Champions felt something similar.

Speaking of the Champions, the tell-tale thump and giggle of witches moving through the library had Harriet opening her eyes, but not in time to duck beneath the table. Viktor Krum had already spotted her.

“Fuck…”

Harriet smiled as best she could as he approached, though not without an uncomfortable twisting sensation in her middle. Viktor bore the unmistakable signs of having been outside on his person, the shoulders of his red cloak darkened with rainwater.

“Harriet,” he said, ignoring his fans huddled conspicuously at the end of the row. He also ignored the unwavering weight of Elara and Hermione’s stares.

“’Lo,” she replied, swallowing. “Need help with revisions?”

He made a noise, air through his nose, a kind of frustrated, genteel huff some of the older Slytherins did instead of back-chatting. He looked annoyed, both with Harriet and the tittering coming from girls following him. “I vas hoping to talk vith you.”

“I’m, err, busy studying right now. Could we have a chat later?”

For several seconds, Viktor said nothing. Then, he exhaled and reached into the inner pocket of his cloak, extracting a letter. “For you.”

He extended it, and when Harriet reached out to accept, he brought his other hand around to cup hers between his two, the letter against her palm. He didn’t release her immediately, only loosening his hold when Harriet pulled back. “I hope ve vill speak soon.”

Harriet smiled and hoped it looked sincere, though she couldn’t be fussed if it didn’t. Already she could see the poisonous glances of Krum’s inadvertent entourage—their hatred almost tangible in how thick it tainted the air. They were the reason Harriet had no intention of reading Viktor’s letter, why she didn’t want to talk to him. She was only human; she didn’t want more Bubotuber Pus in the post, didn’t want to shoulder more vitriol from her peers, didn’t want more gossip or nasty rumors swirling about for a relationship she didn’t understand. Harriet didn’t even know if she liked Viktor.

No one said anything as the Bulgarian left, nor did they comment when Harriet shoved the letter out of sight without a thought for its contents. She ignored the girls who lingered behind to make nasty comments just out of earshot and slumped further into her chair.

Beneath the table’s edge, Elara moved her hand to grasp Harriet’s arm and give it a simple squeeze.

“Bugger them,” she whispered to no one in particular. Thunder rolled outside, resounding against the mountains, muffled by the forest—and then, distantly, a flash of lightning touched the window.

Harriet didn’t notice at first, used to the changing weather surrounding the castle. Then, Elara’s hand on her tightened, and Harriet tipped her head to see her friend, silently asking what the issue was.

“It’s storming,” Elara commented, her gaze faceted on the window at her side. The lightning flashed again and glared against Elara’s stark profile, gleaming in her colorless eyes.

“It does that often enough if you haven’t noticed.”

“Hilarious, I assure you.” Her gaze cut toward Harriet, unamused. “Think, brat. It thunders enough, true, but lightning is rarer.”

“Light—?” Harriet caught on to Elara’s subtle hinting, her eyes widening. “Oh! A lightning storm!”

“The first one of the season.”

The final stage had finally arrived, and Harriet had almost missed it in her maundering. The Animagus potion! Finally, it’s ready!

Harriet was out of her chair in an instant, everything else forgotten in favor of rushing to the dorm. “Hermione!” she said. “Hermione, stop flirting and let’s go!”

“It’s a library; we’re studying!” Hermione retorted, face aflame, though Terry smiled, dead pleased with himself. “Where are you off to in such a hurry?”

“My potion is ready!”

“Potion? What potion?”

The potion!

“The—?” Hermione suddenly gasped, then made a grab for her things, hastily shoving them into her satchel. “Sorry, Terry, we have to go!”

Terry watched their scrambling with a bemused light in his eyes. “You three are weird,” he said with definite fondness.

They didn’t run to the dormitories—that would have drawn far too much attention despite it being a weekday, but they did walk quickly, dodging out of sight when a group of older Slytherins passed by. The sixth year prefect, Pendarves, was a good sort but brooked absolutely no mischief, and the trio were definitely up to mischief that afternoon.

The common room remained mostly empty aside from Melvan Knight and his girlfriend Caia Verpia hanging over each other by the main hearth, much too preoccupied in themselves to notice three fourth years slip by into the girls’ corridor. The sounds of weather were muted underground, but the crash of rain on the lake reverberated over their heads and shimmered in the submerged windows.

“Where are you thinking of drinking it?” Hermione asked as they entered their room, and Harriet knelt by the side of her bed. Rather than putting the potion in her trunk, she’d hidden it in Livi’s nest, a bit leery of someone coming across it if they managed to force their way into her luggage. She lifted the bed skirt and stuck her head under, Livi’s blue eyes staring at her.

Misstresss.”

Where’s my box?” she asked, reaching out to pet his snout, Livi’s tongue flicking.

The Horned Serpent nosed about his blankets and torn pillows until the small black Stabilizing Box was visible. “I watched your tressssure.”

Thanks, Livi.”

Picking it up, she brushed a bit of fluff from the surface and settled on the bed proper, joined by Hermione and Elara. The former jerked the hangings closed while the latter carefully picked up the Mandrake potion, studying it.

“It should be fine to drink here, yeah?” Harriet asked, eager, and Elara nodded after a moment of consideration.

“It should. But, you must promise you won’t be upset if you don’t—.” Here she hesitated as if grasping for the right word. “If you don’t feel anything.”

“What do you mean?”

“I can’t describe it. You have to experience it for yourself.”

With that cryptic remark, Harriet was left to use her wand, pointing it at her own chest as she incanted “Amato Animo Animato Animagus,” for the final time and opened the potion. It uncorked with an audible pop!, all three witches holding their breath as Harriet placed the rim against her mouth and drank it down.

“Ugh,” she murmured, dropping the empty bottle on her nightstand. “Tastes like fermented rubbish.”

Elara nodded. “Mine did as well.”

Ugh!” Harriet crossed her legs and settled in the bed’s middle, joined by her friends, the space cramped with three witches hidden between the hangings.

“Close your eyes.”

Harriet did so, taking a deep breath.

“Let your mind wander. Seek out the magic in yourself, pull it over your head, your body.”

“Sounds funny.”

“Shh.”

Inhaling, Harriet let the room’s smell seep into her lungs—damp condensation from the lake, Pansy’s perfume, cat from Millicent and Hermione’s familiars. The tinge of ink and parchment clung to their clothes from the library, and her sheets had a light musk from the natural detergent the house-elves preferred.

Her fingers laced together, her thumb rubbing against her index finger at a slow, repetitive pace. She felt a bit odd knowing Hermione and Elara were essentially watching her meditate, and she sought something within herself that was different than it’d been before.

Well, she thought. I’m a tad peckish. And that potion’s taste is still in my mouth. Merlin, that’s nasty.

As the minutes passed without change, Harriet wondered if all her time and effort in trying to become an Animagus would amount to nothing, if she’d be one of those witches who just didn’t have the magic in herself. She didn’t think Elara would be disappointed—not in her, at any rate—but what about Sirius? He went on at length about how fun and clever her dad used to be, how he’d been an Animagus just like Sirius, and Harriet couldn’t help the lingering doubt that her godfather might find her…lesser if she failed. That it was somehow her fault.

Wait—.

Somewhere below the doubt and the slow morass of her idle thoughts, something else lurked. Harriet sought it out, looking at it as if from the corner of her eye—and she understood why Elara couldn’t quite bring herself to describe the sensation. It slid against her awareness like gossamer, cold as silk and yet sharp, stinging. It had all the substance of tissue paper, tender as new skin threatening to tear. It pooled around her body like an open robe, and slowly—so slowly—Harriet imagined herself pulling it upward.

The magic slunk higher, over her arms, across her back, jarring a shiver from her bones. It crept toward her shoulders inch by painstaking inch, leaving prickles in its wake, conforming to her shape, pressing in, until Harriet could feel it rise around her neck—.

Somewhere from deeper than where the magic resided, deeper than anything Harriet understood, a darkness stirred, whispering. “Harrrrriet,” it said. “Harrrrriet.

She startled.

The magic tore between her insubstantial fingers, tattered, and disintegrated against her body. Energy popped, sparked. It twisted as it went—and Harriet screamed, screamed as bones snapped and flesh tore, trembling hands catching her by the shoulders before she could pitch herself from the bed. A wail lodged itself in her throat.

The voices of her friends came as if from a great ways off. Lights blurred, the torches flickering, dying.

Elara—!

No, not here—!

“—we need to—!

“—help me move—!”

Madam Pomfrey—!

Whatever happened after that, Harriet didn’t know. The pain swelled, consuming, and she shut her eyes against it for a final time.


A/N:

Viktor: “We need to talk.”

Harriet, stuffing breadsticks into her bag: “I gotta go, something came up.”

Viktor: “….This is a library, where did you get breadsticks?”

Chapter 199: fortunato

Chapter Text

cxcix. fortunato

 

The pages of the Daily Prophet crinkled softly under Hermione’s fingers as she read the paper.

“Hmm. The Whitchurch Wailers won their last game against the Corris Carriers, one hundred and fifty to zero. Apparently, it was a rather quick and dull game.” The page wrinkled, a square portrait of a familiar, distasteful man smiling from the front. “And, of course, Gaunt is on a tear, campaigning for his reelection at the end of the year.”

On the narrow, white bed, Harriet harrumphed. Hermione continued reading.

“The Ministry’s passed a new amendment to the law forbidding the importation of Minotaur horns. And they’re entertaining a new petition for the introduction of Aqrabuamelu into Being status, though we both know that’ll fail here in Britain. The Ministry is ridiculous.”

Again, Harriet made a soft, indifferent sound of acknowledgment. Hermione lifted her eyes from the paper and frowned at her. The younger witch appeared very small in the plain bed, her sheets tucked in tight, though the top of her arm remained visible, bent and strapped against her chest as it was.

Hermione tried very hard not to stare.

Two days had passed since the accident in the dormitory. Merlin, it had been horrid—the snap of bones breaking, blood splattering the sheets, the disgusting pop of joints coming apart. Elara had proved more useful than Hermione, as when she’d started to panic and Harriet had screamed in agony, Elara had grabbed Harriet under the arms and ordered Hermione to help her get the witch out of the room.

A clever decision, in hindsight. The pungent aroma of half-rotted Mandrake leaves had hung over Harriet’s bed, a clear indication of what had been going on. Elara had hit Harriet, insensate in pain, with a Scouring Charm that left her sicking up soap bubbles in the hallway, but it erased the potion’s smell from her mouth. It’d been cruel, but it’d eliminated evidence of their wrongdoing—wrongdoing that could easily place Harriet in Azkaban.

They’d dragged Harriet to one of the outer couches of the common room, and Hermione ran back to their beds to find a Transfiguration text—any text—so she could throw it open at Harriet’s feet. When she returned to the common room, Elara had ordered Verpia and Knight—who’d been entirely too engrossed in their inappropriate conduct to note their presence or absence from the room—to get Madam Pomfrey.

Hermione told the witch it’d been a practice spell gone wrong, that she’d misfired from her pincushion in an attempt to turn it into a hedgehog and hit Harriet. It was a horrendous excuse, Hermione knew, but she’d been unable to come up with a better lie at the moment. Though skeptical, Madam Pomfrey took the excuse at face value in favor of looking after her patient, but Hermione knew next they saw McGonagall, she’d be furious.

A small sigh built in her chest, but Hermione kept it inside. She couldn’t help how her attention wandered to what bit of Harriet’s arm remained visible above the sheet. Bandages and gauze peeked from around her scrawny shoulder, her scar stark white and inflamed about the edges.

Madam Pomfrey hadn’t disclosed all of Harriet’s needed treatment, of course, but Hermione had stayed long enough the first evening to hear the matron whispering about ‘amputation’ and ‘regrowth’ to the Headmaster. By the time she’d been allowed to see Harriet again the next afternoon, her twisted, deformed arm was normal again, but Harriet’s face was sallow with deep, sleepless circles under her eyes. Hermione imagined it must have been a very painful night.

Hermione felt stupid for not dissuading Harriet from trying this. They hadn’t even gotten a glimpse of the creature—just…bones, and flesh in the wrong places. She knew exactly how dangerous Animagus transformations could be, having read the subject extensively before Elara attempted her own. Why hadn’t she been more insistent? Why hadn’t she demanded they use more caution, be more careful?

She flipped to the next page in the paper, ignoring how her fingers tightened. “The Ministry lotto number was apparently ‘two,’ only two, and has caused a bit of a scandal.”

Harriet snorted. “Idiots.”

“Quite.” Hermione paused in her reading to study Harriet again, who wriggled slightly and grimaced. “Are you all right? Do you need anything?”

“No,” she huffed, scowling. “Pomfrey Charmed my arse to the mattress.”

“She what?”

“I—tried to leave this morning,” Harriet admitted. A slight blush colored her sickly cheeks. “But I fell because of the stupid pain potion she gave me that makes my legs all wibbly. I had to lay on the floor until Pomfrey found me.”

Hermione didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. “You’re meant to be resting.”

“My bloody legs were fine!”

Shaking her head, Hermione folded the top of the paper down. “So…has Professor McGonagall come to speak with you yet?”

A shudder racked Harriet’s body. “No, thank Merlin. Or maybe it’d be better to get it over with while she thinks I’m meek and wounded and upset.”

She was meek and wounded, whatever Harriet’s pride asserted. As for upset—well, Hermione imagined anyone would be upset if a project they’d devoted time to for months on end had gone pear-shaped. “Elara said, based on what you’ve told her, it should be possible to find your form.” She hesitated, picking at the paper’s corner. “She said it’s there, but you’ll have to attempt pulling it out again.”

“I’m not in a real rush to try again here, Hermione.”

“No, I imagine not.” The sigh she’d held in escaped this time, and she rifled the Prophet. “Right, well. Where was I?”

Unfortunately, before Hermione could delve back into whatever insipid drivel the Prophet had decided to publish, the doors to the infirmary creaked open. They couldn’t see the doors from where they were, hidden behind a privacy partition near the rear of the wing, but it only took a moment of listening to recognize the footsteps—or, rather, the lack thereof. Professor Slytherin hardly ever made a sound aside from the faint hiss of his silk robes on the stone floor.

He came around the partition without announcing himself, and Hermione froze, uncomfortable with the wizard’s sudden, intense scrutiny thrown upon her. Harriet stiffened in the bed, and had her posterior not been attached to the mattress, Hermione surmised she might have made a run for it.

“On the mend, Potter?” he said, though his tone framed the words as a statement—a demand—more than a question. Of course, Hermione didn’t believe the wizard capable of exhibiting any real concern. Nothing beyond what would possibly inconvenience him.

“Yes, Professor.”

“Good.” He flicked his wrist and wordlessly summoned two black envelopes into his hand. The first he dropped into Hermione’s lap without ceremony, and she nearly fumbled it upon the floor. The second he held out to Harriet, waiting, leaning a little too closely over her bed as Harriet dragged her usable arm out from under the sheet to accept the missive. “I won’t tolerate your absence from my generous invitation, Miss Potter. Wounded or not.”

“Of course, Professor.” Harriet couldn’t have sounded more bored if she tried, but she displayed the proper obeisance, and Professor Slytherin found no further need to remain. He swept from the ward with his usual ghostly silence, trailed by his green robes. Harriet ripped into the envelope with her teeth.

“Bloody brilliant,” she snarked, spitting a bit of parchment from her mouth. “Of course, he chooses now of all times—or, rather, two days from now?” She read the letter inside, turning it toward the light. “Two days from now, in the middle of the bloody night, meeting in the entrance hall. If he tries to make us go in the bloody forest again….”

“Are you going to be well by then?”

“Yeah. I’ll at least be out of the infirmary.”

Hermione worried about how this would affect Harriet’s chances. She’d reported prior how Professor Snape believed the second trial would test their convictions, searching for a candidate malleable enough to bend to his wishes while having just enough backbone to not bend for others. Hermione hoped whatever task he’d dreamed up, Harriet could conquer it with her injury.

She resumed reading the paper, if only because it disguised her restless thoughts and gave Harriet something to listen to. She couldn’t worry about Slytherin’s trial. There were no clues, no preparations to be made, and though Hermione had never done anything in her life with the intent of losing, she very much understood this was not something she was meant to win. There was no winning this game.

“Skeeter’s done another piece,” she commented.

“Don’t say that wretched woman’s name to me. Daft cow over-egging the pudding.”

Hermione ignored the comment, knowing if they got into a discussion on Rita Skeeter and her so-called journalism, they’d be here for a very long time. “It’s relatively buried, considering it’s another jab at Longbottom. A fluff piece on his behavior in History of Magic. There’s even a bit in here about something Remus told him, dressing him down.” Hermione didn’t continue to read aloud, stopping instead to scan the article again, then a third time. She frowned.

Now, if one weren’t familiar with Remus, they might assume him the kind of professor who’d give a student a telling off in front of others—Merlin knew Professors Snape, Slytherin, and—to an extent—McGonagall had no difficulty doing the same. However, Hermione knew Remus would do no such thing. He was the sort of teacher who preferred taking his students aside to address in private, usually with tea and an accompaniment of biscuits.

That doesn ’t make sense.

Too soon, Madam Pomfrey came about, and Hermione was rousted from her spot and told to go to class. “Can you bring me a book when you come again?” Harriet begged, ignoring the stern look given by Madam Pomfrey and the reminder she was meant to be resting, not reading. “Please? I’m going spare.”

“Oh—which book, then? We have a test in Care of Magical Creatures on Monday, so would you like that text—?”

“A novel, Hermione. I don’t want to study. Merlin.”

Pomfrey managed to push Hermione from the ward, and she huffed under her breath as she left, rushing as she heard the warning bell. She didn’t quite make it to the dungeons on time, but by some miracle, Professor Snape said nothing. His back remained turned to the room as he wrote on the blackboard, and Hermione slipped into her seat.

The empty spot between her and Elara felt much larger than it should have.

“How is she?” Elara whispered as Snape continued writing, the chalk clacking hard on the slate. It sounded like the man was attempting to stab it.

“Bored. Trying Madam Pomfrey’s patience—but doing better this morning. Did you feed Livius?”

“Yes. He nearly bit my head off, but it’s done.”

Snape finished writing out the title and structure of their potion today and whirled around, causing the front row of students to flinch. Hermione couldn’t be sure, but she thought the angles of his face appeared particularly grim, like the wizard hadn’t gotten much sleep.

“Quiet. The first person to speak out of turn will lose fifty points for their House.”

No one dared breathe.

Hermione maintained her usual diligence in taking notes as Professor Snape began the lecture, but she couldn’t help that her mind started to wander, seeming to rubberband back to the confusion she’d experienced in the infirmary. The half-folded issue of the Daily Prophet remained tucked on the top of her bag, and if she turned her head just so, Hermione could look down and see part of the stark print.

Remus wouldn’t berate Neville in front of others—which meant, yet again, Rita Skeeter had managed to find information that should be impossible for her to know. Remus wouldn’t have given the reporter the time of day, and Longbottom would have never imparted facts that Skeeter could use to paint him in an unflattering light. Of course, she could be lying entirely, but Remus had vaguely mentioned to Harriet in passing during one of their afternoon teas that he needed to have a word with Neville about his behavior, and Harriet had been suitably smug in relaying that fact to Hermione and Elara.

Now, how Skeeter had known about that meeting remained a mystery.

The lecture eventually transitioned into the practical portion of the double period, and while Elara did her part by setting up the cauldron and retrieving their tools, Hermione joined the queue for the student cupboard, getting their ingredients. The potion wouldn’t take much thought, honestly. It required precise timing and stirring, something even Longbottom could manage if he stopped mucking about for five minutes at a time.

Hermione almost wished Professor Snape had set something more challenging, if only to keep her mind centered. However, the Potions Master showed little interest in teaching, seated behind his desk, rubbing his fingers against his temple. Barely ten minutes had elapsed, and already Longbottom and his partner Lavender had messed up their Equanimity Potion, using the wrong species of moth wings. Goyle stuck the blunt end of his ladle in his nose, pulling a face, and Crabbe guffawed.

Hermione rolled her eyes.

The potion between her and Elara came together at a swift pace, and when they had nothing to do but to wait for the swirling blue liquid to simmer, Hermione slipped the Prophet from her bag and reread the article that had her so flummoxed. Though brief, the language used sounded very much like Remus. It must have come from him. So, the question remained, how did Skeeter manage to get the information?

An eavesdropping Charm of some sort? Hermione had never heard of such a thing, and it most definitely wouldn’t work all the way from London. Magic lost potency over time and distance; places like Hogwarts or the Ministry retained their integrity through the original relays set by their founders—little spells, almost vampiric in nature, how they took tiny sips of magic to hold themselves together. Should the school be abandoned tomorrow and left to go to seed, the old spells would fall, crumble. Fade.

No, Rita Skeeter could not be maintaining that kind of spell—should it exist—from London or anywhere else in the isles aside from Hogwarts. But she couldn’t be in Hogwarts, barred by the Headmaster along with all other members of the press. Was it possible she had something like Harriet’s cloak and used it to move about the school? Was that how she’d been present at the Yule Ball?

Hermione gave their potion a look over, then glanced at Professor Snape. He still sat at his desk, though he’d move on from glowering to inspecting another class’s samples in a contraption even Hermione didn’t have a name for. Whatever he saw disappointed him, as he sneered and made an ugly red mark in his grade book.

She shoved the Prophet back into her bag. Careful not to be seen, Hermione slipped her Atlas out from her robe pocket and into her lap, angling her knees below the table so the glow wouldn’t be readily apparent. She retrieved her wand and tapped the lens. “Non Ducor Duco.”

Elara turned her head, a slight frown tipping her lips. “What are you doing?” she whispered.

“Nothing. Just—checking something.”

“Hmm. You know our potion is nearly done.”

Hermione hadn’t known that, and realized she’d lost more time than she thought in introspection. “Oh, yes, of course. Will you get the glassware?”

Elara rolled her eyes, knowing an excuse when she heard it, but she nonetheless stood to get extra vials from the shelf by the sinks. Hermione used the distraction to tap the Atlas again. “Search: Rita Skeeter.”

It brought back the image of Skeeter’s labeled dot easily enough, but her surroundings were blurred, the lines unrendered. She’s somewhere we haven’t been, Hermione surmised. Definitely not Hogwarts, probably the paper’s headquarters or her own residence.

Hermione gave the Atlas another tap, clearing the results. She hardly paid any notice to Elara decanting their finished product. “Search: Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.”

The whole of the school bloomed into view, and Hermione used her finger to slide about within the defined edges of the wards. She hadn’t a clue what she was looking for, but she sometimes gave the map an idle lookover. She perused the Atlas while experimenting with it from time to time, testing its limits, contemplating potential improvements. She still had great plans for the probability ward Terry had helped her compile.

Thinking of him brought a slight flush to Hermione’s cheeks, and she couldn’t help but flick through the floors and levels until she settled on the Defense Against the Dark Arts classroom. She stared at the little dot labeled “Terry Boot,” seated next to “Anthony Goldstein” in the front row.

Now you ’re just being a silly twit, Hermione Granger. Move along.

“Hermione.”

“Hmm,” she said, tracing the drawn corridors, the little details and flickers of magic giving clues to other locations and hidden secrets. Harriet had put a great deal of time into creating the icons for the legend.

“Hermione, I’m going to be late for choir practice.”

“Hmm.”

“Class is over, you understand?”

“Right, right. I’ll be right there….”

Hermione navigated the mostly aerial view of the castle’s interior, trailing different dots until she found the infirmary. Harriet remained in her bed, and Hermione hoped she’d stopped being stubborn and had gotten some rest.

Nothing at all seemed out of the ordinary as she made a quick circuit, her wand still clasped by four curled fingers while her thumb slid against the warm glass. She would have to look for Rita Skeeter again and see how—or if—she was managing to get onto the school grounds. As it stood, she didn’t spot anyone out of place, not even the odious Aurors milling about the entrance hall. She’d already memorized their names.

Just as she meant to finish her inspection with a final glance at the dungeons, Hermione flicked her thumb and passed Professor Snape’s office. Inside was a single dot.

She stopped, shocked, and pulled back.

Professor Snape didn’t allow anyone in his office alone. He kept it locked tight if he wasn’t in attendance—and considering the wizard sat at the front of Hermione’s class currently, he was definitely not entertaining office hours!

Bartemius Crouch. What in the world was Mr. Crouch doing in Professor Snape’s office? His storage cupboard more specifically?

“Miss Granger!” Hermione nearly dropped the Atlas to the floor as she startled, the Potions Master now looming by her table, radiating displeasure. A blink cleared her eyes, and she looked around to see the rest of the class had already vacated the room. Only now did she recognize Elara’s words to her, telling her the bell had rung.

“Is there a reason I have to stand around waiting for you to drag yourself back to reality and get out of my classroom?”

“Pr—Professor,” she said aloud, overcoming her shock. “Professor, someone’s in your office.”

Whatever pithy comment the wizard had—and Hermione knew he had something particularly cutting for her, given his severe expression—Professor Snape swallowed it. “What are you on about, Granger?”

Wordless, she handed the Atlas for him to take. He narrowed his eyes as he did so, the blue light unkind to his pale complexion as it glowed across his face. Hermione noted the fake eye reacted oddly to the magic, a curious, fractal glimmer in its black surface, though Snape didn’t notice.

He didn’t say anything. His lips curled when he saw the label moving through his storage cupboard, and he dropped the Atlas on the desk. Hermione grabbed it before it could bounce to the floor, but Snape had already whirled from the room in a flash of dark robes. She didn’t have a reason to do so, but Hermione grabbed her Atlas and her bag and ran after him.

Outside the classroom, she nearly collided with a Beauxbatons student, then a seventh year coming out of the Wandmaking class farther down in the dungeons. A myriad of people lingered in the main passage, headed higher to the entrance hall and the Great Hall beyond. By the time Hermione caught up with her professor, he’d disappeared into his office, leaving the door ajar, and when she stepped inside, it was empty aside from Snape.

Crouch left with the crowd, she realized. Or he set an alarm to know if Snape was coming.

Hermione sank sideways onto the only available guest chair as Professor Snape banged on the frame of the library painting guarding his storeroom, ordering the visible patron to attention. “Who did you let through here?” he demanded.

“I beg your pardon, sir! But the password was given, though there was no body present.”

The emphasis of the words stressed the split in “no body,” which Hermione took to mean the perpetrator had been invisible. Snape snarled at the painting and all but wrenched it from the wall in his haste to get it open, disappearing into the storage cupboard.

Hermione stared after him for a moment before her attention wandered over the rest of the professor’s office, looking for anything out of place—not that she’d necessarily know, the space being packed with all manner of odd and—and bizarre jars. Really, she hated that room and the low, lingering sniff of formaldehyde in the air. It unnerved her. Snape unnerved her.

One of the shelves had books on it. The volume at the end read “The Cask of Amontillado & Oth—on the spine, the end of the title degraded by fingers rubbing the gilded letters.

An explosion of noise sounded from the cupboard. “Son of a whore!

Hermione’s heart jumped into her throat, and she nearly bolted for the door. She gaped, open-mouthed, as Snape returned to the main office, seething. “Miss Granger,” he said. “How accurate is that toy of yours?”

She stuttered for a moment, doing a great rendition of a Babbling Beverage before she could get her bearings. Her wits had a shock after dashing to his office and hearing the man bellow obscenities. “Yes, sir—I mean, we’ve have—mostly, sir. Yes. Accurate.”

Snape’s jaw clenched, and an eyelid twitched.

“What…why would Mr. Crouch be in your storage cupboard, Professor?”

“Because he was stealing from me, you insufferable chit!” He kicked his chair from behind his desk and sank into it, leaning heavily on his elbows. He made short, aggravated motions with his hands, rubbing his face, before he froze and spoke. “You are dismissed, Miss Granger.”

Dismissed? Was that it? Well, if Professor Snape knew more about what Crouch was doing in here, he wasn’t sharing. Frustrated—but also shaken by Snape’s furious attitude—Hermione forced herself to stand again, one hand gripping her bag’s strap, the other sweaty as it held the Atlas and her wand.

As she left, Hermione’s gaze cut across the bookshelf she’d seen earlier. Her mouth popped open, and she spoke without warning, “Professor? May I borrow that?”

Severus lifted his head slowly, as if he couldn’t believe what he’d heard. He followed Hermione’s pointed finger to the last book on the shelf, then looked back at her, incredulous.

Before he could explode—because Hermione could see his barely leashed temper rising like the vein in his temple thumping—she rushed to say, “For Harriet. In the hospital wing. She’s—bored.”

For the longest moment, he said nothing, and Hermione could only hear her own breath and the lingering chatter of students moving through the corridor. His expression blanked like a chalkboard being wiped clean before he stood and walked to the shelf. He took the volume, then walked around his desk and held the book out to Hermione. She had to quickly slip her bag’s strap onto her shoulder to free a hand to take it.

“Get out.”

Hermione went, and didn’t look back.

 

Chapter 200: invoke thy aid

Chapter Text

cc. invoke thy aid

 

“This is degrading,” Harriet huffed, the air bouncing back against her cheeks. With her nose all but pressed to the room’s corner, it was inescapable. “I’m not a child, for Merlin’s sake.”

She distinctly heard McGonagall sip her tea at her desk. “Well, when you cease behaving as a child does by disregarding the instructions given to you, we’ll reevaluate your punishment.”

Harriet fairly stung with the reprimand and the humiliation, having had to stand still and quiet while a few students passed through McGonagall’s office hours. Some had giggled at her predicament. She’d known from the beginning the older witch would be furious if she found out Harriet was attempting an Animagus transformation, but she’d tried anyway, supposing McGonagall wouldn’t find out. In hindsight, maybe that hadn’t been the best choice.

Harriet hadn’t admitted to the failed transformation. No matter the pain of the experience, she hadn’t lost her mind. But McGonagall needed only to take one look at her ruined arm in the hospital wing, and her nostrils flared, her color high. Her Scottish brogue thickened until it was almost an unintelligible storm of rolling r’s and thick vowels. Harriet landed herself in detention for every Friday evening for the foreseeable future.

Her nose itched, and Harriet went to scratch it, only to jostle the weak arm still bound in a sling. A soft, pained noise left her when she bumped the wall. McGonagall stopped shuffling through her paperwork and sighed.

“Come over here and sit down, Miss Potter.”

Relieved, Harriet turned and marched over to the plain, uncushioned chair in front of McGonagall’s desk, happy to be off her feet finally. Pomfrey may have let her leave the infirmary—reluctantly—but it didn’t mean she wasn’t exhausted and incredibly sore. The new arm remained tender with the occasional prickles running through her fingertips.

McGonagall gave Harriet a hard look over her square spectacles, then conjured a plain goblet and filled it with water, shoving it across the desk. Harriet picked it up and sipped, eying her professor with uncertainty until she set the goblet back down and sat up straight.

It didn’t take long for McGonagall to start. “Do you have any idea of the danger you placed yourself in? The stupidity of your actions? You could have been mutilated—permanently. You could have lost your mind. You could have died.”

Heat infused Harriet’s cheeks. “Yes, Professor.”

“If you understood any of what I said, why did you persist? Especially after I warned you and Miss Granger of the potential consequences.” A sudden thought crossed her expression. “Is Miss Granger—?!”

“No, no,” Harriet rushed to assure her. “No, she’s—not. I promise.”

“Forgive me if your word is less believable after that stunt.”

Harriet winced but couldn’t argue with the sentiment. After Elara managed to become an Animagus, she and Hermione promised McGonagall they wouldn’t attempt the same. “Sorry, ma’am….”

“Did it ever occur to you to ask for help? I warned you against attempting a transformation on your own, and you never thought to take advantage of having a Transfiguration instructor who is also an Animagus? I am a professor, Miss Potter; it is my job to teach.”

To that, Harriet had nothing to say, because it hadn’t occurred to her to ask McGonagall for help. She’d warned them off from attempting it independently, but she hadn’t told them they couldn’t try. And it wasn’t as if the professor forbade them out of malice; she did it because of exactly what happened.

“You can ask adults for help, Harriet. You don’t have to do everything on your own.”

“…I know.”

McGonagall didn’t seem to believe that sentiment, but she allowed the subject to drop, concentrating instead on doctoring herself a new cup of tea from her silver service set. Harriet watched her from the corner of her eye, waiting for the mood to shift again and the berating to start anew.

“We’ll be having your lessons in the secondary Transfiguration classroom on Friday evenings,” the professor said, her voice still stern, but less angry and more practical now. The classroom she mentioned adjoined the main Transfiguration space, but it found more use for sixth and seventh years, who often had larger and more complicated spells to compile. “Not that you don’t deserve punishment for your own good, mind. You can be as thick-headed as your father, Miss Potter, and that is not a compliment.”

She heaved a weary, frustrated sigh and smoothed a single stray hair back behind her ear. “Has Professor Snape approached you about his lessons for you?”

Confused by the non sequitur, Harriet answered, too nervous to ask questions. “No, Professor.”

The older woman muttered something suspiciously like “Idiot boy,” before primly sipping her tea and clearing her throat. “Well, that’s neither here nor there. Both Professor Snape and I have adjusted our schedules to fit in more time with you starting next term, but I was under the impression he wanted to begin sooner rather than later.” A spark of flintiness entered her eyes, gone in a flash, replaced by her usual cold, professorial severity. “I expect you to listen to our instruction to the best of your ability, and to come to us if you have difficulty.”

Harriet’s shoulders slumped. “Yes, Professor.”

McGonagall huffed. “Don’t sit there as if I’ve pronounced your doom, Miss Potter. Finish your water, and for Merlin’s sake, have a ginger newt. You look pale as a ghost, och.”

Harriet took a ginger newt from the tin on the desk—taking another when McGonagall arched a brow. The professor waited for her to finish eating, the last of the crumbs swept off Harriet’s skirt, before she turned the conversation to yet another area of discussion, asking Harriet to describe her failed transformation.

“It’s hard to put into words, ma’am,” she said, thinking about those moments before everything went to pot. “It was a bit like…trying to pull on a big cloak that had fallen off my arms. But it didn’t fit real well, and it…it didn’t feel like it’d been made of anything I was meant to be touching. Like I was grabbing smoke or—really cold water that stung a bit when I tried moving it.”

McGonagall studied Harriet with keen eyes before nodding her head. “Go on.”

“Elara said I had to pull it up over my head, and I didn’t know what she meant until I tried it myself. I think I managed it somewhat, though I….” Harriet paused, searching for words, her finger giving her cheek an idle scratch. “I thought somebody said my name, but looking back, that’s silly, innit? Hermione and Elara didn’t say anything because they wouldn’t have distracted me.” She heaved a sigh. “That’s what happened. I got distracted, and the feel of the—the magic twisted away, as if I’d pulled too hard or gripped too tightly. Then I got hurt.”

McGonagall nodded along with Harriet’s statement to convey her understanding, then leaned back in her chair, her face lined with thought. “Well. By your description, it seems your efforts weren’t in vain and you do have the ability, and the potion wasn’t botched. Proper training—.” And here she fixed Harriet with another stern glare that had the girl fighting a shiver. “—would have prepared you for how difficult it can be to coax your secondary nature into its proper form. It’s not something to be undertaken in a dormitory with others spectating.”

Harriet refrained from saying that was almost exactly how Elara had managed it last year. She half expected that remark would see her back in the corner, staring at the mortar.

“We can work on this in the summer term, when we both have more time.” McGonagall rose to her feet, and Harriet scrambled to do the same. The heavy guilt weighing upon her lightened at the words.

“You’ll really help?”

“As I said.”

“Thank you, Professor!”

“Until then, do use your head, Miss Potter. I don’t want to see you in the infirmary for anything more than a cold.”

“Yes, Professor.”

McGonagall waved her off toward the door, and Harriet went, exhaling with relief. She had only managed a few steps when McGonagall said—.

“And Harriet?”

Which forced the girl to stop, turning her head. McGonagall stood with her aged hands folded together before herself, holding tightly as if anxious or worried, though none of that emotion bled into her tone.

“Yes, Professor?”

“…Good luck this evening.”

Dread suddenly crept into Harriet’s chest, cold as winter’s sharpest gale, heavy as snow piling up inch by inevitable inch. The second trial was scheduled for that night.

She swallowed the lump in her throat with some difficulty and smiled, her lips trembling.

“I’ll do my best.”

“I know you will.”

 

xXx

 

The lightning storm that had heralded Harriet’s dubious exploits with Animagus transformation lingered over the highlands, and though the lightning itself had petered off, the rain persisted. It persisted with a vengeance.

Huddled in what shelter the eaves of the castle provided, thirteen Slytherin students stood waiting in the downpour for their Head of House to make an appearance. Harriet couldn’t stop her shivering despite her cloak and the heft of the flame-filled jar braced in her good hand. On either side of her, Hermione and Elara shivered just the same.

“It would be wonderful if he could be on time just once in his miserable existence,” Elara sneered through clenched teeth, her gloved hands stuffed into her armpits. “Just once.”

“If he thinks I’m going into the bloody forest in this weather, he’s barmy,” Harriet added. “Merlin’s knickers, I can barely feel my toes.”

“How about your arm?” Hermione asked. She’d been fussing over Harriet from the moment she’d left the infirmary, almost as if she had actually cursed her. Harriet couldn’t tell if she was putting on a show for others, but she genuinely thought Hermione just worried about her.

“Bloody numb, thanks for the reminder.”

Hermione tutted under her breath and flourished her wand, giving the Bluebell Flames a firm prodding. They crackled higher inside the smoke-stained glass, and Harriet clutched the vessel closer.

The others had similar jars in their possession, having followed Hermione’s lead when they arrived outside. Harriet looked over their group, the Carrow sisters at the end with Pucey, joined by Hawkworth and Craft. Lestrange stood much too close, and he caught Harriet’s gaze as she turned her head.

“Why even bother showing up, Potter?” he said above the crashing rain, the weak torchlight from the castle’s entrance making the handsome curves of his face stark and ghoulish. Harriet thought that a good word for Lestrange: ghoulish. “What with your gimp arm?”

“The same reason you’re here despite being a moron.”

His taunting smile became savage, and Vuharith put a restraining hand on his shoulder, leaning in to mutter something in his ear. Water dripped from his dark hair like the rain did from a gargoyle’s teeth. “You’d best watch yourself, little girl.”

“Did you like that, little girl?” Riddle crowed as Harriet trembled on the floor, wracked by the after-effects of the Cruciatus. “Oh, I think you did.”

“Harriet?”

She flinched, jerking herself from the sudden, inexplicable memory. Their words might have been similar, but Lestrange didn’t hold a sliver of Tom Riddle’s menace. Still, the stark whisper slid against her spine like ice, and Harriet very nearly stepped away.

She wanted to get inside. She wanted this to be over already.

“Harriet.” Hermione was more insistent this time, and Harriet looked toward the other witch. Hermione pointed at the path—at the Thestral-drawn carriages and their orange lamps wending their way closer.

The first clattered to a halt in front of them. The door popped open.

“Are—are we supposed to get in?” Derrick asked with a small, uncertain chuckle.

“Obviously,” Bragge sniped—but Harriet noted she made no move toward the waiting carriage. No one did, not even Lestrange.

Harriet grit her teeth, sucking air through them. “Ruddy cowards,” she muttered before moving from under the eaves into the torrential downpour. She didn’t stop until she pushed herself up the metal step and swung into the empty carriage. Hermione and Elara followed a moment later, dashing out of the rain. No sooner had Elara ducked inside did the door swing shut once more, and the Thestral lurched into motion.

“Where do you suppose he’s having us go?” Elara asked as she dropped onto a seat, grimacing at the wet squelch. “Is it too much to hope it’s somewhere dry?”

“That’s probably why he’s not here. I can’t imagine that twat standing in the rain.”

“Probably Hogsmeade,” Hermione murmured, ignoring Harriet’s comment. She had the presence of mind to press herself against the door, peering out of the window to watch. “The gates are open.”

“Is he allowed to do that?” Harriet asked, her unease growing, whatever bravado had propelled her into the carriage fading into nervous dread. “Blimey. I thought I wasn’t allowed without my guardian’s signature?”

“Technically, as a Head of House and a chaperon, he can take students off-site. And considering you have to register for this competition….”

Harriet cursed softly under her breath.

The carriage continued to trundle on, past the open gates with the boars atop their pillars, heading on toward Hogsmeade. Harriet swallowed, her mouth dry, and picked at the seam of her cloak until a thread threatened to come loose. They took a sharp, abrupt turn onto a smaller dirt path, and Hermione grunted as her cheek smacked the window.

“Where on earth are we going?” she demanded, rubbing her nose. “This isn’t the direction of Hogsmeade. There’s nothing out this way!”

They kept moving, and despite what Hermione said, a structure soon loomed between the winter trees. Harriet joined her friend at the window, their breath painting the speckled glass as they peered into the darkness. They could little see the building in the night, only the vague outline of stone and the warbling light of a bare torch illuminating a gaping arch heading inside.

The carriage lurched to a halt. Harriet cursed again.

“I guess the worst thing that could happen is we—I don’t know, get locked in a cursed tomb or something?” she said, reaching for the door’s latch.

“The worst thing that could happen is we get murdered, Harriet.”

“Well, I wasn’t going to say that, Elara! I’m not putting that out there!”

Hermione remained quiet during their bickering, though she appeared pensive, her teeth digging into her bottom lip. “Why would he bring us out here?”

“To scare us?” Harriet theorized. “Remember, Snape said this task is going to be more—mental than the others. Something about Slytherin wanting to weed out the cowards.”

“There’s more to it.” Hermione shook her head as Harriet eased the door open and the sound of rain in the naked trees echoed into the carriage. “If that was his only aim, he could scare us easily enough at Hogwarts. There are plenty of mostly unexplored areas in the dungeons that would suit, don’t you think?”

Harriet nodded, having discovered several questionable places while exploring. Hogwarts was a castle, after all, and at one point or another, Harriet wagered they’d kept something other potions in the dungeons and the deep, dark places. Slytherin needn’t leave the school if he wanted to offer his students a scare.

They braced themselves against the rain once more as they stepped into the weather, the other carriages drawing to a halt on their own. This time Vuharith and Lestrange were the first to shed their reservations and enter the building, followed by Derrick and Bragge. Harriet stayed behind despite the rain splattering against her glasses, trying to discern just what they were meant to be walking into. Part of the structure had given way with time, and the front seemed to have been burned.

“Lovely,” Elara snarked. The water plastered dark tendrils of her hair over her temples and brow.

They headed inside with Craft and Pucey in front of them, following the gentle, whispering tones of their fellows and the echo of dripping water. Noise resonated in the dim interior, lit only by a single torch inside and the residual light of the first torch by the uncovered entrance. It was…unimpressive, and though Hestia and Flora appeared unnerved, Harriet had seen more frightening places.

“What a rubbish tip,” Desdemona Bragge said, sticking her nose into the air. Lestrange and Vuharith slung themselves onto one of the half-rotted benches strewn throughout the otherwise empty space, the latter crossing her legs while the former scoffed.

“Where’s your sense of adventure, Bragge?”

“It seems I left it in my dormitory—along with the warm hearth and dry clothes.”

Lestrange made a rough, laconic gesture with his wand that Harriet recognized as the beginnings of a Drying Charm, and Bragge snapped at him, her own wand extended. “Don’t you dare. The lining of this cloak is Acromantula silk, and I won’t stand for you ruining it, boor.”

Craft laughed at that—loud and unbothered, not unlike how Luna laughed. Lestrange’s dark eyes cut over to him, and the mocking set of his mouth twisted.

“Be silent, freak.”

Again, Craft appeared unbothered. Indeed, he barely took any notice of Lestrange at all, choosing instead to lean against one of the crumbling stone walls, his arms crossed, wet hair tumbling down past his shoulders.

Meanwhile, Harriet ignored their snide comments and studied the enclosure. Seeing no sign of fallen walls or other barriers, she assumed it had been built as one cohesive space, which meant it must have been a meeting area of some kind. She scrunched her nose as she investigated one of the benches, the wood decayed until almost unrecognizable.

It looks like…a pew.

“It was a Muggle church.”

The familiar voice startled a shriek out of Hestia, who flushed purple when Slytherin stepped from the shadows of the only room adjoined to the main sanctuary. Harriet hadn’t heard the door open, nor had she seen the wizard enter. He made for a chilling, ghastly specter in that loathsome place. Slytherin sent a disdainful glance in Hestia’s direction before speaking again.

“Many years ago, before the introduction of the Statute of Secrecy, Hogsmeade was not a solely magical village. The Muggles who resided in or near the area thought to bring monotheism into the Scottish highlands among the pagans, and when their religion encroached upon Wizarding lives….” A smile split Slytherin’s face as he brushed a hand almost lovingly along a charred bit of wall. “No more Muggles.”

An appreciative chuckle left Lestrange.

“I thought it a most…appropriate venue for tonight’s activity.” He stepped farther from the shadows into the ring of torchlight, still smiling. “Welcome to your second trial, my dear children. You have done well to make it this far, and I am…pleased with your progress. Behind me, you see a door. Beyond that, a room. Within the room is a table, and upon the table are thirteen runestones. Tonight, I will simply ask you, one by one, to pass into the room, retrieve a runestone, and return it to me. I will give you each five minutes to complete this task.”

Harriet exchanged glances with her friends, knowing this couldn’t be that simple, and Slytherin fluttered a pale hand as if forestall any questions.

“Though this may prove a simple endeavor for some of you, for others…my, my. A trip to Madam Pomfrey might be required before the night’s end.”

The weight of Harriet’s sling felt more immediate as he spoke, heavy. Some of the others flicked their eyes in her direction as if expecting she’d give up now.

If only.

Slytherin drew his wand to conjure himself a nice chair, neglecting to provide seating for anyone else as he carefully pulled his robes to one side and relaxed. “First…let us have Miss Bragge enter.”

Attention turned to Bragge, who paled under the scrutiny of her peers but nonetheless steeled her nerves and strode forward. She walked into the darkness of the room beyond, and Slytherin gave his wand another bored twist. The door slammed shut, setting loose a cloud of dust.

“What is the point of this?” Elara murmured, eyes narrowed at Slytherin’s profile. Unperturbed, their professor held a pocket watch in his hand, giving it a twist every so often so he could read the time. “Do you suppose he’s put a creature of some kind in there?”

“He wouldn’t risk his position for a poorly veiled chance to maim his students,” Hermione replied, her voice hardly louder than a breath. No sound emanated from beyond the shut door. Thunder churned far in the distance, and the rain battered the poor roof. “There must be a reason he brought us here.”

“Outside of a chance to spit on Muggles,” Harriet added. Four minutes had elapsed before the door creaked open on rusted hinges, and Bragge stumbled out.

To say she appeared frightened would be an understatement. Her haughty, if anxious, poise had vanished, and she shook like a tree in a summer storm, her legs threatening to give out from under her. She stared ahead of her, unseeing, and somehow managed to stagger to Slytherin and drop a small, smooth stone into his open hand.

“Very good, Desdemona. Take a seat against that wall over there.”

Bragge nodded, mute, and did as told, collapsing onto the filthy floor with no regard for her expensive cloak.

“What happened?” Lestrange hissed at her in an undertone, attempting to keep his voice down. Unfortunately, Slytherin still heard him.

“Quiet, Mr. Lestrange. You will have your opportunity soon enough. Mr. Derrick, if you would.”

Peregrine Derrick frowned slightly, then shrugged his massive shoulders. He disappeared into the room, and again Slytherin slammed the door shut, just as he had with Bragge. This time, however, Derrick didn’t emerge after four minutes. He didn’t emerge after five, either, and so Slytherin snapped his watch closed with a sigh and stood. He entered the room and returned all but dragging Derrick by the arm, the burly Quidditch player stuttering in terror.

“How disappointing,” Slytherin said as he crossed the sanctuary filled with quiet, grim students, shoving Derrick down to sit by Bragge. Derrick gawped at the wizard—and reeled back as if afraid of being struck when Slytherin sneered. “Pathetic.”

Harriet stared at Derrick and Bragge, the pair white as fresh sheets and covered in filth as if they’d rolled upon the floor. Her palms warmed with sweat. Bragge was a brilliant witch—and Derrick was their seventh year prefect, both physically and magically strong. What could possibly reduce them to two quivering wrecks?

Hermione’s hand seized hers, and Harriet jumped. “Dark magic,” she whispered, breathless.

“What?” Harriet hissed.

“It’s Dark magic. That’s why he brought us out here—no wards. If you cast Dark magic in the castle, there’s a chance the Headmaster will know.”

Slytherin summoned Vuharith forward next as Harriet chewed on this information. Yes, she could imagine Slytherin inflicting Dark magic upon them—after all, who would tattle? Not anyone who wanted to live to old age. And off of school grounds, was it even illegal for him to use it in a competition voluntarily entered?

It sounded bloody illegal, but if anyone knew how to manipulate loopholes and bylaws, it was Slytherin.

Vuharith completed the task, as did Pucey after her, the pair joining the others against the far wall, sweaty, shaken, and silent. Then, it was Hermione’s turn.

“Good luck,” Harriet said, giving her hand one final squeeze. She could hear Hermione’s throat click as she gulped, then strode into the dark. The door slammed—and Harriet almost screamed at the wizard to open it again, consequences be damned. Elara’s hand replaced Hermione’s around her own, the leather of her glove tacky with water.

“She’ll be fine.”

“And if she isn’t?”

She’ll be fine.

Each minute felt as if it lasted a dozen, and as they passed, Harriet’s heart sunk lower and lower in her chest. She counted the seconds, willing herself to stay calm, knowing Elara did the same. When the fifth minute came, Harriet couldn’t restrain herself any longer. She yelled, “Professor!” aloud. The volume of her voice startled the others.

“Patience, Miss Potter. Patience.”

He took his time standing and straightening his attire, a smirk curling the edge of his mouth. He retrieved Hermione with the same blasé care as he had Derrick, and she came out of the shadows sobbing, muck streaked across her cheeks from her hands frantically wiping at her tears.

“Hermione!” Harriet cried, rushing forward. Slytherin jerked the other witch away from her, pushing Hermione toward the far wall. Hermione went, though when she sucked in a breath as if to say something, Slytherin silenced her with a look.

“Leave her be, Potter. It’s nothing permanent.”

Behind them, Lestrange laughed, still slumped on the best pew in the building, his arms stretched wide and comfortable across its top. “It’s hardly surprising,” he mocked as Harriet turned, fixing him with a warning glower. Hermione’s sobbing curtailed itself into quiet sniffles, and she buried her face in her hands. “Who wouldn’t expect the little Mudblood to be a coward?”

Harriet lunged.

A fist closed itself in her hair and yanked her back, Harriet yelping at the resulting burn in her scalp. Through teary eyes, she squinted at Professor Slytherin as he gave his hand another cruel twist, and she bent with the motion. She gasped, hoping he wouldn’t rip her hair out at the roots.

“Enough of this. You next, girl.”

He shoved her hard, and Harriet had no choice but to follow the motion, stumbling before she fell to her hands and knees beyond the room’s threshold. Her wounded arm throbbed in dull agony when it bumped the stone. She staggered upright and turned just in time for the door to slam, plunging her into darkness.

Oh, fuck. You’ve done it now, Potter, she told herself, panting. He’d probably bloody leave you in here for the rest of the night if it was his choice!

She continued to breathe, shallow and irregular, the air damp and jagged in her lungs. She expected it to smell of must, what with the rain and their dilapidated surroundings, but the air tasted somewhat sweet—almost cloying. It reminded her of something she might have used in Potions, but Harriet was much too rattled to identify it properly.

As her eyes adjusted to the dimness, she realized the room wasn’t completely submerged in shadows. Instead, a vague, murky blue light limned the edges of shapes, giving form to the walls and the slumped figures of ancient, crumpled furniture. Harriet thought it might have been a rectory at one point, though Elara would probably know better than her.

She tugged her wand from its brace, whispering, “Lumos.” The light blazed despite the stubbornness of the gloom, and Harriet shone it over the area, moving her good arm until she found the table Slytherin had mentioned, ten runestones scattered over its surface. There was also an open bottle with a thin tendril of green mist escaping its brim. No monster crouched in the corner, no other visible threat. It seemed to be nothing other than a plain, shabby ruin.

The taste intensified in Harriet’s mouth.

Confused, she stepped toward the waiting table, cautious, her lit wand held at the ready.

Something moved.

Harriet whirled about, a hex on the tip of her tongue, but the floor teetered, and she knelt, gasping. The shadows flickered and wavered, biting at the edges of her failing spell, oozing upon the dirt and pavers. The stacked stones of the walls rippled like black scales—the black scales of a Hungarian Horntail, yellow eyes hunting, circling, circling.

What is…happening…?

The centaur Firenze stood by the table, and Harriet wheezed at him, begging for help, the taste of rotten flowers upon her tongue.

I dunno if I believe in destiny,” she told him, just as she had in the Forbidden Forest, speckled in the blood of a one-eyed werewolf that now crawled upon the floor, growling, growling. “I’m just Harriet. That’s all I want to be.

You will never be just anything, young witch,” the centaur said, his voice echoing as if he shouted. His blond hair wavered in no wind at all, plaits like ladders scaling his head. Above it all screamed a voice, a voice, hammering at no door that could be seen, demanding to be let in. To consume. “Destiny and Death come for us all.

The dragon was coming—the werewolf sunk his claws into her legs, pulling. The cold, rotted hand of a Dementor slid against her nape, its lips nearing her own.

There’s no such thing as magic!” Uncle Vernon bellowed.

The cupboard opened for her, waiting, beckoning, the inevitable fall against a flat, dusty pillow, to wake again to a torpid, suburban life—.

She bled, red on her hands, on her mouth, the dead eyes of her best friends peering with judgment from the dragon’s flaming maw—.

Dead, they were dead—.

It’s not real! Harriet screamed at herself, a tiny, lingering bit of her sanity rioting against the illusion. It felt real. Too real—.

There is great evil in this world,” Firenze said, words once given in a flat monotone bleeding into malice. “And it exists in places we least expect. You will always choose to fight it, Harriet Potter, but you will not always win.

“You will never win!

Red eyes loomed in the darkness, a high, cold laugh—.

A flash of green, a woman screaming, screaming—.

Harriet lunged for the table, grasping, the smell intensifying—.

Nebulous, skeletal hands clapped over her mouth and nose, rising from the ground. The shadowy hands cut off her air, and Harriet struggled, clawing at her face, slamming her injured shoulder against the table’s solid lip.

Set! her mind supplied as her last breath fluttered in her lungs. It’s Set!

Harriet would have panicked at the continued loss of air, but as the edges of her vision sparkled with black spots, her thoughts ceased their restless, terrified barrage, and the creatures assailing her melted once more into the masonry. The dead, broken bodies of Hermione and Elara faded back into furniture, and Firenze disintegrated.

The runestone!

She fumbled to grab one, her heartbeat loud in her ears, as loud as a drum thrumming inside her head. She nearly dropped the bloody stone because of how hard her damp hand shook, but she held onto it, clasping it like a lifeline. She picked up her fallen wand. She wheeled about and staggered for the door, half-crawling, desperate for air—.

The knob gave under her fingers. When the door swung out, the hands clasped to her face disappeared—and Harriet gasped for fresh air as she slumped to her knees. No one said a word.

Slytherin hummed—a low, amused note. “The runestone is not in my hand, Miss Potter. Tic-tock.”

An eternity had passed her by—a thousand years of horrid, malformed things, clawing at her flesh, digging into her very soul. But it had not been five minutes. Not yet, and as the anger billowed in her middle, Harriet wanted nothing more than to hurl the stupid stone at Slytherin’s head. She wanted to bludgeon him with it until he was nothing more than blood and viscera under her fingernails.

Do it. Do it. DO IT—.

She didn’t. She wouldn’t. Harriet shoved the anger aside and rose like a puppet on taut strings. She pressed the runestone into Professor Slytherin’s hand, ignoring how his fingers briefly passed over her own. She didn’t stop until she reached Hermione’s side, whereupon Harriet sat with her face buried in her friend’s shoulder. Hermione’s bushy hair was coarse against her damp cheeks, and Harriet shut her eyes, refusing to see anymore.


 

A/N: Chapter 200!

Title is from Paradise Lost, in which the devil is asking for assistance to make his great work.

Basically, Slytherin put a hallucinogenic potion upon the tables with the tokens. As one got closer to them, the potency intensified, confronting the participant with their worst terrors. The trick was to hold your breath before entering the room, which no one could possibly guess.

Harriet: “This looks ominous.”

Elara: “There’s like a 95% chance we get murdered.”

Hermione: “Be more optimistic!”

Elara: “94% chance.”

Chapter 201: gladiator

Chapter Text

cci. gladiator

 

It took nearly an hour for the rest of the competitors to pass through the trial.

Harriet paid her surroundings little attention, her heart fit to burst with every little sound that broke through the static of the rain and shook her into awareness. She only looked up when Elara’s name was called, and the tall, stone-faced witch clasped her hands together before walking into the rectory.

Don’t breathe, Harriet wanted to shout at her. Don’t breathe, it’s poison. She said nothing because Slytherin had his red, gimlet eyes resting upon her while Elara went to the door. Harriet wasn’t brave enough to open her mouth.

Elara managed to return the runestone to Slytherin with only seconds to spare, striding out of the rectory with her back ramrod straight, her face a sickly tinge of green. She handed Slytherin the stone and, instead of joining Harriet and Hermione, left the sanctuary, heading outside. Harriet didn’t need to follow to know she was ill in the bushes.

In the end, only Peregrine Derrick, Linden Craft, John Hawkworth, Hestia Carrow, and Hermione failed the task—but no one returned to the carriages in any sort of good humor, not even Lestrange. Only Craft needed medical attention, swilling a potion Slytherin dropped into his trembling hands as he struggled to breathe. That gave credence to Hermione’s theory that whatever nasty, invisible fog lingered in the rectory was Dark magic.

Harriet and her friends didn’t say much to each other as they made their way back to the castle. They didn’t say much the next day either, and the cold Harriet had felt the night before barely seemed to dissipate. Elara soon came down with the flu, and all Hermione could do was sigh.

“Dark magic is harmful—almost carcinogenic in the effect it has on the body,” she explained. “A great deal of the spells only cause little harms, but others can be more…insidious. They…linger.”

Harriet didn’t see Snape until their Potions lesson later that week, whereupon—as McGonagall had warned—he had a note for her, summoning her to her first lesson with him later that evening. She didn’t complain, only shoved the note into her pocket and resigned herself to finishing her homework early. At least she’d been able to remove the sling the day before.

Harriet wandered back down to the dungeons a few minutes after dinner, finding Snape in his classroom on his feet but half bent over the desk as he scrawled on a bit of parchment. He reached up to tuck the long strands of his black hair behind his ear, pausing when he heard Harriet shut the door behind her.

“I’m here,” she said, hands shoved into the pockets of her robe.

“So you are. And incapable of knocking, I see.” Snape sounded more distracted than annoyed, continuing to write until he finished whatever he was working on. With a wave of his hand, his parchments and quills rose in the air and cloistered themselves inside the desk’s drawers. Those drawers slid shut with the definite click of locks engaging. “We’re not staying here.”

He strode past Harriet back into the corridor, and she followed with a grunt, picking up her feet to match his quick, efficient pace. Instead of heading to his office or somewhere higher in the school, Snape took the stairs downward to the next sub-level, and he didn’t stop until they came to a Moon Mirror framed by two rather woebegone statues. The one of the left was missing its face.

Galatea,” Snape said, surprising Harriet. He must have caught the sharp rise of her brow because he could only scoff. “Did you really think you and your reprobates were the only ones who’d figure the passwords out?”

“Well—honestly, yes. It took me months to chart out all the bloody moons, and I had to use the school’s original blueprints.”

“Your mistake was in trying too hard.”

Not having any idea what that was supposed to mean, Harriet followed the Potions Master through the Moon Mirror into the Aerie, clamoring up the frame’s edge while he could simply step over it. She tried not to blush as she nearly toppled to her arse on the other side.

“Why’re we in the Aerie, Professor?”

“Because it’s private—more private than any other place in the castle, and it’s imperative Slytherin does not learn of your lessons with me. Not at this time.”

Harriet caught those small addendums—with me and not at this time. Did that mean Slytherin wouldn’t care about her taking lessons with Dumbledore or McGonagall? Or, perhaps, it was more critical for Snape to appear detached? She couldn’t be sure.

“But there will be a time, then?”

“At some point, I imagine he’ll pawn off meaningless instructions for me to complete. He does so enjoy delegating when it suits his mood.”

Snape proved his competence with the Aerie when he strolled toward the nearest archway and summoned the room they needed—a long, empty hall, well-lit by the Aerie’s ubiquitous, mullioned windows and the golden light beyond them. You could lose track of time in Ravenclaw’s domain, lost wandering the shelves and rooms, the light always bright, untouched by the day or night. When he spoke, Snape’s voice bounced on the stone floor and the paneled walls, echoing up into the intricate ribbing of the arched ceiling.

“Did you write Johannes Jonker as I told you to?”

Harriet wrinkled her nose. “Yes?” Then, realizing what he was hinting at, she pulled her right sock down just enough to show the wand brace hidden there. The Charms on the short bit of leather made it so cloth stretched over the top if it appeared smooth, conforming to the wearer’s leg. Harriet kept her mum’s wand tucked inside of it, strapped to the outside of her calf.

“Good. Keep it on you always. Stay there.”

He crossed to the other side of the hall, taking his time, while Harriet remained fairly close to the entrance. He seemed to be deep in thought, but she broke his concentration.

“You were right, by the way,” Harriet said. Snape turned to face her, the motion abrupt, and she nearly startled.

“I usually am, but what was I right about now?”

“The second trial. It was—well, like you said. He wanted to pick out those who…couldn’t master their fears.” Harriet grimaced, thinking of Hermione, who had cried but remained one of the bravest witches she’d ever met. If not for Set’s intervention, Harriet wouldn’t have made it from the room. She wasn’t brave. Not like Hermione. Not like Elara.

Snape gave a short, brisk nod, his lip curling. “He revels in seeing his followers writhe. Slytherin, Gaunt, the Dark Lord—to a one. They are sadists who delight in finding out just how far a man or woman can bend before they break.” He shrugged out of his outer robes, the heavy material sliding down his shoulders and arms. A silent spell from his wand sent them flying to the wall, where they hung as if snagged on an invisible hook. “Your third trial will be a duel. A series of eliminations rather than an all-out brawl. He’ll make a spectacle of it.”

Harriet glanced at him as she pulled off her own robes. She didn’t have a fancy spell to hang them up, so she let them flop onto the floor. She nudged them away with her foot, clearing her throat. “Did he tell you that?”

“No. It is simply…expected.” An emotion crossed his face, a slight tension around his dark eyes, by his mouth. “It is the Dark Lord’s privilege to demand his followers fight for his favor—or his entertainment, like the gladiators of old. He tests them. He tests us, constantly weighing our fates against our usefulness, our talent. Do not think this a simple, gaudy tattoo, girl.” He gestured at the interior of his left sleeve, indicating what lay below, hidden. “I know what Slytherin will require of you because the Dark Lord requires it of his prospective Death Eaters. I had to fight for this honor.” He spat the word like venom. “To have this branded into me as if I were chattel, I had to cut through his other initiates and survive the bloody melee. I will bear the scars of their curses and hexes for the rest of my life, all so the Dark Lord could look upon me—battle-worn, trembling, and bleeding, standing among his dying faithful—and clap.”

Harriet swallowed as Snape drew his wand, and she did the same. She’d never given a thought to how very large he was—and not in the way that Uncle Vernon was large. Rather, large like a statue that was thin and gaunt and yet still eight feet tall and forty stone. He towered over her, broad and scowling, and Harriet couldn’t imagine what it would be like to face down Severus Snape in real combat. She’d be mad to try.

“So yes, Miss Potter. I do know what he will expect from you and the others. I know better than most.”

Terror and unease crawled under her skin like living things as the analogous relationship between Harriet and Slytherin compared to Snape and the Dark Lord occurred to her. Was she attempting to become something like a Death Eater?

Sick burned in her throat, but she forced it down. No, no. She wasn’t—she would never be—.

“Do you realize the point of my instruction tonight, Potter? The point of being Slytherin’s apprentice?”

Harriet returned her thoughts to the present and nodded, but her hands fidgeted, the right tapping her wand against her thigh in a quick, nervous rhythm. “Yes? To fight him? To—learn how to beat the Dark Lord.”

Snape let out an aggravated breath, clearly straining for more patience. “The point in being his apprentice is not in the position itself. Slytherin won’t be teaching you how to defeat the Dark Lord. We—me, Professors Dumbledore and McGonagall—are teaching you how to survive, how to thwart him. The defeat is incidental; your survival is what matters, impudent girl.”

“I…don’t know if I fully understand.”

Snape gave his eyes a brief roll as if that had been obvious. “Slytherin will teach you to fight. You will emulate him—his style, his strengths, his weaknesses. The reason he does not duel before an audience is so his faults cannot be disseminated. However, in training an apprentice, it will be impossible for him not to pass those faults onto you.”

Harriet followed along with his words—Snape speaking perhaps a tad slower than normal, which she appreciated. “But how does that help me in the long run? Because we’d have the same—err—weaknesses, right?”

“Which is why we are here. Beyond teaching you how to succeed in your final trial, you will come to me and we will train. I will find your weaknesses and, in that way, find his weaknesses. I will teach them to you so that you may overcome and exploit them should the need arise for you to protect yourself.”

“Wouldn’t—?” Harriet’s voice faltered, but Snape gestured for her to continue. “Won’t Slytherin notice something is different if you train me? Couldn’t it—I don’t know, backfire? Make him aware of his own shortcomings?”

Snape nodded. “And therein lies the difficulty of your task. You must learn how to fight in different ways, to remain aware of yourself in a manner that will most likely go against your instincts. I will not lie to you or give you false cheer as the Headmaster would, Potter. This will not be easy. This is not a weekend lark, but rather a long, thankless task you will not enjoy. However, it remains the most probable way in which you can safeguard yourself from the Dark elements of our society.”

Harriet could only nod, already tired, not at all looking forward to what kind of misery Slytherin could unleash on her. Learning how to fight sounded like a perfect excuse for him to hex her into the ground over and over and over again, all while she had to maintain a pretense of not knowing how to counter him, how to best him.

Merlin, don’t kid yourself, she thought. If Dumbledore and Snape can’t beat him out, what chance do I have, apprentice or no? There’s no pretense.

Snape studied her, gaze flicking from her feet to her face, his wand twirling once between his fingers. He tilted his head, stretching, and the bones in his neck popped.

Harriet felt like an idiot, bracing herself for what she didn’t know. Her heart thumped hard against her sternum.

“Attack me, Miss Potter. Act as if I were your enemy.” The smallest of smiles touched his thin face, there and gone before Harriet could register the self-deprecating slant of his mouth. “Remember that I am a Death Eater who helped your parents into their graves.”

She fumed, but steadied herself. “The best lesson I could possibly teach you is not to become frustrated when presented with a seemingly impossible task,” the Headmaster’s voice resonated in her head. Harriet chanted to herself, don’t get frustrated, don’t get frustrated, because she knew Snape meant to provoke her.

Harriet slid her feet apart, knees slightly bent. She thrust her arm forward— “Expelliarmus!

Snape swatted the spell aside with a weak shield. He scoffed. “Is that the best—?”

Harriet sent a Leg Locker Curse sailing toward him, skipping it across the floor as she had once with Professor Slytherin, and Snape’s hand blurred into action, throwing a quick shield toward his feet, the spell bouncing with a thwap!

“Good!” Snape said, a searing light in his eyes. “Use your opponent’s distraction!”

She sent four more hexes at the wizard, trying to vary the angles to catch him off-guard, but Snape moved as if he could anticipate where the spells would come from before they’d even been spoken. He needed only to give his wand an efficient flick, his lips moving with softly spoken words, and each hex shattered against a different colored shield.

“How—?”

He sent a Disarming Jinx towards her, and Harriet jerked to the side, wide-eyed.

“Be aware an enemy might send one spell to force you into the path of another.”

Another Disarming Jinx jetted toward her—and then a Tripping Jinx she barely managed to shield against when she stepped aside. Merlin, he’s quick!

“As for your question, certain spells dictate certain motions in the wand and body, and those motions have a fixed probability of class, element, and color.” Snape eased from his fighting stance with surprising grace. He held his empty hand in front of his body, almost level with his groin, and when he spoke, it was in his most professorial tone. “If the wand’s motion begins from here, muladhara, it is red. From here—.” He raised his hand to his navel. “Swadhisthana, it is orange. Here—.” His solar plexus. “Manipura, yellow—.” He tapped the center of his chest next, then his throat, between his eyes, and the top of his head. “Anahata, vishuddha, ajna, sahasrara. Green, blue, indigo, violet. Or, if you’re a simpleton—.” He dragged his index finger from the top of his head down his middle. “Vibgyor.”

“That’s—about the V.E.R.D, right?”

“Birch’s Law: viscosity, elasticity, refraction, and density of spells. At least something of my teachings penetrated your thick skull. I do so loathe wasting my breath.”

Harriet scowled. “I listen!”

“Tell that to McGonagall.”

Her face fairly glowed red.

“Depending on the beginning motion of your wand, I can postulate which spell you will use—or at the very least the color, predicting the intensity of shield needed to block your assault.”

“That sounds impossible! How am I meant to know how to do that?!”

“Practice, girl. Dedication! It is why we are here. Now—come at me again!”

They only spent an hour trading spells, and Snape managed not to bite her head off, though he did bark a few rough, impatient commands when she messed up. Harriet took his attitude in stride, determined to let him rile her temper, and Snape responded in kind.

Whatever else he was, the man was a bloody demon with his wand.

When he called an end to the practice, checking the time on his pocket watch, Snape conjured a pair of cups with water inside. He handed one to her. Harriet felt knackered and out of breath, but the Potions Master didn’t look at all ruffled, not a single black hair out of place. He could have left his robes on and not broken a sweat.

Barmy. Utterly barmy, Harriet told herself as she gulped water and Snape looked on, bored. His gaze paused on a slight red mark rising on her hand. A spell had managed to break the edge of her shield and graze her. He looked away, and the muscles in his jaw twitched.

As she caught her breath, Harriet dared ask the wizard about something that had been bothering her for some time. “Professor?” she ventured. “What am I going to do about my Parseltongue?”

The cup paused on its second trip toward his mouth, and Snape frowned, a sharp line appearing between his brows. “What in the blazes are you on about?”

“If I have to be Slytherin’s ruddy apprentice, I’ll have to be around him more, yeah?” Harriet grimaced at the mere thought. It made her stomach upset. “He’s always saying things in Parseltongue. Little snide comments in class no one else can understand—and it sounds like English to me. I try not to react, but sometimes it’s hard not to wince or—I don’t know—move when he’s nasty. He’s never noticed before, but what if he does when it’s just the two of us?”

Snape’s frown increased, and he glared at the far wall, considering her words. “In an ideal situation, he would never discover your ability.”

Harriet sucked in air to argue, and Snape continued, louder.

“However, you are not incorrect in assuming he is more vigilant in personal settings. Before, it would have spelled your doom for him to know—but now…now you can turn it to your benefit.”

“How?”

“He values resourcefulness, to an extent. Especially if that resourcefulness can be used in his favor. Before, you would have been a rogue element—a Parselmouth outside of his purview, with a skill he covets as his own. Solely his own. Now, as his apprentice? It depends on how closely he views you as an extension of his will. Revealing the skill will either be to your benefit or detriment.”

“That sounds like a lot of words to say, ‘I don’t know what would happen, Potter.’”

“Don’t be impertinent,” Snape snarled. Harriet chose not to react, picking her wrinkled robes off the floor. She tugged them on and heard Snape take a breath, then another, before resuming in a somewhat calmer voice. “Return to your dormitory, Miss Potter. I’ve seen enough of you this evening.”

“All right.” She hesitated before leaving, fidgeting. She lifted her gaze to stare into his face. “When should I expect another lesson?”

“Soon. I will send word.” Snape exhaled, and seemingly against his wishes, he lifted his hand to the nape of his neck, and his thin fingers pressed down, his thumb kneading the skin as if to relieve tension. He shut his eyes. “Go, Potter.”

“Good night, Professor.”

He didn’t respond.


 

A/N: Snape is referring to the seven classic chakras.

Chapter 202: the heart of every man

Chapter Text

ccii. the heart of every man

 

Elara stared at the Transfiguration text open in front of her with dry, sleepless eyes.

The month of February was finally drawing to a close, and with it came winter’s last gasp and the looming spectacle of the Tri-Wizard Tournament’s second task. For the vast majority of students in the castle, that meant little; they would get an afternoon off of classes to watch a silly game, would lose a spot of money by betting, and then return to their lives.

It meant something different for the champions. Longbottom went from lesson to lesson like a haggard, half-chewed dog toy, and Elara supposed he hadn’t deduced the golden egg’s purpose yet, or didn’t know how to complete it. Diggory didn’t share his anxieties—as well he shouldn’t, considering Harriet had done the legwork for him. Krum wore his usual surly expression, and Fleur—.

Well, Elara tried not to look at her.

Ever since their trip to the old, rain-soaked church, Elara had gotten little sleep. She tossed and turned at night and spent untold hours staring at the canopy of her bed, listening to the lake move, her dormmates breathe. Rippling moonlight made strange patterns on the cloth. She knew Hermione and Harriet had difficulties as well—nightmares being an old friend to Harriet Potter—but, to her everlasting shame, Elara’s reasons were different.

As soon as she’d tasted the odor of fermented sweet-brier and damask rose, Elara had known what Slytherin had put in the rectory. The Doloformido Draft had been cataloged in the Black annals after all, a brief addition to a rather dull grimoire from the time of her great-uncle Lycoris Black. It had been originally used to punish particularly naughty children. The smell of it haunted Elara for all the wrong reasons.

She would lie awake, thinking about that sickly potion, sweat on her brow, wanting another taste more than her next breath.

Of course, the smell had still induced terror in her—the usual stars of her nightmares— Father Phillips and his chanting, the rattle of chains, and half-formed animals—making their appearances, but it had been the magic that stunned Elara in place. It curled through her lungs and down her throat like secret ambrosia, so much so that the fear had ceased to make any kind of sense to her. It had only been the magic—Dark as midnight, soft as a veil upon her skin—that Elara could feel.

She’s known within seconds not to inhale the potion—and yet, she couldn’t help herself. Accipto must have had the same problem, if he had access to books similar to Elara’s. The terror had been worth the infinitesimal touch of euphoria that came with each breath—and the most horrifying aspect of the experience had been her willingness to suffer the handcuffs on her wrists, the brand against her chest, for the magic to overcome her. The Dark enthralled her.

Hermione and Harriet hadn’t experienced what she had. Hermione could see the theoretical impact of it, had recognized the warm flush of Dark magic like a buss upon her cheek—but Harriet hadn’t. The magic didn’t touch her; the girl was so stubbornly Harriet, the inveigling aspect of Dark magic found no purchase in her, nothing to corrupt, and so it only burned—like a mean, petulant child.

Harriet was too good—which was not to say she didn’t have petty desires or bad thoughts, moments of weakness, or general faults. She was good in the sense that she did not wish ill upon others, that she could forgive—that through the evils she suffered, she did not lose pieces of herself.

Elara was not good. Not good at all.

She drew in a shuddering breath and muttered a soft, voiceless curse at her Transfiguration book. She dragged a handkerchief from her pocket and wiped the perspiration from her furrowed brow, passing off the behavior and her unhealthy pallor as remnants of her recent flu. The…longing had improved, but it still struck at off moments, sharp as fangs slipping through her tender flesh.

The dormitory was loud. Though still early in the evening, most of the fourth year witches had wandered to their beds and the sweltering warmth of the hearth. Pansy had brought out her Wizarding Wireless and had the dial turned to a station playing the latest Weird Sisters hit. She and Daphne spoke animatedly while Millicent and Tracey sprawled on the latter’s bed, giggling over a Witch Weekly article.

Hermione had dragged her chair over to Elara’s carrel and was sitting with Crookshanks sprawled in her lap. When Elara wasn’t blankly staring at her book, she watched Hermione. The repetition of her hand parting through ginger fur was almost hypnotic.

The clock chimed the hour, and Elara stirred to glance at it. “Is Harriet going to meet us here before dinner?”

“I’m not sure,” Hermione replied. “A prefect dropped off a summons to the Headmaster’s office. I didn’t think much of it at the moment, but…. You don’t suppose she’s in trouble, do you?”

“When is she not in trouble?” Elara meant to say this with humor, but it came out with a sigh, and she propped an elbow on her desk and leaned her head upon her raised arm. Her skin felt tacky under her fingers. The room was too loud, and the walls—despite having been exactly as they were for centuries—seemed to move closer.

“You said you were feeling better, but are you really? You’re quite peaky.” Hermione laid the back of her hand against Elara’s brow before she shooed her away. “I can tell this lot to move out to the common room if you’d like to lie down before dinner?”

“No, we’d never hear the end of Pansy’s whinging. I’m fine, Hermione. I’m going to walk and see if I come across Harriet on her way down. I need to clear my head.”

“All right. You should pop by the infirmary and see if Madam Pomfrey has any Pepper-Up Potion.”

Elara doubted very much that Madam Pomfrey had the kind of magic she needed—wanted—but the sentiment warmed her, and she embraced Hermione with one arm before standing up. “We’ll see you in the Great Hall—unless you’re with dear Mr. Boot and his, how did you describe them? Oh, yes: his ‘very soft lips.’”

Hermione’s cheeks darkened, and Elara grinned before heading off.

Most of Slytherin House crowded into the common room—though, crowded was a subjective word, considering how large the space sprawled. But no one wished to sit in the outer edges, away from the main cluster of hearths and torches, as the walls tended to retain the abhorrent February chill. Even now, Elara could feel the coolness emanate through her shoes from the stone floor below.

She cast a curious glance over the others as she turned toward the wall guarding the entrance. Elara neglected to check the shadows, and so startled and jerked when movement in the periphery of her vision caught her attention. A small backstep stopped the reaching hand from touching her arm.

“Hello, cousin,” said Accipto Lestrange as his fingers closed upon air, and he let the limb drop again to his side. “Having a good evening?”

Elara didn’t bother with the familiar pretense. “Did you need something, Accipto?” she asked, her tone as cold as the floor. “Or are you merely making a pest of yourself?”

Lestrange dropped his friendly smile, though why he’d bothered with it in the first place, Elara didn’t know. His dark eyes flickered over her person, and she noted he’d inherited those from the Black side of his family. The silver she shared with Sirius was far more uncommon, a vestigial hue inherited in Orion’s branch where McMillans and Malfoys peppered the family tree. The dark, curly hair Accipto tamed with Sleekeasy’s looked similar to Andromeda’s, and so Elara assumed that, too, had come from the Blacks, though the warm, olive cast of his skin was definitely in the Lestrange blood.

“I’ve been meaning to have a word with you,” he said, leaning back to prop his shoulder upon the edge of the alcove he’d emerged from. “You and Potter and Granger—though, the Mudblood doesn’t much matter now.”

“Yes?” Elara snapped, her patience thinning.

“It’s impressive how far you and Potter have come in Slytherin’s esteem, you know? You are a Black, but given your proclivities….” He smiled, and Elara grit her teeth. His hand slipped to the inner pocket of his robes, and she froze, expecting his wand—but Accipto revealed a short, pointed knife. He held it and cleaned his nails with the tip.

That’s disgusting.

“Potter, though, now there’s a surprise. I keep hearing rumors about her, little bits here and there. Apparently, the little half-blood isn’t as stupid as she looks, and given she looks as stupid as a pile of rocks, I’d say that’s quite a shock.”

Elara didn’t clench her hands into fists. She didn’t say, “That little half-blood could curse your legs off before you could blink.” Instead, she stared—impassive—at her second cousin, and paid no attention to the little blade he continued to play with, no matter how it glinted into the firelight.

a box of eight knives meant to be nine, the dimpled impression in dusty velvet, the Black crest inlaid on the tiny pommel—

“Is that all? I’ve places to be.”

“Yes, I imagine you’re busy. I’m quite busy myself.” And here he pointed the knife at Elara, casually, but with enough intention to still her once again. “And that’s why we’re having this friendly chat, dear cousin. Because I’m busy, and I would so appreciate it if you and Potter kept that in mind during Slytherin’s final trial. I detest wasting my time.”

Elara narrowed her eyes. “Worried, Accipto? Why, when I’m just a deviant and Harriet’s the spawn of a Mudblood? You needn’t have anything to worry about, right? Or are you finding out that your pure blood and sullied name mean nothing?”

Lestrange leaned forward and, in a low, furious hiss, said, “If you or the mongrel fuck this up for me, they’ll never find your bodies.”

“Hiding bodies is an old family pastime; I’m not impressed.” Elara let her lip curl, hiding how her hands shook in the folds of her skirt. “If you point a knife at me again, I’ll geld you with it like the bitch you are.”

Then, she was gone, hurrying from the common room before Lestrange could follow—or launch a curse at her back. Her words caught up with her when she reached the bright, cheerful light of the entrance hall, and Elara knew she shouldn’t have said that, shouldn’t have baited him, but the fury crackling in her chest demanded she do something before she broke her own teeth from clenching her jaw. She could little stand the ache there or in her neck, shoulders, and head. Even the sparse glint of daylight made her eyes sting and throb.

“I’ll regret it later,” she whispered to herself. “Later.”

She came across Harriet on the third floor, making the long, rather grueling trek down from the Headmaster’s tower. “It was the most absurd thing,” the shorter witch told her, laughter in her voice. Elara realized there’d been a lot less laughter in their lives of late, and the near cackle Harriet let out loosened the tension she felt in her middle. “D’you remember what I said about Diggory’s egg? What it said?”

“Yes, of course.”

Harriet glanced around them to make sure they were alone. A few younger Hufflepuffs puttered farther down the corridor, but they wouldn’t be able to hear them. “That’s what it was about. The ‘treasure’ they’re putting in the lake is people, and so the event coordinators—well, mostly Bagman—thought it a good idea to ask me to be Krum’s—treasure. More like victim.” She snorted.

“And what did you tell them?”

“I asked if they were a few beans short of every flavor. Dumbledore laughed, but he pretended it wasn’t funny. I think Bagman nearly passed dead away when I told him I’d rather have flobberworms in my porridge than be in the ruddy lake during February. He looked like I’d insulted his mum.”

“The imagery alone is enough to make me ill.”

Harriet mimicked the distinct sound a flobberworm made when crushed, and Elara’s stomach lurched.

“Stop it, brat. We’re supposed to have dinner soon.”

“Oh, brilliant. Can we make a quick stop by the library? I need to return this book before Pince murders me in my bed.”

She retrieved said book from the satchel hanging off her shoulder, and Elara nodded. The idle chatter they exchanged on the way proved far more calming than the noise and calamity of the dormitory. She could easily picture the scene in Dumbledore’s office as Harriet described it, and Elara could only breathe with relief that Harriet hadn’t accepted their offer. The girl didn’t need to spend any amount of time napping underwater—and Krum didn’t need the confusion.

Though, Elara acknowledged. Maybe Harriet truly is something he’ll “sorely miss,” even if she isn’t remotely interested in him. Poor sod.

They reached the library but had to wait by the main desk, Pince loitering somewhere in the stacks, reshelving volumes or haranguing children, one of the two. Elara leaned her hip against the desk and crossed her arms, gaze resting on the far window. Very little light touched the stained glass, leaving it sullen, dim. She let her mind return to the confrontation with Lestrange, and her thoughts churned with potential consequences. She wouldn’t put it past him to be as mad as his mother.

“Oi.”

Elara stirred and turned her head, seeing Harriet had wandered while they waited. The other witch peered down one of the aisles and again, quietly, called Elara over with a gesture. Elara straightened and went, arching a brow as she peered around the shelf.

Neville Longbottom sat alone at the end of the row at the cluttered table, his neck bent over a thick tome, his shoulders high. He had a feverish mien about him as he turned through the pages, searching for something.

“I bet you anything he’s still trying to figure out how to breathe underwater,” Harriet muttered.

“Truly? The task is tomorrow morning.”

Harriet let out a small groan, as if she’d stepped in something unpleasant. “He’s so bloody stupid. Why hasn’t he thought of gillyweed? He’s great at Herbology and takes Care of Magical Creatures with us.” She pinched the bridge of her nose below her spectacles. “Why didn’t Diggory give him the answer?”

“Maybe Diggory tried. We both know Longbottom isn’t much for subtlety. Or he rejected Diggory out of pride.” Elara studied Harriet, then flicked her gaze to the back of Longbottom’s red neck. “God help me for giving him an excuse, but perhaps the pressure has scattered his wits. Even an obvious answer can be difficult to see when everything else seems so immediate.”

Harriet groaned again and grimaced.

“What is it?”

“If he drowns, we’ll never hear the end of it. They’ll turn it into a bloody holiday—the national Wanker Who Lived Day.” Harriet jerked open her satchel and fished about for parchment, muttering all the while. “It’ll be a tragedy, and suddenly all anyone will be able to say is ‘oh, poor Neville,’ and ‘Neville this, and Neville that. Such a hero!’ Never mind that he’s a prat who nearly got me killed and couldn’t find his arse with a map and both hands.”

She grabbed a sheet of rumpled parchment and a pencil, and Elara watched, amused, as Harriet scrawled “GILLYWEED” in large letters like a ransom note. She folded it into the ugliest paper aeroplane Elara had ever seen, but that hardly mattered, as Harriet used her wand to levitate the folded note over Longbottom’s head. They left just as it started to fall.

“You forgot about your book.”

“Sod it. I’ll slip it into the stack tomorrow and hope Pince doesn’t notice.”

They hurried away before Longbottom could investigate. Harriet turned her nose up at the Boy Who Lived and the mania surrounding him, claiming she couldn’t stand it if she had to hear people mourning his death—but Elara knew the truth. Despite the wrongs he’d committed against her, Harriet didn’t enjoy watching others suffer, not even Neville. She didn’t wish others ill, and didn’t think of hurting them. She was good.

Elara’s thoughts drifted again to Lestrange, the glint of fire upon his stolen knife. Her fists clenched behind her back as she followed her god-sister through the shadowed corridor.

Elara wasn’t good. Not good at all.


 

A/N: Title is from the Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn quote, “The battleline between good and evil runs through the heart of every man.”

Chapter 203: where our voices sound

Chapter Text

cciii. where our voices sound

 

Harriet watched with bated breath as bubbles broke the water’s tension. The crowd surrounding her, all bundled in their thickest cloaks and scarves, shivering against the wind coming off the lake’s surface, mirrored her anticipation and leaned forward, waiting. The gray stands groaned in the breeze. The bubbles increased, a black shape writhing beneath the tide, a head cresting the lake’s white foam—.

Neville Longbottom threw his hair back from his forehead as he helped Dean Thomas toward the temporary docks.

“Circe’s arse!” Harriet snarled, her voice drowned out by the wave of adoration spilling from the riotous Gryffindors. They made the floating seating arrangement shudder with their pounding feet. “Damn it, Diggory!”

The crowd had been waiting in the stands erected along the deepest part of the lake’s shore for nearly an hour. Viktor Krum had returned first, rescuing his mate from Durmstrang; Harriet thought his name might be Ivan, but she didn’t know, having never been introduced. He’d used a partial shark Transfiguration and had startled screams from many younger students when he came surging out of the water.

Fleur had returned next, though not of her own volition. She’d strayed too far toward the mire and had run afoul a nasty mix of grindylows and Hinkypunks. Despite the vicious gashes on her arms and legs, she seemed eager to get back into the water, and only the restraining hand of her Headmistress kept her in place while Madam Pomfrey worked.

Bloody Longbottom was the next to return successfully, much to Harriet’s frustration. Ten minutes later, Diggory came along, sweeping Cho Chang onto the deck into the waiting embrace of warm, Charmed towels and blankets. He’d been third, and had Fleur not failed, he would have been last!

“Absolute rubbish,” Harriet snapped. “Does he not know how to swim or something?” Next to her, Elara shook her head and rolled her eyes.

The coils looped around her torso shifted, a low hiss emanating from the triangular head resting on her chest. “Misstresss isss angry,” a sleepy Livius hissed. Her bulky cloak and loose robes hid the serpent from view, but Harriet could feel his weight pulling on her posture. He’d grown almost too big to be carried around, but she’d made an exception for today.

Mistress is annoyed,” Harriet corrected, speaking into the scarf pulled over her mouth. “Mistress doesn’t appreciate helping people just to have them bollocks it up.”

The water rippled again. Two Mer came to the surface—and between them, they helped a tiny blonde girl kick and paddle her way to the shore. Delacour let out a strangled shriek and leapt back into the shallows, wadding over as quickly as she could to grab the girl up into her bloodied arms.

“That’s Gabrielle,” Elara muttered for Harriet’s ear. “Her little sister.”

“I’m surprised they let a child be put under the lake,” Hermione said from her other side, a small sniff of indignation leaving her nose. “No matter the precautions taken. No wonder Delacour’s in such a panic.”

The judges eventually managed to extract Fleur from her sister and lead her to the floating stand before the podium. She stood shivering with the other three Champions, waiting for the results.

Naturally, Krum came in first place, leading the Tournament by a sizable margin. Next came Longbottom, and then Diggory—tying the pair for second in the rankings, a bare sliver above Fleur. Delacour, for her part, looked as if she didn’t much care. She was in a rush to go back to Gabrielle.

“You can’t count on Hufflepuffs for anything,” Harriet groused as spectators cheered. Krum appeared as sullen and unaffected as he ever did, leaning away from the one-armed embrace of his victorious Headmaster. She couldn’t hear what was being said, but Harriet saw Professor Dumbledore speaking with Longbottom and Diggory, his hand first on the former’s shoulder, then the latter’s, giving it an encouraging squeeze. She wished he’d push them back into the frigid water.

As Harriet’s gaze passed over the Champions, she noted something odd. One of the judges—Crouch—had jumped from the platform to the shore, slipping on the slick, frost-coated rocks. He all but bolted up the uneven path despite his unsteady legs, running from the abandoned platform and the people gathered on it. Moody watched him go, blue eye whizzing.

What is that about?

A foot nudged hers, and Harriet looked around to see the other Slytherins rising to their feet. The stands swayed ever so slightly on the swelling tide. “Come on, Harriet,” Hermione said, brushing off the tiny bits of sleet that had gathered on her shoulders. “Let’s get back inside and out of this deplorable weather….”

Harriet nodded but turned to look toward the path again. Mr. Crouch had disappeared.

 

xXx

 

“Tell me of your competition.”

Harriet paused in practicing her Shield Charms to look at Snape over her shoulder, the Potions Master having thus far been silent as she ran through the incantations. He had his arms crossed as he waited, unbothered by the sweat painting Harriet’s red face or the frustrated glower she sent in his direction. Dawn had barely peeked its head over the horizon before a house-elf came with a summons for another lesson. Harriet couldn’t forgive the bloke for ruining her Sunday lie-in.

She breathed heavily for a moment, the magic taxing, then asked;

“How do you mean?”

“Your competition. Tell me of those who passed Slytherin’s second trial.”

Harriet lowered her wand and turned to face the wizard, though she was confused. Didn’t he already know who’d passed? Slytherin must have told him.

“Well, there’s me—.”

“Unless you plan on sabotaging yourself, do try to skip the obvious.”

“Elara—.”

Snape flipped his hand, sighing.

“Nott. From my year.”

Here Snape paused, then nodded, slowly. Considering. “The boy has no real talent with his wand. Next.”

“What? Nott gets great marks. Better than me—.”

“And therein lies his strength. Academia—theory, research. Not unlike Miss Granger.” Snape scoffed at Harriet’s scouring look, flicking back a bit of his hair from his brow. He showed none of her exhaustion despite the hour—though Harriet thought he might not have been to bed yet. “Not everything is meant as an insult, Miss Potter. If you could look past your wounded feelings, you would acknowledge the truth. Miss Granger’s best ability does not lie in creativity or quick action.”

Harriet disagreed with him, but years of dealing with Snape had taught her it was sometimes best to bite her tongue. Hermione was brilliant with or without her wand, and Snape could get stuffed.

“The same could be said of Mr. Nott. He has a knack for critical thought, but his talent is not in the field. Now, who else?”

“Carrow, the fifth year. Oh—Flora Carrow, not Hestia. Hestia failed.”

“Either twin would not matter; again, their ability lies in areas beyond fighting or dueling. Next.”

“Vuharith, the sixth year prefect.”

This time, Snape said nothing, instead giving his chin a sharp jerk for Harriet to continue.

“Then there’s Pucey and Lestrange—both sixth years, and then only Bragge from seventh. Derrick and Craft didn’t make it.”

Harriet finished listing off names, and Snape pulled out his wand, Harriet eying the length of black wood with a healthy margin of caution. This was only their second lesson, and though he’d volleyed a handful of hexes at her to test her wards, Harriet knew she hadn’t felt a fraction of what Snape could unleash. She really didn’t want to.

He conjured four mannequins out of corks found in his pocket, making each roughly human in shape, and a few quick slashes carved “PUCEY,VUHARITH,” “LESTRANGE,” and “BRAGGE” across their chests.

“These are your main obstacles in defeating Slytherin’s final trial. If my assumptions are correct—and they usually are—he will have three rounds, seven bouts total, rather than a melee. If you are incredibly lucky, two of your three fights will be against those already mentioned—Nott, Black, or Carrow. You will have no difficulty defeating them.”

The assurance in his statement surprised Harriet. If Snape harbored doubts about her chances, he wouldn’t hesitate to voice them. The unspoken confidence in her ability rattled Harriet to the point where she had to clear her throat twice to speak.

“And if I’m unlucky?”

He flicked his wand to send the ugly mannequins several feet away, spacing them apart. “You will face three of them.” He gestured at the figures, then crossed his arms again. “It’s my responsibility to prepare you for the worst possible outcome.”

Harriet grimaced.

“You still have the benefit of knowing your opponents beforehand, however. In the real world, you are seldom allowed the luxury. Making assumptions about their basic ability is a skill that will take you time to hone.”

He paced behind the first mannequin, Pucey, and held his hand over its misshapen head. “What can you say about him?”

Harriet fiddled with her wand, unsure what he wanted her to say. “About Pucey?”

“Yes.”

“He’s a…sixth year?”

Snape muttered something that sounded like “Salazar save me,” then raised his voice. “I’m asking you to tell me what you’ve observed about the boy—his character, his behavior, and how that might translate into his dueling ability.”

“Oh,” Harriet said, lamely. When he raised an expectant brow, she flushed. “I’m…not sure.”

“Try.”

Her mouth twisted, and for a moment, she bit her lower lip, pulling at the skin. “Well…he’s a sixth year, yeah?” When Snape scoffed, she rushed to continue. “Which means he should know silent spells.”

Snape’s face changed from derisive to flat, staring.

“Hermione told me that’s part of the sixth year curriculum, and…uh. Pucey’s a bit thick, but not like Goyle or Crabbe, so he’d probably have some skill with it, and he’s got wicked reflexes because he was a Chaser. He’s not a Chaser now, but I think that has more to do with Slytherin and his shite about not wanting his favorites to be on the team.” Harriet scratched at her cheek. “Pucey’s patient. He listens more than he talks, but I think he can be a bit…I dunno, gullible? He always went along with what Flint or Derrick said, even if I could tell he disagreed.”

Snape watched as she spoke, his black eyes fixed on her. It unnerved Harriet, but she continued her thought to the end and didn’t back down. “And how would you apply that in a duel with Mr. Pucey?”

Harriet spent a minute considering her answer. She stood before the mannequin and stared, the golden light from beyond the windows settling in the dips and curves of the lumpy face. She pictured Pucey in its place and flexed her fingers. “He’d wait for me to go first, probably. He doesn’t have a lot of initiative. He’d want to see what I do, then react—a bit like a Bludger coming at him. He’s got an idea of different patterns to fly and formations, but he wants to wait for the Bludger to come flying first. It’d be best to beat him on the first go before he gets a chance to make a better plan. Either that or force him to act first.”

Snape said nothing. He inclined his chin and paced to the next figure, standing behind it again with his hand over the dented head. “Vuharith.”

“She’s mean,” Harriet replied, pretending the response didn’t make her sound like a child. “She was nicer before, back when I first started Hogwarts. But then she started hanging around Lestrange and—Elara says they’re together, but not actually together-together, whatever that’s supposed to mean. She doesn’t usually bother the younger students, but when she does, it’s usually to be petty. She’s prefect, but she fights all the time with Pendarves because she skives off the duties to take potions with Lestrange and Dread in the dungeons.” Harriet paused, frowned, but assumed Snape already knew about Vuharith’s extracurricular activities. “If I had to duel her...she’d attack first and try to embarrass or intimidate me because I’m younger. I don’t know how well she’d handle someone standing up to her rubbish.”

Snape walked to the next mannequin, his boots making small taps on the floor. “Bragge.”

Harriet had to take a moment longer here. “I don’t know her very well. She’s snotty, but clever. Rumor has it she only lost out on prefect to Muldoon in their fifth year because she got in trouble with an older student after that student ruined Bragge’s arranged marriage with some bloke.” Her brow wrinkled, the specifics of the story muddled by the years and Harriet’s initial inattention. Arranged marriages happened among pure-blood families still, and she thought it stupid. “She’s not quick. She could probably hex me into oblivion if I don’t keep her off wrong-footed and distracted.”

Snape proceeded to the final mannequin. “Lestrange.”

Shifting, Harriet fought how her shoulders rose toward her ears, discomfort shaking in her bones. “He’d try to hurt me. Really hurt me. He’d figure out the worst spell he could use without sabotaging himself, and that’s what he’d default to. He’s not terribly brilliant or inventive.” Her mind stirred, the image of Dudley Dursley rising to the fore, his pudgy face spread wide in a malicious grin. “Then again, bullies don’t have to be brilliant or inventive. They just hit hard.”

“Their lack of originality is often their downfall.” Snape came from around the wooden figure to stand by Harriet, the pair facing the line of mannequins. “A witch or wizard without ingenuity will meet a mundane, sticky end.”

Harriet’s eyes followed Snape as he moved, flickering up to the profile of his pale face when he turned, tracking the motion of his hands half-covered in his long, buttoned sleeves. He kept talking, the low drone of his baritone echoing—but Harriet’s mind wandered, imagining him as one of the mannequins, “SNAPE” scrawled across his broad chest.

She tried to picture what’d it be like to duel him. Difficult, without question. And over quickly. He radiated competence, and though he could have a nasty temper, looking at Snape reminded Harriet of staring into cold, placid water. He was steady and predictable in that stability, but a single riptide could turn a simple swim into a deadly dive under leagues of numbing black water. He could be shallow, transparent, and then the tide would recede again to the depths and Snape became somebody else. There’s no telling what could wash onto that shore.

She wondered what type of monster Professor Slytherin could be to challenge a wizard like Snape, or the Headmaster. The thought made cold sweat bead on the back of Harriet’s neck.

“Are you listening to me, Potter, or am I wasting my breath?”

“Sorry, Professor.”

Snape grunted, eyes narrowed. “As I was saying, learning your opponents and successfully guessing their actions can be more imperative than having an expansive spell repertoire.” He tipped his head. “And the converse has similar applications.”

“How do you mean?” Harriet asked.

“If you become predictable, you will face the same issues. As you try to read your opponents, they will try to read you. They will make assumptions about your skills just as you have made assumptions about theirs. Keep that in mind. Let them make all the wrong predictions and use them to subvert their defenses.”

She listened to him, nodding just once. “And what will they assume about me, Professor?”

“That you’re weak.” He spoke plainly, tone sharp, uncompromising. “That you’re fourteen and a witch. Soft. A half-blood with no familial claim to Slytherin House. They will see you as an anomaly who has made it this far by pure chance and think you an easy target. You will prove them wrong.”

He made it sound simple, as Snape often did when things were not in the least bit simple. Harriet knew she’d had a few lucky goes of it in the past, that she wasn’t a complete bumbling numpty with her wand—but she’d never been in a proper duel before. The professors expected her to win, and Harriet—well, Harriet thought she might be sick.

Snape banished three of the mannequins to the side of the hall and strode over to the remaining figure—Pucey. He used his wand to mutter spell after spell, the mannequin sprouting legs and arms, rotating joints and even a stubby wand in its right hand. When he finished, Snape turned to Harriet a final time.

“Don’t act as if you’re defeated just yet, girl. I told you this would take practice and dedication. You told me you were prepared; was that a lie?”

Harriet stiffened her spine and straightened up, tucking her loose hair behind her ears. “No, sir. I—I’m ready.”

“Are you?”

“I can do this.”

Snape smirked. Harriet didn’t see what was so funny. “Good.”

Suddenly, he shoved the mannequin—and its arms jerked up, wand aloft, and started toward her. Wide-eyed, Harriet gasped, then jumped into action.


A/N: I played around with the idea of whether or not Neville would go for Gabrielle. As much as I wrote him to mirror aspects of canon Harry, Neville isn ’t Harry. Though Neville is, at his core, a good person, his upbringing has made him exceedingly selfish and competitive. I feel as if he has been trained to be a hero, but he is not a hero.

Cedric: *realizes he placed after Longbottom*

Cedric: *hears a particular Slytherin witch swearing in the distance*

Cedric: *sinks back into lake*

Chapter 204: extortionist

Chapter Text

cciv. extortionist

 

Hermione Granger stood at the mouth of the Charms corridor, hidden in the shadow of Darius the Dread, puzzled.

It was precisely eleven-oh-two on a Monday during Hermione’s only open period, three days since the end of the Triwizard Tournament's second task. An innocuous hour, most students and their instructors remained tucked away in their classroom or otherwise occupied with study hall. Hermione herself should be huddled in a comfortable corner with Harriet and Terry, working on their essay for the 1912 Goblin Riots, sharing a tin of sugar-free sweets from Honeydukes.

Instead, Hermione half crouched in the shadow of a weathered statue with the Argonauts’ Atlas balanced on her knees.

The day had started off normally enough—as normal as any day at Hogwarts could be. She, Harriet, and Elara sat in their usual place at their House table and had breakfast. Harriet ripped apart her toast in a sulk over Snape’s difficult lessons, and Elara slouched in a half-doze.

Hermione had only just tucked into her porridge when the Prophet arrived. Given the conversation that rose as the owls dispensed the paper, she guessed Skeeter had written another salacious article. A glance at the cover showed it to be about someone outside the castle for once, but as Hermione took her first bite of porridge, she frowned.

Skeeter had done another article over the weekend about the Tournament’s second task. That in and of itself wasn’t a surprise, of course, but Hermione thought the level of detail she slipped in couldn’t possibly be replicated by a second-hand account. No press had been allowed to the event. Somehow, Skeeter had been there.

So, as breakfast finished and they gathered their bags—prodding Elara awake—they went to History of Magic, and Hermione pulled out her Atlas below the desk. Professor Lupin lectured, and Hermione set the map to search for Rita Skeeter. She had expected the results to return as they had the last time she’d checked, with Skeeter somewhere in London or her own home, wherever that may be—but, instead, Hermione’s eyes had widened as she recognized the tiny dot moving through the corridors of Hogwarts.

Holy cricket!

Her notes for the period proved pitiful, as Hermione couldn’t tear her eyes from the Atlas to pay much attention to the lecture. She almost concussed Harriet in her rush to pass off her heavy satchel at the end of the class, and when the other witch asked where in Merlin she was off to, Hermione didn’t answer. She clung to the Atlas and hurried away.

Now, over an hour later, she was torn between questioning the Atlas’ efficacy or wondering if Rita Skeeter could somehow turn herself invisible.

She’d trailed the dot with Skeeter’s name through several passages and halls, becoming more and more puzzled as to how no one around her seemed to hesitate or approach the witch. When Hermione finally came within sight of her—or what should have been within sight—she expected to look up and see a stranger, Skeeter utilizing Polyjuice or another disguise—only to find the corridor mostly empty.

Hermione scrunched herself smaller against the wall, grousing. Skeeter—or not-Skeeter, or Skeeter-the-somehow-invisible-libelist—supposedly lingered at the door to the Charms classroom, but when Hermione looked down the corridor, no one stood there. With everyone in class, the emptiness became all the more glaring—and frustrating.

Well, she told herself, lips pressed in a thin line. I could go over there and begin poking around, but if Skeeter IS there, a blunt investigation will only tip her off to be more careful. However, I’m not getting anywhere sitting in the dust….

A patrolling Auror approached from the far passage, making slow, unbothered progress toward the Great Hall. Hermione stared at the Atlas with such ferocity she was surprised it didn’t melt in her hand. The dot John Dawlish toddled by Rita Skeeter—within inches, overlapping—and then continued without a single hitch in his step. Hermione only had seconds to step away and slip into one of Filch’s broom cupboards before Dawlish spotted her and gave away her position.

What in Merlin’s name is going on? Hermione had a dozen half-formed theories bubbling in her head, but none of them included the possibility of Skeeter being permeable. The Auror had walked through her! And now, Skeeter’s dot seemed stuck to Dawlish’s, meandering toward the stair vault.

Hermione eased the door open and looked out, brow furrowed. She glowered at the back of Auror Dawlish’s graying head as if he were culpable in her annoyance—and an instant before she dropped her gaze, a sudden sparkle on his collar caught her attention. There, clinging to the thick maroon fabric of the wizard’s robes, was a beetle. A jeweled beetle specifically, the spotty radiance of daylight giving just enough glow to catch the shine off the bug’s patterned elytra.

NoHermione told herself, her fingers tightening against the door’s edge. That isn’t probable in the slightest….

Except Rita Skeeter being an Animagus made a frightening amount of sense, especially if she could transform into something as inconspicuous as an insect. Hogwarts couldn’t maintain barriers that would bar witches or wizards in animal form; barring them in their human bodies proved difficult enough, as stated by Hogwarts: A History. It required a blood sample, and most people weren’t eager to give those up. Being an unregistered Animagus no bigger than a child’s palm meant Skeeter could go wherever she pleased.

Perhaps I shouldn’t be so surprised, Hermione thought, grim. After all, Pettigrew spent years as a rat—.

Pettigrew.

Hermione’s mind fairly burst with ideas, and she recalled rapid-fire scenes within the Forbidden Forest, the cold, firm touch of glass under her fingertips. Her eyes bounced from side to side, unseeing, as she continued to crouch in the broom cupboard, a cobweb caught in her bushy hair. If a jar could work on Pettigrew….

A plan began to form.

Oh, but it was a wicked plan, the kind that could get her expelled, for Merlin’s sake—but Hermione couldn’t ignore the potential benefits. When her best friend was risking her life working toward apprenticeship with a dangerous wizard, there was no assistance Hermione would dare to overlook—not if the only thing truly at risk were her own scruples.

What she wouldn’t do—wouldn’t give—to shut that horrid woman’s mouth permanently, to never have her say one rotten word against the people she saw as family. What she wouldn’t give to have that disgusting rhetoric turned away from her friends—.

“Dobby,” she said aloud, and the house-elf appeared with a crack! She couldn’t see much of him in the single stray shaft of light entering the cupboard, but what she saw was covered in several hats, socks, and a fine misting of flour.

“Miss Herme-ninny!” The house-elf launched himself at Hermione, and she caught him in a one-armed hug, the other hand flying back to catch herself before she could topple. “How can Dobby be helping you?”

“Hello, Dobby. How are you?”

“Dobby is good! Thank you, Miss!”

Hermione brushed a bit of flour from her robes, and from Dobby. “I wanted to ask if you’d lend me a hand.”

He bounced on his toes, head nodding before Hermione could finish speaking. “Yes, Miss Herme-ninny! What is it Dobby must do?”

“Well, first we’ll need one of the glass jars from the kitchens. I’ll put a Charm on it, and then, we’ll be going on a beetle hunt….”

 

xXx

 

Consciousness returned to Rita one bleary, headache-inducing second at a time.

She couldn’t remember where she’d been or what she’d been doing. Based on the state of her head, she’d guess having one too many pints down at the Leaky, but that didn’t sound right. Rita clearly recalled checking in to the office, and seeing as it was a Monday morning and rather slow, she decided to make the trek to Hogwarts in search of new stories. She wasn’t averse to popping by the Three Broomsticks on the way home, always with an ear out, but it was Monday—wasn’t it? She never got squiffy on a Monday or on the hunt for a new article.

Rita shifted, her body feeling off, her eyelids closed. No, she hadn’t gone to the pub. She remembered being in the school, making a quick lap through the classes attended by the older Slytherins. There’d been whispers of an inner-House competition held by the Defense instructor to find an apprentice, and Rita knew her readers were salivating for the story. The participants had been infuriatingly tight-lipped.

Rita knew better than to tail the instructor himself. She’d found that out the hard way. Slytherin had been a mysterious, intriguing figure since his supposed return to Great Britain some fifteen or so years ago, and Rita had very nearly had her antennae hexed off when she’d dared follow the wizard a bit too closely. The same could be said of the Potions Master, that grim fellow apparently acquitted of following You-Know-Who in the eighties. Rita had no desire to be mistaken for an escaping potion ingredient.

That was all well and good, but Rita still didn’t have a story, and nothing to go off of aside from a few comments here and there and tidbits fed to parents back home. She remembered being outside the Charms classroom, but the door had been sealed too tight to fit through. She recalled spotting a passing Auror and then using him as cover to get back to the Great Hall. If she couldn’t get a story about the supposed apprenticeship, she could always pinch some gossip off the Boy Who Lived. Not terribly riveting stuff, but—.

Rita groaned, because she’d flitted over to the Auror, but she never made it to the Great Hall. A girl had called out to Dawlish—Rita didn’t see her, but the wizard had stopped to answer or chat, and then—.

Bulbous green eyes. Four hats and two mismatched socks. A snap, and—.

The ground shifted below Rita, rolling like an earthquake. She yelped as the cloth she’d mistaken for her own eyelids pulled back, and her beetle legs twitched in sync as the light coruscated in her eyes. Her antennae moved fitfully, tapping against something solid, something that felt suspiciously like—.

“Hello, Miss Skeeter.”

The voice spoke outside the glass walls surrounding Rita, and she had to turn her whole body to find the girl seated in a chair at the other end of the desk her jar prison rested on. It was a girl—a student, given her robes and the telling stripe of Slytherin green revealed by the turned-down lapels. A vague recollection buzzed against Rita’s brain, but she couldn’t quite place the chit. Bushy-haired, maybe fifteen or sixteen, her teeth slightly too big and too white in a friendly smile.

Where …?

“I wouldn’t advise changing forms at the moment. The jar is Charmed Unbreakable, you see. It’d be interesting to witness what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object—but, well, I don’t think you’d like the result.”

Rita’s wings buzzed beneath the hard shell of her casing, and she had to move the whole of her body in a quick, fumbled circle to get her bearings, not wanting to give the girl her back. They were in a classroom—abandoned, of course, the girl sitting primly in the chair with her legs crossed and her hands folded neatly on the desk. She continued to smile, looking for all the world like a cheery schoolgirl in an interview, but Rita still thought those teeth shone too bright. Too sharp. Too hungry.

“This is a rather unorthodox way of meeting, isn’t it? But I guess I can’t apologize for that. It was the most efficient way of having this conversation, and I fear we don’t have terribly long. Lunch will be over in another half hour, and I really must be in class.” The girl paused. Her brown eyes fairly gleamed with thought as she bent ever so slightly closer, peering at the jeweled beetle under glass. “I don’t think we’ve ever had the pleasure before. I’m Hermione Granger.”

Granger. It took Rita a moment to place the name, her head still frazzled from whatever had knocked her out—but oh, she did know that name. The Muggle-born who was a ward of the Malfoys until last summer, until she became a ward of the Blacks.

The other shoe dropped for Rita, and with a rising sense of dread, she thought she knew where this situation was headed.

“Did you know it’s illegal to be an unregistered Animagus? It has been since 1731, when it was put into law that all would-be Animagi had to be registered at the Department of Magical Law Enforcement by a Master certified with the Thorwich College of Transfiguration. Isn’t that interesting?” The Granger girl extended her hand to give the jar a gentle tap on the glass, startling Rita. “It’s often overlooked, as not many witches or wizards ever make an effort to become one, and even fewer have the ability. You’re quite talented, Miss Skeeter, but I would imagine it’s frightening, knowing that that if anyone discovered your secret, you could face a ten to twenty-five year sentence in Azkaban. Well, pardon me, ten to twenty-five years not including potential charges of unlawful espionage—which, wouldn’t you know, could see you Kissed? I mean, one word to Minister Gaunt about a potential leak in his office would probably elicit a fairly extreme reaction. Fascinating!”

Rita didn’t find it fascinating at all. Had she the ability to sweat, she imagined she’d be soaked within an inch of her life. How did the girl know all of that? Had she been watching Rita? How long had she known? Who had she told? What did she have planned?

Rita’s legs moved, restless, as her wings buzzed.

“The Ministry can be so uncompromising. Oh, I guess it’s a bit hard to have a conversation at the moment. Here, let me open the jar, and you can take a seat, Miss Skeeter.”

The girl whipped out her wand and gave the jar’s lid a sharp tap. It unscrewed, and Rita took her chance to fly up and out. Even as she changed forms, she couldn’t shake how wrong-footed she felt, whipping around to stare at the impudent chit who’d had the gall to trap her in a jar. Granger merely stared back, wand in hand, and her eyes flicked toward the opposing chair.

Rita cleared her throat. “If you wanted to chat, you could have sent a letter to my office,” she sniffed, tossing her head as she sat perched on the edge of her seat. She could feel her heartbeat in her fingertips, Gaunt’s name hovering like a Blasting Curse about to go off. She hadn’t spied on him, she hadn’t! But would the Minister believe that?

“I didn’t think you’d want me to write any of this down, would you? Might be a tad incriminating.”

Rita’s lips puckered as if she’d bit into a lemon. “What do you want?”

“I don’t want anything, Miss Skeeter. I have a terrible habit of gathering facts and sharing them.” The girl’s smile remained bright, the soft glow of the torchlight almost angelic on her face. Rita fidgeted with her hands, making short, aborted motions as if to reach for something and bring it in front of her, placing it between her and Granger. “I think we have a misunderstanding. You really perform a vital role, did you know? I read your articles every morning. Everybody does.”

Something in the girl’s voice eluded Rita, but her nerves eased. “Is that a veiled threat for me to stop writing, Miss Granger?”

“Oh, no. I’m being sincere. Whether or not I agree with what you write has no bearing on the fact I read your articles whenever they come out, and so does everyone else. I can appreciate your…creativity. Especially when directed toward the people in our government. Or even celebrity figures, like Longbottom. I’m glad someone questions them.”

Rita settled in her chair. “Well. My stories on the Boy Who Lived are usually popular.”

“Of course. I’m sure those articles do better than the ones about other students’ personal lives.”

Rita’s nerves twinged, the skin of her neck tingling. She narrowed her eyes. The audacity of this chit!

“Cut to the chase, girlie,” she snapped. “I know how this game works.”

“I wouldn’t treat this information like a game, Miss Skeeter,” Granger said, her tone firm, sincere. Her eyes remained fixed on Rita’s face and didn’t waver. “This isn’t a game. My foster sisters’ lives aren’t innings of cricket. You humiliating teenagers for the reading leisure of banal, fatuous cows leading vicarious lives is not amusing.” The girl cleared her throat, then primly swiped at her skirt, ensuring it lay flat against her thighs. “I have my own qualms with the integrity of your writing, but I understand it serves a purpose. People will read it, and some of those people cannot think for themselves. This isn’t something I can change. However, if your poisonous quill continues its habit of mentioning the Blacks and Potters, or tearing into children’s private lives, I may start to question that purpose. I may start to question the need to stay silent on your extracurricular skills.”

Rita said nothing, her expression cool. Granger seemed to pick apart her thoughts with terrifying ease, to the point Rita again questioned how much she knew, how long she’d sat on in this information.

“It would be rather costly to bribe a Transfiguration Master to register your name now—both in the literal sense, and the figurative. It would affect future stories, wouldn’t it, if your status became known? And should someone possibly tip the College off to a potential fraudulent registration….” Granger raised her brow, then smiled. “So it really would benefit you to simply drop interest in my foster family, extended or otherwise. You have far more interesting subjects to follow, don’t you? Stories potentially about Ministry corruption—abusive officials, excessive nepotism, legislation violating basic human rights. The list goes on.”

Rita swallowed and forced a matching smile onto her face. Heat shimmered in the girl’s eyes and belied the otherwise amenable expression. Really, blacklisting a few dull children and that miserable Black convict wasn’t much to ask. Not when Rita knew every word the girl said was true, not when a whisper in the wrong ear would see her sealed on that miserable rock in the North Sea…or worse.

Turning her sights on the Ministry, however…that may be more than Rita could stomach. More than her editor would accept. But what would the girl do if she refused?

It didn’t occur to Rita for an instant that the brat might be lying, that she wouldn’t have the nerve to report her to the DMLE. She rattled off the laws with barely a breath taken, and the mention of Azkaban had been made without pause, without an ounce of reticence. That wasn’t the behavior of a coward. Rita had a nose for information, a knack for simply knowing, and something in the girl stilled her tongue.

Granger stood just as a bell, muffled by the thickness of the stone walls, rang. Rita quickly jolted to her feet and straightened her robes, taking a moment to nudge her jeweled spectacles up her nose and try for a measure of composure. Granger merely picked up the jar, smirking.

“Do we have an agreement, Miss Skeeter? It’s time for me to go.”

Rita nodded and extended her long-nailed hand to shake, but Granger made no move to take it. She watched the reporter with those shrewd, burning eyes, and Rita snatched her hand back as if stung. She made for the door, ready to return to her Animagus form and get away from the brat.

Rita didn’t see Granger’s satisfied smirk slip, nor did she see how malice gleamed like new coins in the young girl’s eyes for the briefest of moments before she straightened and handed the jar off to the house-elf hidden behind her legs.

“I’ll be looking out for your next column, Rita. It had better be good.”

Rita gulped as the door opened. She turned into her beetle form and fled the room as fast as possible.


A/N: Something I believe a Gryffindor!Hermione wouldn ’t recognize and a Slytherin!Hermione would is that blackmailing Skeeter to not write anything at all would eventually fail and drive her to think of how to get out from under Hermione’s thumb. All stick, no carrot.

Hermione: “This is such a silly little thing— but if you cross me, I ’ll make certain you go to prison and have your soul sucked out of your body . Nothing major!

Rita: “Ha ha. I’m in danger!”

Chapter 205: the man in the woods

Chapter Text

ccv. the man in the woods

 

When Hermione returned to the dormitories that evening and told the story of her afternoon, Elara couldn’t help but laugh.

“You’re barmy,” she told the other witch as Hermione fussed with the sleeves of her nightgown. They’d all readied themselves for bed, Elara already relaxing against her headboard. “I can’t believe you did that.”

“I can’t believe it either, really,” Hermione admitted. Harriet started to giggle—and Hermione quickly lobbed a pillow at her, Harriet smothering her laughter in it. “I can’t believe the woman’s so brazen as to go around as a bug and spy! I nearly couldn’t hold it together. I was an instant away from telling Dobby to squeeze her back into the jar so we could leave it in the lake.”

“Well, you have already threatened her with Azkaban. I’m sure the lake would be preferable,” Elara commented, smiling despite the panicked look on Hermione’s face. The witch was brilliant. “Harriet, get off my legs. You weigh a ton.”

Harriet sat up and shuffled over, hugging the pillow to her middle. “But you won’t get in trouble, will you? If Skeeter gets jammed up and rats on you for knowing?”

“In the current state of things, I really couldn’t say,” Hermione admitted, hands once more picking at her sleeves until Elara lowered her book and reached out to stop her. “Technically, no. I’m a minor still, and you can’t charge minors for abetting crimes unless they’re strictly involved—but when has that stopped the Ministry? Especially Gaunt and his goons.”

Their conversation pivoted from there lest Hermione worry herself into an early grave—or a panic attack, whichever came first. They eventually returned to their own beds, with Harriet’s final yawning remark being for Hermione to warn them if she decided to blackmail anyone else before breakfast. For Elara’s part, she mused it probably made her a terrible person to be filled with warmth at the thought of Hermione threatening Rita Skeeter on her behalf. It concerned her more that Hermione had decided to confront a potentially enraged witch with no other help aside from a scatterbrained house-elf. Elara wouldn’t have minded an excuse to crush a beetle under her heel.

She settled farther into her blankets as the lights dimmed and the chattering of her dormmates leveled off. Perhaps it was a good thing Hermione went without us.

The next day, the fourth year Slytherins had Herbology first period with the Ravenclaws, which was never Elara’s favorite class. It was too early, and they had to take care of their own plot of magical borage—which meant Elara had a planter of dead twigs poking out of her soil. Professor Sprout winced every time she passed their cluster.

Hermione was too enamored with Terry to scold her over it. They tended the garden together on the other side of the row, and their borage had grown to chest height. They could sit on their stools and hide behind it, and Elara knew they stole more than one subtle kiss when Sprout was busy elsewhere.

The affection they oozed was nearly nauseating.

“Stop touching the plants,” Harriet hissed as she stepped closer from her own plot and began attacking Elara’s with a trowel. She transplanted one of her healthy borage bushes, and it might have been Elara’s imagination, but she thought the little blue, five-pointed flowers were already wilting at her proximity.

“I didn’t touch anything,” Elara complained with a sigh. She held up her thick, mud-stained gloves for confirmation.

“Stop glaring at it! You’re hurting its feelings!”

“Plants don’t have feelings.”

Her plant drooped more.

By the end of the period, Elara had one scraggly borage specimen, and Professor Sprout gave her a passing mark, ignoring the gaping hole in Harriet’s planter. The bell rang, and they washed their hands and gathered their things, Elara eager to leave all things nature behind. They had a free period now—but Hermione, hand-in-hand with Terry, skipped off to debate club, and Harriet grabbed Elara’s arm to drag her to Hagrid’s for tea. That would have been a pleasant way to spend the early afternoon had Hagrid not roped them into collecting fledgling Bowtruckles for the kitchen’s house-elves.

“They’re great for keepin’ the orchards healthy,” he told them, opening the wooden box to reveal what few Bowtruckles he’d picked up. They resembled the tiny little nubs of twigs. “A whole heap are needed ‘fore the spring.”

So, Elara found herself following Harriet through the wood at the Forbidden Forest’s edge, carrying a light wooden box against her middle as Harriet tried to convince Bowtruckles to leave their old trees. It involved a great deal of scaling branches and scaring Elara half to death when she toppled out of them.

“You’re ruining your socks,” Elara pointed out as Harriet jumped from an elm—into a crowberry bush.

“Ow—fuck!” Harriet sniped at the thorns snagging her skin. “Ouch—! What about my socks?”

“You’re ruining them, and you haven’t got any more in your trunk.”

The shorter witch studied the mud streaked up her legs, tears in the fabric. “Bugger. McGonagall’s gonna have a cow. Here, take these—.”

She slipped a pair of tiny Bowtruckles into the box with leaves and bark shavings. She then proceeded to beat the dirt from her cloak and legs, though her efforts did little aside from smear the mud onto her hands. Harriet released an aggravated sigh as her shoulders drooped.

Elara took pity on her and mended her socks, cleaning away the mess with spells she’d learned from Andromeda’s home-caretaking books. She even polished her shoes, for all the good it would do, the dirt paths reduced to slush and muck as the snows began their first melt.

“Thanks,” Harriet said, though the rambunctious spark didn’t return to her eyes.

“Why have you been taking so much care with your appearance?” Elara asked as she stowed her wand away again, jostling the box. “You look perfectly fine in whatever you feel most comfortable in—and you keep dodging the question with Hermione, but I won’t be put off. Out with it.”

Harriet sighed—a heavy, jagged thing, the flash in her green eyes conveying her displeasure in being called out. Elara didn’t miss the slight flush rising in her cheeks. “I’m ugly.”

Elara blinked, scoffed. Was she being serious? “Don’t be daft.”

“I’m not. I don’t understand all that girl stuff, so my hair’s always a mess and my skin’s dry and I bite my nails. My clothes never fit right because—because that’s how Aunt Petunia liked it, innit?” Harriet grimaced and kicked at a dowdy shrub before starting toward another tree. “Krum asked me to the Yule Ball and I knew absolutely no one would believe it. They needed only take one look at me to know it was ridiculous.”

“Why? Because Krum is such a prize?” Elara retorted. “Because he plays Quidditch?” She made a noise of disgust. “Spare me. He doesn’t seem much more than a thick-headed dullard. He rarely has more than a word to say, and I worry too many Bludgers to the head had scrambled what brains he had.”

Harriet rolled her eyes, but the corner of her mouth hitched, cheek dimpling. “But you don’t even like boys, so you wouldn’t like Krum.”

Elara almost said, “I’m not sure you do either,” but she didn’t. No, she thought instead about the way Harriet spoke to Cedric Diggory, of all people. They’d caught up to him over the weekend, and Harriet had given him a piece of her mind for losing to Longbottom in the second task, but there had been something…soft in her berating. A small exuberance in the way she’d fiddled with her fringe and let her eyes flick over him. Elara thought Harriet liked him, even if she wasn’t really aware of it herself, and given the fondness in Diggory’s answering smile, it seemed he reciprocated.

She took the wrong Champion to that stupid ball.

“Idiots, the pair of you,” she mumbled.

“What?”

“I said you’re absurd. I don’t have to like boys to know Krum is a thick-headed rotter.”

“He’s all right. Just not…not for me.”

Exhaling, Elara changed the topic. “You’ve a Bowtruckle in your hair.”

Harriet stopped inspecting the bark of the spruce in front of her and sent a withering look toward her scalp. “It’s because they think I’m a ruddy tree. Here, get it off of me….”

Elara had no interest in touching the poor thing, so she grabbed Harriet’s hand and guided it to the creature, her small fingers fumbling about until she could pluck it from her plait. Into the box it went.

They inspected two more trees before deciding the branch of Bowtruckles they’d gotten so far would be enough. They turned around and started back down the path.

“Are you tutoring the little monsters this afternoon?” Elara asked into the thick silence. Perhaps it was what remained of the snow that made it so still, so quiet. The air held an odd humid quality—the temperature fluctuating as spring neared. “They must be rabid by now, what with the end of term coming.”

“I said I might be in the library today. Might is not even a maybe,” Harriet groused.

“You’re still going to go, aren’t you?”

“Just to check! Just to make sure they’re doin’ what they’re supposed to be doin’.”

Elara took that to mean Harriet had gotten much too invested in the marks of the younger students and would take it personally if they did poorly. Silly. Elara warned her she’d end up like Hermione, breathing down their necks every time exams got mentioned.

“Next year is going to be bloody awful,” Harriet groaned. “O.W.Ls! Hermione’ll be beating us about the heads with color-coded binders before summer ends, watch.”

“We should be so lucky.” At Harriet’s scandalized look, Elara shrugged. “She finds out the entire year’s curriculum from the professors and writes it down beforehand. It saves a great deal of time and is incredibly useful.”

“Even from Snape?”

“I’m not sure how she manages that.” Elara tapped her chin, then smirked. “She must bribe him by promising to keep you out of trouble.”

“I resent that. I am never in trouble.”

The sarcastic remark had barely left her mouth when a scream rent the air.

Elara and Harriet stopped their banter and stared at one another, frozen, another cry burbling and echoing from the deeper woods. A fox, Elara told herself, searching for an explanation. Some stupid fools playing around—. But the sound was too bloodcurdling to be fake, too high to be a fox. It sounded like—.

“That sounds like a first year,” Harriet whispered, her wand suddenly in her hand. “Go get help!”

“Don’t—!” But Harriet had already jumped forward into the underbrush, and had it not been coerced out of her at a young age, Elara would have sworn until blue in the face. Instead, she lowered the Bowtruckle box and all but fell into her dog form in her haste to follow Harriet, because she was not about to let her god-sister go tearing off into the woods alone—.

The screaming continued.

They ran nearly into the Forbidden Forest proper, only stopping shy of the short wire fence acting as a barrier between it and the lesser wood. They came to a clearing more a divot caused by a fallen tree than anything, a space stretching two or three meters across. They burst through the winter bushes, and Elara resumed her human form, fumbling for her wand.

A ghastly sight hung from one of the trees.

There was a girl fallen in the dirt, dressed in a woolen cap and blue coat. Elara knew her to be younger than a first year because she knew her. “Gabrielle!” she shouted, breathless with horror, refusing to look up at the looming specter. The call of her name startled the little French girl, and though she didn’t know Elara well, the voice of someone remotely familiar had her scrambling to her feet and dashing into Elara’s arms.

“I—I got lost! J'ai peur, j'ai peur,” she sobbed into Elara’s robes. “Je veux ma soeur!”

“Don’t look,” Elara said, hand on the girl’s head. She didn’t know if she was talking to Gabrielle or to herself. “Don’t look. Ne—ne regarde pas.

Harriet had her face upturned, her green eyes narrowed as the pale light from the sky poured over her. She studied the wizard suspended in the fir tree, the set of her jaw grim but solid, more solid than Elara felt at the moment. The wizard hadn’t been hung in the traditional sense; no, he’d been impaled on several broken branches as if he’d been blasted off his feet, and those branches sagged under his dead weight. Elara couldn’t bring herself to see more, too close to losing her breakfast. She stared at the red pool gathering in the tree’s roots. It dripped from the ends of his robes.

“That’s Mr. Crouch,” Harriet whispered. A flash of recognition touched Elara’s mind, the brief glimpse of the man’s white, terrified face registering. His arms were spread in a grotesque mimicry of Christ on the cross, and Elara dug her fingers into Gabrielle’s pale hair. “This wasn’t an accident. Not with how he’s positioned like that. This wasn’t—.” Harriet wafted a negligible hand at Gabrielle, whose face remained buried in Elara’s torso. “I think—he was levitated, then dropped. Someone did this on purpose.”

A rasp escaped Crouch—not a real breath, but a death rattle, the final haunting exhale of a body giving up the ghost. Elara saw Harriet stiffen, her body utterly still, knuckles bone-white from her grasp on her wand. A snap echoed in the woods.

“They’re still here,” Harriet hissed. “We need to run!”

“Harriet—!”

Run!”

Elara didn’t know where she found the strength to pick up a crying eight-year-old, but she managed to pull Gabrielle up, skinny arms going around her shoulders as Elara looped her own arms under the girl’s thighs to hold her in place. Her feet felt like stone, too shocked to move, but Elara forced them into motion, lurching into a stilted run. She heard Harriet behind her, the whistle of her wand cutting through the air, then—

Nebulus!

A blast of fog filled the clearing at their backs, hiding their passage. Elara concentrated on holding Gabrielle, on running, her wand useless in her fist. She thought she heard rustling in the trees, but she couldn’t stop, couldn’t listen past the heaviness of her breathing and the crash of shrubs underfoot.

Torsit,” Harriet snarled. “Incarcerous Herbivicus!

The ground burst to life behind them, a tangle of roots writhing out of the earth—and the second spell whipped the tree branches down, forming a wall behind them. Gabrielle cried in her ear.

They reached the end of the wood and kept running, not coming to a halt until they’d clamored up the steps to Hagrid’s hut, and Elara had to set Gabrielle on the top step before she dropped her. Harriet bruised her knuckles beating on the door, and when Hagrid appeared, he knew something was wrong.

“What is it? Yer okay?”

“Find the Headmaster,” Harriet gasped. “There’s—someone’s been killed. Hurry!”

While the half-giant went for the castle, Harriet and Elara remained on the steps, panting for breath. Elara’s heart beat as if attempting to escape her chest, and her stomach revolted at the memory of blood streaked across dead leaves.

“Did you see who it was?” she asked Harriet, and Harriet shook her head.

“No—but there was someone there. Someone still there.”

Gabrielle kept crying.

Elara released a shaky sigh, then swallowed, crouching to the girl’s level. She didn’t know how well Gabrielle understood English, and her own grasp on French was pitiful at best. “Êt…Êtes-vous bien?” she asked. “Are you all right? What happened out there?”

Gabrielle sniffled. “I—I waz with ma soeur,” she stuttered, “But I left. I wanted to see ze…des licornes?” She made a motion with her hand to mimic a horn in the middle of her forehead. “But Fleur said non, and I went alone. I did not know where I waz, and ma soeur—.

“We’ll find her,” Harriet said next to them, still holding her wand. She hadn’t stopped scanning the edge of the forest. “We’ll get you back to her.”

As it turned out, they needn’t go searching for Fleur at all. The Beauxbatons Champion came tearing down the drive from the direction of the lake, shouting her little sister’s name. She was frantic when she spotted Gabrielle, and they ran to each other, Gabrielle nearly tripping off the steps in her haste.

They spoke in swift, garbled French, the thickness of their accents and emotions rendering it intelligible in Elara’s ears. She caught snatches, words like “unicorns” and “man,” and if Fleur’s wrenching cries and desperate need to embrace Gabrielle were anything to go by, the little witch had told her about what she’d seen.

Elara had never seen Fleur look worse—her face and eyes red with tears, snot on her face from the cold, her silk robes disheveled from running. Even so, Elara couldn’t look away, inexplicably warmed by the sight. She and Harriet approached the pair, and when Fleur straightened, Elara handed her a handkerchief, not meeting her eyes.

Fleur mopped up her face and blew her nose, hiccuping. “Oh, thank you,” she said, reaching out to clasp Harriet’s wrist. “Thank you. You saved her—.” Harriet scrunched her nose as Fleur feathered kisses against her cheeks. “‘ow could I ever repay you?”

“S’alright,” Harriet replied, her gaze flicking again toward the trees. “Just glad she’s okay. The Headmaster should be coming soon.”

“And you—.”

Elara startled when Fleur clasped her arm and gave it a slight tug. She had to step closer or lose her balance, breathing in the smell of parfum, notes of cheery, freesia, and oak moss. The brush of lips against her cheek stole her breath, and blood rushed to her face.

Fleur withdrew, pausing to look into Elara’s wide eyes, to see her flushed skin and mussed hair. Elara remembered Skeeter’s article all too clearly, and how she’d gone to great lengths to avoid Fleur ever since. She couldn’t stand the embarrassment, the rejection. Even now, she expected laughter, a cold, stinging dismissal—.

Elara tried to lean away, but Fleur stopped her. She touched her face, fingers tracing where her lips had first brushed until she cupped her cheek in her cold palm. Fleur raised her head to Elara’s, and brought her mouth to hers.

Elara’s skin tingled, her eyelids fluttering. It was firm, more than a grazing brush, slight pressure from Fleur’s hand tilting her head enough for their noses to slide against each other. Her lips tasted of salt, the remnant of tears and sticky gloss. Fleur retreated, then kissed her again, and Elara reciprocated.

They pulled away and stared at one another, Fleur’s eyes glittering. Elara thought she might never breathe again.

“The Headmaster’s coming,” Harriet said. Indeed, Dumbledore was coming down the sloping steps from the higher bailey, flanked by several professors and Gaunt’s Aurors. Fat lot of good those Aurors did for Barty Crouch. Harriet went to meet them, and Elara tried to regain her bearings.

Fleur’s hand fell to hers, and cold, red-chapped fingers squeezed Elara’s. She smiled, the expression tempered by the somber mood, and Elara’s face reached a new shade of red. Fleur pulled away, returning her attention to Gabrielle again and the nearing professors.

“Thank you,” Elara whispered, at a loss for words. She’d witnessed a murder in the last half hour, and yet this had stunned her more than the sight of a dead Ministry official. Fleur Delacour just kissed me. ME.

Fleur raised a brow, the slightest tilt to her mouth as if Elara had said something silly. Perhaps she had. “Jusqu'à la prochaine fois, beauté.


A/N: Jusqu' à la prochaine fois, beauté.” : Until next time, beautiful.

Fleur smooches Elara:

Harriet: “IT’S HAPPENING!”

Harriet: “HERMIONE, GET THE CAMERA.”

Hermione: “Harriet, there was a murder!”

Harriet: “THIS IS MORE IMPORTANT!”

Chapter 206: the coward

Chapter Text

ccvi. the coward

 

The dead, decaying leaves broke softly under Severus’ boots as he picked his way through the winter trees.

Minerva followed at a similar pace and with similar care; cat-like, Severus would call it, if he wasn’t so rigidly opposed to voicing a thought so close to a pun. Clouds had moved in with the afternoon, and their wands provided more light to the dim woods than the covered sun.

His eyes scanned the bare trees, listening. In the distance, the Aurors tromped in the undergrowth with heavy, plodding steps. They called to one another every so often, and their voices echoed like stones skipping across a pond.

“Do you sense anything, Severus?” Minerva asked, voice low. “This is about where Potter said they saw him, yes?”

“I’m not a bloodhound,” he replied, distracted. Of course it had been Potter to stumble upon a suspected murder scene—Potter, Black, and that little French chit who had no business wandering about the grounds on her own. Albus’ first order after hearing the children speak was to send them into the safety of the castle, canceling classes for the afternoon so half of the professors and Aurors could comb the grounds. The other half secured the school.

Severus wished the Headmaster had sent Potter with them to spare the hours of blind searching. Better to have her here with them than with Slytherin indoors. Slytherin, who’d been too bored by the prospect of picking through the weeds for a dead body to stir from his office. His exact words to Severus had been, “You had best get started before the spring thaw makes things…ripe.”

“You don’t suppose the girls could have run afoul a Boggart or other grim apparition, do you?” Minerva spelled a series of weak magelights ahead of them, the glow veiled to spare their vision. “Morgana knows enough evil lurks in the Forest to confuse or trick a mind.”

“You don’t believe that.” Severus stopped to study a thin branch, broken by something run past. The body had been shorter than his, roughly shoulder-height with a fourteen-year-old witch.

“No.” The older witch sighed, an unguarded gesture on her behalf. “Misses Potter and Black are not so easily frightened as that. And Albus’ attempts to contact Mr. Crouch have been fruitless.”

Severus didn’t roll his eyes, though he wished to. He jerked his arm and pointed his wand toward the north. “This way.”

Minerva followed, setting her feet where Severus did, the occasional flash of magic raining on the shrubs to detect traps. Ahead, they discerned the shape of an odd barrier, a wall of roots and branches rising to twine about the tree boles and block passage. Squinting at the obstacle, Minerva asked, “What could have done this?”

Severus brushed his fingers against the roots, studying the knots. “Potter,” he said. He knew because it was his spell—a testament to Potter’s ability, as she’d only seen him use it once, and yet she’d mastered it, finding new forms of use. A Tangling Charm had torn open the earth, and Severus’ Root Cage Jinx weaved the tree limbs around the trunks, forming a phalanx several meters long. Not terribly practical, but helpful in a pinch.

He paced a meter along the barricade and stopped upon finding an area where the roots had been severed so something may pass through. He touched the cut ends, felt the tell-tale sting of Dark magic prick his fingertips.

“Death Eater.”

Minerva stiffened and approached. “How do you know?”

Because it was his spell, his Blade Curse, one of his spells the Dark Lord liked so much, he stole it and distributed it among his faithful. He would recognize it anywhere.

“I know,” Severus grunted. “Sectumsempra.”

A harsh slash of his wand mimicked the old slices in the roots, carving a larger hole to walk through. Minerva followed him to the other side, her mouth pursed in disapproval.

Another fifteen minutes of search led them to a glade that matched Potter’s rushed description—with the glaring exception of no corpse. However, the lack of body didn’t deter Severus as he took a deep breath through his nose, scenting the air. The tang of iron marred the heavier odors of salt, pine, and ozone.

Severus lifted his eyes to the tree at the edge of the clearing, many of the branches on the south-facing side snapped off or broken. He brushed back the hair from his face displaced by the breeze and approached the tree, ignoring an alarmed noise from Minerva. He opened his robes to reveal the leather bandolier stitched into the inner lining.

“What are you doing?” Minerva inquired.

Severus picked one of the vials, studied it in their wandlight, then pulled out the cork. He tipped it to the side, and with two definite taps, sprinkled the pale powder. The loose grading dispersed the powder in the air, and once it touched the ground, it burst into a cloud not unlike a heavy plume. Severus watched as the shimmering haze revealed white streaks on the tree’s bark.

“What is that?” Minerva asked, standing at his shoulder, eyes honed on the powder. “I do wish you’d simply narrate what you’re doing, Severus, so I could stop asking questions.”

“Blood,” he told her as the cloud went higher and the tree fairly glowed. “The potion works similar to a Muggle black light, if you’ve heard of it. The bioluminescence is preserved by dissecting and drying a particular algae from the Welsh coast. It shines on traces of bodily fluids, no matter what magic employed to vanish them.”

The two professors stood in silence as the cloud dissipated, leaving behind a tree painted in negative, the white blotches and streaks centered most on the broken branches.

“Morgana have mercy,” Minerva whispered before mustering herself, one sharp nod steeling her eyes. “They returned to remove the body. A blessing, if it means they didn’t go after the students as an alternative. We should start looking—.”

Severus shook his head. “We won’t find it.”

“No? How can you be so certain?”

He sneered. “Death Eater,” he reiterated. He allowed her to make assumptions about whom he meant. “We won’t find the body. A pity; I’m certain Crouch made for a better Yule ornament than a person.”

“A man is dead, Severus.”

“And it couldn’t have happened to a better one.” To be honest, Severus regretted not being able to see the body himself. It would have slaked something inside his shriveled little heart to look down on that bastard and give the corpse a good kick when Minerva turned her head.

“For your own sake, please keep your mouth shut when the Aurors come,” Minerva snapped as she waved her wand and summoned a wordless Patronus. “The Head of the Department of International Magical Cooperation is missing, and we don’t need you cooling your heels in Azkaban for your horrid sense of humor.”

The silver light of the spectral cat vanished into the trees, taking with it the momentary flush of warm feeling that left Severus more bitter and annoyed than he’d been when leaving the castle. He crossed his arms. “The only humor here is you thinking I’m joking.”

It only took one additional Patronus to lead the Aurors and Headmaster Dumbledore to the scene, Albus’ eyes appearing dark and veiled as he studied the trees. He raised his hand, and magic unfamiliar to Severus flared gold, revealing more destroyed evidence—the pale, ghostly impression of a body in the canopy, the golden outline of three girls on the outer rim, flickering in motion, and the garbled gray haze of a fourth individual moving in and out of the trees.

“What’re we supposed to tell Gaunt?” one of the thick-headed Aurors asked, breaking the clearing’s hush. “There’s no body and no witness aside from a couple of brats. He’s not gonna like that.”

The other Guardians in their midsts exchanged shifty, uneasy looks. Standing in the back, Severus smirked.

Mad-Eye stumped his way into the center of the collective, growling, and smacked the nearest Auror in the chest. “You!” he snapped. “Set up a standard perimeter! And you three! Start searching for vestiges of spell casting! The first buggering moron still standing here gawking in the next thirty seconds will be written up with Bones!”

The Aurors shifted into action, making a show of being busy when Severus knew they’d find nothing. Death Eater. There was a Death Eater somewhere in the forest—or in the school, but to whom did they belong? What was their purpose here? Why kill Crouch?

Severus had turned to begin the trek back to the castle when a voice stilled him, spelling rage into his bones.

“And where do you think you’re going, Snape?” Moody demanded. Severus could hear the uneven thump of his footsteps approaching.

“Alastor….” Dumbledore said.

Moody ignored him. “What were you up to this afternoon, eh? Settling a score with Crouch Senior? As I remember it, you didn’t much enjoy your time in his custody all those years ago. Maybe you saw a chance to get even today.”

“Anyone with a pulse despaired of spending time with Crouch,” Severus drawled, his teeth grinding. “As for where I was, I was teaching—you know, my job? Not all of us can laze about the castle and treat our careers with such….” He turned to stare at the murder scene, a single brow raised. “Lackadaisical care.”

Moody pointed his gnarled finger. “Seems I’m looking for Dark wizard and there’s one right in front of me. Maybe you should be put somewhere nice and safe, Snape, until the end of this investigation.”

Severus’ expression didn’t change, but he felt reluctant horror churn in his guts as he remembered his weeks in Azkaban and considered what returning there would mean. The cold, the despair. The humiliation. Slytherin would be furious with him. Facing down his ire fresh out of a prison stint might just kill Severus.

Alastor!” Dumbledore raised his voice to such a volume no one left in the clearing could ignore it. “That is enough.”

“Leopards don’t change their spots, Albus.”

“I said that is enough. Severus has been an employee of this school and a member of the Order for over a decade, and his service is above reproach. You have no cause to impugn his innocence any more than Minerva’s or mine.”

Both of Moody’s eyes landed on Albus and stared as if he’d lost his mind. Severus didn’t wait to hear what else would be said; he yanked his robes from the snagging bracken and walked into the woods. After a moment, the quiet snap of Minerva’s footsteps followed.

“This is absurd,” Minerva hissed, fairly fuming with indignation. “The whole Tournament has been an exercise in madness from the beginning, but this is beyond the pale. Murder on the grounds! In sight of children! The Aurory so filled with political lackeys it—och!”

Her foot snagged on foliage, and Severus’ hand shot out to catch her by the wrist, glowering when he let go. Minerva muttered her thanks and readjusted her robes.

“Severus—what could this mean? A Death Eater in the school? Why chance killing a Ministry official like Crouch? It’s not a logical decision.”

He didn’t have an answer for her. There was certainly a Death Eater in the school—two, in fact, with a third having killed Crouch. But where? Granger had exposed Crouch for stealing from his stores, but Severus hadn’t been able to theorize why he did it. To plant false evidence on him? To steal Polyjuice ingredients? But for what reason? For himself? To give to someone else?

“Should I venture a guess, Professor, there’s a Death Eater under Polyjuice gallivanting around. Dipping farther into speculation, let’s say I know Crouch was poking around in the ingredient cupboards, stealing boomslang skin and Bicorn horn.”

Minerva wasn’t a potioneer, but her time at Ministry hadn’t been spent idle, meaning she could recognize the pieces of an illegal potion easily enough. “And you believe he was what? Brewing? Giving these to another person?”

“I would say he was Imperiused. He thrives—thrived—on how others perceived his so-called noble leanings, and such a weak-willed simpleton wouldn’t be able to throw the curse off. Not easily. But, should the person holding his leash grow complacent, should Crouch perhaps make a break for it or threaten to reveal the intruder’s presence….”

“He’s expendable.” Minerva glanced the way they’d come. “But to kill a loose end on the grounds? And in such a—gruesome fashion! That’s hardly subtle or sane for someone apparently trying their hand at espionage!”

“And there’s very little we can do about it.”

She sucked in a short, angry breath. “But there must be something we can do to flush them out—.”

“There are nearly three hundred students at Hogwarts—not including staff, auxiliary employees, the foreign pupils, the Durmstrang and Beauxbatons professors, the Aurors, or the Ministry peons tramping in and out of the gates at every hour. Beyond that, we haven’t the means—nor the authority—to test them all. The foreign dignitaries would steam at the ears if it was suggested one of the visitors had been compromised, and Gaunt would laugh himself sick over a warrant requesting the Ministry idiots be checked.”

“Why would a—Death Eater go through all of this? To what end?”

“Someone had to put Longbottom’s name in the Goblet. Somebody wanted him to compete.” Severus pinched the bridge of his nose and rubbed at his eyes, exhausted by this whole meaningless venture. Crouch was dead; Potter had seen it, and it didn’t matter if they had a body or not. What mattered was there being a potential maniac roaming the castle and they were no closer to finding them.

Severus continued walking, and Minerva didn’t follow. He kept on until he reached the crest of the hill, the castle doors within sight, when he paused and allowed the wind to buffet against him. He faced the woods and the denser forest beyond, the breeze flaring his cloak as he looked not toward the trees, but rather at the sky.

No flare of green marred the clouds—no Morsmodre lingering above the canopy.

They’d taken the body, removed the blood. They tried to keep the kill silent despite being interrupted—but why? Why take the risk? Why pose the body and make such a scene if not to sign their work? Death Eaters spelled the Dark Lord’s Mark into the sky when they killed. It was almost blasphemous to forego the custom.

Severus narrowed his eyes, and the sky didn’t change. Birds winged from the bare tree limbs. What does it mean?

 

xXx

 

Severus had one short, blessed hour of silence before the door to his office slammed open.

Why Igor Karkaroff thought himself entitled to barge into Severus’ space, he’d never know.

“Is what they’re saying true?” the wizard demanded. He slung the door shut with such force, it bounced in the jam and sprung open, left ajar. “Is it true, Snape?”

Severus lowered the old ledger he’d been perusing and snapped the cover closed. He’d spent his hour since returning from the grounds trying to account for every known or suspected Death Eater. If he could narrow down their locations, he could find who possibly could have breached the school’s wards. Well, he could account for Karkaroff, as the git was currently in front of him, sweating like a constipated Erumpent.

“Look at it! Look at it, and tell me you are not afraid!” the wizard insisted as he shoved the thick material of his lined robes up his arm, revealing the pale, marked flesh below. “It has been burning all day!”

“Has it?” Severus asked, sending a cursory glance over Karkaroff’s brand. It looked marginally more inflamed than his own, which hadn’t bothered him much that day. Severus and the Headmaster theorized it didn’t mean anything significant; the Dark Lord’s power fluxed in irregular ways and pulled against the tendrils linking him to his servants. Some tendrils burned, others tingled, and it varied from day to day.

“It has been burning like a fire, and there has been a murder?! Crouch is dead?!” Karkaroff took a step forward and slammed both of his hands on Severus’ desk. The Potions Master curled his lip. “It is the Dark Lord!”

“Not every murder that occurs is the Dark Lord’s doing,” Severus mocked. For fuck’s sake, he knew Karkaroff hadn’t traversed the darker echelon of Tom Riddle’s followers, but how he’d survived even a year was a bloody mystery. He fairly oozed cowardice. “Do try to find what composure you’re capable of before Moody comes knocking for an interview.”

Karkaroff’s face paled more than it had before, his skin glossy in the candlelight. He perspired like a toad secreting oil, and it disgusted Severus.

“If you mean to vomit, do so in the corridor.” He returned his attention to the books he’d pulled from the library. Most contained preserved records of old Daily Prophets, not entirely unlike Muggle microfiche. Though Severus had gone through them before, he intended to once more comb the archives and trace the activities of old classmates. Someone might have slipped through. That someone could be in Hogwarts.

“What are you planning to do? You must be planning something!” Karkaroff leaned closer, his breathing heavy. Severus could see his left arm spasming, the muscles beneath the clammy skin jumping and twitching. “You always had a plan for—for everything! You must have a plan for this! Tell it to me!”

He reeked of desperation, and Severus wished for nothing more than to tell him to douse his head in the lake lest the stench seep into his clothes. “I believe I already told you my plans are no business of yours. I believe I told you to stay away from me.”

“What do you want? Money? You’re just a poor half-blood; you must need money.”

“You’ll have to make your own way, Igor,” Severus told him, a nasty smile spread across his face. “Just like us poor, filthy half-bloods.”

Karkaroff stole a shuddering breath, his tongue flicking across his lower lip. He was skinnier than he’d been upon arriving at Hogwarts, his cheeks paunchier, loose. “Do you want information? Is that it? For Dumbledore, or—? Slytherin?”

Severus scoffed. “Pathetic.”

“I—I can give them information on the families in Europe! The Durmstrang families!”

“Selling out your newest allies? My, my,” Severus sneered. “I can’t say I’m surprised. As I have told you before, my associates and I are not interested in your information, as you so generously call it. We are not interested in you or your fate.”

Karkaroff’s face twisted at being denied yet again, and his arm came out, knocking the books and candle from Severus’ desk. The latter went out as it bounced on the stone floor.

Severus, for his part, simply rolled his eyes. He dealt with enough melodramatic, angst-ridden teenagers daily, and though very few had the gall to throw his things, some did. Karkaroff was no different. “Typical,” he sniffed.

Just then, a shadow passed between the slight crack in the door, and Severus felt more than heard the air pressure shift. The door eased open, and a familiar voice called, “Professor Snape…?”

Harriet Potter stood on the office’s threshold, her green eyes flickering as they took in the scene. They landed first on Severus himself, then the mess on the floor, Karkaroff, and finally, Karkaroff’s arm. His bare arm and the blasted, repulsive Dark Mark on full display.

Karkaroff reacted first, jolting from the desk toward the girl, grabbing her wrist. Potter gasped in shock or pain as the wizard nearly yanked her arm out of its socket in his rush, and her other hand rose to guard her face. Severus was on his feet in an instant and threw himself at Karkaroff, the shelves behind him rattling as the wizard’s back slammed into them.

“Severus,” Karkaroff wheezed as the Potions Master’s hands twisted in the front of his robes. “Severus, she’s seen too much—.”

“Let. Go.” The words slid through his teeth like knives, cold and unforgiving, and he could feel Karkaroff’s heartbeat race under his balled fists. “Now.”

For once in his miserable life, Igor made the right choice and unclenched his fingers from around Potter’s slender wrist. She cradled it against her middle and lurched back a step, already halfway out the door. Red marks marred her skin.

“I didn’t—I just wanted to know if you found anything! If you found Crouch!” she stuttered. “I didn’t mean—.”

“Go back to your dormitory,” Severus told her, still holding Karkaroff against the shelves. The wizard made as if to shake off his hold, and Severus thrust him back again, harder, glassware chiming as it clashed together. Karkaroff grunted. “Go, Miss Potter.”

She went, still holding her bruised arm, the sound of her scampering footsteps loud in the empty passage. He waited until the noise dissipated, then released Igor, spelling the door shut properly. The lock clicked home.

“She knows too much!” Karkaroff spat, a low whine in his voice from having the air knocked out of him. “The stupid little bitch saw my Mark; what do you think you’re doing—?!”

His words cut off. A slow, contemplative look overcame the older wizard’s face, and something like understanding bloomed in Karkaroff’s beady little eyes as he straightened. What understanding that was, Severus didn’t know.

“Is that how it is? Is that what you’re after?” Igor asked. His tone wheedled like an old friend trying to commiserate, and Severus tipped his head to one side, his brow furrowed. “I must say, I didn’t expect you to like them young, but a man has his vices. I’m not one to judge.”

Severus said nothing. He almost couldn’t hear the filth coming out of Karkaroff’s mouth over the ringing in his ears. The unctuous man took Snape’s silence for agreement and continued, shooting him a wink and a toothy grin.

“Nice little thing she is, easy, I imagine. Not quite my type. I can get you better, Severus, my friend. Prettier. Younger, if that’s what you need. Just help me—.”

Severus’ fist collided with his face. Karkaroff reeled as blood burst from his nose.

Bastard—!

The second blow caught him in the mouth, breaking teeth. The third, against the cheek, Karkaroff toppling into the ground, hitting the shelves once more. The jars that had so far resisted falling now hit the floor, shattering into a million pieces, shattering like Severus’ composure.

Nice little thing.

He snarled as his fingers broke, not caring about the pain radiating through his bones, up his arm, his limp hair in his face, fist raised for a fourth and a fifth blow. He cared for nothing but the rage hot like Fiendfyre in his veins, scouring his chest, rising from his throat in an almost bestial shout. His dragonhide boot landed on something tender, and the downed wizard howled.

“Wait, wait!” Karkaroff shrieked, blood and saliva dribbling from his busted lip, smearing his chin. “Severus, please—!”

“I warned you,” Severus hissed. He flicked his wrist, summoning his wand, and he leveled the length of ebony wood at Karkaroff’s ruined face.

“Please!” Igor begged. “Please, I—!”

Severus didn’t listen. He acted before he could change his mind, before he had to tell the Headmaster why a second body had turned up on the grounds that afternoon. If Karkaroff said one more word, Severus would bloody kill him.

He twisted his arm, wand raised, and incanted—.

Obliviate!


A/N: Poor Igor learned the meaning of “Fuck around and find out.”

Karkaroff: “The Dark Lord’s coming!”

Snape: “…”

Karkaroff: *touches Harriet*

Snape: “REEEEEE!”

Chapter 207: spring of youth

Chapter Text

ccvii. spring of youth

 

March and April slipped by Hogwarts with surprising ease.

The morning after Harriet fled Professor Snape’s office, Headmaster Karkaroff showed up in the infirmary, his face bludgeoned and his wits scattered. She heard through gossip among the Durmstrang students that Pomfrey didn’t think his problem was severe enough to send him to St. Mungo’s, but Karkaroff spent the proceeding weeks confined to the hospital wing, barely cognizant of his own name.

Harriet hadn’t told anyone what she’d seen in Snape’s office. Her friends already knew Karkaroff was a Death Eater; him having a great dirty Dark Mark on his arm wasn’t news to anyone. She hadn’t repeated what Snape had done, lunging out of his chair with such violence, Harriet had been spooked. She’d never seen him act like that before, and as far as she knew, that was the last time Karkaroff had been whole—and in possession of all of his teeth.

Was Snape responsible? Because of her? For her? Harriet didn’t know. She couldn’t begin to speculate on it.

As for Crouch, no one had been able to find him. The Ministry’s official stance was he’d gone on holiday, or sabbatical, with no definite day listed for his return. Of course, any person with half a brain knew it was suspicious for Crouch—the bloke integral to the Triwizard Tournament—to leave in the middle of it. However, Harriet and Elara had received a dressing down from a stern-faced Auror about “spreading stories,” and the issue had been swept under the rug—at least, as far as the Ministry was concerned.

On the other hand, the Hogwarts staff didn’t dismiss what had happened on their grounds. Harriet noticed they had taken to watching the students and others with sharper, warier eyes, and they found more excuses to patrol the grounds. Snape had his N.E.W.T class brewing something called Thief’s Downfall, and their steeping cauldrons sat in the back of the classroom, permeating the room and part of the dungeons in a sweet-smelling mist. Beauty and Concealment Charms kept failing on those who passed through, leaving more than one witch or wizard wailing over revealed blemishes or their frizzy, unkempt hair.

Harriet’s extracurricular lessons continued apace as the threat of Slytherin’s final trial loomed in the distance. On Friday evenings, she showed up to the secondary Transfiguration classroom, and McGonagall drilled her on material compositions, the best conversion pairs, and density. She taught her how to Transfigure with speed rather than intricacy, which Harriet found she enjoyed more than what they did in class.

“You must remember you aren’t dueling, Miss Potter,” McGonagall told her. “You aren’t on a set stage, and there are no judges enforcing rules or awarding points. You have only your own judgment to decide the amount of necessary force needed, and your environment is just as much of a weapon as your wand. It is up to you to use it.”

Dumbledore didn’t often have time for lessons, and when he did, the summons came at the last second, and Harriet found herself having to make the strangest excuses to escape to the Headmaster’s tower. Together, they never visited the same room twice in the castle. Dumbledore seemed intent on showing Harriet the strangest pieces of spellcraft he could discover, then having her attempt to break them down to better her understanding of magic in theory and application. Of course, the bust of Barnabus made a reappearance, and Harriet suffered trying to rip the blood bow tie off of him.

She still hadn’t had the opportunity to fight Snape in his sessions. She spent their time together in the Aerie running the gamut of Shield Charms, the list so extensive and intricate, Harriet was often exhausted by the repetition. “Practice forges better pathways,” Snape told her in his usual snide drawl. “Like a muscle being exercised. Or a mind storing knowledge. The more you use it, the more you repeat the action, the easier it is to remember—until it is instinctual. You will learn these shield variants and how best to utilize them so that you may properly counter a spell in your sleep.”

The end of the school year bore down upon them all, and the professors loaded their students with assignments to be researched and completed. More and more, Harriet would need to finish her homework later at night, her free time woefully scant. She spent the weeks more tired than she’d ever been in her life—sore and groggy and prone to napping whenever she could. That included the middle of class, Hermione’s sharp shoes always ready to give her a nudge in the shin when a professor passed by.

As the weather warmed in begrudging increments, Harriet and her friends captured whatever moments they could to relax and enjoy the spring warmth. Even Hermione could be coaxed out of the library from time to time, though she usually smuggled a book out under her robes. Elara had a new regiment of potions from Snape that meant she could go outside without wheezing on the blooming pollen.

On one particularly sunny Saturday afternoon in late April, Harriet threw her Firebolt over her shoulder and made for the grounds. The Quidditch Stadium was off-limits to all students and had been since Yule, for whatever reason. So, instead, she picked a spot on the sweeping lawn near one corner of the woods, a place well in sight of the castle proper. She couldn’t fly more than two meters off the grass or Hooch would revolt, but Harriet took what she could, eager to get out and feel the breeze.

She hadn’t anticipated others following her, but soon she’d taken to the air with Ginny Weasley, passing off a dented Quaffle they’d nicked from Hooch’s office, her brothers Fred and George seeming to pop out of nowhere to join them. Hermione, Terry, and Anthony Goldstein found seats on the rocks nearby, deep in conversation about Vanishing Spells and where stuff actually got vanished to. Elara lounged in the grass on a Conjured blanket, reading.

Soon more students began to dribble out of the school, escaping their studies and responsibilities, players from the Quidditch teams and Quidditch hopefuls unable to resist the sight of brooms in the air. The lawn filled with people from all the Houses, brooms were taken from storage, and a skirmish match began with the one lopsided Quaffle and Bludgers taking the form of pinecones tossed by spectators.

Harriet hovered by the Slytherin first years clustered together on the sidelines. “Hit the Weasley twins,” she told them, pushing pinecones into their small hands. “And Diggory. Actually—yeah, just him, Diggory. Hit him.”

“Why just Diggory?” Izumi Takagi asked with her usual curiosity.

“Because he could use the dodging practice,” Harriet grumbled. “Either that, or he deserves a good pelting by soggy pinecones. Go on!”

She returned to the game, drifting perhaps a tad higher than Hooch would allow, watching her ploy come to fruition. Diggory blinked under the assault of pinecones bouncing off his back, most of them brittle and bursting into pieces on impact, though that didn’t stop Diggory from being baffled. Ginny—on Harriet’s team—took her chance to sink the Quaffle in the basket serving as the goal Diggory was meant to be guarding.

“Ha,” Harriet said under her breath, clapping.

Not long after Ginny’s goal, attentions wavered, and people paused mid-flight to watch someone approach from the castle. Harriet pulled back on her Firebolt to see what had caught their interest, and she saw Fleur Delacour coming out onto the grounds without her usual entourage of vapid Beauxbatons socialites. She must have noticed the staring because she had her nose in the air, and she flipped the long, silvery curtain of her hair over her shoulder as she walked. She didn’t stop until she came to the edge of the blanket Elara lounged on, and when Elara—annoyed—looked up from her book, she almost sprained something scrambling to her feet.

Harriet chuckled and almost decided to swoop closer to hear what was being said, but she didn’t, content to watch as Elara made an effort to appear composed and aloof—even as her face glowed like a hot brick. Fleur said something, a wheedling tilt to her chin, and Elara replied, being passably cool—though Harriet could see how nervous she was. Elara nodded, and they shifted to sit together on the blanket.

As she watched her friend—grinning—Harriet’s eyes flicked to the side and noticed someone else who’d come down to the grounds, sitting at the edge of a school’s paddock, shaded by an elm. She wouldn’t have recognized Malfoy at all if it hadn’t been for the sunlight glittering on his hair. Neither Crabbe nor Goyle were with him, and he had his arms loosely folded on his thighs. Every so often, he’d glance toward the cluster of Ravenclaws and Hermione, then look away.

“Heads up!”

The Quaffle smacked Harriet in the face, and she yelped, then cursed at the taste of copper in her mouth.

“Sorry, Potter! Look alive!”

She didn’t see who spoke but tossed Quaffle in their general direction and made for the lawn. She landed and shouldered her broom, poking her tongue against the new cut inside her lip, then walked over to Malfoy.

“Oi, why aren’t you playing, prat?” she asked, hopping onto the fence next to him. Her mouth burned, and Harriet leaned over to spit saliva and a bare amount of blood into the weeds. “Gross.”

Malfoy wrinkled his nose. “Bugger off, Potter.”

“Don’t be like that.” She noticed how Malfoy kept his head pointedly turned from the Ravenclaws. Hermione looked up when she saw Harriet had landed and smiled, though she did glance at Malfoy with a puzzled lift of her brow. Harriet shrugged and shook her head. “You know, you can still be friends with her.”

“I don’t know what you’re on about.”

“You’ve barely said a word to her since Yule. You’re being a right git about her and Terry by pretending she doesn’t exist, and that doesn’t endear you to her. Not as a friend, and definitely not as more.”

“Not everything is about you or Granger or Black,” Malfoy snarled, taking Harriet aback. His face was paler than usual, his eyes slightly red. “Fuck. You’re such an idiot.”

“Steady on!”

He drew in a breath, and Harriet heard how it shook. “Mother’s at St. Mungo’s.”

She didn’t know what she’d expected him to say, but it hadn’t been that. “Why?” she gasped, quickly trying to remember the last time she’d received a letter from Narcissa. A week ago? Or two? That wasn’t entirely unusual in their exchanges. “Is she alright? What happened?”

“What do you think happened?” Draco muttered. He sounded less angry now and more grieved. “Father won’t say, but he’s implied enough for me to guess it was Gaunt.”

Harriet had no reply for him. In the background, the Quidditch skirmish continued, brooms whistling in the air, people laughing and cheering. Others not involved in the game had come out to study or just be with their friends and chat. She could see Professor McGonagall much farther up the hill by the castle doors, simply watching, her hands folded in front of herself.

Malfoy had a point, loathe as Harriet was to admit it. The world didn’t revolve around her, Hermione, and Elara; it didn’t revolve around Hogwarts or the problems here, either. The rest of Wizarding Britain and the people residing in it had to deal with Gaunt, his administration, and the problems they made. Professor Slytherin made life difficult for all the students here, not just Harriet’s House or her friends. Somewhere out there, Voldemort lurked—a danger to everything living, be they magical or not.

“Father won’t let me see her. He doesn’t want me to leave the school—fat lot of good that does anyone.” Malfoy scowled at the new spring grass. He had smudges on his shoes as if he’d been kicking at something solid like a stone wall, or perhaps his trunk. “She’s supposed to be home at the end of the week.”

“You lot have a Hogsmeade day tomorrow, don’t you? You should find her something nice to let her know you’re thinking about her.”

Malfoy grunted in response. Hermione laughed at something Terry said, and Malfoy glanced in her direction before jerking away, muttering. Harriet sighed.

“You know, you can go sit with them. I promise they’re not completely nauseating, and Hermione would want to know about your mum. She cares about Narcissa a great deal.”

“You wouldn’t understand, Potter. You’ve all the awareness of a stink bug.”

“Oi! I was going to ask if you wanted a go on my Firebolt to make you feel better, but if you’re going to be a tit—.”

The mention of the Firebolt perked Malfoy up, his gray eyes flicking to the broom resting on Harriet’s shoulder. “Come on, Potter. Don’t be cruel. I’m suffering.”

“You’re suffering under your own fat ego,” she quipped, but she did unhook the footrest from where it had settled near her neck, holding the broom out for him to take. “Don’t make me regret this. Not one bloody scratch, Malfoy! I mean it!”

He smirked, already taking off across the grass, swinging the Firebolt into position. Harriet huffed as he took to the air, but she trusted him enough to have respect for the broom, if not herself. At least he seemed more himself.

She could not help the worry that tossed in her stomach when she considered Narcissa—or even Lucius, arsehole that he was—or any of the pure-blood families who lived under Gaunt’s thumb. She couldn’t say they were the greatest of people, but did they deserve to live in terror in their own homes? Hermione had told them about the injuries Lucius sustained from Gaunt. She hadn’t realized those might extend to his wife.

Harriet breathed out through her nose and did her best to push the thought away, to embrace the novelty of a carefree day. She moved away from the paddock, licking away the last bit of blood from her lip, and approached Elara and Fleur.

“Can I sit here?” she asked the pair, and when they nodded, she sprawled on the grass, staring up into the sky. Clouds hovered around the mountains, threatening rain in the future, but otherwise the sky was faultless. Serene.

“Fleur, you know my god-sister, Harriet?”

Harriet sat up enough to see Fleur give her a dazzling smile. She really was very pretty, though Harriet still thought her snooty. “Salut,” Fleur said.

“‘Lo.”

She returned to her sky-gazing and Elara and Fleur to their conversation. Apparently, Fleur wanted to practice her English more and had sought out Elara to converse with, or so she claimed. Harriet thought Fleur might be suffering from her own bit of starstruck awe when it came to Elara, taken in by her pretty face and dry wit. But, of course, Elara having helped rescue her sister also played a factor.

The French witch had been studying in her final years at Beauxbatons how to be a Curse Breaker at Gringotts. “At ze bank,” she clarified. “I do not wish to tromp about ze filthy tombs.”

Harriet thought that a shame. Maybe she’d like doing something like that if she had the brains for it. It reminded her of all the wonderous and odd feats of magic Professor Dumbledore showed her. She thought seeing the tombs of ancient wizards and trying to puzzle through their traps would be brilliant.

When the topic turned to what Elara saw herself doing after school, she didn’t have an answer. “I’m not sure,” she confessed. “Life isn’t…static here in England. Our Ministry is corrupt—our Minister a madman, and the Dark Lord is always a threat. I couldn’t say what tomorrow would bring.”

Harriet didn’t know what tomorrow would bring either. Sometimes, she could barely think of what next week might look like—but now, lounging in the grass, hearing the others play Quidditch while she listened to Elara and Fleur chat, that all seemed very far away. She closed her eyes and felt the sun’s warmth on her face, the red glow simmering beneath her lids. She could only wish for more days exactly like this.

But Harriet couldn’t have guessed how soon easy afternoons would become a thing of the past. She couldn’t have known how they’d be gone like the final, flickering gasp of a candle and the waning spring of youth.


A/N: It ’s all downhill from here.

Chapter 208: morituri te salutant

Chapter Text

ccviii. morituri te salutant

 

On the twelfth of May, the members of Slytherin House woke to find a new announcement pinned to the common room board.

“Slytherin’s final trial is in two days,” Elara read, leaning over the shorter heads of those crowded before the board. “Apparently, it’s going to be held here in the common room after supper, and the whole House is ‘encouraged’ to attend.”

Harriet and Hermione exchanged short, uneasy glances. “I thought he meant to have the trial in June?” Harriet asked, a nervous tick in her voice. She’d expected to have more time—a month’s worth, or at least a few more weeks. She didn’t feel ready.

“He must want the month to acclimatize his apprentice?” Hermione said, but it came out as a question because she didn’t have any more of a clue than Harriet did. The black letter neatly pinned among the normal bits of parchment seemed to taunt them and the others.

The next two days passed in a haze of dread and sleepless nights. Harriet tossed and turned and stared at the canopy of her bed, her stomach twisted into knots. At meals, she picked at her food, and everything tasted like ash in her mouth. Everyone’s expectations sat heavy on her shoulders, and Harriet didn’t think she could bear it. What would happen if she lost? What would happen if she won?

“You should eat a bit more,” Hermione told her at dinner the evening of the fourteenth. “You’ve barely touched a thing all day.”

“No, I feel like I might be ill,” Harriet confessed, pushing away a tureen of stew. She glanced toward the High Table and discovered several of the seats empty, including the Headmaster. A pity; she could have done with an encouraging word from the wizard.

After the meal concluded, the Slytherins fairly buzzed with excitement as they returned to the dungeons. They entered the common room to find it empty of furniture, the space more cavernous than usual, lit only by the fires in the various hearths and the murky light of the moon washed green by the lake water.

“Good evening,” Professor Slytherin said as he observed his students carefully edging farther into the room. He stood in such a way that Harriet almost missed the presence of Professors Snape and Sinistra at his back, the pair appearing suitably grim. Harriet wondered why they were there and, in a moment she’d later blame on her fatigue, remembered they were Slytherins too. It seemed the Professor had invited more than just current students.

“I have invited you here to bear witness to an auspicious occasion. Tonight, I will be selecting my apprentice from among those who have triumphed in the trials I have set them.” Slytherin steepled his fingers before his chest, his posture a disgusting mirror to how Professor Dumbledore might have stood if he’d still had two arms. He’d dressed well—not that he ever wore anything substandard—but Harriet hadn’t seen him wear those dark, pine green robes with the silver lining before. They looked expensive, and instead of a brooch at the clasp, he wore a torque fashioned to look like one of the stone snakes winding in the ceiling’s arched ribbing.

“I have chosen a simple task for them—an opportunity to display their strength, their knowledge, their cunning, and ability. All traits any great Slytherin has in spades.”

Next to Harriet, Hermione frowned. “That’s a Muggle saying,” she murmured.

Harriet had to frown as well because it was a Muggle saying, and wasn’t it curious for Professor Slytherin to use it? Almost as if he hadn’t meant to?

“Tonight, I will ask the eight qualifying witches and wizards to participate in our own little tournament. Through seven duels, we will see who can best their competition and survive through the final round. I will name the victor my apprentice.”

Whispers of interest fluttered through the crowd. “It’s gonna be Accipto!” Warrington said, backed by a vocal cheer from Dread. Nervous laughter trickled from the sixth years, though Professor Slytherin’s expression never changed from one of cool cordiality.

“Silence,” Snape snapped. The whispers died out.

“If you would all find places against the wall, Professors Sinistra and Snape will be setting a barrier. For safety.”

The students did as told, spreading themselves thin along the perimeters of the room as the professors paced before them, using a quiet incantation to draw a solid, uninterrupted line on the stone. When they finished, it reminded Harriet of an arena—a large expanse of empty stone, a few slender, serpentine pillars, and the white line barring people from entering. When Slytherin snapped his fingers, a thick, transparent wall of gold sprung up toward the ceiling. Harriet gave the wall a prod—and flinched when an electric jolt burned her fingertip.

“The rules for each match are simple,” Slytherin spoke from the head of the room by the best hearth. A single, winged armchair returned into being, and he sat in it, making himself comfortable. “Nothing can be used that will mangle or otherwise permanently disfigure your opponent. Of course, no magic that would see you sentenced to Azkaban may be used either.” Slytherin smiled, red eyes blazing. “Beyond those stipulations, I leave it up to your discretion. The match will not end until a participant forfeits or is incapacitated beyond the means of surrendering. Spectators are not allowed to interfere. Do put on a good show for us.” His head tilted, and with a lazy wave of his hand, he summoned the first pair in the ring. “Nott, Vuharith. Step forward.”

Bodies shifted as the barrier dipped, and the pair came into the arena proper. Harriet couldn’t see their faces well in the shadows, but Theodore’s stiff shoulders radiated nerves, and Vuharith had a hand propped on her hip, wand twirling in her fingers.

“On the count of three,” Slytherin drawled. “One—.”

Nott fumbled to pull his wand from his pocket, shaking.

“Two—.”

Vuharith’s teeth flashed in the firelight when she grinned.

Three—.”

The first spell came from Vuharith, a flash of orange light catching Nott high in the torso before his shield could fully form. His legs wobbled as if boneless, his hands flying wide for balance, then—.

Furnunculus!

The second jinx struck Nott in the face with a burst of gold—and his skin erupted with large, scarlet boils. He yelped and clasped at his cheek. Vuharith laughed, prompting others to do the same. Before she could continue hexing him, Nott gasped out, “I forfeit!”

“Aw, c’mon, Nott. That’s it?” Vuharith complained over scattered applause. Professor Slytherin clapped as well, not appearing surprised with the outcome.

But he wouldn’t, would he? Harriet thought. Snape said Nott wasn’t a challenge, that he doesn’t have a talent for this. He was right. That didn’t stop her from feeling sorry for Nott. He didn’t deserve a full hexing in front of their entire House.

Snape broke from his position and strode through the golden barrier once the match was called. He canceled the jinx on Nott’s legs, letting him settle on the floor, and Nott stifled a moan with his closed fist. Snape briefly examined his face, then sent him from the room with Sinistra to be administered a Cure for Boils.

“Next, let us have…Bragge and Lestrange.”

The two older students parted through the barrier, Warrington clapping Lestrange on the shoulder before he sauntered forward. Harriet chewed her bottom lip as she watched, recalling everything she and Snape had gone over in the Aerie about the pair. Bragge was clever—intelligent and inventive, but she wasn’t quick. Lestrange was quick, and nasty. He wouldn’t hesitate.

Harriet almost gasped when her projection for the bout went as she expected it would; neither sixth-year needed to speak their spells aloud, and Lestrange was fast, aggressive. He didn’t give Bragge a chance to showcase her skills. He simply fired hex after hex in a dizzying array until Bragge’s shield faltered, she fell to one knee, and a blink of red laid her out flat.

That’s not efficient, though, Harriet thought as Professor Snape woke Bragge and Lestrange returned to his cheering friends. If he does that every match, he’ll be exhausted.

“Black and Carrow; you’re next.”

Harriet’s heart leapt into her throat as she squeezed her friend’s arm, and Elara shook her and Hermione off. Looking at her, one would assume her the picture of composure—her spine straight, hands steady as she retrieved her wand. However, Harriet could see her lips had gone pale, the witch nearly sick with nerves.

Harriet pressed so close to the barrier the spark licked at her skin, sending prickles through her nose and cheeks. Flora Carrow stood perhaps four yards from Elara and appeared shaken, scrutinizing her as if the grim reaper had stepped out into the light, not a fourth year. She was shorter than Elara and a tad reedier, more like Harriet in build. She had none of Elara’s stone-like countenance and visibly winced when Slytherin began his countdown.

“One. Two. Three—.”

Expelliarmus!” Carrow cried.

Protego!” Elara’s shield blocked the red bolt, but Harriet noticed how she took a step back.

Lean into it. You need to lean into it, she said in her head, biting at her lip again to keep her mouth shut. She wondered if Slytherin was far enough away not to hear her giving advice and glanced toward him. She jolted when she found his red eyes already resting on her as if waiting for her to interfere. He saw Harriet looking at him and smirked.

She swallowed and lowered her gaze.

Relashio!

Elara used another shield to block Carrow’s second jinx. Harriet ground her teeth, wanting to yell at her friend to stop hesitating, to stop waiting for her turn like a game of chess—and, as if she’d heard her, Elara moved, lurching as she jabbed her wand.

Offendimus!

The Trip Jinx went lower than Carrow expected, and her hastily thrown protego didn’t catch it from tangling around her ankles. She didn’t quite fall, but her attention wavered, and this time Elara didn’t hesitate.

Accio Carrow’s wand!

The wand in question flew straight from Carrow’s inattentive fingers to Elara’s waiting hand. She clasped it tight, and the two witches stared at one another, Flora at a loss for what to do.

Slytherin cleared his throat. “The match continues until someone forfeits.”

“I—I forfeit. I forfeit!” Carrow stuttered as if frightened Elara might continue firing spells. Elara nodded and handed back her wand, then returned to Harriet and Hermione. Harriet clasped her arm and felt the quiet, anxious tremors leave her friend in a rush.

Lestrange scoffed loud enough to be heard. “Child’s play,” he said, resulting in a mixed bag of titters and jeers.

“You did brilliant,” Harriet whispered. “Real brilliant. Don’t let him make you think otherwise, yeah?”

“Mr. Pucey, Miss Potter. It is your turn.”

Harriet squeezed her eyes shut as she heard Professor Slytherin’s call. Her heart thumped heavy and loud in her chest, and she could feel the eyes of her fellow students settle on her, both curious and caustic. Her skin stung from their attention. She felt as if she’d gone cold and warm at the same time, a nervous dampness sticking her collar to her scarred neck.

Today, Miss Potter. While we’re still young.”

Hermione gave her a nudge, and Harriet stepped forward, stumbling when her shoe clipped the edge of the barrier. It snapped back into place, leaving Harriet standing alone with Pucey several meters away. Laughter echoed in the common room—the kind of mean, taunting laughter Harriet had heard more than once in her life because she was too short and thin with bones like a bird. She allowed herself one anxious gesture, adjusting her glasses farther up her nose before she forced her hand back down to her side. Pucey studied her.

“One—.”

Harriet drew a deep breath into her lungs, her eyes seeking out Professor Snape in the crowd. She found him a few paces down from Slytherin, his gaze fixed on her, arms crossed, waiting.

“Two—.”

She pictured Pucey as the mannequin in the Aerie, his name across his chest, recollecting all the things she’d guess about him. Of course, the answers came less quickly now that she was face to face with a real person, but the exercise remained the same. She kept breathing, low and slow, her knees bent, posture loose.

He’ll wait for me to go first because his reflexes are better than his initiative, she thought. Her tongue flicked against her lower lip. But he’ll react hard. He knows more magic than me, has more practice. My best shot is the first—.

“Three!”

Harriet exhaled.

Baubillious!

Shrieks sounded when the sudden blast of white light came from the end of Harriet’s wand and blinded the onlookers—Pucey catching the full brunt of it. With her own eyes closed, Harriet didn’t allow a full moment to pass before her arm was already twisting from her first spell into the next.

Adhaerere Lentum!

The black gunk struck Adrien in the face, and he gasped, stumbling.

Offendimus!

A final jinx caught Pucey by the ankles, and when Harriet pulled, finishing the spell, he fell and hit the floor with a resounding thump.

Expelliarmus.” Harriet disarmed him as an afterthought, not expecting he’d get back up after having the air knocked out of him. As it was, he could barely wheeze a concession, holding his arm up to ward off any unseen attacks. Harriet looked up, realizing no one had said a word, finding a sea of shocked faces watching her. One of the first years broke the silence by clapping, and a few others followed. Harriet’s face flushed as she started toward her friends.

“You’re not dismissed, Potter.”

Harriet stopped, alarmed, and Slytherin waved a hand. “Let us be efficient, shall we? Vuharith, you’re in.”

Puzzled, Vuharith glanced at the wizard—but when he narrowed his eyes, she didn’t hesitate to scramble through the open barrier. She shook off her initial confusion and grinned, hand once more on her hip, wand out.

Harriet hadn’t even had a chance to breathe, and Adrian had just been yanked from the ring by Snape. She rushed to remember everything Snape had taught her to recognize in Vuharith—her pettiness, how she enjoyed intimidating students younger than her. She remembered Vuharith as she used to be years ago, before she started following Lestrange, when she was kind and studious and helpful. Harriet saw the pieces of that witch and how they’d been twisted and picked over until Vuharith became the person she was today.

Harriet squared her jaw as Slytherin began to count.

“Ready to eat floor, Potter?” Vuharith mocked, holding her wand at the ready. The tip’s position is by her middle, Harriet told herself. She’s being an idiot and projecting where she’ll cast from. It’ll be a hex, something nasty, and it’ll be orange or yellow. Which means I’ll need….

“One, two, three—.”

Vuharith jumped forward, dark hair swinging free of her ponytail. “Calvorio!

Harriet already had herself ready and didn’t blink when the frizzy blur of orange flew toward her. “Protego Calilumen.

The shield rippled in front of her, orange and syrupy like a caramel sweet, and when Vuharith’s Hair-Loss Curse touched the surface, it bounced back like a rubber ball, spiraling at increased velocity. Vuharith’s eyes had a moment to widen before the curse clipped her, and she shrieked as half the hair on her head disappeared.

The crowd roared with laughter. Vuharith’s cheeks blazed with embarrassment, but her eyes glittered hot as coals, her attention focused on Harriet.

Defodio!” she shrieked. Harriet jerked to the side to avoid the sudden knife of dark blue light. It carved a line in the floor and struck the barrier, the golden light shivering as the energy dispersed. “DEFODIO!”

Harriet dodged again. “Expelliarmus!

Protego Tria!” The shield gleamed, thick and unwavering. It was strong—stronger than any of the spells Harriet knew.

Colloshoo!

As Harriet predicted, Vuharith kept the shield up for the second spell, but it didn’t extend to the floor. The Stickfast Hex struck her in the feet.

“Wh—?”

Flipendo!”

The Knockback Jinx blasted into Vuharith’s shield, and the shield held. But, as the witch compensated for the sheer force Harriet threw into the spell, she tried to step back and couldn’t, the soles of her shoes glued fast to the floor. She toppled, landing on her arse.

Expelliar—.

Vuharith flicked a silent spell at Harriet with a harsh stab of her wand, and Harriet flinched, interrupting her incantation. The spell flashed over the top of her thigh, leaving a stinging cut in its wake.

Finite Incantatem!” Vuharith jabbed her wand toward her feet, then flicked it upward toward Harriet. “Incendio!

Protego Flammae!” The watery barrier swallowed the gout of flame with a hiss, then hit the floor with a splat!Incarcerous!

Vuharith attempted to scramble to her feet but slipped in the water, failing to dodge. The thin, black ropes wrapped around her legs and torso, pinning her arms.

Expelliarmus!

Protego!

The older witch attempted to shield, but she couldn’t raise her arm to properly form the spell. The wand was snatched from her grasping fingers, and Harriet fumbled to catch it when it smacked her hand.

She waited for Vuharith to surrender. Her legs shook, and the right burned, blood dripping along her thigh to ruin the top of yet another pair of socks. Harriet exhaled, shuddering, and still Vuharith didn’t surrender.

“The match doesn’t end until you forfeit, Miss Vuharith,” Slytherin said, bored.

“I’m not going to forfeit to a stupid half-bred brat like her!” Vuharith snarled, smacking her head against the floor as she writhed against her bindings. She looked rather pathetic, trussed up like a Christmas roast with half her head sheared bald.

Slytherin sighed, red eyes flicking skyward. “Then the match continues until you’re incapacitated.”

Unfortunately, Harriet didn’t know how Vuharith could be much more incapacitated than she already was, and she had no plans to start hexing the witch into compliance. The longer she stood there frozen, the more she felt the pressure of waiting eyes. Vuharith kicked and rolled, scraping her elbows and knees, but the ropes wouldn’t fail until dismissed, and the witch’s wand remained tucked in Harriet’s hand.

“Stop being difficult,” she hissed.

“Fuck off, Potter!”

Slytherin sighed again, and the chair creaked ever so slightly as he rose. Any of the students standing close to him scrambled out of the way, and he crossed the barrier without resistance. Harriet’s eyes must have resembled an owl’s as the wizard approached her, coming to stand at her side and look down at Vuharith. He clearly enjoyed the situation.

“As I see it, you have two options, Miss Potter. You can either kick her in the head until she’s unconscious—.” Vuharith stilled at his words, looking at the defense professor with disbelief. “Or you can use a Stunner.”

Well, she certainly wasn’t going to pick the first choice. “I don’t know how,” Harriet confessed. She knew of the spell, but she wasn’t entirely sure of the incantation or the necessary movement. She kicked herself now for not learning it.

Slytherin considered her, one finger balanced against his chin—and then he smirked, and Harriet tensed as he brushed her hair behind her ear and leaned nearer. Cold chills chased over her spine as the wizard whispered, “It’s Stupefy. A short, downward motion. From the throat.”

Harriet’s hand trembled, but she held her wand up and performed the spell as he explained it. “Stupefy.”

The red flash struck Vuharith, and her thrashing ceased. She looked dead.

Harriet’s throat tightened as Slytherin leaned away from her—but not before the low, mirthless chuckle left him, shared between the two of them.

“Good job, Miss Potter,” He told her, turning again toward his seat. “Next, Black and Lestrange. It’s your turn.”

 


A/N: You know, I originally wanted to do this scene in the Chamber: I thought it would speak to Slytherin ’s need to show off and be “better” than everyone, his need for drama. But the more I considered it, I decided he would never want to share that, not even once.

morituri te salutant = “those who are about to die salute you.” Supposedly what the gladiators told the Emperor before fighting to the death in the arena, though it’s disputed.

Slytherin, whispering in Harriet’s ear: “…”

Hermione: “What did he say?”

Harriet: “Nothing, he just burped.”

Chapter 209: like a thunderbolt

Chapter Text

ccix. like a thunderbolt

 

Harriet passed Elara as she returned to the sidelines.

“Don’t let him bully you,” she said softly, her back to Slytherin. “He’s going to hit you with a barrage like he did to Bragge. Don’t—don’t try to shield. Dodge. He’ll pin you down otherwise and—and he’s using silent magic. We don’t know what to shield against.” Harriet turned her head and chanced a glance in Elara’s direction. Their eyes met. “Be careful.”

“I will.”

Slytherin cleared his throat, and Harriet faced forward, leaving the ring. Hermione reached out for her, and she could feel how sweaty her friend’s hand was.

“Oh, that was nerve-wracking,” she said, squeezing Harriet’s fingers until they felt like they might break. “I was so scared, and you’re bleeding—.”

“I’m all right,” Harriet told her. “It’s just a little scratch, see?”

It was more than a little scratch, and Professor Sinistra—returned with Theodore from administrating the Cure for Boils—had to heal her leg as Elara and Lestrange stared one another down. Slytherin took his time before giving the countdown, almost as if he enjoyed the heavy, malicious tension lingering between the two.

“One. Two. Three—.”

Elara had already thrown herself into motion before the countdown began, so when the blast of gray light flew toward her, it hit the floor and left a strange, spiraling smudge. She clasped hold of one of the pillars to catch her balance when she dodged the second silent spell, and then had the good sense not to try hiding behind the thin barrier for the third. She lunged for the next column, unable to do anything aside from dodge Lestrange’s barrage.

However, he couldn’t maintain the same level of casting forever. Not with the power he infused into his spells or with the frustration shown sharp and glinting in his dark eyes. On his last spell, he barked out the final syllable of the incantation as his concentration wavered, and he dragged in a ragged breath—but Elara didn’t know to press the advantage. She hesitated, then jerked forward, snarling—

Oscausi!” A white blur came for Lestrange, but he lurched out of the way, sending the spell flying upward. It left a black streak on the ceiling’s ribbing and chipped one of the stone snakes.

Lestrange retaliated, snapping, “Declinatio!” It wasn’t a spell Harriet recognized. A lethargic purple jet sailed toward Elara, and she dodged as she had before—but suddenly, the spell flung itself in a new direction, striking Elara in the side. She hit the floor and rolled, scrambling to regain her footing.

Comprimo!

Protego Duo!

The beige mist that came from Lestrange’s wand coalesced over Elara’s shield—then came down hard like a stomping boot. It repeated the motion again and again as Lestrange held the spell, wand steady, and Elara buckled under it onto one knee.

No! Harriet had told her not to block him for this very reason. “Move!” she shouted, the golden barrier snapping and sparking against her arms as she leaned into it. “You have to move!

With a grunt of effort, Elara let her shield fall and tried avoiding the spell, though it clipped her shoulder and sent her sprawling into the floor again. Before she even attempted standing, Elara jerked her head up, her hair mussed and robes dirty, and snarled, “Inhaere!”

Something like a ghostly red net came from Elara’s wand. Lestrange’s eyes widened and he jumped back a second before the net could snap him up in its weave. Harriet hadn’t a clue what the spell did, but Lestrange looked enraged, and Professor Slytherin called out, “Mind yourself, Miss Black!”

“Someone’s been into the family library,” Lestrange sneered at Elara as they stood facing one another, breathing heavily. Elara’s lip curled as she flung a Stinging Hex toward his eyes.

Lestrange stepped to the side. “Comprimo!

The dust-like mist returned, and Elara moved instead of shielding, but then—.

Declinatio!” Lestrange used the purple spell again, and it darted in one direction, then another, making its trajectory hard to predict. It caught Elara in the chest, and Lestrange hit her again with the pressing cloud, slamming her into the floor. She barely had a chance to breathe before Lestrange snarled, “Spasmos!

Another spell Harriet didn’t recognize. She looked on in confusion—and fear—as the narrow red beam flicked to the center of Elara’s torso, and her arms and legs suddenly jerked and curled in toward her chest as she shrieked.

“Elara!”

She shrieked again, the noise struggling to leave her lungs, and Lestrange let up. Elara gasped. “I forf—.”

Spasmos!

“Stop it!” Harriet shouted, pressing against the barrier despite the ache in her palms. “She’s forfeited, stop!”

Slytherin must have heard her, but he didn’t move to intercept Lestrange, who kept up the spell until he couldn’t hold it any longer. Panting, he lowered his wand and laughed as Elara rolled to her hands and knees and vomited.

Harriet’s arms trembled with rage, her face curiously numb and her eyes wet with tears. Elara had only entered this competition because of her. She’d entered to increase Harriet’s chances of winning, and the only reason she was on the floor right now, sick, was because of her.

“Harriet—.” Hermione had a grip on her robes, yanking her as much as possible in their limited space. “You’re burning your hands!”

Harriet let her pull her away, feeling the sting of new blisters on the pads of her fingers as she clenched her hands into fists. Elara forced a short, clipped surrender, choking, “I forfeit,” before Lestrange could muster another spell. Harriet pressed against the barrier again, but it didn’t relent.

Snape crossed the room, cloak trailing across the scarred floor as he came to kneel at Elara’s side. He vanished the sick, then waved his wand over her as Elara struggled to sit up. “You’re not dying, Black,” he griped, taking her by the arm to lever her upright. Elara wheezed. “To the hospital wing with you.”

No.”

“Do not even think of being difficult—.”

Elara bared her teeth, and Harriet noticed a pink tinge to her teeth, guessing she’d bitten her tongue or the inside of her cheek. “Not until Harriet makes him bleed.”

Snape’s only response was an aggravated grunt as he yanked Elara to her feet. He started inspecting a scrape on her palm—but Harriet noticed how his chin dipped, the muscle in his jaw twitching as the black curtain of his hair swung forward to obscure his face. Harriet knew what he was doing. He was whispering something.

He broke away a moment later and dropped Elara’s wrist, allowing her to limp over to Harriet and Hermione.

“If her lips turn blue, Granger,” he snapped in passing. “Drag her from the room.”

Hermione could only nod, helping Elara step over the barrier’s lip. Elara grabbed Harriet’s shoulder and jerked her closer, her mouth nearly touching the shorter witch’s ear.

“Snape said to not be fair. Break his bones.” She leaned away. “You can do it, Harriet.”

That was all well and good to say in theory, and Harriet would gladly oblige if she could—but after watching Accipto fight, she didn’t know if she could win. He knew more magic than her, moved quickly, and didn’t have any compunction against hurting someone. Despite her anger, and despite her dislike of the wizard, she didn’t know if she could “break his bones without hesitating, and if she hesitated, he would defeat her.

Harriet swallowed.

“Miss Potter,” Professor Slytherin called over the din of speculating voices. He’d allowed enough time to pass for Elara to leave the ring and for Lestrange to regain some strength. Harriet forced herself to look at him across the room, his frame cast in shadow by the fire at his back, though his eyes still gleamed red like garnets. “If you would join Mr. Lestrange.”

Her ears buzzed and her hands stung. She sucked in a shaking breath and stepped over the barrier, feeling every inch of the exhaustion she’d stored in her body over the last few days. She hadn’t eaten, she hadn’t slept. Her nerves felt fried, taut as a fishing line, and she almost wished she could forfeit before the bout even began.

Coward, an unhelpful voice in her mind said. You’re a coward, Harriet Potter.

“This will be the last round, children,” Slytherin told the room at large. He folded his hands together in his lap and tipped back his head, observing Lestrange and Harriet with his eyes half-closed in contemplation. “Whoever wins, I will take on as my apprentice. I wish you both the best of luck.”

Lestrange turned to glower at Harriet, and she took a step back, forcing more space between them. She could barely recall what she and Snape had speculated about him in the Aerie. He’ll try to hurt me, she told herself. Winning is secondary to that—and what did Snape say? No originality will make him lose?

What was that supposed to mean?

Her hand felt sticky with sweat on her wand.

“One. Two—.”

Pure reflex spared Harriet a spell to the face as Lestrange jumped the countdown. She flung herself to the side, jumping to avoid a second curse aimed at her legs. She raised her wand. “Baubillious—!”

Nubeshirun!

She tried to blind Lestrange as she had Pucey, but she should have anticipated him watching her duels and learning what she’d do. A black cloud swallowed her spell whole before it could burst. She aimed a jinx at his ankles, but Lestrange’s answering Shield Charm extended to the floor.

Damn!

Harriet urged herself into a run, and Lestrange reciprocated, the pair of them circling the perimeter of the ring. The barrier hummed like a lightning storm at Harriet’s back.

Comprimo!

He used the same crushing spell he had on Elara, trying to force Harriet into the same mistakes. She dodged—.

Declinatio!

The strange purple spell that acted like a Knockback Jinx came, but Harriet shouted, “Protego!” and tossed the Charm directly at the incoming beam without slowing. It pushed it from her path. “Aguamenti!

The surging funnel of water went straight through Lestrange’s conjured shield and doused him. He sputtered and staggered. “What the hell is this, Potter?” he demanded. “I’m not interested in playing in a paddling pool with you!”

Harriet didn’t answer. She snapped, “Flipendo!

And Lestrange said, “Protego!

So Harriet threw herself into the next spell as quickly as she could. “Glacius!” She knew it would pass through a normal Shield Charm, just as she knew someone would use a normal Shield Charm to block a run-of-the-mill Knockback Jinx. As expected, her first spell bounced on the ward, and the Freezing Spell passed right through. Lestrange shrieked as his wet clothes froze to his skin.

Harriet grinned—but it hadn’t worked as she’d intended. Instead of being frozen immobile, Lestrange shifted, and the weak ice encasing him snapped and crunched. A look of rage descended over his features like a falling curtain. “Confrigo Maximo!

Fire and soot erupted from Lestrange’s wand, and the spectators gasped and shrieked as it filled the arena like the falling plume of an erupting volcano. Eyes widening, Harriet used a Fire Shield and ducked behind it, the heat scalding where it passed her by, the sparks stinging in her eyes—.

Bombarda!

The targeted explosion came whizzing from the gathered clouds, and Harriet had just enough sense to leap out of the way before it could take off her leg. She choked on cinders, and her eyes watered.

Bombarda!

It came again from a different direction, and Harriet realized he was using the lingering cloud from his Blasting Curse as cover. She tried to listen, to anticipate where he’d come from, but the crowd was too loud, and Harriet’s ears rang. She panted, coughing—.

Where? Where, where, where—?!

Bombarda!

Protego!

Her arm trembled under the force of the blast. She tried to blink the debris from her eyes but couldn’t. She knew there was a spell meant to clear the air, but she didn’t know it, hadn’t had time to learn it—.

Bombarda!

The incoming force rattled Harriet’s teeth.

BOMBARDA!

She went down on one knee, gasping, the edges of her shield splintering—.

Comprimo!

The compressing force of Lestrange’s final spell shattered Harriet’s shield and slammed her face-first into the stone floor. She tried to breathe, but it felt as if a gargoyle had come to sit on her back, and it pressed upon her lungs like a forty-stone weight—.

Lestrange appeared from the thinning plume, his face rippling beneath a Bubble-Head Charm.

Spasmos!

It was the same spell he’d used on Elara, and when it hit Harriet, every muscle in her body seized with terrible cramps, pain rippling inward from her limbs as her hands spasmed and her legs kicked, but she refused to scream. She wouldn’t give him the satisfaction—.

Her wand slipped from her aching fingers—

Accio Potter’s wand!

—and flew into Lestrange’s waiting grasp.

Harriet watched it go with dread, peeling her cheek from the wet floor.

“That’s checkmate, Potter,” Lestrange said as he twirled her wand and then held it between his hands, grip tight, threatening to snap it. “I’ll give you more mercy than I did Black. I’ll give you one chance to forfeit.”

No. She couldn’t lose. It—this had been planned. Months of effort, training, Professors Snape and McGonagall and Dumbledore devoting time to her, to this, so she could become Slytherin’s apprentice and learn how to protect herself. So she could be useful.

It couldn’t end here, not like this. Harriet wouldn’t live down the shame.

Her eyes flicked toward her leg. She had her mother’s wand there—but could she grab it before Lestrange saw? She doubted it, and Snape had warned her to use it only in life-or-death situations. She was not meant to let others know she had it. She couldn’t bring it out in front of her entire House—and definitely not in front of Slytherin.

There was a puddle between her and Lestrange. Harriet couldn’t remember where it’d come from at first, having smacked her head against the floor hard enough to shake her brain, but then she realized it was from her Water-Making Spell. It seemed as if that had happened a lifetime ago and not just a handful of minutes. Movement in its reflection caught her attention, and Harriet looked toward the ceiling.

There was one of those carved serpents above Lestrange’s head. In the wavering firelight, Harriet thought it blinked.

“I’ll give you a countdown, Potter. Just for you,” Accipto said. Someone on the sidelines shouted for him to hex her, some laughed, and a younger voice cried for him to leave her alone. “One. Two. Three—.”

He paused when Harriet held up a wavering hand, no doubt thinking she meant to surrender. But, no—Harriet had all of her attention centered on the slender stone head pressed to the ceiling’s ribbing as it had been for a thousand years. She was back in that barren room with Professor Dumbledore and the bust of Barnabus. She was standing in front of it, knowing what she wanted, what she needed, but not having the words.

Harriet extended her shaking hand and narrowed her eyes, throwing forward every last drop of her will—.

Wake up,” she hissed, spit flying through her clenched teeth. “Wake up. Listen to me. You are needed. Wake up.”

Lestrange took a startled step back. “What in the hell are you—?”

Harriet didn’t care that the room had gone deadly quiet or that somewhere outside of her vision, she knew Professor Slytherin was watching her with his cold, hateful eyes. “Wake up,” she ordered the serpent. “Wake up, wake up—.”

Spasmos!

The spell struck Harriet, and she yelped, but Lestrange couldn’t hold it for long, too exhausted by the repeated use of it throughout the evening.

Wake up,” Harriet continued to hiss through ragged breaths. “Wake up, wake up—.”

“Are you touched in the head?” Lestrange demanded, his own chest rising and falling in heavy gasps, his eyes wild in confusion and no small amount of fear. “Stop it! I said stop—!

Overhead, the mortar cracked and crumbled, and a collective gasp rang in the common room as the stone serpent peeled itself from the ceiling and lunged for Lestrange. He jumped back with a shocked exclamation, but not before the snake collided with the floor, its coils cracking and breaking as it bent unnaturally to move. It hissed and sank tiny fangs as sharp as daggers into Accipto’s thigh. He screamed.

Harriet flung herself from the floor like a Seeker caught in mid-dive and leapt, her hand closing around her wand, shoulder knocking Lestrange’s away. She twisted, coming face to face with his pained, shocked expression, and pointed her wand between his eyes.

Stupefy!

The force of the spell threw Lestrange from her, and he crumpled, the snake’s stone head still attached to his leg. The rest of the creature’s body shattered and broke, whatever paltry spark of Harriet’s magic that had animated it not enough to give it proper form or longevity. It crumbled like so much charred soot.

Swaying where she stood, she looked down at the broken pieces, the gray bits splintered to nothing under her feet, centuries-old craftsmanship gone in an instant. The emerald chips in its eyes dulled.

I’m sorry,” she whispered, still breathing hard. The air still tasted of smoke and ash. “I’m sorry.

Lestrange didn’t move.

A chair creaked, and robes rippled. Harriet turned, limping, to see Professor Slytherin rise from his seat, his gaze boring into her like the sharp edge of a sword hanging above her throat. No one said a word until Slytherin stirred, his tongue wetting his lower lip in an agitated gesture.

“It appears Potter wins. Congratulations, Apprentice.”

She had won. She had done it—but Harriet felt no elation, no joy. She simply felt tired.

Cheers erupted, tinged with groans and boos from Lestrange’s friends and lackeys, though Harriet hardly heard them. Professor Slytherin had crossed the barrier and was coming toward her, his red eyes blazing with rage.

Harriet glanced again toward the broken statue on the floor and felt her heart stop beating.

She gulped.


A/N: Title from Sun Tzu ’s The Art of War , “Let your plans be dark and impenetrable as night, and when you move, fall like a thunderbolt.”

I hope you all enjoyed the duels! Those are a lot of work to write aha. Honestly, I feel like Lestrange would have used more silent magic, BUT it would be rather dry to read. And I 100% wanted Livius there, but I worried it ’d be a bit too deus ex machina or plot armor-like, y’know?

I also played around with the idea of Harriet losing, but Slytherin still choosing her just to prove it ’s his game, he makes the rules and can break them if he wants. In the end, I decided he wouldn’t have taken her on: whatever shape he’s in, Voldemort is hell-bent on his followers proving themselves. He wouldn’t accept an apprentice—meant to be an extension of his will, a weapon in essence—who just lost in front of him.

Harriet: “Finally, this nonsense is behind me!”

Harriet: *realizes the reality of being Slytherin ’s apprentice*

Harriet: “LESTRANGE, I’VE CHANGED MY MIND.”

Chapter 210: the maw of the beast

Chapter Text

ccx. the maw of the beast

 

The castle had never seemed so terrifying to Harriet before.

Night at Hogwarts had a strange quality to it. It seemed to swell and loom, becoming ominous rather than inviting, reminding trespassers it was foremost a castle and not just a school. The torches and braziers only sputtered to life in increments, just enough to give light to the path ahead before dying, smoke hissing from the fizzling embers. The uncoordinated snap of Harriet’s shoes hitting the floor echoed, incriminating, and the hushed murmur of voices from the portraits trailed like accusatory ghosts.

Of course, Harriet had never experienced a night at Hogwarts with Professor Slytherin dragging her by the upper arm, so that could be contributing to the overall malice the castle seemed to exude. His fingers dug into her bicep and made the already sore muscle twinge with pain. He’d grabbed her in the common room not seconds after she’d defeated Lestrange and took her into the corridor. Now, she didn’t know where they were headed, only that she’d tried to match his pace but couldn’t find the energy to do so.

“Professor—,” she tried, but he showed no inclination to listen to her. Instead, he stared straight ahead as they departed the dungeons and made for the higher stairs.

Harriet’s heart beat quick and heavy in her chest. She’d never seen Professor Slytherin like this, and she couldn’t predict how he would act. The uncertainty wreaked havoc upon her nerves, and her head swam, every breath stolen as if through a tight, narrow tube.

Exposing herself as a Parselmouth may not have been the most calculated thing she’d ever done. It had seemed brilliant in the moment; it showed her resourcefulness, and she and Snape had talked about Slytherin valuing those kinds of traits in his followers. She knew that one day Slytherin would discover she was a Parselmouth—it was inevitable Harriet would slip, and she had already had several near-misses with her dormmates and Livius’ proclivity for snooping. Slytherin wasn’t a vapid teenage girl willing to brush off snake-related peculiarities; he would notice eventually.

She winced when his fingers dug in, and they turned a corner, though she nearly sighed with relief when she realized Slytherin was leading them to his classroom. He didn’t stop there, however, instead continuing through the pitch-black room as if he could see in the dark, moving with ease until he all but threw Harriet through the door to his office.

She had visited the professor here once or twice over the years, and it never appeared to change. Ever since the first time she’d been forced to come, Harriet had likened the office to Professor Dumbledore’s—in a twisted, mirrored version of the space. The walls were rounded and covered in heavy wood shelves stained nearly black, leather-bound tomes hidden behind diamond-paned glass. They exuded an oppressive weight like a thousand hateful, leering eyes, and the tables interspersed with hard, uncushioned chairs held sharp, spiney instruments, some that looked like they could be used to torture unwitting students. The seat behind his desk could only be described as throne-like with its towering back and thick, scrolled arms.

Slytherin didn’t go to sit in his ridiculous chair. He flicked his wand to ignite the empty hearth, and Harriet almost wished he’d left it dark to spare her the sight of his irritated face. He rolled his wrist, and his wand followed the motion, flaring as he stepped closer. Harriet flinched and threw her hand in front of her face, certain he was about to hex her—but Slytherin didn’t. He snapped a strange spell and fired it toward the floor.

In her brief prior visits, Harriet had noted the strange line on the stones she had to cross in order to enter the room. The castle had many strange quirks and details to it, but this particular line had caught her attention because it looked as if someone had taken a hot poker and had repeatedly dragged it upon the floor until it carved a circle in the office’s interior. The deep groove was stained with soot—and something thick like tar.

Slytherin used an incantation, and red light flared from the odd line like the fires of Hell crawling out of the earth’s belly. Harriet jerked away from the growing barrier, terrified by the red, glaring light encircling them, and she nearly jumped into Slytherin when he swept over her.

A solid hand grabbed her face, narrow fingertips digging into her cheeks as he turned his eyes to hers. Her scar burned. “Don’t—,” Harriet gasped, not knowing what she was protesting—but then Slytherin’s wand touched her temple, and she couldn’t turn from his blazing, blood-colored gaze.

Legilimens!

A sudden blast like cold water bursting against her face hit Harriet, and though she tried to blink, she found she couldn’t. Her view of Slytherin vanished, occluded behind a deluge of other images. It felt as though an icicle had pierced her brain, and the cold besieging her radiating from it—a pulsing, fiery pain splintering her thoughts, crackling like lightning, bringing memories into light.

A hazy, flickering image of a black-haired man, spectacles gleaming as he smiled from ear to ear and the stuffed bear in his hand wiggled its arms—.

“Go, Lily! I’ll hold him off—.”

A shared grave wreathed in autumn leaves, two names carved upon the stone. ‘The last enemy to be conquered—.’

The lumbering shape of an overweight, mustachioed man coming through the front door, arm extended to embrace his son. Small, watery eyes land on her and narrow—.

The rustling of the morning paper, the sizzle and pop of cooking bacon. She stood at the hob, while the others chatted at the dining table—.

Jealousy swelling in her lungs, Elara Black at her elbow, the bitter statement of, “At least you have a father—!”

Something of Harriet’s mind persisted beneath the onslaught. Distantly, she realized a word kept resonating in the mess like the chime of a tuning fork. Father, father, father—a concept that Harriet truly had very little knowledge about, so with the images came the emotions of confusion, guilt, want, and sadness. Slytherin tore through it all, searching, grasping, letting it slip like sand through his clawed hands—.

Creaking floorboards under quiet feet, French voices in the air. A tap upon the door, beckoning, “Girls, réveillez-vous. Breakfast is soon—.

A bench in a summer garden, cold night air, a gentle voice murmuring, “It wears upon the heart to know those you come to love will go on without you one day—.”

The dusty door creaked in on ancient hinges, and the first man through was draped in Auror robes, the second gaunt and haggard but smiling—.

Just as suddenly as the assault had begun, Slytherin pulled back—and Harriet fell to the floor, clutching her pounding skull. The pain seemed to throb through her eyeballs, and Harriet clapped her hands over them as if afraid they’d pop right out of her head. As the seconds passed, the ache dulled to something less brain-melting, and she pried her eyelids open.

What in the hell was that?!

The wavering light from the fireplace made it difficult to see at first, though she could discern Slytherin’s form pacing in front of her inside that odd red barrier. He had a hand on his temple as if soothing his own searing headache, though that hand lowered when he noticed Harriet had lifted her head. She sniffled, wetness gathering and dripping from her nose.

A small noise of disgust left the Professor, and he conjured a flannel with a wave of his hand, flicking it in Harriet’s direction. She had to pick it up off the floor and hold it to her bleeding nose.

She could feel his eyes upon her as she stood. Once she regained her feet, Slytherin swept closer again, and Harriet squeezed her eyes shut when he grabbed her face, bracing—.

Stop fussing,” Slytherin hissed as he tugged her closer to the fire and turned her toward it. Confused, Harriet dared open one eye to find Slytherin scrutinizing her again in the light, twisting her this way and that, ignoring the blood on her upper lip. When he finally let go, Harriet recoiled, backing up as far as she could inside the barrier.

“Wh—what did you do?” she demanded.

Some of her blood and no little amount of snot had smeared on Slytherin’s fingers, and he vanished it with an appalled breath. “It is of no consequence,” he told her. “You should be more concerned with your actions in the common room. Never thought to mention your little gift, did you, Potter?”

Harriet swallowed. With the way his tongue lingered on the mention of her ability, she knew he was using Parseltongue. He sounded different than she did—more snake-like, with a harder, lingering sibilance that cut across her like a razor’s edge. Her mouth went dry with fear as she tried to gather her scattered wits.

“I—don’t know what you mean. Sir.”

He sucked air through his teeth. “You’re going to learn lying to me doesn’t get you very far, apprentice,” Slytherin said. “Try again.”

She couldn’t help how her eyes darted around the room. Something about the red barrier felt…wrong. The castle around them groaned, and Harriet’s ears popped with pressure. If her wits hadn’t been scattered by dueling Lestrange and then having her thoughts turned on their head by Slytherin, Harriet would have tried to guess at the barrier’s purpose. It must be the reason he dragged her all the way here.

“I—.” Harriet cleared her throat. “Well, it’s not very clever to let everyone know your strengths, right? So I never…told anybody.”

“And yet you exposed yourself in front of the whole House.” He hissed again with an out-flung hand, aggravated. “Foolish! I’m of a mind to think you did so intentionally!”

Harriet stared at her shoes, still wiping the drying blood from her nostrils.

He studied her again, suspicion written in the shallow lines of his young face, the firelight uncanny in the red glint of his eyes. He opened his mouth as if to speak but changed his mind, seeming to weigh unknown, sinister thoughts. He had a calculating look about him, torn between smiling or scowling, and the indecision did nothing for Harriet’s panicked heart. It thumped in her chest faster and faster as she shivered and waited for him to come to a decision.

“Tell me; have you any relatives who share our particular skill, hmm?”

His question startled Harriet. “Err, no?” she answered—regretting it when Slytherin smiled. Should she have lied? Said she had a cousin or another distant relative who could have a chat with snakes too? No, that wouldn’t be a good idea. She didn’t want to set Slytherin to hunting a non-existent person.

Then, he laughed, and it was a cold noise—a hateful noise. Inexplicable tears jumped into Harriet’s eyes, and she held them back, feeling as if she were the subject of a joke she didn’t understand.

“Very well. This has worked out…marvelously.” Slytherin’s mocking chuckle dwindled into a pleased grin. “Better than I could have expected. Off to bed with you, Miss Potter. Apprentice. We will attend the finer details of our arrangement tomorrow afternoon before supper.” Professor Slytherin raised his wand and dismissed the red barrier, letting it fall back into the floor with a hiss like water dumped on hot coals. With it went the oppression feeling, and the castle stopped groaning and creaking.

Harriet wasted no time running for the door, but when she found it locked, she forced herself to swallow her pride and turn around. Slytherin stood looking very pleased with himself for several moments, making a point, before he unlocked the door. Harriet slammed it against the wall in her rush to leave.

 

xXx

 

The Vow had not stopped aching for hours.

Severus stared at his hand in his lap, limp, pale fingers curled against the black fabric of his trousers. Midnight had long since passed, and he imagined the girl either suffered nightmares or lay awake, unable to sleep. He was familiar with the feeling and had done the same after many of his meetings with Slytherin.

Albus leaned his arm against the mantel, staring into the flames. A deathly silence had overcome the Headmaster’s tower once Severus had arrived to deliver news of Potter’s victory and her subsequent return from Slytherin’s interrogation. It seemed Dumbledore, like Severus, didn’t know how to feel about the newest developments, so they kept quiet, entrenched in their thoughts.

“The entire House witnessed her use of Parseltongue,” he said, thinking back on the moment when Potter’s furious eyes had tipped toward the ceiling and that horrid, horrid rasp had fallen from her mouth. Severus had been moments away from intervening, from declaring Lestrange the winner no matter Albus’ plan, simply to spare the girl Accipto’s nastier temperament—but then Potter had proven herself too resourceful for her own good. “They all know.”

Severus shut his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose.

Glass rattled against glass, and he peered toward the hearth to find Dumbledore pouring liquid into a pair of conjured goblets. Given he was Headmaster and this was a school, the bottle of pricey single-malt scotch usually remained concealed behind the edge of a moth-eaten tapestry. The amber fluid sloshed in the vessel.

“I don’t drink,” Severus said, but Dumbledore still held out the goblet, and Severus still accepted it. He didn’t even pretend not to sip from it.

“I had hoped he may never discover dear Harriet’s talent,” Dumbledore said as he sat in the winged chair opposite Severus. The Potions Master had sunk into his, slumped like a sullen teenager, long legs sprawled. “Ah, but I cannot fault her for doing her best when that is all we have asked of her.”

“Next time ask her to be more circumspect,” Severus grumbled.

Dumbledore chuckled, though it was mirthless. “You know, I expected you to be angrier than you are. I’m pleased you’re taking all this in stride.”

The taste of peat and honey turned on Severus’ tongue. He didn’t speak at first, didn’t look away from the fire. His wrist ached.

“I’m tired, Headmaster,” he said. “I’m simply tired.”

Albus sighed, drank. It was far too late for either of them to be awake, too late for them to rest. Too late, too late. They drank—but this wasn’t a celebration, no matter their victories. Severus could only think they’d lost something vital: the blade had sunk into their back without them noticing a thing.

“He’ll assume Harriet is Voldemort’s daughter,” Dumbledore stated, setting his glass down to stroke his beard. He didn’t smile, and Severus’ entire body stiffened. “We can only hope that will give him more incentive to teach her and to take her into his confidence. He’ll want to keep her safe from his own self, if only to satisfy his agenda.”

Severus straightened and leaned forward, slamming his goblet down on the arm of his chair. He didn’t care that the dewy glass slipped through his fingers and hit the rug with a thud, scotch seeping into the fibers. “The Dark Lord killed his entire family,” he spat, teeth clenched, stomach churning. “He used to brag about it in certain circles. Even the delusion of the girl being his blood will not spare her his mistreatment! When will it end, Dumbledore? When will it be enough?”

The rage he’d suppressed earlier returned with a vengeance, and Severus could not bring himself to stay there a moment longer. He could not look at Dumbledore, could not stand the crackling warmth of the fire on his skin or the somnolent comfort of the Headmaster’s tower. He had to leave.

They had walked Potter into the maw of the beast, and Severus had all but pushed her in.

The door to Dumbledore’s study shut at Severus’ heels as he descended the stairs. His shadow loomed on the wall, flickering in the torchlight.

Potter would be Slytherin’s apprentice. Having already suffered years as the wizard’s ally and confidante, Severus knew what she would face in her future. He knew the sensation of Slytherin’s grip tightening, nails sinking in, both in the literal and figurative sense. He knew all this, and he would have to watch it happen without doing a thing to intervene.

What could he have done differently? Should he have sabotaged Albus’ plan? Convinced Flamel to take Potter away? Send her to Beauxbatons or Durmstrang or bloody Mahoutokoro for all he cared? But would that have been the better choice? The Dark Lord would have come for her eventually. His interference was, in every sense of the word, inevitable.

His wrist ached. He stopped by his storeroom on the way to his quarters, finding a dusty bottle of Dreamless Sleep to send off with one of the house-elves. By the time he disappeared into the cold dark of his quarters, the pain began to relent. Severus imagined his guilt leaving with it, dispersing like birds toward the horizon, but it remained—stubborn as ever—long into the morning light.

 


A/N: I don ’t like how Legilimency is often treated in canon or fanon. We do (eventually) have an entire arc dedicated to it and Occlumency in CDT, but for now, it’s enough to know that no, Slytherin cannot simply look into Harriet’s head and have her whole life story pour out. He can only interpret images and emotions as he sees them, which means he doesn’t necessarily know the context behind them.

Slytherin, studying Harriet: “…”

Slytherin, speculating: “…”

Slytherin: “I owe SO MUCH back child support.”

Chapter 211: the circle of magical mastery and manifestation

Chapter Text

ccxi. the circle of magical mastery and manifestation

 

Harriet stared at her kidney pie and thought she might vomit.

“Well, you need to eat something,” Hermione sighed, reaching for the platter of Yorkshire puddings. Elara poured more pumpkin juice into her glass. “Here, have a bit of this with some gravy….”

Harriet didn’t want to have a bit of this or a bit of that; she wanted the floor to open up and swallow her whole. Maybe she could live with the mole people. Might make for a nice holiday.

“If your meeting’s before supper, you’re most likely going to miss the meal. Try eating something,” Hermione said with an insistent frown. “Or have a spot of tea. Maybe it’ll soothe your stomach.”

“My stomach’s fine, Hermione. It’s just trying to escape at the moment,” Harriet groaned. Her knuckles were white around her fork, and she prodded the tines along the plate’s rim. With Slytherin’s final trial behind her, she thought her appetite would return with a vengeance—but now her nerves were worse than ever, and Harriet gave serious thought to hiding in the hospital wing to avoid her first meeting with the professor.

“Hey, Potter,” Bole called down the table. Harriet could tell by his grin and the smothered laughter of his friends he was about to say something terrible. “Did ya learn anything new from your Daddy yet?”

Bole and the group of Quidditch players laughed. Harriet wondered if she could throw her Yorkshire pudding at his head and get sent to detention.

“Careful, Lucian,” Craft said from his spot farther along the table, sipping his herbal tea. “She’s already put poor Accipto in his place. You wouldn’t prove much of a challenge.”

Laughter turned to Bole’s expense, and he flushed scarlet. Harriet was happy Lestrange hadn’t been at meals today and had been dreading her next confrontation with him. The twat personified “sore loser.”

Harriet turned her attention to the High Table. Professor Slytherin’s chair remained empty, though Snape sat in his usual place, picking apart his dry toast. Harriet looked to the Headmaster, and he happened to catch her eye, giving her a reassuring smile. Harriet tried her best to return it, then focused on eating something.

When lunch ended, she stood with her friends and gathered her satchel. Harriet glanced around and saw heads turn away, gazes darting back down to plates or laps, though the whispering didn’t change.

Can she really talk to snakes? Like Professor Slytherin?

“—do you think—?

“Maybe she’s not really a Potter—.”

“You-Know-Who could too—.

Harriet chewed on her lower lip as she walked away, head bowed, pretending she didn’t hear anything. Hermione and Elara caught up with her, exchanging worried glances over the top of her head before they all continued to class.

The hours ticked by, and Harriet’s trepidation rose, her meager lunch turning in her stomach like rocks. “Try not to think of who you’re apprenticing to quite so much,” Hermione told her as their last class of the day drew to a close. “Think of it as being someone—else. Anyone else. It really is an amazing opportunity, and you’ll do brilliantly!”

Harriet tried to keep her words in mind as she left Transfiguration and dragged her feet to the Defense corridor. Slytherin hadn’t given her an exact time for their meeting beyond “before dinner,” so she stalled for as long as possible, attempting to scrounge up some semblance of excitement. Not having a bloody clue what to expect, she just felt nervous.

He can’t actually hurt me, Harriet told herself. It wouldn’t be allowed. Right?

She nodded to herself as she eased open the classroom door. Slytherin wasn’t inside, but the gentle rustle of displaced parchment came through from the office, as did the candlelight and smell of melting wax. Harriet climbed the steps up to the entrance and tapped on the open door. Slytherin lifted his gaze from his desk to peer at her, unblinking.

“I, er…didn’t know when I was supposed to come? Sir?”

He continued to stare for another moment, then glanced toward the standing clock with its swinging pendulum. “Our appointment is not until six. Sit.”

Appointment?

Harriet sat, though she wished he wouldn’t talk to her in Parseltongue. She much preferred when it was something she shared with her snakes. The professor took another minute to finish whatever had his attention before consulting the clock again. He sniffed, then looked Harriet over from her head to her toes.

“Is that the best you can wear, Potter?” he asked in a tone not all that dissimilar to Malfoy’s. “Did your parents not leave you money?”

Harriet’s jaw ticked at the mention of her family, and she glanced down at herself. She thought she looked quite nice, especially considering the pains she endured to ensure her socks stayed clean, her skirt straight, and her shirt unwrinkled. In answer to Slytherin’s snide question, she decided to lie and shrugged. “If they did, I don’t have access to it. And I’m wearing the standard uniform, Professor. I’m not supposed to wear anything else on a school day.”

Her answer did little to assuage the disgruntled look on Slytherin’s face, though he didn’t appear to care enough to say more. Instead, he finished reading the parchment before him, marked something, then rose. One raised hand summoned his cloak to him.

Cloak?

“Wh—where are you going, Professor?”

Slytherin paused to look at her. “We are going to Yewbarrow, Miss Potter.”

“…Yewbarrow?”

He tugged the cloak to rest on his shoulders without pulling his arms through the sleeves, flattening the silk lapels. “Did you not look into apprenticing before? Did the Mudblood tell you nothing?”

Harriet’s entire body stilled at his use of the slur, but she didn’t allow herself to retort, not when he had an expectant smile tilting his mouth, waiting. She wanted to kick him between the legs and march out of the room, but she didn’t—couldn’t. Harriet kept her face empty and shook her head. “A bit.”

“Hmm. Well, it’ll be a learning experience. Follow.”

Slytherin strode from his office with Harriet begrudgingly trailing at his heels. The castle was mostly empty and quiet, given everyone had skipped off to dinner, so they didn’t encounter anyone on their way to the entrance hall. She would have given just about anything to be able to run to her friends at their House table and stay there, but Harriet didn’t, sighing quietly as she followed her professor outside.

Slytherin didn’t say anything as they walked, his robes and cloak rippling in the late afternoon breeze. He kept a quick pace, though only Harriet’s footsteps crunched on the gravel path.

They reached the gates, and Slytherin retrieved his wand, slashing it through the air. The metal rattled, then clanged open, wrenched apart as if by massive hands. Trepidation rose again in Harriet’s chest, and though she faltered a step, she didn’t stop. She couldn’t. Not now. There was no going back.

What could possibly be in bloody Yewbarrow? What IS Yewbarrow? she questioned as they strode past the school’s boundaries, and the faintest whisper of magic licked against her skin. If Hermione had known anything about it, she would have told me.

“Your arm, Miss Potter.”

Startled, Harriet jerked her attention from the open highlands to Professor Slytherin, finding he had his pale hand extended, waiting. She gulped and offered her wrist, which he took, pale fingers curling like twitching spider limbs until he had a firm grip.

She received no further warning before Slytherin yanked them into Apparition, twisting sharply on his heels. The pressure hit Harriet in the middle, her breath smothered on an ill-timed inhale—but, just as swiftly as it had begun, the sensation stopped. Harriet stumbled, and Slytherin released her arm.

She didn’t have a single inkling as to where they’d landed. “Wh—where are we, sir?” she dared ask as she took in their surroundings, fiddling with her sleeves. Harriet had expected “Yewbarrow” to be the name of a town, but instead of buildings or streets, they’d appeared on the edge of a rather ramshackle cliff, green, unforested mountains crawling skyward around them. There was one building higher up the hill, though Harriet could only see the roof’s edge from where she stood.

“Keep up, Potter.”

Slytherin had already started ascending the stone steps carved into the earth, and so Harriet rushed to keep up, squinting against the slanted, golden sunlight to get a better view of the building ahead.

Beige, almost coral-colored bricks built a rounded tower surrounded by less symmetrical additions, the roof Harriet had spotted below domed and comprised of gleaming glass. It had a grand air to it without being palatial—practical but beautiful, much like Hogwarts when compared to Beauxbatons. In Harriet’s opinion, the style looked distinctly Roman, maybe built or designed initially during the occupation hundreds of years ago. It was much too bright and warm for a bloke like Slytherin to be marching toward.

The steps turned into a sharp incline, a flagstone path leading toward the arched entrance, another set of stairs eclipsing the doors. Harriet’s curiosity got the better of her, and she paused to take in the sight. A large plaque was at the top of the open foyer’s arch, bearing a bronze “C” surrounded by three “M”s like mountains.

Slytherin hissed at her, a wordless command to pick up her feet and hurry along.

They climbed the granite steps, footsteps echoing, reaching the entrance flanked by burnished, burning braziers. Harriet was so taken with the architecture she didn’t notice Slytherin had come to a sudden halt, and she walked right into his back.

“What are you doing here?” he demanded.

At first, Harriet assumed Slytherin was talking to her, and then she spotted a pair of very dashing, cloudy blue robes.

“Oh, well,” Professor Dumbledore said, eyes twinkling behind his half-moon spectacles as he turned from the wall he’d been admiring. “It’s quite an auspicious occasion, isn’t it, Tom? It’s been decades since Hogwarts had an apprentice in attendance. Forgive me for wanting to attend.”

Slytherin looked like he wanted to spit. He glowered at Dumbledore, then blanked his seething expression, continuing inside. Harriet couldn’t help but flash the older wizard a toothy grin.

“Hello, Headmaster.”

“Good evening, Miss Potter. Are you ready for your ceremony?”

“I—yes?” Her confusion must have shown on her face because Professor Dumbledore chuckled. “Honestly, I haven’t a clue.”

He glanced at the back of Slytherin’s head, then gestured Harriet to continue inside with him. “I’m sure Professor Slytherin has only forgotten to tell you we’re at the Circle of Magical Mastery and Manifestation’s citadel. The Circle is responsible for research conducted into Charms—which includes a dedicated branch for Defense.”

They crossed through a short antechamber and entered the central tower directly, the towering walls lined with shelves and wooden mezzanines, more books than a thousand people could hope to read in a thousand years rising to the domed ceiling. Those loose volumes not yet re-shelved flew like flocks of birds, moving on their own, and a few doddering wizards rattled about with their carts, trying to wrangle the books into submission.

“The ceremony is your induction as a member of the Circle,” Dumbledore patiently explained as they continued to walk after Professor Slytherin. He didn’t stop for directions, apparently knowing just where to go. “An apprentice is a minor member, but the day may come when you decide to take on a more fundamental role and be responsible for creating your own research, or taking on an apprentice of your own.”

The more the Headmaster spoke, the wider Harriet’s eyes grew.

“Are you in the Circle, Professor?”

“Oh, no. I do have a chair at the Thorwich College of Transfiguration, but not here. Professor Flitwick is a notable, contributing member of the Circle, though his areas of mastery are Animation and Alteration rather than Defense.”

Professor Slytherin clicked his tongue. “If you’re done doddering, old man.”

“I beg your pardon, Tom. I do so enjoy a chance to dodder, as you say.”

They kept in silence for a minute, passing through a vaulted corridor, coming to a stop before a set of solid oak doors. Slytherin consulted the clock on the wall and popped a hand on his hip, tapping his foot.

“Err, can I ask what’s gonna happen in this ceremony?” Harriet kept the question vague and hoped Professor Dumbledore would answer, but Slytherin spoke first.

“You’ll be officially initiated by an unimaginative witch named Lelani Clocks, the C-triple-M’s elected Head, and have our registration as master and apprentice recognized by Grandmaster Goldhorn.” Slytherin kept his tone polite—or, well, what passed for polite with Slytherin—though Harriet thought he sounded especially cold. Dumbledore softly hummed an upbeat chorus from a popular Muggle song.

“Silas Goldhorn is the head of the C-triple-M’s Defense branch,” the Headmaster said for Harriet’s benefit. “An impressive wizard, Master Goldhorn. He investigates incidents involving Dark creatures that the Ministry might find themselves ill-equipped to handle.” His beard shifted as he smiled. “He pops by for tea when he finds the time in his busy schedule.”

Slytherin glowered at the Headmaster before turning away. Harriet surmised this Goldhorn bloke must be friends with the Headmaster—which meant he probably didn’t much care for Slytherin. Knowing she wasn’t walking into a den of his sycophants eased her anxious nerves

The clock chimed six, and the closed door before them eased open.

A short, pudgy witch with glittering, gem-encrusted spectacles stuck out her head. “Master Slytherin and apparent apprentice?”

“Yes, yes,” Slytherin said with a rather impatient sigh, brushing aside the door so he could stroll into the chamber beyond. “We do have an appointment, after all.”

Taken aback by his abruptness, the witch let out a small huff and patted the pink ruffles at her throat. “Well!” she said before looking at Dumbledore and Harriet. “Headmaster! How nice to see you!”

“A pleasure as always, Mistress Antwork. I trust you and Jon are well?”

“Simply grand. He had a touch of the Flagrant Flu this summer, but nothing a trip to the apothecary couldn’t settle. Who’s this here?”

Dumbledore settled his hand on Harriet’s shoulder. “This is Harriet Potter, Tom’s apprentice.”

“Oh, but you’re such a young thing!” the witch gushed. “Still in your Hogwarts robes! You must be talented for a Master to take you on while you’re a student.”

Harriet blushed to her roots. “Well, I—er, that is to say—,” she stuttered.

The witch and Dumbledore traded glances before she laughed. “Nervous too, I see. In you come, in you come. You’ll have to wait on the bench by the entrance here, Headmaster. I hope you understand.”

“Of course. I’m only here to witness a rather special occurrence in Hogwarts’ history….”

The chamber inside the doors was not large or overly grand, though it possessed a solemn air, the rounded walls heavy with tapestries, a recessed pit containing an odd, oblong podium of sorts. A collection of plain wooden chairs resided on the raised stone dais beyond, and there sat a dark-skinned witch perusing parchments on a floating lectern and a snoring wizard so old, he made Dumbledore look spry.

“And here we have Master Poults—Elliot, for Merlin’s sake, will you wake up?!

Master Poults snorted and sat up, making a grab for his fez before it could hit the floor. “Justa’ resting ma eyes, Alm.”

Mistress Antwork huffed as she had at Slytherin and bustled on to introduce Harriet to the next witch. This woman wore a stern expression worthy of McGonagall as she lifted her head. She, too, wore spectacles, but hers came with several other lenses attached on slender brass arms, and when her focus shifted, new lenses clicked into place.

“This is Mistress Clocks, our Head here at the Circle of Magical Mastery and Manifestation.”

“Apprentice Potter,” Mistress Clocks acknowledged, her voice as dry as desert sand. She tapped the lectern’s surface, and it floated aside. “I am pleased to make your acquaintance.”

“Hullo, ma’am,” Harriet replied, still flushed and more than a bit unsettled by the attention. She supposed it was better than being under Slytherin’s judging gaze. “It’s nice to meet you.”

Mistress Clocks blinked, the motion slow and unbothered. “I knew your mother,” she said without preamble. “She had just signed on to be my apprentice a few months before she died.”

Harriet hadn’t known that. She gaped at the witch, wordless, though Clocks didn’t appear to expect her to say anything. Instead, the older witch turned her head to Mistress Antwork.

“Are we waiting on Silas, then?”

“Yes. He should be here in just a minute. I did send a reminder that we had a swearing-in today, but you know how he is.”

“Indeed.”

Slytherin cleared his throat. “I do hope Master Goldhorn isn’t thinking of wasting my time,” he said. He’d stepped into the pit and had his back leaning against that strange, heavy wood podium. Though perhaps a meter below them, his voice carried authority, and Harriet caught the chilling undercurrent of fear flickering among the Circle attendants. It came and went, too fast to linger, though it persisted like the buzz of an agitated fly in a jar.

Fortunately, nothing else could be said before the hearth on the far wall flickered green, and out stepped a new wizard who could only be Grandmaster Goldhorn.

He wasn’t as old as Harriet had expected, though age could be tricky to predict among magical folk. She guessed him to be about sixty, his red hair thick with silver where the careless waves curled about his ears, though his scarred face was relatively unlined. He wore no robes, dressed almost like a Muggle in a canvas jacket and jeans, though he had his wand blatantly strapped to one thigh in a holster and a set of wicked daggers attached to the other. He had mud on his sturdy boots that fell off in clumps on the otherwise clean floor.

“Silas!” Dumbledore greeted from his place by the doors. “I see you’re just coming in from the field. Good to see you well.”

Rather than acknowledging anyone else in the room, Goldhorn knocked the rest of the mud from his footwear and went to Dumbledore, recognizing him with a friendly clap to the shoulder.

“Albus,” he said, gruff, accent decidedly Irish. “Good tae see you.”

They exchanged pleasantries, the rest of those in attendance looking on with baffled expressions. Harriet saw Dumbledore lean in and murmur something in an undertone. Goldhorn grunted.

Slytherin once more cleared his throat. “If we could get on with the proceedings, Grandmaster,” he called, irritation prickling like bits of new frost in his tone. “That is, after all, why we’re here. Dumbledore’s presence is incidental.”

Goldhorn turned from Dumbledore and looked down at Slytherin. Something unspoken passed between them, and though Harriet didn’t know what it was, she knew it to be distinctly unfriendly. Goldhorn grimaced and made for the dais, heavy green eyes finding Harriet at last.

“You the apprentice, then?”

“Yes?” she answered, sounding uncertain, choked. She coughed and tried again. “Yes, that’s me.”

“Stand down there, then. On the other side from your Master.”

The title sent chills along Harriet’s spine, but she nonetheless took the steps down into the pit and came to stand on the opposing end of the podium from Slytherin. He watched her with his unsettling red eyes, a slight, knowing smirk on his lips.

“Shall we be gettin on with this?” Goldhorn said, voice loud enough to echo on the chamber’s stone walls. “I’ve work tae be gettin back to.”

“As professional as ever, Silas,” Mistress Clocks quipped as she stood, straightening how her violet robes fell against her black dress. “Certainly. Let us commence.”

She and Goldhorn joined Harriet and Slytherin in the pit, though they stood facing one another on either side of the podium’s center. It looked very much like an odd dining table, should that table lack chairs and be chest-high and marred with ancient blotches of dark ink.

“We are here to witness the tentative admission of one Harriet Dorea Potter into the Circle of Magical Mastery and Manifestation, full admission pending her mastery qualification at a future date. Acting as initiator: Mistress Lelani Clocks. Recognizing intent: Grandmaster Goldhorn. Are there any objections?”

None came, the room quiet.

Mistress Clocks retrieved her wand—a short, pale bit of wood—with a fluid gesture. A wave of it conjured a long scroll that unfurled across the podium, one end in front of Harriet, the other in front of Slytherin. Flowing green ink began to swirl on the surface.

“Before you is a document vowing your intent on this day. Master Tom Slytherin vows to his intent of teaching Apprentice Harriet Potter to attain mastery in Charms with an emphasis in Defense. Apprentice Harriet Potter vows to her intent of qualifying for said mastery. Both parties will be bound for a period of no less than four years, unless intent is otherwise severed. Should qualification not be met in four years, the contract must be resworn.”

Harriet had to stand on tip-toe to read the writing before her. Her side of the scroll was written in green, while the writing on Slytherin’s was written in blue. He thought nothing of taking up the quill that had appeared and gracefully writing his signature at the line on the bottom. Harriet, on the other hand, rushed to read as much as she could, knowing Hermione would box her ears if she knew Harriet had signed something without scrutinizing it first. The emerald copperplate included a list defining what qualifying for a Defense mastery entailed, most of it centering around the completion of an original project that would, in some manner, expand and better the field of magical research and practice.

There were no secret clauses about obeying her Master, no bits about Slytherin at all, really. ‘Apprentice resolves to submit one qualifying dissertation, monograph, spellscript, or achievement within the four year period to be assessed by the Grandmaster and the Circle of Magical Mastery and Manifestation’s council. Qualification and recognition of mastery is pending council’s approval of presented dissertation, monograph, spellscript, or achievement.’

Bloody hell, Harriet thought, reaching for her own quill. She felt queasy, but she scribbled her name at the bottom of the scroll.

Mistress Clocks watched her sign, then gestured Mistress Antwork forward. The other witch extended a bit of wax and a seal. Mistress Clocks used her wand to melt the former and drip it on the scroll’s center.

“As initiator, I sanction Apprentice Potter’s admission into the Circle of Magical Mastery and Manifestation.” She pressed the seal into the wax, then peeled it back. It was too far for Harriet to see properly.

A second seal found its way into Grandmaster Goldhorn’s large hand. Unlike Mistress Clocks, he hesitated, so much so the wax on the scroll had almost cooled before he set the seal in it. “As Grandmaster, I recognize the bond between Master and Apprentice formed this day.” He pressed down, ratifying Harriet’s fate—but not before the wizard’s eyes flicked to Slytherin and narrowed. “Fecking travesty that it is.”

Slytherin only smiled. The scroll snapped closed on its own, coming to a close in the podium’s middle, binding itself with a simple black ribbon. “Sticks and stones, dear Silas,” he crooned. “Be sure to give my love to your wife and children.”

Goldhorn dropped the golden seal, and it hit the floor with all the weight of a death knell, the chime resounding in the silent chamber. Master Poults snored in his chair. “Scum of the earth,” Goldhorn growled—and then he was gone, striding right back to the Floo he’d appeared from, disappearing in a whorl of green flame.

Mistress Clocks ignored the tension and picked up the scroll, settling it under her arm. “This will be filed in the archives,” she said before turning to Harriet. She considered her for a moment, taking in her young face, the dark smudges beneath her green eyes, then nodded. “I wish you the best of luck, Apprentice Potter.”

“Thank you, ma’am.”

With that, Mistress Clocks took her leave, followed by her floating lectern and Mistress Antwork, who managed to wake Master Poults for a final time and escort him from the chamber. Harriet quickly climbed the steps from the pit, eager to return to Hogwarts. What would Hermione and Elara make of all this? Hermione would probably be excited, though Elara would be more reserved. She’d look at signing anything with Slytherin as a bloody nightmare waiting to happen.

“A moment, Miss Potter,” Dumbledore said, and she paused, going when he gestured her closer. The Headmaster pointed to one of the many tapestries, and as Harriet shuffled up to it, she could see a line of new golden thread wriggling on the gray surface. She squinted and read, “Harriet Potter, 1995. M: T. Slytherin.

“A record of your admission,” Dumbledore explained, beaming. Harriet glanced at the other names and saw they riddled all of the tapestries, this one being the newest, with Harriet’s own name about two-thirds of the way toward the bottom. The thread looked so fresh, shining as if polished. Harriet couldn’t identify the emotion swirling in her chest when she looked at it, but it wasn’t difficult to return Professor Dumbledore’s smile.

Slytherin stood to the side, observing them, eyes distant. Cold.

Dumbledore patted Harriet’s shoulder. “Congratulations,” he told her. “You’ve done Hogwarts very proud today. Very proud indeed.”

 

xXx

 

The return trip to Hogwarts was made in silence, their path lit by the nascent twinkle of stars and the smoldering light of day lingering on the horizon. Harriet walked with Slytherin, though she maintained a careful distance between them, not trusting his pensive mood.

Most of the professors were waiting for them in the entrance hall, eager to extend their own congratulations. Flitwick was quite excited for Harriet, given her mastery was going to be in Charms, though in a different branch of the subject. Snape was notably absent, though no one aside from Harriet seemed to notice. The weight of their expectations impressed upon her how novel this situation was, how rare it was for a student to become an apprentice. After all, if in four years she really did manage to make or do something that swayed the C-triple-M council, she’d have a mastery, the same as any professor at Hogwarts.

Harriet kept staring at the toes of her shoes, shrinking a little more each time one of her teachers touched her arm and extolled their confidence. She wanted to tell them she was just doing this to survive, that she wasn’t anyone special or worthy of their regard—just a girl who wanted to learn how to protect herself from the man standing at her side. From the man who’d murdered her family.

No one at all said a word to Slytherin.

Soon, the professors departed after giving their final best wishes, Dumbledore bestowing one last reassuring touch on her shoulder before he left for his office. Harriet went to dart toward the dungeon stairs, wanting to disappear into the common room—but Slytherin finally decided to move.

He placed his hand on the back of her neck and pressed in with his fingers. “Remember, Miss Potter,” he whispered into her ear, holding her in place. “You’re my apprentice. Not Flitwick’s or McGonagall’s. Not Dumbledore’s. Mine.”

“Y-yes, sir. Of course.”

He didn’t let go. Instead, Harriet felt the pressure increase just shy of leaving bruises. “Don’t make me regret this,” he hissed, almost too quiet to be heard. “Because I assure you if I do, you will as well.”

“I—.” She swallowed. “I won’t.”

He withdrew, and Harriet ran for the dungeons.


A/N: In my head-canon, Wizarding Britain uses “Grandmaster” in the medieval sense that Silas is the head of a “military” order—or, in this case, the practice and research of defense. It’s not that he’s above the other masters in the C-triple-M (indeed, he is not), only that the title is attached to his particular role. Outside of his membership to the Circle, I imagine his profession is the magical world’s equivalent to a Witcher. (A lot of backstory for a random OC but okay)

The deal with the apprenticeship is, no matter the ulterior motives, Harriet has essentially signed on to earn her PhD …at fourteen, lol. Hope you lot enjoyed a chapter basically all of world building xD

We see Dumbledore is definitely more reserved with Harriet here, but he ’s playing into his role as a caring Headmaster. Truly, I believe he would have come regardless of which student was becoming an apprentice, but he’s not about to let Slytherin take Harriet wherever he wants unsupervised.

Slytherin: “…”

Slytherin: “You ruin all of my fun.”

Dumbledore: *nods happily*

Chapter 212: dread and other terrible things

Chapter Text

ccxii. dread and other terrible things

 

Harriet shifted from one foot to the other as Snape flipped through the rumpled parchment packet.

It had been a very long two days since her return from the C-triple-M. She kept waiting for the other shoe to drop, so to speak, waiting for Slytherin to spin about and curse her or demand she do something terrible. However, he did no such thing, and school life continued much the same as it ever had—except for the nervous, terrified glances she got from students of the other Houses. No one had worked up the nerve yet to ask if she was the Dark Lord’s illegitimate daughter, but she’d heard the rumors. She knew what they whispered behind her back.

She hadn’t known who else to go to when Slytherin had ended their morning Defense class by dropping a load of documents bound in a loose folio on her desk. He told her to make herself familiar with the contents before their next meeting—whenever that would be. Harriet’s first instinct had been to bundle the lot and throw them in the rubbish bin—but she wisely resisted the urge and instead brought it to Professor Snape. He’d been less than enthused by her barging into his office unannounced while he was marking essays, but he’d still set the lot aside to read through the packet.

“What does he even mean?” she asked, voice encroaching on a whine. “It’s just—a bunch of random lines or words or symbols. It’s not even sentences. What am I meant to do with that? I wasn’t about to ask him any bloody questions.”

Snape grunted and didn’t answer Harriet, his office chair creaking as he leaned back in it and flipped to another page. He barely had his eyes open and appeared more tired than usual. Most of the staff had been looking a tad rough of late, and Harriet attributed their fatigue to the Tournament’s rapidly approaching final task. Getting anyone to pay attention in their classes proved next to impossible as excitement and anticipation mounted.

Harriet didn’t feel excited, just—drained.

Snape flicked to another page, then returned to it, one long, pale finger trailing down the list. “He intends for you to strengthen your baseline.”

“Do what now?”

Snape let out an aggravated breath and leaned up out of his chair, the folio still in hand. He started out of his office without a word, and Harriet hurried to follow. Snape didn’t go far, striding to the next corridor crossing and the portrait of the bored fletcher observing an arrowhead pinched between his fingertips. The portrait swung forward, and Snape disappeared into his quarters.

Harriet lingered at the entrance, unsure if she should come inside. “Professor…?”

If he heard, Snape chose not to acknowledge her, instead standing at his bookshelf searching the spines. He brought one hand to his face and tapped his mouth in thought, a full minute passing before he crouched and snatched up a volume.

“Here, Potter.”

Harriet took that as permission to come inside and left the portrait, traipsing forward to take the second-hand book while Snape went back to looking at the shelves. She had to open it to the inset to find the title.

“‘Druidic Meditations,” she read aloud, frowning. Snape dropped another into her hands. “‘Melicast’s Craft and Weft: A Primer for Spell-making.’ What am I meant to do with this?”

“They’re book. Inside, you see, there are pages, and on those pages are words. You’re meant to read them, you daft girl.”

Harriet blushed. “I know that! I meant—why does he want me to read this? I dunno anything about this druid stuff, and this other one is about making spells!” Harriet had learned enough in her years at Hogwarts to know creating one’s own incantations wasn’t as easy as throwing together words and hoping for the best. Hermione had briefly considered the field while they made the Atlas, and she’d quickly changed her mind when confronted with how difficult it was.

“The ‘druid stuff,’ as you say, relates to the art and history of spell-creation in Great Britain. He could have you research Latin spell creation, but the Romans have kept a very tight lid on the information for centuries. I assume Slytherin will eventually have you formulating incantations for him to prove your utility—but that is far in the future. As it stands, this area of study is also useful to your apprenticeship and could be the basis for your final project. Never forget, Potter, that he wants you to become a Master. The Headmaster and I theorize it is integral to his plans to bring another Defense Master into his fold.” Another book joined the small pile. It didn’t have a title, but when Harriet glanced inside, she found a bunch of charts and diagrams mapping the body’s motion. “Based on his instructions, he wishes you to gain basic, foundational knowledge of the material.”

“He just wants me to read?” That hadn’t been what she’d been expecting. It seemed rather…anticlimactic.

“Do you find that difficult, Potter? Imagine my surprise.”

Harriet nearly told him to shut up, then remembered herself, clearing her throat. When he failed to get a rise out of her, Snape crossed his arms against his chest and propped one shoulder against his shelf. He kept the folio in hand. “Slytherin deplores what he deems menial tasks. You’ve witnessed this yourself in his classroom. Count yourself lucky he feels no compulsion to oversee every moment of your education, though he will retain vigilant oversight.”

A sigh worked itself out of Harriet’s lungs, heavy and thick as a rain cloud. “I thought I was supposed to—not do this, but be learning his weaknesses? How to fight him?”

Snape studied Harriet, black eyes lingering on her face before he straightened and gestured for her to leave his living room. She thought that would be it, that Snape would slam the portrait closed and leave her to turn over her questions on her own—but, instead, he stepped into the corridor with Harriet and led the way back to his office.

“An apprenticeship, Miss Potter, is much like any other class you may take in that it entails a curriculum that begins with the basics and scales to the advanced materials.” Harriet sank into the visitor’s chair, wincing as the stiff wood creaked, while Snape leaned on his desk after sticking the folio in the top drawer. Harriet heard it lock when it closed. “Did you truly think you’d simply walk into his classroom and begin dueling him?”

Usually, such a statement from Snape would be delivered with vitriol, but the wizard sounded genuinely curious in this instance. “I really don’t know,” Harriet confessed, touching one of the books he’d lent her, thumb fiddling with a bent corner. She’d been concentrating so much on the trials to become Slytherin’s apprentice, her thoughts beyond that were nebulous—as vague as one of Longbottom’s iffy potions and just as volatile. She was sick of being told how all of this would make her better and stronger in the future, when all Harriet wanted was to be stronger now.

“What was your master like?” she asked. “You had one, right? But for the—what did Hermione call it? The Guild?”

“The Guild of Ethical Potioneering and Standards,” Snape drawled. His lips thinned as he considered her question and, undoubtedly, whether or not he should throw Harriet from his office. “My master was a man by the name of Hart Frangula.”

“Was he anything like…you know?”

“No.” Snape’s mouth twisted with distaste. “Frangula had no Dark inclinations of his own, but he was a coward. During the war, when it became clear sides must be chosen, he was not hard to sway toward the Dark Lord’s camp.”

“So he—he worked for the Dark Lord?”

“Essentially. The Dark Lord was not so different from Slytherin in that he, too, saw the benefit of training his best underlings and having them become Masters in their own right.” He tipped his head so his hair covered more of his face. “It was part of his lies, Miss Potter. Indebting apprentices to his puppets right out of Hogwarts. It was how he recruited those less inclined to debauchery and blatant terrorism.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Don’t you? Poor half-bloods from Manchester aren’t given apprenticeships for nothing.” He snorted and shook his hair back again, a hard, angry glint in his black eyes. Harriet didn’t know if he was angry with her or with himself. “Every person has their price. Some come cheaper than others.”

Harriet blinked and tried to imagine a younger Snape—poor, as he said, and a half-blood without those family connections pure-bloods enjoyed. She wanted to say he could have earned an apprenticeship on his own merit, and maybe he could have, but she wasn’t unfamiliar with how unfair life could be. What would she have done if she’d lacked prospects and someone like Tom Riddle, at his most charming, came knocking?

I can give them back to you, silly girl. What Voldemort takes away, he can return….”

Harriet’s face pinched with anxiety, thinking about what might happen in her own apprenticeship, wondering if she too had a price. Would casting Dark magic get easier? What if it didn’t? What if she started to disappoint Slytherin?

Harriet paled. Snape saw, and something indefinable wavered in his eyes.

“Your situation will not be the same,” he said. “You are not…indebted to him, not in a manner that will allow him to…abuse you. Not as I was. Slytherin will test you in terrible ways, have no doubt about that, but he will benefit most from having you compliant and relatively happy.” Snape tipped his head back and rolled his eyes to the ceiling. Harriet wondered what Slytherin considered ‘relatively happy.’ “And as the Headmaster is so fond of saying…you are not alone. He cannot isolate you from your friends or Professors Dumbledore and McGonagall. And…I will be there. Always.”

Harriet simply nodded, though the uncharacteristic optimism from the dour Potions Master flickered hope in her chest. Snape cleared his throat, looking away.

“I would estimate his more personal tutelage will not begin until next term. You’ll have time to prepare yourself. Worrying before then is pointless, Miss Potter.”

“It’s not pointless, Professor,” Harriet muttered, fiddling with the top book in her lap. She opened the front and, spying a splotch of ink on the yellowing page, squinted to read the spidery scrawl. “Oi. Who’s the ‘Half-Blood Prince?’”

Snape looked as if he’d swallowed something sour. It could have been the light, but Harriet thought his cheeks were a bit red. “Never you mind,” he snapped. “You’ve your assignment now. Have you not somewhere else to be? Other unfortunate souls to annoy?”

“Not really,” she admitted, shutting the book. “Classes are canceled for the rest of the afternoon, what with the final task being in two days and no one paying the slightest bit of attention. Elara’s got choir practice for something with the Tournament, and Hermione’s off with her boyfriend.”

“Riveting,” Snape replied in a voice drier than a bucket of sand. “But I fail to see how this should affect me.”

Honestly, Harriet didn’t have an answer for him. Yes, her friends were busy, but she did have other friends; Ginny and Luna were always up for company, and even the Weasley twins could be good for a laugh. She could stay in the common room and help the younger years frightened about their looming exams. She could pop down to Hagrid’s hut for tea, or simply enjoy the grounds. She could sprawl in her bed, shut the curtains, and stare at the ceiling if she wanted.

Nothing seemed to calm Harriet’s nerves. Slytherin’s threat lingered with her. A haze of exhaustion and ill feeling followed her, dread like a mantle heaved upon her bowing shoulders, her shadow pinching and pricking and pulling at her skin. Harriet woke from unsettled dreams to find new bruises splotched upon her wrists and shins. Livi hissed ominous things when she sat up in the wee hours of the morning, shaking with cold, waiting for the dawn.

She felt as if something terrible was about to happen, and she was useless to stop it.

Snape watched Harriet quietly stare at her knees until he seemed to come to a conclusion. He sighed and ran a hand through his hair. “We might as well have a practice session if you’re just going to sit in my office and pout.”

Harriet looked up, eyes widening. “Really?”

“That’s what I said, is it not? Let us find a Moon Mirror and be off.”

Harriet jumped to her feet, still holding her books, and followed Snape through the door once more. They only paused when he retrieved his wand and warded his office closed.

“I don’t pout, by the way.”

“No? You could have fooled me.”

Harriet tipped her head back to shoot him an unimpressed look as they started walking—but it didn’t last, and Harriet smiled. “Thanks, Professor.”

Snape nodded, smirking, and kept pace with her as they disappeared together into the corridor.

 

 

Chapter 213: sending a message

Chapter Text

ccxiii. sending a message

 

He had not stopped watching Harriet, and Elara had not stopped watching him.

It did not matter where they sequestered themselves in the castle over the last few days; Accipto Lestrange found an excuse to linger nearby, always watching Harriet with his dark, deep-set eyes, his face wretched with a hatred even Elara—for all her faults—couldn’t fathom.

At breakfast the day before the Triwizard Tournament’s final task, Lestrange sat at the table’s far side and had not touched a single thing on his plate. Nor had he turned once to address either of his lackeys. He stared at Harriet, who remained engrossed in a tatty, second-hand book while she nibbled on a bit of bacon.

A flutter of blue robes in the periphery of her vision turned Elara’s head, and she blinked as Fleur took a seat by her side. “Coucou,” she said, her smile so brilliant it caused a first year to dribble porridge down his front. Elara had steeled herself against Fleur’s presence enough to only blush profusely—though her insides wibbled and warmed. “‘ow iz the food today?”

“Good morning,” Elara replied. “It’s the usual English fare.”

“What a dizaster.”

She affected a disgusted expression, and the corner of Elara’s mouth twitched upward. Harriet and Hermione didn’t much care for Fleur’s attitude, but Elara found it funny more often than not. Especially considering for all her snark and snooty airs, Fleur had a good heart.

“There are croissants,” Elara commented, Summoning the platter from farther along the table to settle it in front of Fleur. The French witch picked one up and set it on her plate with a sniff.

“They are not as good as Beauxbatons’.”

“I’ll be sure to pass your comments along to the house-elves.”

Fleur poked out her lower lip, fluttering her lashes. “The poor dears,” she sighed, tearing a piece off her perfectly delicious croissant. “Zey are doing their best. I will get by.”

Elara rolled her eyes and resumed watching Accipto. He hadn’t moved during her discourse with Fleur; if anything, his expression had only grown stonier. He dragged his thumbnail along the teeth of his dull breakfast knife. Cassius Warrington said something to him, tried to get his attention, and when that failed, he gave up and stomped off in a huff.

A soft breath blew against Elara’s ear. “Why iz it you watch that boy, hmm?” Fleur whispered. “Do you like him?”

“Not hardly,” Elara coughed, appalled by the idea on multiple levels. Fleur chuckled, chin resting on Elara’s shoulder.

“Then what iz it?”

Elara exhaled, face warming again, though she didn’t turn to look at her. “Do you recall my mentioning how my House was competing amongst ourselves for an apprenticeship with our Head?”

Oui.” Elara felt Fleur nod. “I thought it very odd timing, what with za Tournament ‘appening.”

“Oh, his timing was very much on purpose. Professor Slytherin is not what he appears.” Swallowing, Elara continued. “Harriet won the competition. She won by defeating that boy over there in a public duel.”

Fleur leaned forward to better see Accipto—tall, sinister Accipto oozing malcontent—and then Harriet, currently stuffing bits of muffin into one of her pockets. She’d grown more wan as the final days of term approached, her wrists especially bony where they peeked above her loose shift cuffs, though she’d been a mite happier today. “She did?”

Her incredulity was tangible, and Elara slid her eyes in Fleur’s direction. “You’d be surprised. If she were in the Tournament, I would wager on her winning. Even over you.”

Fleur adopted an expression of mock outrage and delivered a playful swat to Elara’s arm. “Comment oses-tu!” she complained.

“It’s only the truth.”

Fleur huffed and settled her chin on Elara’s shoulder again. “But what iz it about the boy then that has your attention?”

The small smile on Elara’s lips died, her spine stiffening. “I think he’s going to hurt her,” she murmured. “Because she embarrassed him. Because he’ll want revenge.”

Fleur said nothing, but the hand she’d loosely tucked around Elara’s arm tightened, fingers pressing close. They sat quietly, watching. Terry Boot came up to the table to tap Hermione on the shoulder, and the pair shared blinding, goofy smiles as Hermione hopped up to give him a brief hug.

“Hey, Potter. Do you want to go to the library with Hermione and me?”

Harriet waved them off, not looking up from her book. “After I eat. You two put me off my food.” A few Slytherins snickered, though it did nothing to deter Terry and Hermione’s moods as Hermione gathered her things, and they departed.

Through it all, Lestrange didn’t move.

“What iz it you wish to do?” Fleur asked.

“I…have a plan, of sorts,” Elara confessed. She’d been formulating it for days, discussing ideas with Hermione and herself in the mirror. “He’s not afraid of me. Strictly speaking, he doesn’t have a reason to be, not when he’s so much more competent with his wand. I dueled him myself in the competition and did not hold up well.” Elara grimaced. “But if I could give him a reason to be afraid….”

Fleur hummed. “How can I be of ‘elp?”

Turning her head, Elara’s nose nearly brushed the other witch’s as she considered her. Merlin, but was she pretty. “Could you convince him to come to the Potions’ classroom? You know where it is, yes? Lessons have been called, so it’s empty and…suitable to my purposes.”

“Oh, ma belle. I could convince a man to do anyzing.”

With that, Fleur’s lips pressed themselves to Elara’s cheek—there and gone—and the witch stood, flipping her long, silvery hair behind her. Every time she did so, it swiveled heads in the Great Hall, and it was more than just Elara staring after her as she sauntered farther along the table to where Lestrange sat. Fleur leaned in to say something in his ear, and he finally—finally—took his eyes off of Harriet.

“Poor idiot never had a chance,” Elara muttered, shivering. She reached for her tea and took a long sip.

 

xXx

 

It was cold and rather odorous in the dark of the student ingredient cupboard. Having the nose of a dog certainly didn’t help. Elara conceded that there were probably better places she could have hidden, but the classroom had been her first idea, and Snape was preoccupied with the Tournament preparations. It was isolated, though not suspiciously so—and, of course, it had the rats.

Her ears swiveled atop her head as she heard footsteps approaching, charming laughter twinkling in the outer corridor. The classroom door swung open—.

“—thought you were with Davies?”

“Who?”

“You know, Davies? The Ravenclaw?”

Non, non. Roger is—mmm, how do you say? Not my taste.

Lestrange laughed, feet shuffling, the door swinging closed with a finalizing thud—.

Mustering herself, Elara pounced, bursting from the cupboard with a rattling bang! Lestrange gasped and spun away from Fleur, who took the chance to retreat and press against the wall. Lestrange’s eyes widened as he took in the sight of the huge, snarling dog in front of him.

“What the fuck is this?!” he demanded, leg smacking one of the desks as he backed up. Elara curled her upper lip as she growled, exposing sharp, white teeth as her silver eyes gleamed with uncanny lucidity in the candlelight. Accipto fumbled for his pocket, reaching—.

In her hands, Fleur twirled his wand.

Elara snapped once, twice toward his knees—and then changed, standing before Lestrange tall and unruffled, an imperious tilt to her head lifting her sharp nose. Some of the panic left Accipto’s face as he recognized her. He exhaled.

“Good morning, cousin,” Elara said as if she often came barreling out of cupboards half-rabid and ready to bite a man’s leg off. “I’m glad you could stop in for a brief chat.”

Accipto straightened, slowly, catching his breath after his fright. His dark eyes flicked from Elara to Fleur, settling on the French witch.

“Don’t look at her. Look at me; I’m the one speaking here.”

His eyes jerked back, jaw muscles twitching. “So, is this the part where you threaten me, little Elara?” he scoffed. “Haven’t we already performed this song and dance? As I remember, it ended with you screaming at the end of my wand on the common room floor.”

The reminder did nothing to shake Elara’s blank expression. “Yes, that’s true.”

Accipto’s brow furrowed when he glanced down and realized Elara held a rat in her hand, thumb stroking its head. It wasn’t a real rat, of course. They used golems to test their potions after they were brewed, and Snape kept a ready tank of them in storage. Not that Elara would care if it was real; after dealing with Pettigrew, she couldn’t stand the horrid things.

“That’s true. You bested me in a fair fight, and I acknowledge I could never defeat you in a duel.” She lifted the rat a little higher, and it began to struggle, little claws hooking into her skin. “But Accipto, I never said I was interested in being fair.”

The rat started to scream and flail, high-pitched squeals bouncing off the walls.

“What are you—?”

Elara’s eyes didn’t leave Lestrange’s as she reached for that uncomfortable, humming pressure inside herself she usually went to great lengths to repress, letting it pull into her raised hand. The rat’s brown fur grayed and flaked off in tufts—pink flesh rippling, bubbling, before it peeled back in rotting hunks. Elara’s fingers sunk into tiny, decaying organs. Within seconds, her hand cradled bleached bones, some slipping from her palm to patter on the floor while the others were reduced to ash.

Elara opened her hand to let what remained trickle through her fingers—and then she jumped, grabbing Accipto’s wrist. He’d watched the scene unfold, gobsmacked, and only now thought to draw a breath. No color remained in his pale, shaken face as he stared at the dirty hand gripping his unprotected skin.

“You’re going to leave Harriet alone,” Elara sneered. She sounded firm and composed—but her insides quivered with fear and disgust. “Accept you’ve lost, because if you don’t—remember what happens to rats.

Lestrange jerked free of her grip—which proved a good thing as Elara’s hands began to tremble. “You’re mad,” he spat, voice cracking. “You and your father and your worthless friends—.”

Elara made as if to grab him again, and Lestrange startled, toppling one of the desks in his rush to get away.

“Don’t touch me!”

He ran for the door. Elara let him go, making no move to intervene—and a sudden burst of panic overtook her when she remembered Fleur’s presence. As the door swung shut at Lestrange’s heels, Elara scrambled to find her gloves in her pocket and yanked them on. She kept her eyes on the floor.

God, what she must think. How could I forget she was here? That she’d see? Disgusting, cursed—.

Fleur brushed her arm, having approached when Elara looked away. Her hand gave Elara’s elbow a small tug to turn her, and Elara dared to lift her chin, surprised to find Fleur’s face quite close to her own.

“Hold still,” Fleur murmured. A single swish of Lestrange’s wand—and wasn’t that a laugh? He’d left it behind—conjured a white lace handkerchief. Fleur took it and carefully dabbed Elara’s nose. A tiny but bright blood smear stained the pristine fabric when she brought it away. “Remind me not to threaten your ‘arriet, hmm?”

Elara laughed, the sound escaping her chest like the grating, mangled burst of a sob. Her entire body shook with it. She could feel the grit between her glove’s leather and her sweating palm.

“I thought—I thought you would be disgusted—.”

“I am part Veela, Elara. I am not fully human, oui? Do you find me disgusting?”

“No, of course not—.”

“Then what? You know they have a word for you? Nécromancienne. It does not scare me.”

Gulping, Elara let herself lean into Fleur’s careful touch as she cleaned her face. When finished, she vanished the handkerchief.

“There. And look! The coward left ‘is wand! I ‘ave never seen a wizard almost grown so frightened!” Fleur tossed Lestrange’s wand to the floor with a revolted grunt. She stepped closer. “You are too tall! Lean down ‘ere.”

Elara acquiesced, and Fleur pressed her mouth to hers.

 

xXx

 

The stones snapped and bounced upon the surface of the lake as the dark-haired boy threw them into the black water.

“I don’t know why it even matters,” Vuharith said, voice echoing on the jetty’s rocks rising at their side. “You’ve been out here all day. It’s done, innit? You didn’t need the apprenticeship, so why—?”

“Fuck off,” Accipto Lestrange hissed, throwing the next rock harder. His uniform was rumpled, dirt streaked along the collar and untucked shirttails.

“Accipto—.”

“I said fuck off, Mallory!” he shouted. “Or do I have to make you?!”

Eventually, Mallory Vuharith took the point and abandoned him there on the shore, making her way back to the castle. Though night had already fallen, no professors lingered in this section of the grounds, and any of the prefects who might think to come here knew not to bother Accipto Lestrange.

His fingers dug into the wet sand and mud as he picked up and threw another stone. His breath came low and quick, a match to the angry rise and fall of his chest.

“Surely there are better ways to be spending your time.”

Accipto spun on his heels to see a cloaked man behind him covered by the shadow falling from the jetty’s jagged edge. His eyes, however, glimmered like molten cinders in the belly of a firepit.

The next stone slipped through Accipto’s fingers and clattered on the shore.

“I’ve heard about your unfortunate loss in Slytherin’s pointless game,” the wizard said, taking one pointed step forward. The moonlight shone on his pale face. “He never was good at appreciating the best talent. To take on a simple, dull-witted half-blood girl over yourself—tsk tsk.”

Accipto’s throat bobbed as he swallowed. “I know who you are.”

“Of course you do, dear boy.” Gaunt’s lips tipped in a placating simper, one that little matched his cold eyes. He’d come again to Hogwarts for the Tournament finishing tomorrow afternoon. “I’m quite recognizable.”

“No. I know who you are.”

“As I said…of course you do. Your parents were always clever too.” Gaunt approached the boy, one gloved hand extended. “I could use wizards such as yourself in the Ministry. You wouldn’t be unappreciated there.”

Accipto raised his gaze to meet the Minister’s, then dropped to his waiting hand again. Hesitating.

“Come now, Accipto. Imagine all you can gain in my administration. All the power just waiting for the right person to take it.” His voice blended with the water lapping against the shore—sloshing, striking, hypnotic. “The Guardians of the Magical Right take only the very best.”

Slowly, the boy leaned forward to place his hand in Gaunt’s. The Minister’s fingers closed around it, and his smile widened as they shook.

Excellent choice.”

 


A/N: If you forgot, Elara is registered as an Animagus and is vaguely known to be one.

Elara: “Hey, Accipto—catch.”

Lestrange: “Catch what?”

Elara: “THESE HANDS.”

Or

Elara: “As you can see, my basket of chill is empty.”

Lestrange: “Why?”

Elara: Because I have none.

 

Chapter 214: start to believe

Chapter Text

ccxiv. start to believe

 

The day had finally come. The last task of the Triwizard Tournament was upon them.

To tell the truth, Harriet couldn’t wait until it ended. The constant tumult of emotions running high banged around in her head like an unbalanced washing machine, and she would much rather the school returned to a sense of normalcy. Next year would have its own challenges, but it would—hopefully—be a bit quieter.

A nice, normal year, she told herself. Though, I can’t imagine Slytherin’s changed his mind about me being on the Quidditch team. Blighter.

The champions’ families arrived at the Headmaster’s invitation to support their children. Harriet happened to spot them as she was on her way to drop off a book in the library and escape into the Aerie. She paused with a few other students to peer into the Great Hall, seeing Diggory with his mum and dad—“Amos,” she heard him called. Neville sat with his dad, the Auror, whom Harriet had noticed walking about Hogwarts on patrol a few times, as well as his step-mum Catherine Blishen. She had a little comb in hand and was fixing the part in Neville’s hair, much to his frustration. Harriet guffawed.

“Come, come—you must meet my maman!” Fleur gushed as she dragged Elara by the arm, the usually composed witch suddenly as graceless as a newborn colt. “Maman! Par ici!

“I, err—,” Elara stuttered. She caught Harriet’s eye and gave her a helpless look, to which Harriet simply shook her head. Elara grimaced as she was brought over to a beautiful witch with Fleur’s features, the witch already holding Gabrielle’s little hand.

“I’m sure they tried their best to be here,” Karkaroff soothed a quiet, slump-shouldered Krum. His parents were not with him. “It was a last-minute decision on Dumbledore’s part, you see. The trip came so sudden—.”

“Yes, I know,” Krum replied with a short nod, eyes fixed on the far wall. “It vould be hard for them to come.”

Harriet watched Durmstrang’s champion for a moment longer and almost wanted to comfort him, maybe try to cheer him up—but she’d done a bang-up job of avoiding Krum this term, and she planned on keeping that streak going. With one last glance into the Great Hall, she turned away and continued on to the library.

She was almost there, too, when she heard a familiar voice.

“—awful amount of time for such a thing. You must be exhausted, Albus!”

“No more so than any of my staff. They’ve worked hard to make it perfect.”

“Oh, but I fear for the state of your Quidditch pitch, oui? Those hedges—.”

Harriet rounded the corner at the end of the corridor at a dead run, shoes skidding on the stones as she slid to a halt. The Headmaster stood there in a pair of dark gold robes trimmed in white, joined by Nicolas and Perenelle Flamel.

“Ah, I see Harriet has already found you,” Dumbledore said when she appeared. “It seems I won’t have to send Dobby searching after all!”

“Harriet!” Mr. Flamel boomed as he opened his arms. Grinning in disbelief, Harriet collided with him, earning an “Oof!” before the older wizard snagged her in a hug. She squeezed tight, hardly daring to believe they were there. He ran his fingers through her hair, over the crown of her head—a warm, solid weight. She opened her eyes and peered up at him. “Hello, petit oiseau.”

“What are you doing here?” Harriet wondered as she let go, reaching instead for Perenelle. She gathered Harriet close, smelling of peat moss and gardenia. Her garden at home must be in full bloom.

“Oh, well,” Mr. Flamel said, exchanging glances with Professor Dumbledore. “For the—Tournament’s last task. It’s ah, an ‘istoric occasion. It is best to witness it for one’s self.”

Perenelle quickly nodded as well, and though Harriet thought they were acting a mite suspicious, she chose not to question it. She let Perenelle, tuck her into her side, more than happy to let the witch fuss with her hair.

“You’ve gotten so big!” Perenelle marveled. “But so thin! Albus! Do you not make sure your students are eating? Honte à toi.

Harriet blushed as Professor Dumbledore sputtered and prevaricated. Mr. Flamel came to his rescue. “Now, Perenelle, I’m sure ‘arriet knows she is to be eating at every meal, yes?”

He said this with a pointed look at Harriet, who nodded and leaned in closer to Perenelle.

“I’m sure Harriet would enjoy showing you around the castle. She would make a far better tour guide than myself,” Professor Dumbledore said.

“But you must have already been here before,” Harriet replied. “And isn’t it—dangerous for you to be seen?”

Non.” Mr. Flamel waved off her concern. “Our faces are not so recognizable, especially among students. And, it iz only natural we would want one of Poudlard’s best to show us around. Isn’t that right, ma moitié?”

“Oh, oui, oui,” Perenelle agreed. “It ‘as been so many years.”

Harriet needed no further convincing. She was excited to show the Flamels around, and though they must have visited most of the places Harriet led them to before, they expressed genuine interest in the stories she attached to those locations. She brought them to Slytherin’s Redoubt, showing them the view across the grounds, late spring redolent in the humid air. She brought them to the Aerie, where Perenelle had a spirited conversation with the portrait of Rowena Ravenclaw and Mr. Flamel marveled at undiscovered inventions the school’s founder hoarded in her workroom. They even popped by the kitchens, and the elves loaded their pockets with as many cakes as they could carry.

As the afternoon waned and they ended the tour with tea in the Headmaster’s office, the morning’s happy glow dimmed, and the shadows of Harriet’s worries began to creep forward like the hands of a Boggart from under a bed. She stared into the surface of her cooling Earl Grey, watching it ripple from side to side inside the cup.

Perenelle chatted with Professors Dumbledore and McGonagall, the latter taking a break from wrangling Ministry officials and spectators arriving for the task. Mr. Flamel sank onto the seat next to Harriet, stirring her from her straying thoughts.

“How have zings been with your studies?” he asked—and the question ‘How are you doing with being Slytherin’s apprentice?’ went unvoiced. Harriet could only shrug one shoulder, jostling her tea. She didn’t want to talk about Slytherin.

“Fine,” she said. “I’ve been studying for finals with Hermione and Terry. We’re feeling confident about our marks.”

“Who iz this Terry?”

“Hermione’s boyfriend.”

“Oh, I see. And where is Elara during this studying?”

“She comes sometimes. Other times she has choir practice—or she goes with Fleur.” He must have seen Harriet’s nose wrinkle ever so slightly because his brow rose.

“And what iz wrong with Fleur?”

“Nothing. She’s nice enough. She’s also rather snooty, but I think Elara likes that about her.”

Mr. Flamel chuckled. “And how has your Animagus training come along?”

Harriet fidgeted with her cup—taking a sip, setting it back down on the spindly end table before she could spill any. “I did make some progress. But not—not since I had my accident.”

“Ah, oui. You said in your letter. Perenelle and I were very worried for you.”

“I’m okay now. Madam Pomfrey fixed me in a jiffy.” That wasn’t quite the truth, but Harriet thought telling a little white lie was fine. She looked up to Mr. Flamel, his eyes fixed on her face. “I have a form, apparently, but I’ve been too…scared to try again.” Harriet dropped her eyes again. “I’m scared.”

Her meaning wasn’t lost upon the alchemist. Harriet feared more than just trying her Animagus transformation again; she feared the upcoming term and what challenges waited for her under Slytherin’s tutelage. She feared what would happen if she failed, if she let everyone who’d helped her and believed in her down.

“There is nothing wrong with being afraid,” Mr. Flamel murmured, reaching out to brush Harriet’s fringe from her eyes. “The greatest things we will do in this life are often things that frighten us. There is no shame in it.”

“But what if I’m always scared? What if I can’t do it?”

Mr. Flamel shrugged. “Maybe you will always be afraid—but, ma petit oiseau, if we allow fear to rule us and make all our choices, then we would get nowhere at all. Merlin would not ‘ave changed the fate of the Isles. Albus would not have stopped Grindelwald’s tyranny. I would not ‘ave asked my Perenelle to marry me.” He broke out into a toothy smile. “Maybe that last one is not so world-changing as the others, but ah, I would not ‘ave made it far without my dear wife.”

Harriet grinned, seeing Perenelle still deep in conversation with Professor McGonagall. She noticed her and Mr. Flamel looking in her direction, and she paused to smile at her husband.

Harriet didn’t much understand love like the kind Mr. Flamel and Perenelle shared; despite almost being fifteen, the idea of having a boyfriend or girlfriend felt murky at best, and she knew that was yet another oddity separating her from her peers. Nevertheless, Harriet hoped she could have a partner like that one day, once it was safe. Once Voldemort was gone.

“Harriet? Is something the matter?”

Blinking, she cleared her throat and pulled her hands apart, noticing the shallow indents of her nails pressed into her skin. Mr. Flamel sighed, gently setting his hand over her own.

“All will be well, Harriet,” he told her. “All will be well.”

 

xXx

 

The hour grew late, the sun making its inevitable progress toward the horizon, and Harriet bid goodbye to the Flamels to join her friends in the Great Hall for dinner. She had never heard the room so loud before—horns blowing, competing chants rising from the Gryffindor and Hufflepuff tables, feet stomping on the floor. A traditional supper had been exchanged for bowls of snacks, as no one seemed keen to stay still. The professors made no attempt to reign in the madness.

“Diggory better win,” Harriet grumbled as Hermione smeared a line of Hufflepuff-yellow grease paint on her cheek. “I’ll find him wherever he’s going next year and hex him if he doesn’t.”

“I believe he’s got an internship somewhere in the Ministry lined up,” Hermione hummed. “Hold still; you’re smearing it.”

“I’ll brave the Ministry to hex him, then.”

Hermione finished up just as Fleur swept over them in her usual flourish of silvery blonde hair and ridiculous grace. She took one look at their faces and said, “Hmph, you’ve made a miztake. Let me help.”

A quick flick of her wand doused them in blue sparkles and confetti. When Harriet and Hermione shook their heads to clear their eyes, they found Fleur had disappeared. Harriet looked at Hermione—and snorted.

“That cheeky cow,” she huffed, pointing. “Your left cheek is Beauxbatons colors now!”

“Really? Just the one? She did both of yours.”

Scowling, Harriet rubbed at her face until her skin reddened and blue streaked her sleeves. Elara managed to squeeze through the crowd to join them—and Harriet jabbed a finger toward her suspiciously clean face.

“Hey, why hasn’t Fleur Charmed you with Beauxbatons colors?”

Elara simply raised one imperious brow. “She wouldn’t dare.”

“Bollocks.”

When enough food had been eaten and the volume had Harriet’s ears ringing, Headmaster Dumbledore vanished the plates and stood at the head of the Great Hall with the other Tournament judges—including Gaunt, of course. He called for everyone’s attention.

“The final task in the Triwizard Tournament is set to begin. If you would all make your way through the entrance hall to the Quidditch field, we will find the final challenge waiting for our champions.”

Benches screeched on the floor as they slid and bodies moved, heading the doors. Harriet and her friends hung back, not wanting to get caught in the crush.

“Quidditch field?” Hermione inquired aloud, a slight furrow between her brows. “Well, that would explain why they’ve had it closed for much of the year. I assumed they were using the chance for maintenance.”

“Mr. Flamel mentioned something about ‘hedges,’” Harriet said. “Can’t imagine they planted those. The Quidditch players would faint dead away.”

The crowd thinned enough for them to stand, Hermione mentioning Terry would meet them there. Elara decided to go ahead because she wanted to wish Fleur luck. Harriet teased her, making silly faces—and promptly received another burst of glitter in her face.

Can’t say I didn’t deserve that one.

“I’m going to go clean some of this off and feed Livi right quick. I don’t know how long we’ll be gone, and he gets—peckish. Makes me fear for Millicent’s cat to tell you the truth.”

“Do you want me to come with you?”

“No, no. Go on and meet with Terry. I’ll catch up.”

Harriet pulled away from the others and dashed down the dungeon stairs, leaving a trail of blue and green and silver glitter with every step. Most of it had shaken off by the time she reached the dormitories, though when she finally flared the lamps in the bathroom, she realized the smeared greasepaint looked more nightmarish than she’d expected.

“I’d hex Delacour’s hair green if it wouldn’t upset Elara,” Harriet grumbled, reaching for a flannel.

My goodness!” the mirror exclaimed. “You look a fright!

“You don’t say?”

Harriet managed to remove the paint with Elara’s stash of ‘Myron’s Miracle Microfoliant,’ using nearly a third of the little squat jar. She dried off, then returned to the dorm to quickly change her messy shirt and tend to her snakes.

Behave,” she hissed at Livi as she set out a plate of prepared meat given to her by Rikkety the house-elf. “Don’t get into mischief.

Livi made a displeased noise, though his eyes flickered between her and the food. “No missschief.”

And no bullying Kevin.” Harriet stroked his snout, trailing one finger along the ridge of his horn. “See you in a bit.”

Harriet tucked him beneath her bed’s skirts, brushing dust and flecks of glitter from her knees. If she listened closely—beyond the sound of Livi eating and the hollow echo of the water rolling against the windows—she thought she could hear the band starting up.

Aw, I’m missing the school song! Harriet thought as she slammed the dormitory door and ran through the common room back into the dungeons. My favorite bit is the horrified looks of the visitors when we’re finished.

The June air felt warm and inviting against her scrubbed face as Harriet exited the empty entrance hall. The sun laid low, but the glow from the distant pitch beckoned, the path lit by dim faerie lights.

Harriet was crossing the grass when a voice called out to her.

“Harriet.”

She came to a halt, her shoes crunching the loose gravel. A body pulled away from the shadows cast by the bluffs leading down to the pitch, and Harriet frowned as she recognized the person approaching her.

“Krum?” she asked, confused. “What are you doing here? Aren’t you supposed to be getting ready?”

He didn’t answer her. His heavier boots tamped down the damp grass as he came to a stop, watching her, the corner of his mouth twitching. Harriet noticed he had his wand in hand, and he tapped it against his thigh.

“You didn’t open my letter,” he said, apropos of nothing.

Startled, it took Harriet several seconds to recall what letter he meant—and that she’d fed it to the common room fire when she’d found it in her pocket weeks ago. She’d never had any intention of reading it.

“Er—sorry about that? Listen, I—uh—don’t think we should have this conversation right now. We have to get going, or you’re going to be late.” Wasn’t he meant to be there already? The Champions needed to be briefed while everyone else found seats.

Krum scoffed. A slight laugh left him as he shook his head, tongue darting out to wet his lower lip. “You really have made this so much more difficult than it needed to be.”

“What are you on about?” Harriet was getting frustrated. “Merlin, take a hint. Can’t you bother one of the other witches always following you about? At least they’re interested.”

Krum’s amused expression never faltered—not as Harriet glared, not as the breeze curled through his dark hair, and not as he lifted his wand and pointed it toward her chest. Harriet froze.

“You really are a stupid girl.”

She kept her eyes on the wand. “What are you doing?”

“Whatever my Lord bids of me. Come over here.”

“No.” Harriet’s heart plummeted to her toes at the mention of ‘my lord.’ She nearly fainted. Spots flickered and bloomed in the corners of her vision. No, no…not him, not now—.

“Get over here—!”

“Potter?”

The inquisitive voice came from behind her, and had Harriet not been held at wandpoint, she would have turned to see Terry Boot coming from the castle. He shrugged into his cloak as he walked, leveling Krum a befuddled look. Krum hadn’t lowered his wand. “…What’s going on here?”

“Go ahead of me, Terry,” Harriet said, voice thin, shaken. “Just—keep going.”

Terry glanced at her, then at the wizard. It was probably Harriet’s panic, but she thought Krum’s skin was moving.

“Go, please.”

“No, I don’t think I will. What do you think you’re doing, Krum?”

There was no warning. No monologue, no culmination of willpower—nothing but the swish of a wand cutting the air, and the arc of green light despoiling all it touched. “Avada Kedavra!

Harriet felt Terry go limp. Horrified, she spun and reached for him as he fell. She didn’t scream. She didn’t have the breath for anything more than a gutted gasp. The green light hadn’t left her eyes.

A hand coiled around her wrist. Harriet jerked against the touch, reeling—.

Krum stood over her. His skin really was moving, and he appeared ghastly in the dying light of day. A smug grin spilled across his mouth. Blue flared in his closed fist. “No time for spares, girl.”

She opened her mouth to shout—and the sensation of a hook lodged itself behind her navel. In the next breath, Hogwarts disappeared in a whorl of bleeding colors. They vanished without a sound.

 


 

A/N: RIP Terry. Congratulations to the 6 other characters who survived me considering them dying instead while I was writing this book ’s outline. You go on to the next round of the Hunger Games.

Yes, all the questions will be answered next chapter. Patience! aha

Flamel: “We are definitely here for the—.”

Flamel: *checks notecard*

Flamel: “Triblizzardment and not because our daughter has been sad and we wanted to see her. Not at all.”

Chapter 215: a phoenix in the fire

Chapter Text

ccxv. a phoenix in the fire

 

The moment Harriet’s feet landed on the ground, she started running.

The world hadn’t had the chance to coalesce, but what she saw of it could only be described as grim: gray stones, gray clouds, the stubby, thick growth of poorly tended shrubs. Darker shapes rose against the storm-clad sky, and Harriet dodged away, thinking they were people—.

“Not so fast!”

A hand coiled in her hair and yanked her back. Harriet shrieked and went for her wand, but he was faster, hand closing around hers and squeezing until bones popped.

“I’ll be taking that, love.” Harriet felt more than saw her wand slipping from the brace on her arm into the hand of her attacker. “Nice and easy, there. Imperio!

Harriet stopped struggling as an odd haze overcame her mind, a thick, blinding sensation like a wool balaclava swaddling her head. Reality muted; some part of her screamed, knowing she had been bloody kidnapped, but that knowledge existed as if behind a thick pane of museum glass. It was scary but remote.

“Go on, Potter. Start walking. Walk.”

Harriet’s feet stumbled into motion without her trying. Distantly, she noted what she’d thought were people were actually statues—big statues of things like angels or the grim reaper standing at the side of headstones or in the shadows of old mausoleums. She was in a graveyard.

She did not want to be in a bloody graveyard!

Yes you do, whispered a voice. You want to be here. You want to walk forward.

A walk is nice, Harriet thought in reply—but no! That was ridiculous. She wasn’t where she was meant to be, and Terry—.

Oh God, Terry—.

Clarity ripped through the happy, muddling cloud, and Harriet twisted away from the wand pointed at her back. She kicked back, foot colliding with a thigh, and tried to run for it.

Offendimus!

The spell caught her about the ankles, and Harriet fell, cracking her chin against a marker. The pain spiraling through her jaw helped clear the lingering confusion.

“Well!” Krum exclaimed. “Well, well! The little girl has more to her than expected! She can throw off an Imperius!”

Snarling, Harriet rolled to her back and aimed a kick to his groin as Krum bent to grab her. He jerked—and Harriet lunged for her wand dangling so precariously from his Durmstrang cloak.

Incarcerous!

Ropes sprang to life as Krum barked the spell, and Harriet hit the ground again, wriggling against their tight hold. She tried to shout, and the ropes coiled around her mouth, covering it. Another spell had Harriet floating in midair, writhing and kicking.

“Stop that. We’ve an appointment to keep. Off we go….”

Harriet felt Krum’s hand tuck into the ropes cinched against her back, and he started onward like an owner dragging along their reluctant dog.

Her mind whirled—chin stinging, knees aching. She could barely get air past the gag, but even if it’d been absent, Harriet was breathless with shock. It couldn’t have been real. It had to have been a trick. No, no. Terry—.

I heard the words; I saw that light. That awful, awful green—.

Harriet couldn’t understand it. It made no sense. Why would Krum do this? Where were they, what was he planning—and, most importantly, how could she get away from him?

Harriet trembled as they passed through the iron gate and stepped into the long grass. She struggled to look around, twisting like an animal in its death roll as she frantically peered into the darkness. A thick fog obscured the land, but Harriet could see a vague halo farther across the field where buildings or a village might lurk. Ahead of them, a house loomed out of the weeds.

It must have been a nice house in the past; touches of faded grandeur lingered in the gables and the proud cornices, but the rest had gone to seed years ago. The garden had devolved into a patch of brambles and thorns lying like a gnarled welcome mat around the house. They continued along the mottled path and up the steps, Harriet hearing the old wood creak and groan under Krum’s clunking boots.

“Almost there,” he hummed as the front door shut behind them, plunging the dingy foyer into darkness. Harriet cursed, muffled by her gag, and Krum chuckled. “Don’t worry. You’ll have a seat right up in front. You’ll be the first witness to my Lord’s glorious return.”

Mmph—!

He dragged her up a set of stairs, Harriet hitting her shoulders and head on the steps as the levitation faltered on the incline. Krum didn’t care—but between the sharp, steady blows, Harriet realized something odd.

His accent had disappeared.

Krum kicked open a pair of scrolled doors, revealing the large room beyond. Harriet couldn’t rightly guess the space’s original purpose and didn’t care at the moment. Lumpy, half-burnt candles left on the floor and mantel lit the dingy walls. A large cauldron bigger than anything they’d ever used in Potions sat several feet in front of a blackened hearth with what looked like an old door split to pieces and stacked beneath it. A rough handful of rickety dining chairs lined the inner wall, and it was one of these that Krum Summoned to him so he could drop Harriet into it.

She struggled as the ropes shifted, binding her to the arms and spindly legs. She braced her feet—or at least tried to, searching for leverage. The chair wasn’t very strong. Surely it couldn’t hold her—.

Her furious, panicked gaze flicked up—and she froze. The ropes slithered from around her mouth.

“Who—?” Harriet gasped, her mouth dry and tasting of dirt. “Who are y-you?!”

The candlelight revealed his face, and the person peering back at her wasn’t Krum. His face was older, paler, his body shorter and thinner than the Quidditch player’s, a shock of greasy, dark blond hair falling over his brow. Krum’s clothes hung on his skinny body.

The man laughed—a grating wheeze of a cackle that his chest shook under. His pink tongue darted out, licking his lip.

Polyjuice, Harriet realized, remembering her own experience with the potion, how Professor Sinistra’s robes had pooled around her juvenile body as it wore off. How had she not recognized it the moment she saw his stupid skin rippling?

“Wh—where is Krum?” she demanded. “What have you done with Viktor?”

The wizard continued to wheeze, then coughed, clearing his throat. “Oh, little girl, you’ve never known Viktor.” He swallowed. “You’ve never even met him.”

Harriet’s insides turned to ice.

A thump emanated from behind a smaller door leading into the room, and before he could stop her, Harriet screamed, shouting for help. The wizard slapped her face, startling Harriet into silence.

A second bloke came through the door, unperturbed by the reedy wizard or the trembling witch tied to a chair. He approached the cauldron and the candlelight, his features coming into focus. Like the stranger at her side, Harriet had never seen the man before; he dressed like a pure-blood in black robes and a damask waistcoat, though the color was muted, dusty. Though trimmed and neatly parted, his dark hair sported thick patches of white creeping from his temples to above his ears. Despite that, he didn’t appear very old, though discerning a wizard’s age could be difficult at the best of times. She didn’t recognize him, but the eyes—

They gleamed like fresh blood as they looked Harriet over.

“Finally have her, do you?” he said to the first wizard, and the latter swept out a hand as if to say ‘obviously.’ “Hmm.”

“I was just getting around to introducing myself,” the stranger said, patting Harriet’s cheek with his cold hand. She strained to lean away. “No need to be shy, Harriet. I thought we were friends? We shared such lovely times.”

“Get away from me!”

The wizard snorted, then bent at the waist to start untying his boots. Harriet’s eyes glared at the pocket containing her wand with hunger, the ropes biting into her wrists. “You probably haven’t heard of me. Too young for that. But, you’ve met my dear father before—.” The wheezing, cackling laughter returned. “Before I killed him, of course.”

The skin of her arms pinched and strung as Harriet twisted under the ropes, desperate for escape. She looked to the other wizard for help, hoping against hope, but he looked on without blinking, seemingly used to the deranged bloke’s homicidal tendencies.

“You and the blood-traitor’s get almost ruined it,” he continued as he released the last of the laces and stepped from the boots. They had to be too big because his feet were far shorter than Krum’s. “Harriet bloody Potter: the bane of my existence. Though I managed it in the end and got rid of his worthless body.”

At first, Harriet hadn’t a clue what he meant—and then, a memory from the woods warbled in the back of her mind like a Muggle alarm clock, and she recalled finding Gabrielle, the body in the trees, the gore trickling through the leaves.

“Crouch,” Harriet whispered. “Barty Crouch.”

The wizard sneered. “Barty Crouch Junior,” he retorted. “At your service.”

“But you went to Azkaban.” Dumbledore had told her Crouch Senior had ‘family difficulties,’ while Hermione later explained his son was one of the Death Eaters caught at Longbottom’s house in eighty-one. “For killing Alice Longbottom.”

“I did,” the wizard—Crouch—affirmed. “And you can thank my father and mother for breaking me out. He held me under Imperius for years, keeping me locked in the house like a fucking animal! Because he knew—he knew I’d find my Lord, that I’d never stop serving him. It took years—but I finally got my chance at the World Cup. I stole the wand from Malfoy’s boy and was free. Free to find my Lord and serve him as he deserves!”

Harriet didn’t ask any more questions. “I don’t care about your daddy issues,” she told him with far more bravery than she should rightly feel in her current situation. The man had a bloody wand on her, for Merlin’s sake! “What did you do with Viktor?!”

“I told you you’ve never known Viktor.” Crouch leaned nearer, and Harriet cringed into her uncomfortable chair. He smelled of Hogwarts still—of lake water and pine. His blue eyes had an unhealthy tinge to them, yellow at the edges, bloodshot and bulging.

“You’re lying! You couldn’t have been him the entire time—.”

“Couldn’t I?”

“Someone would have known!”

He chuckled, and touched her arm. Behind him, Harriet could see the other wizard going about his business without any regard for them. He set fire to the wood beneath the large cauldron and filled it with water from his wand. He paused at one point and jerked; his body spasmed as if hit with a cramp, though it lasted only a moment before he continued filling the cauldron.

“That’s the funny thing about celebrities, love. Everyone has an idea of what they’re like, of how they should behave, like a nice shiny poster. Nobody knows who they really are, and the same could be said about our dear Viktor Krum.” Crouch touched her hair, swept part of her fringe from her face. “No close friends, no contact with his teammates for most of the year. All I needed to do was learn a few quick Bulgarian phrases and lean into that traitor Karkaroff’s sycophancy to accept special treatment. Who’s going to question if the darling Quidditch star is having an off day? Who’s going to question if he needs a break from lessons to have a special cuppa every hour? I can’t even sit a fucking broom, but none of you fools ever suspected a thing.”

Harriet’s pulse raced as dawning horror withered her heart. Oh, Merlin. How many times had she asked Krum for a game and he’d brushed it off? She’d never pressed the issue. She’d explained away his odd looks or behaviors as the quirks of being foreign and far from home. She remembered his watching eyes. She remembered him asking her to Hogsmeade, out on walks toward the forest, away from the school, closer and closer to the edge of the grounds—.

“Had to off the parents from the start, though. Mmm, much too nosey, them parents of his. Getting into the Tournament was a nice little bonus; it gave me an excuse to stay at Hogwarts with you, even if the other Durmstrang brats got sent off. Of course, I also needed to get Longbottom chosen.” Harriet jolted and gaped. “Didn’t guess that, did you? Well, don’t worry. All answers come to good girls who wait, but I’d best let my master explain.”

He touched her neck. Harriet flinched, snarling, “Stop it!” but Crouch kept his hand in place. His fingertips traced the edges of her scar as if fascinated.

“You made things so much harder than they needed to be,” he murmured. His thumb stroked her throat. “You made my master so angry with me when I couldn’t get you alone. Why did you have to be so difficult? You made him wait. You made me fail, and I have never failed my Lord before….”

From the cauldron, the second wizard cleared his throat. “Have you checked her?” he drawled.

Crouch stirred, annoyed. “I got her wand.”

“Yes, but did you check? Would be quite a shame to disappoint him again, Barty, simply because you didn’t find an emergency Portkey.”

Crouch sneered but did snatch his hand away, retrieving his wand. Harriet braced herself as he pointed it at her, incanting, “Appare Vestigium.”

The spell washed over her, and Harriet felt it slide right past her necklace where it rested against her middle, registering nothing. No, the items on the necklace had been dunked onto the Embolized Cauldron and so couldn’t be detected by magic. The spell dipped lower, falling over her stomach, her lap, her legs—.

No—!

“What do we have here?” Crouch asked, kneeling by Harriet’s feet. He pulled down her sock enough to reveal the hidden brace wrapped around her calf, and he grabbed her mum’s wand by its handle. Snape hadn’t given her the wand until after they’d used the Embolized Cauldron, until after it’d corroded beyond use—.

“Don’t!” Harriet snarled, but Crouch already had the wand in hand, laughing.

“A spare wand, Potter? How unexpected! Though I guess I shouldn’t be surprised. You do have the pretender’s eye, after all.”

From the cauldron came a displeased hiss. The second wizard tended to whatever potion he meant to make, though his leering red eyes raised to Crouch’s back for long enough to level a harsh glare.

Crouch adjusted Harriet’s sock—and she jerked when his hand lingered, fingertips gliding up her calf to her knee. “Frigid little thing, aren’t you?” he asked, lip curling. He shuffled closer, pale face looking up into Harriet’s own. A sheen of sweat grew on his forehead. “Not even a Quidditch star could catch your fancy. So particular. It should have been easy to get you off the grounds. It should have easy to crook my finger and have you come haring off with me wherever I wanted.” His nails dug into Harriet’s skin. “But you had to be difficult.”

His fingertips skated higher, brushing below the edge of her skirt, along the inside of her thigh. Harriet mustered every ounce of her revulsion as her lower lip trembled, and she lunged against her bonds, slamming her forehead into his face. His nose crunched.

“Ow—FUCK!” Crouch roared, reeling. Harriet didn’t have time to feel any sort of way about breaking the bastard’s nose before his fist collided with her face, and she saw stars. The chair tipped, and Harriet hit the floor, head bouncing on the dusty hardwood.

CRUCIO!”

The curse struck, but Harriet didn’t scream. The air had been knocked out of her lungs, so only a weak, half-whine escaped her as she shook under the ropes. The pain lit through her like fire in dried weeds, and she tasted copper in her mouth when her teeth drove into her tongue.

“Enough,” bit out the other wizard, clearly annoyed with Crouch’s behavior. “You’re wasting time.”

Panting, Crouch spat blood by Harriet’s head, the spittle spraying on her glasses before he put his bare foot on the bottom rung of the chair and leveraged Harriet upward. He grabbed her by the throat when he settled her into place, and Harriet choked.

“You’ll pay for that later,” he snarled.

Enough,” the second wizard repeated. He left the cauldron and yanked Crouch around by the shoulder. “Get the box. Now.”

Crouch shrugged from the wizard’s grip and stomped away, blood still dripping from his nose. He exited the doors they’d come in through, and the nameless wizard returned to the entrance he’d appeared from without giving Harriet a single look. Left alone, Harriet renewed her struggles despite the pain lingering in her seizing muscles.

He has my wand. Both of my wands. What did she have? Hugh, the Argonauts’ Atlas, her Erkling spoon. They could find her with the Atlas—couldn’t they? No, no, because none of them had ever been here before, and the Atlas relied on knowledge of an area. At the moment, Harriet thought the place would appear as “old mansion.”

What did that leave her? The spoon was of no help, but what about Hugh? She saw Muggle lights, didn’t she? There was a village or neighbors or—something. A place Harriet could run to, a place she could find information and send a message for help—.

No, I need my wand to wake Hugh—.

Too soon, the weathered floor creaked under Crouch’s socked feet, and he returned into view, levitating a large, rectangular box. Dirt and clay covered the surface, as well as some bits of stone that pattered and plinked on the moth-eaten rug.

It’s a coffin, a hysterical part of Harriet’s brain realized. She wondered if they meant to put her in it.

The second door opened again. It was the smell Harriet registered first—the malodorous gasp of sickly decay oozing outward like a low plume of smoke. It permeated the room and swelled. Harriet had smelled rot before—but only in whiffs when cleaning a forgotten fruit in Aunt Petunia’s refrigerator, or in Potions class before Snape had them smear menthol on their upper lips. This smell was worse than anything she’d encountered; it turned her stomach and raised bile in her throat.

Then, the pain started.

Her scar lit with agony as if freshly made, Harriet screaming as her chest jumped under the sudden, inexplicable burn. She screamed so loud, Crouch saw fit to fashion her a gag out of a spare bit of cloth from his pocket. Harriet barely noticed him shoving it into her mouth beyond the fact that it gave her something to bite into, and biting down let her open her eyes.

No, not him. No, no, please—.

She wished she’d kept them closed.

No word in her vocabulary could express the horror that gripped Harriet when she saw the creature that came shambling along after the second wizard. It couldn’t be qualified as a person; it didn’t have enough flesh to be called that. The light from the cauldron’s fire peered through bones, muscles flopping open like an unzipped jacket, organs on display. The thing’s heart pumped and glistened under cracked, mottled ribs.

Harriet didn’t know what happened next. Her eyes closed again, fire raging beneath her skin, when she heard the splash and hiss of water touching the flames. When she pried her lids open again, the creature had vanished into the black, rippling water inside the iron rim.

“Begin,” said the second wizard watching with his red, red eyes.

Crouch gave one, firm nod, and approached the coffin. One flick of his wand popped the warped nails on the pine lid. “Bone of the father, unknowingly given, you will renew your son!

Something solid levitated from the darkness within the box—a bone, though which it was, Harriet couldn’t tell. It went into the cauldron, slipping silently inside, and the surface lit with sparks.

Crouch returned to the cauldron. His face shone with perverted glee, mania a visible poison crawling in his veins. The sweat upon his forehead had built, painting his cheeks and neck, darkening the front of Krum’s loose uniform. “Flesh of the servant, willingly given, you will revive your master!

There was a dagger in his hand. He balanced it between his fingers—and Harriet nearly vomited into her spit-soaked gag as the blade’s edge slipped under his pinky. Crouch howled, blood spurted, and the digit went plopping into the sparking muck. It roiled, turning a sickening blue.

The howling evolved into sharp, breathless laughter. Crouch stomped his feet, bracing himself against the pain in his hand. The blood kept running, dripping past his wrist until Crouch used a spell to swaddle it in bandages. Then, he turned his manic smile on Harriet.

“Get on with it,” the second wizard ordered.

Harriet snarled into the gag as Crouch approached, the blade raised. He slid it under the ropes binding her right arm, cutting them free—and Harriet struck like a snake, hand going for his pocket, fingers barely skirting the handle of her wand.

“Merlin’s arse—,” he seethed, retreating. He removed Harriet’s wands from his person and dropped them on the mantel, Harriet staring at them, knowing she would never reach the fireplace. Crouch grabbed her loose wrist with his injured hand, wrangling in Harriet’s attempts to break free—.

The dagger rose—.

Blood of the enemy, forcibly taken, you will resurrect your foe!”

She barely felt the blade sinking through the skin of her arm. It tugged downward, Harriet unable to do anything about it, and then the stinging began. Blood seeped into the sleeve of her robes, and when Crouch lifted the dagger again, it gleamed crimson. He took the wet blade to the cauldron and dropped it inside.

The simmering mixture swirled, and the surface formed a blinding, golden helix dancing in the air—and then steam engulfed it all. It poured from the cauldron over the floor, dousing the flames. Only the candles remained, and in their weak, struggling glow, a shadow rose from the cauldron’s depths.

It took the form of a man. It stepped from the cauldron, and the second wizard came forward to wrap it in voluminous black robes, covering bone-white flesh stretched over a skeletal body. It lifted hands like wet, white spiders and examined the twitching digits, the talon-like nails. Breath rattled in new lungs—and the head whipped around. Scarlet eyes found Harriet and stared.

Lord Voldemort had risen again.


A/N: I imagine the real Viktor actually had a lot of difficulties in Durmstrang. It ’s a Dark-leaning school that won’t take Muggle-borns, and he’s clearly not adverse to them according to canon, and I would hazard a guess he’s not one for Dark magic given his continued friendship with Hermione and how incessantly she fought against the Dark. He was an international Quidditch star and probably ostracized for that among his peers because of the preferential treatment people like Karkaroff gave him. All this led me to believe very few people probably knew the real Viktor, making him an ideal target for Barty.

Yes, I wrote Barty as a Grade-A CREEP. It fits my idea of the kind of people who stayed loyal to Voldemort instead of Slytherin or Gaunt; Voldemort is the one who gets those sicker individuals their depraved needs. Yes, every single moment I wrote “Krum” being around Harriet I wanted to crawl out of my skin.

Harriet: “…”

Harriet: “Get back in the cauldron. You look half-baked.”

Voldemort: “…”

Voldemort: “Crucio.”

Chapter 216: devil like me

Chapter Text

ccxvi. devil like me

 

“Ah,” Voldemort said with the quiet, cold air of a man used to being heard. “Harriet Potter. We meet again.”

The Dark Lord did not much resemble what Harriet had come to expect Tom Riddle to look like. He shared very little in common with Slytherin or Gaunt or even the memory from the Diadem; the barest shadow of humanity shaped the pale, wet face, his bones sharp, cutting, and malformed. No hair could be found on his head, not even his eyelids—both sets, including the translucent nictitating membrane that snapped over his searing red irises. His nose was flatter, the nostrils formed by slits, shaped more like a snake’s. When his bloodless lips opened, fangs gleamed.

Still watching Harriet, the Dark Lord turned his chin, the bones in his spine giving off ghoulish pops. His neck was slightly longer than a normal man’s, and his shoulders—though broad, intimidating—were sloped, lending more to the illusion of a hungry reptile raising its head above her.

Set curled at her feet in a whirlpool, all his attention seemingly caught on the Dark Lord and the great shadow he cast. Harriet willed the creature to help her, to do something, but—as ever—Set’s motives remained untenable to her. He snagged and plucked at Voldemort, unseen by anyone else in the room, leaving Harriet trapped in the chair.

Voldemort looked away to examine his form, those strange hands of his touching his lean forearms, his chest, the angle of his throat and jaw. Then, satisfied, he snapped his fingers at the nameless wizard behind him without turning. “Wand.”

The wizard hesitated, then moved to take a bone-white wand from the inner pocket of his faded robes and tuck it into Voldemort’s hand. He examined it as he had his own body, stroking the length of wood with one fond finger before pointing it at Harriet. He didn’t bother to speak the spell, but the instant the red light knocked into her and set her nerves alight, Harriet knew she’d been hit with another Cruciatus.

It lasted for a second, there and gone, leaving Harriet winded and groaning into the gag. Voldemort studied his wand, nodded, then snapped his fingers at the second wizard again. “Your arm.”

The wizard knelt. By the cauldron, Crouch had been on his knees since the Dark Lord appeared, his forehead pressed to the floor. Voldemort flicked open the wizard’s cufflinks and raised his sleeve, baring the angry red scarring of the Dark Mark.

“Ah, beautiful,” he whispered, the side of one sharp nail circling the raised edges. “And now, we will see who is wise enough to remember their proper master….”

The circling stopped, and Voldemort laid a finger upon the Mark. The unknown wizard grunted as if in pain, but no other sound of protest left him. Voldemort released after the Mark turned dark as pitch, and the wizard backed away until he could lean against the wall.

The Dark Lord crossed his arms and surveyed Harriet again. Harriet, for her part, glared with all her might, though she’d never been so utterly terrified in all her life. She was going to die. She’d been tied to a chair and disarmed, both wands taken, and Voldemort—in his own body, fully resurrected—stood before her. She was never going to see home again. Her family. Hogwarts.

“You sit at the side of my father,” Voldemort said, the slightest lift of his chin gesturing toward the coffin. “Tom Riddle Senior. The very worst kind of Muggle—both he and my grandparents, and I helped them into their graves. A kindnessss. This was their house, you see. The Riddle House, the home they denied me and my mother when my father cast her aside for her magic and left her to die. Well…never let it be said Lord Voldemort doesn’t deal appropriate justice.”

Harriet swallowed and had to look down, her scar prickling.

“Do you wonder why you are here, Harriet Potter?” he asked. He flicked his wand, the gag disappearing, and it felt as if a hand had grabbed her by the chin, jerking her head upward. “Or do you perhaps already know?”

The invisible hand at her throat tightened.

“It matters not. You will see shortly.”

The hand released, and Harriet took a ragged breath before she silenced herself.

They appeared with loud pops and curling bursts of dark, writhing robes. It startled Harriet, but Voldemort seemed to have already felt their coming, and he watched with cool, narrowed eyes as the newcomers answered their master’s call.

There were fewer than Harriet thought there’d be—but she’d been told before, hadn’t she? How those who followed Lord Voldemort in exception to all others who claimed the title Dark Lord had gone to Azkaban. So, only four wizards felt the Dark Mark burn and Apparated into that awful house. To a one, they wore heavy black robes with raised hoods—and silver masks that glinted cruelly in the candlelight.

The Death Eaters seemed to freeze in shock or indecision when they beheld Lord Voldemort waiting in the squalid room. They breathed heavily—either in panic or because they’d rushed to arrive, following whatever Dark impulse Voldemort imbued in their ruined arms.

It was almost hilarious, watching fully-grown adults scramble to their knees in a loose semi-circle around the maniac, no attention paid to Harriet in the chair. They left gaps between them, and it wasn’t until Crouch threw himself into the formation that Harriet realized they’d left places for the others who weren’t coming.

“My Death Eaters,” Voldemort crooned, arms outspread. “Welcome. We meet once again. Just like old times.”

“Master,” they whispered, genuflecting.

“So few,” the Dark Lord murmured as he paced before his followers. “So few of you have answered my summons. So many of your brothers and sisters have fallen victim to the false allure of the pretenders. I must ask myself; do they truly think there is a power greater than mine? Do they think those mere shadows claiming my name could challenge Lord Voldemort?”

No one spoke a word. Harriet stayed silent too, but she continued to wriggle in the chair. Her skin stung under the tight ropes.

“Naturally, I must then question what the faithful assume. You, who have come before me after so long, who answer your Lord’s call…have you strayed as well?”

The Death Eaters prostrated themselves at the Dark Lord’s bare feet, unmoving.

“Cowards!” Harriet snarled, unable to keep her mouth to herself. “The lot of you are worthless fucking—!”

“Quiet,” the Dark Lord intoned. She felt the Silencing Charm slap her across the face. Voldemort returned his attention to his followers.

“Thirteen yearsss….” His voice dipped into sibilance, and a visible tremble went through the gathered Dark wizards. “For thirteen years I waited, assuming my servants would come, as I had enumerated often over our time together the many ways in which I, Lord Voldemort, had overcome the very shadow of death. I told myself, they will not believe the lies. They will know the truth of my return! I waited—and I waited in vain!

The wand lashed out, and one Death Eater slammed his face into the floor before being thrown to his back, gasping. Harriet recognized the pale hair that spilled from the hood.

Lucius,” Voldemort hissed as he looked down at the wizard. He dismissed the mask, and Harriet saw Malfoy had a bloodied lip to match Crouch’s still oozing nose. Good. “I must say, I am surprised you are here. Has Gaunt not fulfilled your expectations?”

Malfoy’s eyes darted between Voldemort’s deformed face and his feet. “I—I live only to serve, my Lord. You must admit, the reason for the confusion is compelling—.”

“How dare you?” Voldemort flung a silent curse at Malfoy, and the blond prat shrieked, convulsing on the floor until the tyrant relented. “I am the only Dark Lord! All others pale in comparison! They have only a fraction of my power!”

Against the wall, the nameless wizard outside of the circle jerked, then settled.

Malfoy sputtered apologies as Voldemort moved on to his next target, snarling at the Death Eater quivering on Lucius’ right. “Elks…Yaxley…Wilkes….” His red eyes roved over the empty places. “Of course, our numbers will be replenished now that I have returned and can liberate my most faithful. The Lestranges will be honored—and our brothers Rowle, Dolohov, and the Carrows. Those who continued to fight in my name and for our dreams while the rest of you cowered.”

“Please, my Lord—.”

Crucio!

The one he’d addressed as Yaxley screamed. Harriet had to shut her eyes, or else she might’ve been sick. Voldemort kept pacing to the largest gap.

“Here we should have those who fell in my service, and ah, Karkaroff. No, he’ll be taken care of in time…and, of course, the one serving the pretender. He will experience a taste of my power before his end.”

The one serving the pretender…. In the chair, Harriet stilled. Cold sweat soaked into her clothes, sticking the back of her shirt to her spine. She could feel it crawling on her face despite the relative chill of the room. The one serving the pretender….

Snape. He meant Snape. The Dark Lord was going to kill Snape.

It felt as if her stomach had dropped from her middle. Her face and arm throbbed in time with her spiking pulse as Harriet stared at her bound hands in mute horror.

Voldemort was alive. He was alive—and he was going to kill Snape. He was going to kill everyone Harriet knew—everyone she loved.

He’s…Voldemort’s going to return, isn’t he, Professor?

Not today, Harriet.

And when he does, sir?

Then we’ll be prepared. But, as I said, that day is not today.”

They weren’t prepared. Harriet wasn’t prepared; she had a handful of lessons and words of wisdom under her belt, but not the kind of skill needed to challenge the Dark Lord and six of his branded Death Eaters. Cheap tricks and a bit of Parseltongue weren’t going to help her.

Please, she begged, not knowing to whom she spoke, if anyone or anything could hear her desperate, silent pleas. Her skin pinched and bled where the ropes twisted into her flesh. Please, please—.

A sudden, inexplicable warmth filled Harriet’s chest. “But you can’t forget magic is not simply a tool that exists in words or in your wand. It’s part of you,” Professor Dumbledore’s voice rasped in her ear. With her eyes shut, Harriet could almost feel Hogwarts’ warmth, could smell lemon sherbet and wood smoke. “A witch is always a witch, no matter her wand—.”

Harriet’s eyes snapped open.

And no matter the obstacles before her.”

Voldemort had moved on while Harriet had been distracted, standing now in front of Crouch, extending his hand as if to pet an obedient dog’s head. Crouch preened under the touch; it sickened Harriet.

“Barty, my most loyal,” Voldemort praised, causing the other Death Eaters to stir like rats riled from their nests. “The only one who came to find me. Your loyalty has never wavered, has it?”

Never, my Lord.

Yes. You I will reward above all others.” He lifted his white hand from Crouch’s disheveled hair. “Barty has performed an invaluable service for me. Though there were a few…missteps, Lord Voldemort is forgiving. I gave Barty further chances to prove himself, and he came through.” Voldemort waved his hand—a theatric gesture—and the chair under Harriet lurched, rising into the air. It floated as she squirmed, coming to a stop before the Dark Lord. “May I present…our guest of honor.”

Still under the Silencing Charm, Harriet said nothing. The Death Eaters rose high enough to stare at her with various degrees of uncertainty or disregard; before he reapplied his mask, a strange emotion fluttered over Malfoy’s injured face—there and gone.

Voldemort circled Harriet like a hungry wolf, the nails of his long, gruesome hand clicking against the back of her chair. “I see you are all confused. Allow me to begin with a…story. Imagine, if you would, a Dark Lord. Imperious and all-powerful, there is no one who can stand against him. He dreams of reforming our society—of certifying the proper place of magic in the world.

“There are those who dissent. There will always be those who do, those who cannot see his vision and recognize the greatness he means to bring about. He is not unused to challenges and does not fear crushing those who stand in his way—the Muggle-lovers, the Mudbloods, the blood-traitors. They are meaningless.

“Alas…there was one challenge the Dark Lord had not expected.”

He circled in front of Harriet, his red gaze intent upon her face. “They call my downfall the Boy Who Lived,” he said, tone cold. “A mockery. Tell us, Barty, what you saw that evening. Tell us; did a single spell leave my lips when I finally attacked the Longbottom home? Did the squalling infant even have a chance to lay eyes upon my visage?”

“N-no, my Lord,” Crouch answered, doubtful, only continuing when Voldemort gestured for him to do so. “Forgive me, but it appeared as if you—you shattered, Master. Without warning. There was nothing we could do.”

“Ah,” Voldemort replied, nodding. “Yes. You see, a mere hour before we set upon the Longbottom hovel, I had cleared another house. Another refuge of blood-traitor scum—a pure-blood and his Muggle bride.” Voldemort paused. “And, of course, their daughter: Harriet Potter.”

Harriet swallowed when he spoke her name, stiffening her spine. I don’t want to die like this, she thought, eyes stinging, lungs aching. Not like this—I can’t, I can’t. I have to warn them. I have to warn them—.

“I wasn’t certain until we met again, not until I attempted to take the Philosopher’s Stone and you defied me.” The word ‘defied fairly burned with repressed fury, Harriet flinching despite herself. “Death has a way of…confusing memories. Broken, fractured recollections. But oh, I remember now.” He bent closer to her ear—smelling of whatever fetid water had birthed him from the cauldron’s abyss. “Your Mudblood whore of a mother died screaming,” Voldemort hissed. “And your father begged for mercy like a weak, ineffectual child.”

Lies, Harriet thought. He lies. He doesn’t know I can remember, that I heard their voices fighting until the end—.

He made as if to touch her cheek, and Harriet recoiled, bracing for the agony that never came. “Behold,” the Dark Lord said to the assembled Death Eaters. “The real Girl Who Lived.”

No one dared breathe too loudly—but Harriet did. The Silencing Charm snapped, and she shouted, “It’s not true!”

Crucio.”

Harriet’s shrieks bounced upon the empty walls as Voldemort held the spell over her, not stopping until black spots began to prickle along the edges of her vision. It ended, and Harriet listed in her bonds, moaning.

“Didn’t Dumbledore teach you it’s impolite to interrupt someone when they’re speaking, Harriet?” Voldemort circled the chair again, the hem of his robes dragging upon the dirty floorboards that creaked under his weight. “No, I imagine not. ‘Manners for thee, but not for me.’ He’s always allowed his favorites too much leeway.” He flicked the edge of her cloak, revealing more of her school robes—staring, in particular, at the telling House color. “Though, I must admit that came as a surprise….”

Harriet didn’t reply. She wanted to spit in his face—tell him Dumbledore didn’t hate Slytherins, just him—but she kept her tongue in her head, not wanting to be cursed again.

“It is because of Dumbledore the whole of the Wizarding world assumes Neville Longbottom is the one who defeated me. It is by design—a bluff to hide the real chosen one in plain sight. The girl destined to be my downfall.” Voldemort’s talons grazed her cheek, and Harriet turned from it with a grunt. The skin of her neck and chest ached, feeling raw and cracked as if left exposed to a winter storm.

“You see, in my brilliance, I decided to let the old Muggle-loving fool have his delusions. I let him assume I had fallen for the petty ruse.” Voldemort laughed. “Me! Does he truly believe the Dark Lord so easily fooled? I had Barty enter Longbottom into the Triwizard Tournament. As all eyes remained fixed upon the Boy Who Lived, thinking I had any care at all for the pointless child, my real target was left…unwatched.”

The Dark Lord leaned nearer, a smile stretched across his ghastly face. It displayed the sharpness of his teeth, the bloodless gums, the strange structure of his bones. Harriet wondered if his bite was venomous.

“It is true I tasked Barty with attempting to lure you off Hogwarts’ grounds early. Alas, I fear teenage witches are not so tempted as they were in my day.” The Death Eaters chuckled. “But, whatever your choice, Harriet, it was a foregone conclusion. My servants and I cannot touch you within the school’s wards…but there is a moment, one well-documented in Tournaments of the past, wherein those wards aren’t as effective as they should be. The perfect moment in which all it took was one single touch and a measure of patience for you to be delivered to me.”

Harriet’s mind raced, rolling back to the final instances before her kidnapping. What is he talking about? What does he mean? Terry—Terry, Merlin help me—fell in a halo of sickly green, Crouch grabbed her, and then—.

“It is the only time recorded since the spell’s creation that the hosting school’s Headmaster must lower the wards forbidding Portkeys on the grounds. The final task always requires them, you see, to bring the final champion before their adoring audience.” Voldemort cackled. “It delights me to know Dumbledore himself had a hand in delivering you here to me, my dear girl.”

“You’re wrong. Dumbledore did nothing,” Harriet spat.

“And so he continues to do nothing.” Voldemort straightened. “I must thank you, Harriet. Behold, Death Eaters, the Girl Who Lived, the one destined by fate to be my ruin. Behold, the girl responsible for reviving the Dark Lord to his former glory!”

A loose, uncoordinated applause rose from the spectating wizards. Tears of rage and misery seared Harriet’s sore eyes, but she refused to let them fall. She breathed in, and her chest filled with her vitriol, her flagging courage, until it echoed like an open chamber. She met the Dark Lord’s crimson gaze and said, “I’d be impressed if you’d managed to gather more than a handful of pathetic cowards and deadbeats.” Voldemort froze. “The Headmaster will spit on your grave.”

She expected the blow. Truth be told, Harriet expected more than the backhand she received, though it did manage to jar her teeth and nearly unseat the Charm holding her spectacles in place. She expected more than the gleam of malevolence in those horrid eyes. The Dark Lord merely sneered as he flexed his new, bruised hand.

“I’ll finish with you later,” he said—a dark, unholy promise in his words. “And allow Barty whatever is left.”

A single harsh flick of his wand sent Harriet’s chair hurtling from his circle of sycophants, throwing her into one of the walls. Her neck snapped back, head slamming into the plaster. Darkness overcame her vision, and when Harriet came to again, her chin lolled against her chest. The Dark Lord had continued his restless, predatory pacing.

Harriet lifted her head, wincing. Ow.

“Hogwarts will be our first point of conquest,” Voldemort said, his hands steepled, feet leaving dusty footprints as he moved. “Dumbledore is weak, and the traitor will need to be eradicated. The one who calls himself Slytherin will resist, but he will inevitably fall in line.”

“If I may interject, my Lord,” said the nameless wizard, stepping closer to the candlelight. “I believe you will encounter more resistance there than is readily apparent—.”

Harriet winced again as the Dark Lord and his minion spoke. She wanted to listen, to know what the maniac was planning and what he meant to do to her home—but she couldn’t. No, she had to close her eyes and concentrate, else she would never leave this place alive. Already a desperate, desperate part of Harriet sobbed in terror at what awaited her, but she wrangled the fear in, pressed it back. She would not cry. She would not think of what came after, of what the Dark Lord or his horrid lapdog might do to her. She would not panic—she would not panic.

“A witch is a witch,” Harriet murmured under her shaking breath. “A witch is witch, a witch is a witch….”

She shut her eyes and ignored the pain grating against her bones like steel wool. Her lungs hitched and quivered, but still Harriet squashed her rapid panting and urged it to be deep and even.

A witch is a witch—.

She reached inside herself for that stillness waiting below her rushing mind, the part of her own being Harriet had shied away from for months in the wake of her disastrous Animagus attempt. It lurked there still, distant, removed from the horror surrounding her. Pulling it forward invoked a certain kind of terror—a fear of the unknown, or perhaps a fear of permanence brought on only by death’s finality. Cold, unfeeling.

I’m not helpless. I’m not helpless. I’m a witch, a witch—.

It settled on her numb arms like sleeves of icy silk.

The Dark Lord preached still, voice raised. One of the Death Eaters screamed in agony as he was cursed. Harriet, to the side, noted the disturbance but ignored it, keeping her eyes screwed shut. She had been all but forgotten in the Dark Lord’s scheming—a footnote, just as she’d always been, tossed aside to be thought of later. Clenching her jaw, Harriet clung to that brief anonymity and held her breath.

She thought of home. Hogwarts—brisk autumn breezes chasing across the lake, smooth flagstones under her uniform shoes, Peeves winnowing through the corridors on his way to make mischief. Pumpkin juice, sticky under her fingers on the House table. Book pages fluttering, wood polish, Hermione’s quiet whispering in the library. Elara’s soft morning snores melding into the steady echo of water churning overhead. Cloves, dried herbs. Scratchy wool. A deep, impatient baritone. “Concentrate, Potter.

Harriet shook, the magic rising to her throat. Her heart pounded.

The greatest things we will do in this life are often things that frighten us. There is no shame in it.

But what if I’m always scared? What if I can’t do it?”

Maybe you will always be afraid—but, mon petit oiseau, if we allow fear to rule us and make all our choices, then we would get nowhere at all.”

The magic rose higher, smothering her breath, ghosting over her mouth like a warm hand. She could feel it on her eyelashes, in her throat, in the ends of her hair. Her toes curled inside her scuffed shoes with the effort Harriet expended to hold herself steady, to battle the fear, the pain, the distraction—the looming, onerous shadow of her own demise. She held the paltry skein of magic between her fingertips and pulled—.

Harriet couldn’t rightly describe the feeling of transformation. From one moment to the next, her body collapsed in on itself, the magic bundling tighter and tighter like a shrinking cloak. There was no pain, only a curious ache, the same kind of ache Harriet felt when she bent too long over her desk or when she ignored Hermione’s chastising and didn’t sit up straight during lessons. It spread outward from her spine, through her muscles, tugging on her bones. Then, the sensation passed.

The ropes fell onto the chair with quiet thumps.

Harriet blinked—then blinked again, taken aback by the lurid colors, the breadth of her vision taking in the whole of the room. There, in front of her face, was a slender black beak, and when she dared to move, tiny bird feet skittered on the chair’s seat—.

Merlin’s beard!

Like a held breath, the magic escaped her grasp in a rush, and Harriet was herself again, quietly gasping. Voldemort’s attention flickered in her direction—but Harriet clasped the arms of the chair, pretending nothing had changed, pretending the ropes weren’t underneath her—.

Holy shite! I was a bloody bird! Her nails dug into the grimy wood. Elara owes Hermione ten Galleons.

The Dark Lord turned his attention again to Malfoy, the wizard still on his knees, now relaying information about Gaunt. Voldemort barely seemed to be listening.

Breathless, Harriet dared to glance toward the hearth and the mantel above. There, her wands waited, tossed by Crouch when he’d stolen her blood before he’d tied her arm down again. She could barely see them, but she knew they were there.

Slowly, Harriet unfurled her hand.

As she had done with Barnabus the Bust and his ugly bow tie, she extended every bit of her willpower toward the two slender sticks of wood carelessly left on the dusty stone slab. She pleaded with herself, with her magic, entreating it to fill her veins and swell into the surrounding limb, letting it prickle in her fingertips. Exhaustion weighed on her. Merely holding her hand out hurt—but Harriet didn’t dare let it fall. No matter the pain, no matter how it wavered, she didn’t look away. She didn’t allow it to fall.

Please, please—.

The shadows twitched. One long, black limb crawled against the wall behind the Death Eaters, and Harriet watched in horror as the skeletal fingers curled over the mantel’s lip.

What is he doing—?!

One of the wands moved. The end tipped as if flicked—and it rolled, falling from the shelf, hitting the floor with a damning clatter.

The Dark Lord fell silent. Like a serpent sighting prey, his head jerked to the side, spying the wand—and then he lifted his gaze to Harriet, her hand extended, free of the ropes. His eyes widened.

Harriet’s heart nearly burst with urgency. “Accio!” she screamed.

Both wands flew through the air as if yanked by invisible strings and slapped into her open palm.

No! the Dark Lord roared—but he was too late.

Harriet pointed the wands at the floor. “Bombarda Maxima!

The world erupted.


A/N: No mock duel between V and Harriet. I ’ve always conceptualized Voldie having at least some element of sexism; a male Harry he would need to humiliate, a female Harry is already “weaker” by virtue of being a woman. It’s not even something I think he’d be consciously aware of given how much he hates everyone lol.

The great mystery of Voldemort ’s wand: the answer Rowling gave for canon makes ZERO sense. (“Wormtail, desperate to curry favour, salvaged it from the place it had fallen and carried it to him.”) Someone would have picked that ish up the night he was defeated and A) Stole it, or B) Snapped it to pieces. Anyway, in CDT if you recall, Voldemort “died” at the Longbottom’s. Barty was there; he hid his master’s wand and later retrieved it for him.

Wilkes is dead in canon, Adifeus Elks is an OC DE, and of course we know Yaxley and Malfoy. The rest of the DEs who would answer Voldemort are incarcerated.

There wasn ’t a way to naturally bring it up, but yes, the cauldron Voldemort used is the Pair Dadani, first mentioned all the way back in CH. 34.

Me: *smacks the top of Harriet ’s head*

Me: “This child can fit so much trauma in it.”

Or

Harriet: *gets free*

Voldemort: “Harriet Houdini Potter, how dare—.”

Chapter 217: come all ye faithful sons

Chapter Text

ccxvii. come all ye faithful sons

 

Severus sighed and kneaded at his brow as the band continued to play.

“Morgana spare us from that song,” he grumbled as the last of the trumpets petered off, the third-year blowing it nearly dropping it on her foot. “Why Albus insists on repeating that ridiculous anthem at every task, I’ll never know.”

“Come now, Severus,” Minerva said at his side, her elbow nudging his. “Where’s your school spirit?”

“Presumably haunting a graveyard somewhere.”

Minerva huffed at his comment, and Severus crossed his arms, leaning into the back of his seat. The staff had taken the lower stands for better access to the pitch while the students claimed what view there was to be had of the maze on the field from the seats above. Unfortunately, that placed Severus directly behind the band. He wouldn’t put it past Dumbledore to have made the seating arrangements deliberate.

The tuba player blew hard into their instrument. Severus cringed as the resulting noise throbbed in his eyeballs.

“Och,” Minerva said. The noise deadened to a reasonable volume, and Severus pretended he didn’t see her wand hidden in her sleeve. If he pointed it out, she’d probably reverse it just to be spiteful. “You’d think after a full year of practice….”

“What’s that I hear? Dissension from you?” Severus tutted. “Where’s your school spirit?”

“Alive and well, thank you very much,” the witch said with a haughty sniff. “It’s just not nearly as tone-deaf as young Mr. Buckling.”

Severus smirked, letting his gaze drift over the stands. Most of the staff had elected to attend aside from Trelawney, who he imagined was already three sheets to the wind on cooking sherry in her tower. Hagrid had been all but doused in Hufflepuff yellow, complete with yellow-feathered chicks nesting in his beard. Aurors and Ministry officials dotted the peripheries of the maze, most of them chatting or otherwise engaged in their own activities.

His attention wandered over to the champions. Albus stood with Diggory, Longbottom, and their parents, giving them whatever boring platitudes or words of encouragement were expected of a Headmaster in this situation. Maxime was with the Delacour witch, fussing with the plait in her hair, joined by the mother and younger daughter. Krum lingered alone on the maze’s edge, seemingly already prepared to enter.

Severus paused. Something was…amiss with the young wizard. Though he stood at a distance and was veiled in the unreliable light of lit torches, Krum had the look of someone who’d had very little rest and had taken only a glancing run through a shower. Sweat gleamed on his skin, and he looked…thin. Unwell.

Karkaroff was nowhere to be found.

“Where is that simpering moron?” Severus murmured.

“Pardon?”

Severus didn’t answer. He searched the crowd but found no sign of the Durmstrang Headmaster.

The skin on the back of his neck prickled. He tapped his fingers against his thighs, too aware of the thrumming heat on his left forearm that had been a constant sting the last few days. Severus had barely been able to eat from the anxious knot twisting in his stomach, subsisting on tea, supplement potions, and sheer irritation.

Restless, his leg bounced until he forced it to still. The stands vibrated with noise—cheering, chatter, laughter. More than one staff member had sneaked in a tipple, and the air smelled of lager and whiskey, powder from fireworks and dense, broken evergreen. Severus wanted to leave, to immerse himself in the cold, familiar dark of his quarters away from the sound and sharp lights before he crawled out of his own skin—but he held himself there. Tight bands of muscle pressed into his lungs and around his throat.

He faced forward, looking straight down at the students below, the band and choir mixed together. Black stood there, and she turned her head to the stands, her eyes narrowed. Severus tracked how her gaze moved from seat to seat, and her brow furrowed. Granger approached with a frown fixed on her face, and though Severus couldn’t hear what she said or read her lips, he did see Black’s expression grow more distressed.

Something is wrong.

Severus rose and gathered his robes around himself, making for the steps.

He didn’t make it more than a meter before pain lanced through his right wrist, and the sheer, abrupt agony of it took Severus’s legs out from under him. If not for Hooch’s quick reflexes, he would have landed on his arse.

“Steady on, man!” she shouted over the renewed trumpet blasts. Her hand curled around his forearm for support, and Severus swallowed back a scream. He jerked free, jaw clenched, and all but ran down the steps to the lawn.

Potter—where is Potter?

He swung on his heels, searching the crowd for a head of disheveled black hair, a green scarf, anything familiar. His arm surged and, cursing, Severus stepped to the side by the front of the stands, giving himself as much momentary privacy as possible. His shaking fingers found the handle of his wand and jerked it from his sleeve, exchanging it into his left hand. Concentrating, he thought of the spell he’d developed for such situations and incanted, “Abscondere membra.

From his elbow to his fingertips, Severus lost feeling in his right limb. It wasn’t ideal and didn’t mask the pain completely, but it disassociated it enough for him to straighten and take a calming breath.

If she’s fallen in a ditch somewhere, I’ll strangle her skinny little neck myself, Severus thought as he stuck his wand in his pocket and strode toward the girl’s irritating friends. His limp hand hung at his side, hidden by his robes’ sleeve—a frustrating reminder of Severus’ inability.

Granger jumped when he roughly grabbed her shoulder and spun her around, his face set in a harsh grimace. “Where is Potter?” he demanded without giving the witch leave to interrupt. “Where?”

“I—I don’t know,” Granger stuttered. “She said she was going to check her snakes—she should have been only a minute behind me—.”

Severus pulled away without warning and darted for the field’s shadowed ingress. A few students straggled in the tunnel, but none were Potter. Severus kept going, his robes snapping like snarling dogs as the wind ripped through the fabric. Behind him, he could hear Granger and Black running after him, struggling to catch up.

Agony licked toward his shoulder from his worthless arm. He almost wanted to reverse the spell; the absence of feeling felt disorienting, blinding, like stepping into a blackened room knowing a man with a knife waited within. Severus would rather feel the blade in his arm than worry it was about to sink into his neck, but he’d learned before how incapacitating the bloody Vow could become. He had to keep it under control to maintain composure.

Where was Potter? Where was Karkaroff? The fool had no reason to approach her, not after Severus beat his face in and Obliviated what memories remained. The moron had improved in the last month, mostly cognizant aside from lingering bouts of confusion, but he’d never remember Potter seeing his Mark. If Karkaroff was not involved, had Potter been bitten by one of her creatures? Was she injured? Where was she?

Severus ascended the rising path with increasing speed, ignoring the bone-deep thrumming of drums at his back as the final task began. He’d almost neared the final steps that led toward the entrance hall when the light became too vague to see by, and he fumbled for his wand with his left hand. A stiffly muttered Lumos lit the end.

There, in the weeds, he spied the corner of a robe. A student’s robe—a younger year, bearing none of the markers of an O.W.L or N.E.W.T student, only a simple black lining, no stripes on the sleeves, or a seventh-year hood. For one blessed moment, Severus thought he’d found her, that Potter had fallen and gotten hurt or caught the brunt of some misplaced Gryffindor prank. He reached down to grab her out of the brush—.

His eyes caught upon Ravenclaw blue and bronze. The pale, unmoving face turned to the wandlight belonged to a boy, not a girl.

Terry Boot. That ’s Terry Boot, one of Filius’ fourth years.

Shaking off his surprise, Severus hauled the wizard from the weeds and laid him flat on his back in the softer grass. “Rennervate.

Nothing happened.

Severus transferred his wand to his teeth, reaching out—but he hesitated. He hesitated with his left hand above the boy’s still, unmoving face, because fear gripped him in its inexorable hold, and Severus could not bring himself to know. If the boy was not dead, if Severus didn’t know, then they would all continue to walk the tightrope. The armistice would hold—the ship would not rock. But if the boy was dead—.

The rope would unravel.

Many things could be said about Severus Snape, but he was not a coward. And so, teeth digging into the wood of his wand, he touched Terry Boot’s cooling face, brought shaking fingers under his nose, then cupped his neck, searching, searching—.

Finding nothing.

Footsteps scrambled up the path at his back, and Severus rose from his place kneeling by the young wizard. Terry Boot was unbothered. His open eyes stared into the void, his pupils blown wide as black, empty lakes.

“Professor Snape—.” Granger stumbled on the dry grass, Black wheezing up the approach at her back. “Wh—Terry?” Her breath escaped in a rough burst as if she’d been struck in the middle. “Terry?”

Severus caught her by the waist before she could throw herself at the unmoving boy. Her scream broke in his ear, and he thought he might bite right through his wand as he struggled to hold Granger back. His gaze sought Black—standing pale and gobsmacked, staring down at Boot—and he stared until she took the hint. Black didn’t question why he wasn’t using his right arm as she gathered Granger close and held her.

It took longer than it should for Severus to form his Patronus, the blinding light of the ethereal phoenix hanging over his shoulder before he sent it flying for Albus. His arm continued to burn behind the obscuring shield of the spell, and Granger sobbed.

“Where is Harriet?” Black asked, looking at Severus with something almost childlike in her gray eyes. Fearful, uncertain. Shaken. “Where is she?”

Severus didn’t know.

Albus arrived, trailed too soon by members of the Ministry, Gaunt among them. Severus wondered if it was possible for him to experience shock, if that would explain the oddly malleable quality of time, the world dragging and rebounding around him like a Muggle rubber band. Agony gnawed upward from his unfeeling elbow, pinpricks of blackness nibbling at the edges of his vision. The Ministry people’s voices blurred like the ocean roaring in his ears.

Albus conjured a blanket and laid it over Boot, hiding his face. The Headmaster wore every single one of his hundred-odd years upon his bowed shoulders—but there was a rare anger in his eyes as well. Grief, and fury.

“We must cancel the final task,” he said with gravity. “The champions must be called back, and the students moved to safety. Mr. Windels, if you would—.”

“No,” Gaunt said, still peering down at the body. He lacked Albus’ emotion, and if Severus had to guess what was happening inside the wizard’s twisted skull, he’d say calculation. No matter the situation, Gaunt was always calculating. “The task will continue.”

“A student has been murdered!” Albus thundered.

“A student is dead,” Gaunt corrected. “With no proof of anything more at the moment. The task continues.” He curled his upper lip. “There’s no need for you to cause unnecessary panic, Dumbledore.”

Because a panic would reflect poorly upon him, upon the British Ministry—the Aurors meant to be protecting the grounds and the Minister meant to dictate them. They’d swept Crouch’s grisly death under the rug, and if given half a chance, they would do the same with Boot. It was obvious it hadn’t been an accident; the young wizard didn’t have a mark on him, his clothes perfectly tidy aside from a few stray blades of grass. Only one spell could do that.

“She’s missing,” Granger gasped through her tears, grasping for the Headmaster’s arm. “She’s—she’s—H—.”

It was Black who dug her fingers into Granger’s side, bringing her back to the present. Unfortunately, Gaunt wasn’t a dunderhead, and he was perfectly aware of whom Granger and Black were friends with and whom they would be worried about being missing.

“Have you misplaced another student?” Gaunt asked, but Dumbledore disregarded him with a surprisingly blatant turn of his head, addressing one of the Ministry idiots Severus didn’t know the name of.

“Find Auror Moody and search the grounds,” he instructed. “And, Auror Beyar? If you would please see Miss Granger to my office and call Madam Pomfrey—.”

“But Professor,” Granger managed to choke out. “What about—what about Terry—?”

“I’ll be staying here with him, I promise. Now, if you would—.”

“But—!”

“Auror Beyar—.”

The tangle of voices talking skirted Severus’ awareness, the volume nowhere near the resounding thump of his heart rattling inside his ribs. He wasn’t surprised when the Mark on his arm started to burn. Severus hadn’t expected it, not now, but the horror didn’t touch him. It couldn’t, not over his internal scream of, “WHERE IS SHE—?

A shiver went through Gaunt as if someone had stepped on his grave. His head snapped up.

Where is Harriet—?

Clarity hit with all the strength and cruelty of a bucket of ice water being upturned over his head, and Severus jerked, lips parting.

He has her. He has her.

The Potions Master didn’t stop to acknowledge the Headmaster as he left, and none of the group gave his departure much thought. Cold sweat percolated on his face, prickled at his temples and brow—and the Mark raged as if freshly branded, as if it would catch fire to his sleeve and free itself for all the world to see. With it came the intangible sensation of being called, the line thrown out for the Death Eaters to blindly grab and Apparate to, like the sudden tug of an owner’s hand upon a dog’s leash. Severus walked into the castle and felt the leash yank.

He’d gone thirteen years without the feeling. He could have gone for thirteen more.

The barren school echoed back his footsteps as Severus descended into the dungeons, racing toward his quarters.

The Dark Lord is back. The Dark Lord is—.

“She’s missing,” Granger gasped. “She’s—she’s—H—.

“You can’t be guilty forever.” Green eyes narrowed in a young face, white flowers in her black hair like stars in the night sky. “Sometimes, you can have forgiveness if you’re willing to ask for it.”

“Forgive me,” Severus whispered as he came through the door to his quarters, the words rolling like dead leaves, brittle and ready to crack. He slashed his wand, and the trunk held in the bottom of his wardrobe came banging out, landing at his feet with a solid crash. Severus didn’t bother to flare the candles as he knelt, light still spilling from his wand’s tip, and opened the hidden drawer at the trunk’s bottom.

The silver, bone-white mask came into view. It seemed to leer from where it lay atop the black, folded pile of robes beneath it.

Taking a breath, Severus extended his hand, refusing to let it shake—.

A body collided with his, clutching fingers digging into his cloak. Severus’ shins slammed into his trunk’s lip, and he grunted, attempting to swing his shoulder into his attacker’s side. His wand clattered on the flagstones.

Please!” Karkaroff begged from his knees, attempting to drag Severus down with him. “He is calling! He is alive! He is alive! God help us all—!”

“Get off of me!” Severus snarled, but Karkaroff had pinned his usable arm, and he couldn’t dislodge the sniveling wizard. His knees buckled, and he landed on the rug.

The door slammed, plunging the room into darkness—but there, in the slender, feeble glow of his fading Lumos, Severus saw a flash of white skin. Red eyes opened wide and furious, madness spiraling, and Slytherin was upon them in an instant. He threw Karkaroff to his back and leveled his wand.

Please—!

Aht xiek!” the Dark wizard spat, and Karkaroff howled. “You thought to flee? You thought to escape? Did you really believe anyone escapes me?!

Severus could only watch from where he’d fallen as the man writhed and kicked. He reached for his wand, stretching, and as the light renewed once he had it in hand, he stared at Karkaroff’s face—or what remained of it. Before his eyes, the man’s flesh shriveled and shrank, blood pouring from his orifices as Slytherin loomed above. Limbs turned in upon themselves, withered, and as the last of the shrieks cut off, the body began to crumble. It fell like so much dust within a set of empty robes and puddled with the red lake befouling Severus’ floor and legs.

He kicked away from the remnants of Igor Karkaroff and reached for the mask—.

“You will wait,” Slytherin ordered. Severus’ fingertips grazed the mask, and the material blazed red-hot, burning him. He snatched his hand back with a choked gasp.

“You will wait!” Slytherin hissed again. When Severus turned his eyes to him, he found the wizard had his wand pointed at him now, and he wondered if he’d gone too far, if today would be the day he joined Selwyn and Karkaroff and all those who displeased the Dark Lord—.

“My lord—.”

“You will wait. It has been discussed. I have decided it,” Slytherin told him, stepping closer, his robes ghosting over the rippling blood. Severus kept his eyes on the wand’s end. “Not yet. You will not answer him until the old man gives you leave. You will approach with the promise of information, of upholding the order I issued you—.” Slytherin bore his teeth at the slip, rolling his shoulders. “His order. And you will accept your punishment as is deserved.”

Severus leaned away as Slytherin came yet another step closer, and his wand came too close to his face.

“Need I remind you of what happens to traitors, dear Severus?”

Grim, Severus jerked his head in negation.

“Very well, then see that you do as you’re told. Don’t disappoint me.” Slytherin stepped away, and though much of his countenance slipped into the shadows, his eyes continued to glow a ghastly, inhuman red like beacons luring lost travelers to their doom. “You are a good spy, Severus, but not so irreplaceable as you seem to think. Remember that before you act next time.”

With that, Professor Slytherin took his leave, heedless of the mess he’d left behind, and Severus once again found himself alone in the cold dark with only his wand for light. His breath came in harsh, uneven bursts, and the Mark continued to burn. The blood soaked into Karkaroff’s robes.

Inside the drawer, the mask remained unmoved, leering, just as it had been for thirteen years. Severus didn’t take it. Not yet. “You will wait. Not yet.

He has her. He has her.

Unblinking, Severus dismissed the Lumos and let full dark claim the room. He reversed the spell upon his arm, and when the first jagged lash of pain hit, he screamed.


A/N: I imagined Karkaroff grabbing Snape like a drowning man—no guile, no plan, just sheer, ravening desperation. I think Slytherin has held a complete seething hatred for Karkaroff this entire time and has 100% planned to kill him from the beginning, knowing he was a coward and that he would eventually run. Whatever happened, Slytherin was going to make sure Karkaroff didn ’t get back on that ship to leave.

When Slytherin says “upholding the order I issued you—,” he’s literally slipping into a memory not his own; I.e, Voldemort’s.

Chapter 218: the girl who lived

Chapter Text

ccxviii. the girl who lived

 

Harriet ran for her life.

Her feet thumped at an irregular pace over the rumbling floorboards, the sting of thick splinters aching in her legs. She slung herself around the corner as the house shook to its roots—and Voldemort screamed in rage, his followers scrambling to escape the hole Harriet had blasted under their feet. Most had fallen through to the floor below—but she thought one or two might have avoided the fall. Definitely the red-eyed bloke who’d moved to the side. Maybe Barty. She hadn’t stuck around to see.

Her knee slammed into the wall, her injured arm skimming the rotted wainscoting. Cracks wended upward, ripping the ancient wallpaper, splitting the ceiling as the entirety of the old, rickety manor began to fold in upon itself. Harriet stared wide-eyed, feeling as if her brain had been bounced inside her skull one too many times, all her wits rattled to pieces.

Harriet blinked, then blinked again, shaking her head. Her cheek throbbed, a sluggish trickle of blood seeping along her gums from her bitten tongue. Her knees shook, and her muscles ached from the Cruciatus—but she had no time to breathe, no time to stop. There was a window at the end of the corridor, and Harriet braced her wavering hand with her other arm, gritting her teeth.

Reducto!

The window shattered, glass blasting outward in a hailstorm of brittle shards. Harriet returned her mum’s wand to its brace on her leg, her fingertips buzzing and numb, and hoisted herself onto the sill. Outside, the drop straight down would land her in a tangle of brutal gorse, the property rolling away in a steep incline toward those untended grass fields and the graveyard.

Harriet grappled for the magic inside her, and it came easier than it had before. She pulled it up and over her like the tingly fabric of her Invisibility Cloak. It covered her skin and her clothes, snapping in, her body and limbs shrinking—but Harriet wasn’t used to her new form. She lurched—her black, skinny talons scratching against the mottled paint—and frantically beat her wings, trying to get airborne. Something caught under her feathers, and she raised up, jumping for the sky—.

For an instant, the wind swelled beneath Harriet’s wings, the unfamiliar plumage twitching and billowing, and then—.

She dropped. The abrupt sensation of her startled stomach flopping loosened Harriet’s hold on her form. Suddenly, the wind was in her robes, not her wings, and Harriet didn’t have time for more than a short yelp before she hit the ground. Stars burst in her eyes as she rolled, shoulder colliding with a rock, her legs skidding against sharp foliage until she landed in a heap on her back, staring at the black fog overhead.

“Shite,” Harriet choked, remaining sprawled in a stunned heap as the world spun around her. She could feel the dirt on her hands, tall stalks of grass bent under her arms. Pain radiated through her injured shoulder and made her fingers twitch.

Harriet hadn’t a chance to gather her bearings; in the distance, over the crunch and patter of the roof caving in upon the house, came a cold, terrifying scream. “Find her!” Voldemort ordered, the grating sound accompanied by a swell of magic growing like a mushroom cloud. “Bring her to me!

Rolling to her abraded knees, Harriet fumbled for her wand, wiping wet grit away from her eyes on her bloodied face. She scrambled into the taller grass, hoping it did something to mask her presence as she prepared a spell. “Evanesco Vestigium,” she whispered, practicing the motion Snape had taught her to erase the magical signature of her passage. The next spell, “Misceo Omnia!” Harriet had only seen Fleur use once all those months ago during the first task, but she hoped the Muddling Charm did what it was meant to do.

Footsteps came running from the direction of the house, and though Harriet hadn’t any idea where to go, she dashed in the opposite direction, remaining low to the ground. Every inch of her hurt in some manner, but she pushed the pain away, forcing her body to go faster, willing her feet to be silent and steady over the irregular terrain. In the distance, she could hear the pop and winnow of magic as the Death Eaters searched.

Harriet tripped once, catching herself on her right arm. The limb gave out beneath her, the cut opened by Crouch weeping, and Harriet cursed, the sound too close to a sob.

Get a grip, she told herself, repeating it. Get a grip, get a grip. You’re leaving this bloody place and going home to your friends. Now think, Potter, think!

Harriet wondered if she should make for what she assumed was a Muggle village. Maybe she could find help—but what could Muggles do against wizards? And she had no doubt Death Eaters and Voldemort would have no issue cleaving a path through an innocent, unsuspecting crowd to find her.

She listened for the pop of Apparition, waiting for Aurors or Ministry people to appear. Harriet was underaged—and off school premises. Hadn’t the Trace gone off? She must have cast half a dozen spells by now, and the Dark Lord had said the stupid house had belonged to his Muggle family. Surely someone in the bloody Ministry had received some kind of alert?

Maybe it’s because of the Death Eaters, Harriet reasoned. So many adult wizards nearby might muddle the Trace. Either that or the Dark Lord did something to the property.

Whatever the truth, Harriet remained alone without any sign of incoming support.

Okay—what do I do, what do I do? She panted and peered through the swaying grass as her mind raced in a frantic circle. She couldn’t make a Portkey; the only thing she knew about their creation was it took a great deal of power and skill, nothing beyond that. She’d seen others use the Patronus to send brief messages, but Harriet had never done that, and if she could figure it out, what would she say? Help, no bloody idea where I am, but am in desperate need of a pick-up? She was nowhere near a Floo, without access to a broom—but there was another method of transport Harriet had heard magical folk talk about. She’d never used the Knight Bus before, but she knew how to summon it. If she could get far enough away from here and lose the Dark wizards in the countryside, maybe she could call the Bus and escape.

“That’s a very iffy maybe,” Harriet whispered to herself as she tried to see which way to run. It was easy to get turned around in the grass, and the last thing she wanted to do was scamper right back into the Dark Lord’s clutches. If she popped her head up to check, she’d be seen.

“I need to keep my Invisibility Cloak in my back pocket,” she quietly griped, moving in a crawling half-crouch, looking for a glow of lights in the sky. “And Livius. Let’s see how the bloody Dark Lord likes taking a Horned Serpent’s bite right in the face—.”

Her panicked ranting came to a stuttering halt as she heard cloth rippling in the air. Harriet froze like a rat praying an eagle passes her by, and after a moment of nothing happening, she dared peek over the stalks.

Voldemort had gotten tired of searching. Harriet could hardly believe her eyes as she saw the Dark Lord fly at least three meters from the ground with no broom, looking like a ghastly, unearthly fiend hovering against the black of night. He jerked his wand up—and great gouts of flames soared from its tip, crashing into the ground like the bodies of molten serpents devouring the fields. The sight horrified her—roiling, sticky Dark magic sloshing across the grounds, spiraling arms of inferno uncurling like the tentacles of a heinous, chthonic thing—.

It looked like Hell on earth.

Her face bathed in heat, Harriet bolted.

The graveyard! The graveyard—! If I can get to the other side, if I could find a path, a road—.

A rustle came from her left, and Harriet dove to the ground, avoiding a streak of red. “Stupefy!” she snarled in return, aiming for the Death Eater’s mask that glowed a burnished white in the dark. He blocked it with an efficient motion—but he hadn’t anticipated her other hand palming a glob of dirt and flinging it into his eyes. The mask blocked most of it, but the Death Eater grunted—flinched—and Harriet’s second Stunner didn’t miss. She ran before his body hit the ground.

She could feel the Dark Lord coming. Her scar prickled and stung with the force of his swelling rage—.

Thwack!

Harriet collided head-first with an iron fence. She scaled it without further thought, gritting her teeth as she hurtled over the top. The sharp finials ripped her robes.

It was clear the cemetery had been filled and closed a great while ago, the tombs and mausoleums left to moulder and slowly fade. Harriet crouched in the shadow of a headstone, arm pressed to the cold marble, trembling. Behind her, the fields glowed with fire and released black plumes into the fog above.

The residents of the village would see. They’d call the fire brigade, police, the news—gawpers. Voldemort could kill them or Obliviate them, but it would attract attention—attention she didn’t think the Dark Lord wanted at the moment. Not when he only had six ruddy Death Eaters under his command. He would have to find her now or give up the chase and retreat.

Closer, she heard metal shriek and something heavy bang into the earth. Harriet darted for cover by the next grave. She couldn’t see a thing. Every which way she turned, the markers loomed and the fog filled in the gaps like cotton stuffing with no indication of where the exit might be or where the Dark Lord would appear.

Breathing hard with nerves, Harriet flattened her palm and set her wand on it. “Point me—.” But point her where? She needed a location—and needed to know her where she was in relation to that place. Hogwarts? London? The exit?” “Exit,” Harriet tried, and the wand spun in pointless circles.

Voices carried in the slow, meandering breeze, blending into the snapping blaze. Harriet couldn’t tell what was being said or who spoke, but the voices had come too close if she could hear them, and she decided to pick a direction and move.

Harriet remained close to the ground as she darted from stone to stone, crouching under the low-hanging branches of a withered yew tree. Then—the yawning, open vacuum of a large spell being slung moved through the air like a Muggle aeroplane, and one of the larger mausoleums exploded in a red fireball, blasting hunks of brick and marble into the sky.

Merlin!

“Come out, come out, dear Harriet,” the Dark Lord called in the distance. “We have no time for children’s games. Come out and face me as your Mudblood mother once did.”

Harriet had no bloody intention of facing the madman. He could bring up her dead mum all he wanted, but she knew Lily Potter would rather be slandered by her murderer than have her daughter foolishly defend her name. Harriet didn’t stand a chance against him.

She continued away from the voice, cursing every snap and crunch of dried grass or loose gravel. Then, at last, coming around the stone skirts of a weathered angel, she stopped at the edge of a road splitting one half of the graveyard from the other. It had other, smaller paths splintering off of it, leading Merlin knew where. If she followed the main road, Harriet must be able to find the exit!

Bracing herself to move, Harriet lurched—and nearly collided with a Death Eater.

In any other circumstance, it would have been comical how they both recoiled and froze, staring at one another. Harriet would recognize that long, stark blond hair anywhere; some locks escaped his hood and fell across his chest and neck like stray streaks of moonlight. Malfoy stumbled.

Sucking in a breath, Harriet raised her wand and—.

He lowered his.

Harriet didn’t dare move as Draco’s father tipped his wand away, slowly, not allowing it to drop completely. His empty hand went to his masked mouth and pressed one gloved finger to his lips.

What is he on about? Harriet wondered, her eyes narrowed. She was a breath away from hexing the bastard anyway, but her instinct told her to wait.

With his arm back at his side, Malfoy made a subtle turn with his wrist and pointed at one of the stray paths.

Harriet glanced in that direction, then back at Malfoy. The subtle motion became more decisive, and a frustrated huff buffeted the mask’s cover.

“Anything, Malfoy?” came a voice—Crouch, Harriet recognized, the hair on the back of her neck rising.

“Nothing,” Malfoy called in reply. Then, he continued to stride up the road as if nothing had happened, and Harriet followed the path he’d gestured at. She didn’t have the wherewithal to consider the wizard’s behavior now; she needed to get away, get free, and then, maybe then, if she survived this nightmare, she could think about it.

The path eventually led to a small gate that a groundskeeper might have once used, the rusted hinges groaning when Harriet shoved it open. She had to climb a short but steep incline, kicking through mounds of leaves to find the steps, but when she reached the top, she found a dirt road. Without pause, Harriet started running.

Her knees burned, and her lungs ached, every exhale like burrs catching in her ragged throat. Harriet ran past the old trees, putting the graveyard behind her, though she didn’t think the road led toward the village. It pulled to the right, past a large, untended field, short garden walls made of flagstone and crooked wooden fences. It looked as if there was nothing for miles.

She could just make out the shape of a cottage looming between the untended walls of birch trees and bilberry bushes. Wheezing, Harriet diverted herself off the path and made for the cottage. As she came closer, she realized the building had long been abandoned—the roof caved in, the wooden door hanging off one hinge. The breeze caused the door desperately holding on to sway, exposing the dead snake skin nailed to its front.

Ancient, corroded cauldrons littered the garden. Someone had carved little runes into the dropping eaves, and there was evidence of an herb patch once cared for under the sill of the single, empty window. Hope kindled in Harriet’s belly; this was no Muggle house. She could feel the old pinpricks of magic left to wither on the property. It wasn’t pleasant in the slightest—some nebulous part of Harriet’s panicked brain recognized it as Dark—but it was magic, Dark or otherwise.

Gasping for air, Harriet ran through the broken doorway—and nearly tumbled into the pit opened in the middle of the floor. The boards once covering the foundation had been ripped out, and someone had dug into the earth. There were snake skeletons everywhere, snapping and popping under Harriet’s shoes, dozens upon dozens of them left to die in the house.

She swallowed and ignored the gruesome mess. She skirted the hole’s ragged edges and dared to light her wand, giving herself just enough illumination to see by. The light fell across the dilapidated forms of cheap, busted furniture, including the ugliest potions bench she’d ever seen. There, on the far wall, was the hearth.

Hardly daring to believe she might have stumbled upon a bit of luck, Harriet dashed to the mantel and began searching through the rubbish left there. “Floo powder, Floo powder,” she murmured, not caring for the mess she made as she tossed empty boxes and jars aside. “Please, please, please….”

A shadow fell across her, blotting out the weak starlight. Harriet whirled—but not in time to stop the silent spell that slammed her into the stone hearth. Her head bounced off the mantel, and Harriet crumpled.

From the doorway, the Dark Lord stared down at the girl sprawled in the forgotten ashes. “Very good, Harriet,” he whispered, the barest ghost of snake-like sibilance falling from his strange, fanged mouth. “Lord Voldemort is impressed, and I am so very rarely impressed. You did so well to make it this far.”

He stepped into the cottage. Harriet rolled to her back, dazed and terrified, blood dripping from her wounded forehead. It clumped in her lashes, her brow, under the bridge of her spectacles.

Not now. I was so close—.

“I’ll let them know how hard you tried in the end. How very well their pet did,” Voldemort crooned. “But this is where our game ends.” The bone-white wand raised.

No, no, no, no—.

Harriet tried to use the wall at her back to stand. She tried to lift her right arm, but it hurt too much. Everything hurt too much. Something hot burned against her chest.

“You won’t win,” she managed to stutter through bloodied lips. Though this would be her end, Harriet would not grovel for mercy. Not to this wizard. He had no heart capable of mercy. “They won’t let you win, no matter if I’m there or not. You’ll never win.”

“I’ve already won,” he whispered. “Gaunt, Slytherin. They will fall in line eventually because it is in their nature. The pieces will always want to be whole. Those who stand against me—the old man, the Ministry, your friends…they will accept me as their Lord and Master, or they will die. Just like you.”

The burning against her chest increased. Harriet ground her teeth and met the Dark Lord’s red eyes.

The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing,” she quoted, spitting in his direction. The burning stung like searing hot glass pressed to her skin. “That’s Edmund Burke, a Muggle. You might give him a read since he has more sense than you. It doesn’t matter if you kill me, if you kill Dumbledore—until it is just you, the Wizarding world will never be yours.”

Voldemort pointed his wand at her. “Then it will be just me.”

Harriet braced herself—.

Suddenly, it felt as if a hook had lodged itself under her navel, and she sucked in a breath—.

Voldemort’s eyes widened, lips parting. He screamed, “Avada Kedavra!

By the time the green light hit the hearth, Harriet Potter was already gone.

 


A/N: I picture the Animagus form as something that needs a measure of practice, even after you ’ve successfully pulled your second body into being. So, I head-canon the closer you are to mammalian or human, the easier time you have of it. So Rita is actually exceptional in her Animagus usage; even Peter, to an extent, would have had a bit of rougher time of it than James or Sirius. So, all this to say, Harriet will need more practice than Elara did.

We ’ll get more into Malfoy’s behavior in a later chapter.

Lucius: “Listen, Linda.”

Harriet: *raises wand*

Lucius: “LISTEN, LINDA, LISTEN.”

Chapter 219: pieces of three

Chapter Text

ccxix. pieces of three

 

“What do you mean missing?!

Elara had never heard Mr. Flamel yell as he did now, not in all the weeks she’s spent with him in Trefhud with his wife, who had her hand firmly clasped around Elara’s. They sat on one of the benches in the Headmaster’s office, hip to hip, Hermione on her other side. The other witch had stopped crying, but her face looked gray about the edges, her eyes bloodshot as they stared into the distance.

Terry had been moved to the hospital wing, and Elara thought his parents had been summoned by Professor Flitwick, who stayed with him. She wasn’t sure. Everything had happened in a daze—the moment she’d run up the hill behind Hermione, the moment she’d seen Snape stand, the moment Terry came into view. It had happened—so quickly—.

Elara’s hand spasmed under Perenelle’s, who gripped her fingers tighter. Elara reached her other hand out for Hermione and squeezed her wrist, though she didn’t react.

Beyond the solemn bubble of the Headmaster’s office, the world continued as if nothing had happened. The Third Task was underway. Faintly, so faintly a breath could cover it, Elara detected the happy warble of rising cheers.

“How could this be?” Mr. Flamel demanded. “Where is she?!”

“She has not been found on the grounds,” Dumbledore told him. “We can assume with the attack on Mr. Boot, she has been forcibly removed from the premises.”

“Do not speak to me in this way,” Flamel fumed, and the Headmaster held up his hand in placation. “I am not one of your Ministry’s fools who needs to be pandered to! How could this have ‘appened? She is meant to be safe here—.”

Safe, Elara thought. Safe like Terry was meant to be safe. The grounds had been swimming with Aurors and Ministry officials and professors all day—all month! And still something like this had happened. Where on earth was Harriet?

Elara could only thank God she hadn’t been in the weeds with Terry. That gave her hope, however thin, that Harriet was alive—and if Harriet was alive, she would do everything in her power to return to them. Elara believed that.

“The laws of the Tournament dictate a loophole in the school’s security be opened for the final task. This is how I believe Harriet was taken—and whoever took her was very much aware of that flaw being open for a finite time. This was planned.”

Mr. Flamel cursed and ran an agitated hand through his hair. “And what of that—sale gosse? Is he involved? Where is he?”

“I don’t believe Professor Slytherin is involved. Last I saw him, he was in the castle and had declined to attend the task.” Professor Dumbledore gave his head a grave shake. “I would not involve him in this. It will only cause trouble.”

The door came open without the person knocking, and Snape entered as Mr. Flamel said something cutting in French. The Potions Master had eyes only for Dumbledore, and as he crossed the room, Elara stared at his stiff gait, his white, haunted face. Snape leaned in closer to Dumbledore to speak into his ear. The Headmaster froze as he listened, and his jaw tightened under his beard with grim resolve.

“What is it?” Flamel demanded. “What is it?”

Dumbledore took a breath and paused mid-inhale, his eyes flicking toward Elara and Hermione. Elara’s heart thumped in her chest.

It’s bad, her mind whispered. It’s bad, it’s bad—.

“We’re not leaving,” Elara asserted, grasping Hermione tighter—and the other witch finally reacted, her cold fingers squeezing in return. She as if waking from a deep, uncomfortable sleep. “We’re not children to be sent from the room just to spare us from something you don’t want us to hear!”

“Don’t be insolent,” Snape hissed—but his voice sounded off, strained.

“Severus,” Dumbledore cut across him, sounding wearier, more tired. He met Elara’s insistent gaze as he said, “We’ve reason to believe she was taken by Lord Voldemort.”

Perenelle sucked in a loud gasp. Elara tried to make sense of the Headmaster’s words—because it simply couldn’t be possible. How could the Dark Lord come onto the grounds? He didn’t even have a body, for God’s sake—.

Flamel rounded on Snape. “He’s calling you, oui?” he asserted, dark eyes intent upon the Potions Master, who scowled at Flamel. When Flamel made as if to grab his left wrist, Snape recoiled as if struck. “You will take me with you.”

Nicolas—!” Perenelle cried.

“I am willing,” the Frenchman said. “We will go.”

“Nicolas, this is not the way,” Dumbledore interceded. “Neither of you would be safe—.”

I am willing,” Flamel repeated, raising his voice. “Ma fin est déjà écrite. The danger does not matter to me, and this one has made his choices. We will go.”

Behind his dark curtain of hair, Snape turned his eyes to Dumbledore and stared with intensity. Elara thought he resembled a dog waiting for his master’s command. He wanted to go, she realized. He wanted to go to Harriet.

“No,” Dumbledore thundered, his voice startling the portraits and drowning out Flamel’s increasingly more furious protestations. “No. This kind of Summons delivers you into his hold. You would not be helping Harriet. You would only get yourself and Severus killed. If he has Summoned his most faithful, he will be looking to make an example of someone, and that someone would be Severus.” Dumbledore paced before his desk. “Nothing is to be had from acting rashly. Running in and getting killed would not spare Harriet.”

Nicolas exploded in French exclamations, and Snape’s hands curled into discreet fists against his robes. Elara could only numbly watch the proceedings, something like despair turning over in her chest. She couldn’t breathe. Harriet, where was Harriet—.

In what could only be described as sheer serendipity, a thought occurred to Elara, and she jolted off of the sofa, tearing her hands from Perenelle and Hermione. The wizards in the room looked at her as she frantically scrambled to pull open her robes and find the pocket of her shirt. She used the chain linked to her button to yank her Atlas free.

Dumbledore realized what she was doing first and quickly gestured for Elara to set the Argonauts’ Atlas on the surface of his desk.

Non Ducor Duco,” she incanted before giving the glass a sharp tap. “Search: Harriet Potter.

The Atlas enlarged from its standard size, and the blue light glowed. Every person in the room found a spot around the desk where they could crane their necks and see what was displayed. Hermione’s hand found Elara’s again, trembling.

The dot labeled Harriet Potter came into existence, and Elara’s heart fluttered to see proof of her being alive, no matter where she was—.

“Who are zees people around her?” Perenelle asked.

Elara’s eyes jumped from dot to dot. Lucius Malfoy. Corban Yaxley. Ackerly Wilkes. Adifeus Elks. Bartemius Crouch. Tom Riddle, and…Tom Riddle.

“Mon Dieu,” Flamel muttered. “Bartemius Crouch. Is ‘e not meant to be dead? Elara and ‘arriet saw the body. Is ‘e not one of your Ministry men?”

Dumbledore’s brow furrowed, but it was Snape who came to the answer first. “It’s his son,” he hissed, bearing his teeth. “His son was a Death Eater—and went to Azkaban for it. He would answer the Dark Lord in a heartbeat, degenerative beast that he is.”

“He’s reported to have died in the prison,” Dumbledore pointed out. “The guards buried him.”

“If Black can figure a way out, then so can Crouch.” Snape cursed and suddenly faced Hermione, reaching across the desk to grip her shoulder. Hermione startled, lifting her wide, frightened eyes to his. “He’s been here the whole time. Granger, you saw him on your—map. You pointed it out to me. He’s been stealing my fucking ingredients, and I thought it was his father!”

“Zis does not help us,” Flamel snapped, bent close to that Atlas’ surface. The blue luminance leached the warmer tones from his skin, leaving the alchemist wan and ghost-like. “Where is she? Why does it not say?”

“N-none of us know,” Hermione stuttered, her voice hitching. “That is—neither myself, Elara, or Harriet know the location, so the Atlas doesn’t know either, and if there’s no ward for the baseline to meld with—.”

“Then the Atlas relies solely on what we know through being told or what we can see,” Elara finished. She used her fingers to stretch the image on the lens outward, displaying the thin, sketchy lines Harriet had passed through. Hazy question marks bloomed like water drops on parchment. “She’s in a house. She doesn’t know which room.”

“But where?” Flamel stressed, Perenelle touching his arm to keep him calm. He squeezed his eyes shut.

“Why…why are there two of them?” Hermione asked in a soft voice, almost as if she hadn’t meant to speak aloud. “Two Tom Riddles. It’s almost as if….”

There’s another, Elara thought. Another one, just like Tom Slytherin and Marvolo Gaunt. Another Tom Riddle. How does he do it? And why did he take Harriet?

Elara stirred when she heard Snape whispering. “Send me alone, Headmaster,” he urged. “I must go anyway. It is inevitable if we are to keep to our plans. Send me. If it is possible for anyone to assist the girl, it would have to be me.”

Dumbledore listened to him, though his blue eyes remained fixed upon the Atlas. Elara couldn’t read his expression. “Not yet.”

“We are wasting time—!”

“What about a Portkey?” Hermione said over what would undoubtedly be a colorful rant. “If she was taken, it had to be through one, yes? So a Portkey could be used to bring her back.”

“If Potter had a ruddy Portkey, don’t you think she would use it?” Snape retorted. “Use your head, Granger!”

“I am!” Elara had never heard her be so rude to a professor before. “That’s not what I’m saying. Of course, she’d use a Portkey if she were able, but what if we could give her one?”

Elara stared at her, and Hermione shook her hair back from her face, straightening her spine. Her eyes glittered, fierce and red with tears.

“Such a thing simply isn’t possible, Miss Granger. Magic—as I’m sure you’re aware—loses effectiveness over distance, and to attempt to create something so powerful in a location we’re unaware of would not only be improbable, but also dangerous—.”

Elara stopped listening to the Headmaster, frowning at the Atlas, then at Hermione—who stared at Elara as if expecting her to speak.

What is she on about? What am I not recognizing?

Snape stirred, also staring at Hermione, his eyes narrowed. “…what magic did you put into the creation of these devices, Granger?”

“A great deal of wards and Charms, Professor.”

But that wasn’t it, was it? No, Hermione had constructed much of the groundwork, Harriet creating the elements the map needed to show images and words, while Elara—.

“They’re connected,” she blurted, the realization creeping upon her, the pieces slotting into place. The words rushed out of her as quickly as possible. “The—all three pieces of the Atlas act as one, and I used Dark magic to link each lens to our persons. That’s how it manages to record and display information we don’t manually add to the addendum. It’s—.” Elara shook herself and looked to the Headmaster. Dumbledore watched her intently. “Technically, the Atlas is not in three pieces, but in one, stretched across time and space. They’re a part of us. Whatever affects one—.”

“She’s moving,” Perenelle interrupted, new fear lancing through the group as they jerked their attention back to the Atlas. Indeed, the dot labeled with Harriet’s name had broken away from the others, now scattered, and was running along the blossoming of walls being drawn as swiftly as she passed them.

“They’re following,” Snape pointed out. “Whatever you mean to do, Albus, it needs to happen now—.”

With one sweep of his arm, Dumbledore knocked the tidy scrolls and books and inkwells from his desk, clearing room for him to lay a fresh piece down.

“It’s not as simple as you make it sound, Miss Black,” he said as he Summoned a Self-Inking Quill and began to write with a fury. “No matter their connection, the physical object requiring enchanting is still outside our grasp—.”

Flamel seemed to understand the thread of Dumbledore’s thought, as he lurched forward to grab a quill of his own and began to write as well. “Zis will require a great deal of power, Albus.”

“Yes.”

“We may be capable, and with two of ze thirds here—quickly, Snape! A circle!”

Snape withdrew his wand with his left hand. He shunted Elara and Hermione closer to the desk as he began to pace around it, the end of his wand glowing bright red. Whatever spell he used gouged a line straight through the Headmaster’s carpet into the stone below.

“Albus,” Perenelle alerted. “Albus, oh quickly, he iz closing in on her—.”

Dumbledore continued to write without acknowledging her, crossing something out, scribbling something new. Snape closed the circle and stepped across the line to join the Headmaster with Flamel. Elara couldn’t look at the Atlas. She couldn’t watch.

“Miss Granger, if you would add your own Atlas to the desk…?”

Hermione searched her pockets to find her own device, laying it next to Elara’s.

“Please clasp hands—oh, you already are. Good, hold on.”

Elara realized she hadn’t let go of Hermione yet. At Dumbledore’s mention of it, she doubled her grip, and she felt Hermione do the same. Their skin melded together with nervous, frightened sweat.

Albus—!

“Perenelle, panicking will get us nowhere. Could you please join your husband and lend him your strength?”

The older witch reluctantly pulled away from her vigil to round the desk and set her hand on Flamel’s arm again. Elara braved a glance at the Atlas, wishing she hadn’t. To her horror, one of the dots labeled Tom Riddle was coming ever closer to the straggling speck of her god-sister.

Run, Harriet, she willed, thinking of poor Terry Boot and his empty eyes, the stillness of Cygnus Black lying in his death bed. She never wanted to see Harriet in such a state. She wouldn’t accept it. She would never accept it. Run!

“She’ll make it,” Hermione whispered, glaring at the lens in a way Elara could not stomach. Hermione didn’t turn away, didn’t close her eyes. “She’s coming home to us. Harriet.”

Snape and Flamel each laid a hand on one of Dumbledore’s shoulders. He retrieved his wand, holding the tip aloft over Elara’s open Atlas. “Together. Girls, do not step from the circle.”

Elara and Hermione nodded as the Headmaster began to read the incantation scrawled upon his parchment. Flamel and Snape matched his recitation, adding depth, and when Perenelle joined, it rose higher. They matched each word with focus, and Elara felt her fingertips tingle, then her nose. A subtle tremor rose from the floor beneath their feet, and static pulled the skin of Elara’s face tight. It ached in her teeth, in her fingernails.

Trinkets upon the shelves jumped and clashed together. Something fell with a clang.

Totum confer. Pontem tempus et spatium ad inveniendum tuum par.” Every syllable that fell from the Headmaster’s mouth hit Elara’s chest like rolling thunder. The tension vibrated, Hermione shaking next to her. Fine hairline cracks crept along her Atlas’ edges.

Portus!

The spell hit with a resounding bang! Elara gasped as she felt the whole of her body lean toward the desk as if yanked by an invisible tether, and Hermione did the same. The Atlas blazed with light, scorching the desk’s surface—.

From one breath to the next, Harriet appeared in midair. She dropped, crashing into Elara and Hermione, who snapped their arms around the smaller witch as the trio crashed into the floor. Elara could hardly believe her eyes—but she trusted in the solidity of the weight slumped against her, the warmth. She could feel Harriet shaking.

Wetness seeped against her hand, and when she drew it back, Elara saw her palm was painted red.

Harriet jerked, her green eyes open and wild, her face painted in blood and ash. A lens of her spectacles had been smashed.

“He’s back,” she gasped. “He’s back.”


A/N: There ’s a lot to consider in this scenario for Dumbledore, I think. He’s not as compassionless as canon!Dumbledore and not as quick to throw bodies at problems. He has to consider that if he sends Severus too early, he knows Severus will sacrifice himself to free Harriet, and Harriet still might not get away. While it’s not his plan to kill her (Ch.  13: “Voldemort must be trapped, subdued, and held. There are ways to make a man—or a monster—sleep as if dead.” ) Harriet is still a Horcrux. So Dumbledore has to ask himself: is losing his spy responsible for giving him information on Slytherin, Voldemort, and sometimes Gaunt worth a target who may potentially have to die anyway?

I like the symbology of the Atlas. Voldemort made pieces of himself, and those pieces are always pulling away from one another, whereas the Atlas was made into three pieces, one for each witch, and yet it comes together as a whole.

Chapter 220: the weight of this

Chapter Text

ccxx. the weight of this

 

Severus was the first to move.

He raised his hand from Albus’ shoulder, and the thread of power he’d allowed to flow from himself into the Headmaster snapped, the recoil burning under his skin. His head swam, but his legs moved on their own like a wind-up toy tottering into motion. He gripped Potter by the forearms to lift her off of Black, but he shifted his grip under her arms when she whimpered. Severus pulled the girl up against his chest and moved her to the nearest cushioned chair.

There didn’t appear to be a single place upon Potter that hadn’t been injured or mistreated. Her clothes had been sullied, the robes in tatters, her uniform stained crimson. Blood flowed from an open wound above her brow, and Severus’ own hands had been coated with it when he’d inadvertently gripped her slashed arm. She had a rangy, wild-eyed look Severus knew all too well, having seen it upon himself in the mirror after long sessions under the Dark Lord’s wand.

Her eyes rolled from person to person, a tight wheeze rattling in her trembling chest.

Flamel brushed past Severus, and though Potter flinched, he didn’t hesitate to kneel and take her left hand in his. “Petit oiseau,” he said, voice soft, and Potter’s head snapped toward him. “You’re safe, hmm? You’re at Hogwarts. Breathe.”

She stared uncomprehending for several moments before she seemed to recognize the alchemist, and then her gaze jumped around the room with intent, searching, until it landed upon Albus.

“Headmaster,” she gasped. “Headmaster, he’s back. He’s back—I couldn’t—I didn’t—.”

Severus stepped aside so Dumbledore could take his place, his head still spinning. He rubbed his fingers together and dumbly watched the gummy red mess stick and peel from his skin.

The pain in his right arm finally began to recede into his wrist, though the left continued to rage unabated.

“Can you tell me what happened, Harriet?” Albus asked.

“Professor,” Black interjected. “She’s injured! She needs the hospital wing—.”

“Not just yet, Miss Black. Please do not interrupt.” The Headmaster gently touched Potter’s upper arm, drawing her attention from Flamel up to him. “Harriet. We need to know what happened.”

Potter shook her head, on the verge of a panic attack. Yellow flecks of broken grass fell from her hair and stuck to her cheek. Flamel’s wife conjured a flannel and pressed it to the wound on her head, stemming the bleeding.

“I—! I—.”

“Take your time. Start from the beginning. Lend me your strength for a moment longer.”

Potter drew in a shuddering breath, attempting to nod. Severus could see her shivering and, as if from a great distance, heard himself muttering for Mrs. Flamel to cover her with a blanket. She Summoned a wooly, colorful thing from one of the sofas and settled it around the girl.

“I was—. I left the castle—. No, I…I went to feed my snakes.” Potter swallowed, blinked. “I went to feed the snakes in my dorm and change my robes because I had glitter on me, so I—I was behind everyone. I left the castle for the pitch, and Krum stopped me.”

“Krum?” Mrs. Flamel asked with a slight frown. “Ze the Durmstrang boy? Did we not see him go into ze maze?”

“It wasn’t Krum who stopped me. It wasn’t him. It was Barty Crouch Junior under Polyjuice.”

Rage kindled under Severus’ numb heart—a slow, heated prickling that broke through the malaise coating his thoughts. It was a different kind of pain, like a kick in the head from reality, a voice at his ear cackling what a fool he’d been. All year. All year that fucking nonce had been trailing the girl, and he hadn’t known—.

And then Crouch took her. Had her alone. Morgana only knew what he could have done—.

Across the room, one of the Headmaster’s mirrors splintered, and the portrait next to it yelped.

“And Terry—.” Potter suppressed a sob, though that did little to stop the snot and tears from flowing. “Terry was just tryin’ to help. He just—. I couldn’t do anything—. And Crouch—.”

Granger wept on Black’s shoulder. The taller witch stared past her toward the desk where her map device lay still smoking upon the scorched wood. Severus wondered if it’d be recoverable.

“I’m so sorry. I’m so sorry I couldn’t—.”

Dumbledore gave Potter’s arm a squeeze. “It is all right, Harriet. Continue from there.”

“I don’t know where—where he took me. It was dark, foggy. There was a—a graveyard, some fields. There was an old manor. He said—.” Potter shook her head. “He took me inside. There was a room with a cauldron and another bloke I don’t—I never learned who he was. He tied me to a chair. He tried—.”

She bowed her head, shoulders curling inward.

“The Dark Lord went into the cauldron. I think he was…was possessing a body, and it was rotting—.” Potter swallowed. “Then Crouch did a ritual. He took a bone from a coffin. He cut off his finger. He stole my blood—.”

She made a weak gesture with her right arm, her hand still tight upon her wand. Dumbledore peeled back her ruined sleeve to reveal the injury, and Flamel cursed in French. Potter’s description of the ritual sparked a recollection somewhere in Severus’ memories—something from a rather nasty book he’d inherited from his mother—but the errant thought barely registered as he stared at the wet glisten of exposed muscle and reached into his robes, finding a potion. He shoved the bottle into Flamel’s hand, and he uncorked it without asking, dribbling the mixture onto Potter’s injury.

“He’s back, Professor,” the girl rasped. “He came out of the cauldron, and he’s—he’s a monster. There’s nothing human left. I couldn’t stop him.”

“All is well, dear girl.” Dumbledore lifted his eyes from her arm as Flamel used the potion to seal the wound. “Can you tell me how you escaped?”

Potter nodded, wetting her lips. “He summoned his Death Eaters, and he told them I’m—that it’s not Neville who defeated him, that it was me. He said he’d planned it, planned to have Crouch take me. I—.” A dry, sorry laugh left her. “I told him you’d spit on his grave.”

Pride flickered in Dumbledore’s face. Severus almost laughed himself—or cried. The reckless little idiot.

“He said he’d finish with me l-later. He was talking with the Death Eaters, not looking at me, and I—. I figured out how to use my Animagus form. It got me out of the ropes. I got away. Malfoy was there. He—Malfoy helped. I don’t know why. He tried to help when he could.”

Dumbledore’s hand moved from her arm to touch her cheek, careful of the bruises and cuts. “You did well, Harriet. You’re safe now.”

Anything the girl might have said after that devolved into tears, the kind of great, heaving wails that came from a broken heart—or the shattered delusions of an innocent soul, because Potter wasn’t safe. None of them were safe and never would be again.

“She needs to go to the hospital wing!” Black argued, but Dumbledore shook his head as he straightened. “Professor!”

“Current inhabitants of the infirmary would make that a poor choice, Miss Black,” Albus replied, the thinnest vein of impatience wearing on his tone. “I will bring Madam Pomfrey here.”

Boot, Severus realized. He didn’t want Potter to see Boot again, and they’d put him in the hospital wing. Oh fuck.

The Potions Master’s memory in the following hours became hazy as he remained on hand to assist Poppy while Potter cried, a Flamel on either side of her, Black and Granger existing in the peripheries of his attention. He sent elves for potions and salves from his stores, and Potter fought the mediwitch at every turn, not wanting to be put to sleep. Somewhere in that clouded time, Albus summoned Gaunt—and there were Aurors there, listening to a doctored tale of two innocent students being swept into the Dark Lord’s machinations.

“It’s all very convenient for you, isn’t it?” Gaunt drawled as he studied his nails, unruffled by the news. “You have one student dead and another injured, and you want to blame it on the bogeyman.”

The Headmaster persevered, but Severus already saw the writing on the wall. He could feel it in his bones; panic did not suit Gaunt’s narrative. He wanted them all calm, complacent. Soft-headed and easy.

“Voldemort has made his move and has returned to England. It is indisputable, and we must act quickly while we have the advantage. He did not intend for survivors to return and bring news of his return to us. The public must be made aware for the good of the Wizarding world. Your administration needs to—.”

My administration needs to do nothing,” Gaunt hissed, leaning toward Dumbledore, cruel eyes narrowed. The pair of Aurors at his back tensed and exchanged uneasy glances. “Especially not at your bidding. You do not control the Ministry, Headmaster. I do.”

Gaunt swept from the office after delivering his final verdict. He did stop on his way out to stare at Potter—and the look she gave him in return could only be described as pure revulsion.

The door closed with a clatter, heavy footsteps echoing in the tight passage beyond. Albus exhaled and brought his hand to his temple, rubbing at the headache that usually resulted from dealing with the Minister.

“Did you truly think he’d heed your advice?” Severus asked as he spelled the last of Potter’s blood from his hands and robes. He and the Headmaster crossed the room for a measure of privacy, not that it mattered. Nothing short of yelling would get the attention of the others, too wrapped up in their own heads and thoughts.

Sighing, Albus said, “I had hoped he would recognize the folly in allowing Voldemort to move unchecked, even if only for his own selfish benefits. The Wizarding world needs to know. If they are left unawares, Tom will creep in like a poison, just as he did before. We are still reeling from the last war; we will not survive another if people are not prepared.”

Severus scoffed. Last war. Implying the war had ended—as if they’d won. There had been no victory, no defeat, simply a drawn-out limbo like a man stuck in a coma, decaying, inching toward death. Last war? Every day of Severus’ existence was spent in the middle of a war.

The fire in his Mark renewed. Severus must have made a soft noise of discomfort because Albus grimaced, glancing at his forearm.

Hours had passed. Full dark had descended, the thick of night like velvet drapes beyond the golden windows. Severus guessed the Dark Lord was feeling magnanimous if he was giving his wayward servants another chance to arrive.

Either that, or he meant to summon them like chattel to the slaughter.

“Are you prepared?” Albus asked.

Was he? Severus didn’t know despite having anticipated this day for thirteen years. His attention wandered over the Headmaster’s office, taking in the details, burning them into his recollection. The possibility of this being his last time in this room—in the Headmaster’s presence, in Hogwarts itself—was likely. The Dark Lord did not forgive. The Dark Lord did not forget. Severus’ survival hung upon the single premise of his master needing his service more than he wanted Severus’ death.

“I am ready,” he replied despite the anxious thrum of his pulse, the small, frightened voice that hid in the deepest parts of himself. The mask rested in his pocket, heavy against his thigh like a millstone. No, Severus was not ready to walk back into the Dark Lord’s waiting arms, but what choice did he have?

There was no one else.

Severus shut his eyes and turned from Dumbledore. He strode across the room, footsteps muffled by the damaged carpet, and opened the door.

He had only just stepped into the empty corridor when a commotion echoed behind him, and someone shouted, “Harriet!” Severus spun, ready to run back up the steps—.

A body collided with his, shoving him back. On instinct, Severus’ hands rose to grab the girl by her shoulders, and he felt skinny fingers encircle his wrists—.

“You can’t!” Potter cried, her grip tightening as if she meant to keep him there purely by her own strength. “You can’t!

Flamel came down the stairs after her, and he and Severus exchanged confused looks.

“What are you on about, girl?” Severus demanded, not letting her go.

“He means to kill you! He said so!”

His heart lurched, but her words didn’t surprise him. The Dark Lord’s murderous sentiment did nothing to move Severus—but the sight before him, the girl’s eyes streaming fresh tears under battered glasses, scraped, scarred fingers pressing into the wool of his sleeves, did.

“Please—.”

“Let him go, Harriet,” Flamel coaxed. “It is all right—.”

“No, it’s not! Please, Snape! Don’t go!”

Severus slowly brought his hands to Potter’s face, cupping it, the weight of her hanging from his wrists. Her protests stilled, and they stared at one another, her face pleading, his solemn, steady.

Somnus,” he whispered, a wisp of magic passing through his fingertips into her skin. Potter’s eyes fluttered shut, and her body sagged into Flamel’s waiting hands. Her fingers slipped from his sleeves.

A quick spell spoken by the alchemist lightened the girl, and he lifted her into his arms.

Bonne chance, boy.”

Severus didn’t reply. The burden of duty settled upon him—and yet it weighed nothing compared to the phantom hold of shaking hands keeping him in place. The sensation pulled Severus beneath the cold, unmoving waters of his Occlumency, and there he remained. The man who peered back at Flamel was not a Potions professor, but rather a Death Eater.

Severus left the pair in the corridor and marched on to whatever fate awaited him in the gloomy haven of the night.


A/N:

3 more chapters for part 4.

Chapter 221: but smile no more

Chapter Text

ccxxi. but smile no more

 

Harriet woke from troubled dreams with a start.

She lay on her back in a comfortable bed, the clean sheets tucked under her arms, pale moonlight smeared on a familiar ceiling. She was in the infirmary, but in one of the private rooms, not the main ward. Every inch of her hurt in one way or another, most likely from the Cruciatus Curse, though her shoulder in particular throbbed as if she was being struck. It was the shoulder of the arm that had been regrown, and Madam Pomfrey had warned her the tendons wouldn’t have the same resilience as they once did. A low, pained exhale left her as Harriet rolled her head on the pillow.

Professor Dumbledore sat in the armchair at her bedside, his tired eyes glazed as he stared into the distance.

“You let him go,” Harriet croaked.

Dumbledore blinked and turned his gaze to her, “You should be resting still.”

“You let Snape go.”

“Professor Snape knows what he’s doing.”

“He’s going to die.” Harriet’s expression pinched as she considered it might be hours later, and Snape might already be dead. She didn’t want to cry anymore. She felt so worthless when she cried.

Why did he go? she wanted to know. What is so important? Why does it matter? There has to be other people, other ways, other spies—.

“We must have faith in his abilities and his judgment,” Dumbledore said, though his hand tightened ever so slightly where it rested on his knee. “We have been planning for this day for some time. Severus did not step blindly into danger.”

Harriet squeezed her eyes shut, wishing she could believe him, wishing it was true.

“And, of course, the one serving the pretender. He will experience a taste of my power before his end—.”

She swallowed, eyes burning.

“Where’s the Flamels?” she asked, grasping for a different subject. “And Elara? Hermione?”

“Nicolas and Perenelle are asleep next door and will undoubtedly return to bombard you with their concern in the morning. Misses Black and Granger are with Sirius and Remus, and I believe Hermione was convinced to accept a Calming Draft so she could sleep.”

“And Terry?”

“He is with his parents.”

Harriet nodded, eyes on her knees. Terry. Terry was dead. Crouch had killed him for merely being an inconvenience. One of the smartest wizards Harriet had known, offed because he’d been worried about her.

“Go, please.

“No, I don’t think I will. What do you think you’re doing, Krum?”

“The wizard I didn’t know. The one with red eyes,” she said, abating new tears. “If you used the Atlas to bring me back, does that mean you saw his name? I—he didn’t look familiar, but the eyes. I’d know those eyes anywhere.”

Dumbledore didn’t say anything, but he took a breath as if gathering his thoughts.

“He’s like the others, isn’t he?” Harriet asked, heart sinking. She’d hoped to be wrong. “Like—Slytherin, and Gaunt, and the Diadem?”

“Yes, we can safely assume so.”

“What are they, Professor?”

She expected the Headmaster to prevaricate, to push off the question for a later date as he seemed to prefer doing—but he didn’t. He considered her with apparent gravity in his face, resolve etched into the many wizened lines around his hard eyes, before he weighed his choices and came to a decision.

“In the many curiosities you are your friends have delved into, can you tell me if you have ever come across something called a Horcrux?”

The corners of Harriet’s mouth turned down as she considered the word. “I don’t think so, Professor. Should I know what that is?”

“No. In fact, I’d be quite concerned if you did.” Professor Dumbledore removed his half-moon spectacles and wiped them clean on his sleeve—a careful, practiced move that involved balancing the glasses upon his knee for a moment. When Harriet shifted in discomfort, he waved his hand, and the potion waiting on the end table hopped into the air, pouring a thimbleful into a glass. Harriet took it when it floated over to her and downed the trickle, her pain dissipating.

“Thank you, Professor,” she sighed.

“Not at all,” he replied. “Ah, you must forgive me for needing to gather my thoughts. I don’t find this particular branch of magic easy to speak about. A Horcrux is some of the Darkest and most vile magic you can ever find upon this earth. Even in Ancient Greece, it was considered the worst kind of perversion, the kind that slips beyond the bounds of nature and strikes at divinity.”

“What is it, sir? Is it…is it something Voldemort did?”

Grim, Dumbledore nodded. “I won’t go into specifics about the rituals involved. It’s my belief some things should not be given voice, and though you are nearly fifteen now, dear girl, you are still a child, and I would not place the burden of such knowledge upon you. Suffice it to say that one of the most crucial components for creating a Horcrux is murder. Cold, premeditated murder.”

A chill chased itself down Harriet’s spine. She sat up despite the pain it elicited and lifted her knees, folding her arms around her skinny legs.

“It is not a subject that has much area of study. It is not something that has been used very often in history, thankfully, though the lack of information means we can’t fully understand Horcruxes or how they…manifest.” Professor Dumbledore replaced his spectacles. “The man you saw was a Horcrux, Harriet. Professor Slytherin is a Horcrux, as if Minister Gaunt. A Horcrux is a piece of a soul splintered from the whole and placed within an object for safekeeping.”

Harriet chewed on her lower lip, wincing when her teeth dug into the still-healing bruise. “But…Slytherin isn’t—none of them are objects. They’re people.”

“And in there lies a mystery we can only speculate upon, how it is fragments of a soul can find their own bodies.” Dumbledore shook his head. “I digress. Do you understand what I mean by telling you this?”

“It’s the same thing you’ve always told me, innit? That they’re the same person.” Harriet hadn’t known how much they were the same, however. “Professor? If they’re—connected, do they…I don’t know. Do they have the same mind?”

“To an extent. Though, I obviously can’t say for sure how much or how little that extent covers. What I know for certain is that the Horcruxes are all Tom Riddle—all born of the same mother, the same father, and all victims of their own self-abuse. Because you see, to split one’s soul is to profane one’s own being. It has afflicted his mind, has driven his cruelties to new and more frightening levels, and has stripped all vestiges of humanity for his person. With every Horcrux he made, Voldemort descended farther into his own depravity. Tom Riddle is mad, Harriet, in whatever incarnation he takes, and where there once might have been a boy worthy of our pity, there is only a man who has made the worst choices without hesitation or regret.”

“Why would he do that? Why would he—break himself?” Harriet couldn’t fathom. She couldn’t fathom murdering someone, even Voldemort himself, so the entire concept was as foreign to her as an extinct language. “He’s ghastly to see, Professor. He doesn’t even look like a human.”

“I would imagine it is a fault of having very little of his own self remaining. He did it because Tom is a coward, my girl,” Dumbledore simply said. “While he claims to have plumbed the depths of magic to make himself more powerful, he has always been terrified of his own mortality. Every Horcrux was made with complete indifference to his own person and well-being, purely in search of immortality. So long as the Horcruxes exist, so too does Lord Voldemort.”

Horror seeped into Harriet’s mind like the feelers of a nasty insect crawling from beneath a rock. “That’s why he didn’t die that night, isn’t it? That Hallowe’en? How you knew he’d return one day? And you—.” She couldn’t suppress the sudden burst of anger that moved through her. “And you think I can stop him?! You think I can do anything against him?! When it’s not just Voldemort, it’s—it’s all of them! It’s Slytherin and Gaunt and—and whoever else! Who knows how many of them!”

“It is a finite number,” Dumbledore said, heedless of her anger. “There are only so many times one can split their soul before it shatters in its entirety.”

“Well, bully for him!” Harriet shouted. “I couldn’t—I couldn’t do anything! I didn’t stand a chance! I thought I’d died, that he’d gotten the spell off, when I opened my eyes in the office and thought—.”

Professor Dumbledore laid his hand over hers, and the anger went out of Harriet, her fingers unclenching from tight fists.

“The journey seems longer if you concentrate only on the destination,” he told her, his blue eyes intent upon her own. “But a journey is made up of many steps, and every step is just as noteworthy. While it seems impossible today, I promise you, Harriet, that if you remain steadfast, if you stay true to yourself and pursue all that is good, nothing is impossible. Tom Riddle will not win in the end, no matter how many faces he wears.”

Harriet took one shuddering breath, then another. She shifted her hand so she could hold the Headmaster’s, and he gave it a reassuring squeeze. It felt smaller than she would have thought but also warm. Grounding. Her own was covered in a smattering of scratches and fresh scars, bruises on the knuckles, and if she wasn’t mistaken, Madam Pomfrey had regrown a few of the nails in their entirety.

“What happens now, sir?”

“Now, I believe you go back to sleep.” Dumbledore stood, hand slipping from hers as he reached for another potion. “You rest, and tomorrow we mourn those who have been taken from us. Then, the day after, we begin the journey anew. We will strive to make certain those responsible for tonight’s terrible things answer for their crimes. But, that cannot happen if you do not rest first.”

Harriet accepted the potion without arguing, already familiar with the swirling, midnight color of Dreamless Sleep. She’d welcome the lack of dreams, if only so she didn’t have to see Terry’s startled, blank eyes, or have to think about what Dumbledore had revealed this night.

No matter what he said, she knew nothing would be the same again. Harriet would never be the same.

She swallowed a mouthful, then slumped into the pillows once more. Professor Dumbledore caught the half-empty bottle and moved it aside, drawing the sheets over Harriet’s shoulders. The last thing she registered was the soft touch of a hand atop her head before she succumbed to the darkness of sleep.

 

xXx

 

It might have been a dream that woke her. She might have imagined the watery half-light of pre-dawn splashed upon the covered windows and the shadowed form highlighted above her bed, the red eyes of Professor Slytherin looking down at her, considering, calculating.

What does he know that I don’t?” he hissed. “What is it about you, Harriet Potter?

Pale, soft fingers wrapped around her throat and pressed down.

It would be easy.

After a moment, he let go, and Harriet breathed. The shadow of his cloak moved silently across the floor to the door.

It might have been a dream, or it might not have. Either way, Harriet remembered nothing when she woke.


A/N: The title is from Poe ’s “The Haunted Palace,”: “ And travellers, now, within that valley, / Through the red-litten windows see / Vast forms, that move fantastically / To a discordant melody, / While, like a ghastly rapid river, / Through the pale door / A hideous throng rush out forever / And laugh — but smile no more. ” About depression and sorrow, and how it overcomes a person’s mind.

Dumbledore: “Should I tell her about the Horcrux in her scar?”

Harriet: *having the worst day of her life*

Dumbledore: “Gonna save that jar of farts for another day.”

Chapter 222: driving the hearse

Chapter Text

ccxxii. driving the hearse

 

The windows of the train rattled as it moved ever onward along the tracks. Inevitable. Inexporable. Like the locomotive of fate bound to the rails, heedless of what lay in the way.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow once wrote, “There is no grief like the grief that does not speak,” and Hermione resonated with those words more than she had resonated with anything in her short life.

No one spoke of what happened that day. No one cared at all to wonder how Terry Boot passed away. “An accident,” rumor said. “Wasn’t that Potter girl there to see it?

While Cedric Diggory emerged from the maze as the Triwizard Tournament’s champion, Hermione’s world had been folding in upon itself. Oh, she wasn’t so illogical as to say Terry had been her life, or that they’d be soul mates or madly in love. Though she had loved him, it was not Terry’s death alone that had disturbed Hermione. It was the fact that he had died, that evil had passed so easily into a perceived place of safety—.

That it had trailed her best friend. That it had touched her, kissed her hands—.

Terry was gone. Gone in an instant. Hermione had been waiting for him—.

And she would always be waiting now.

At the Leaving Feast, Professor Dumbledore did not abide by Minister Gaunt’s wish to suppress the Dark Lord’s return.

“There are powers that be that would desire for me to tell you falsehoods,” the Headmaster had said as he stood before the student body. Behind him, the House banners had been replaced by solemn black tapestries. “They would wish for me to spare you harsh realities and say Terry Boot passed away in a tragic accident. This is not true. What happened to Terry Boot was murder, and it was committed at the behest of Lord Voldemort.”

Hermione imagined a line drawn in the sand, and Dumbledore dragging his finger along it. Gaunt would not be happy. She could only guess what repercussions would be forthcoming from the Headmaster’s defiance.

All through the Feast, she’d been abnormally aware of the empty seats in the Great Hall. An empty seat for Terry at Ravenclaw. An empty seat at the High Table waiting for a Potions Master who might never return. An empty seat next to Hermione where her best friend was meant to sit. Dumbledore had sent Harriet home straight from the infirmary, excusing her from the last week of classes.

The first time Hermione had heard of the Dark Lord, it had been in a passage of a book, and his name had been “Lord V—.” He’d sounded as fantastical as one of the cartoon villains she’d seen on videotapes or the telly. Even as the years passed and Hermione accepted him as a real danger, the Dark Lord had never seemed as genuine, nor as threatening, as he did now.

Lord Voldemort was out there. He meant to kill her best friend—her sister. He was the reason Terry was dead.

“What do you make of Malfoy’s behavior?” Elara’s voice pulled Hermione from her silent inspection of the train window. They were on the way home, Cygnus tucked into his cage, Crookshanks snoozing on the bench across from them. Rain lashed against the glass. It felt fitting. “Malfoy senior, that is. Why did he help Harriet?”

“I don’t know,” Hermione confessed, not a statement she often found herself making. “Of all the Malfoys, I understand Lucius the least. He doesn’t do anything without a benefit for himself—or his family. I can’t think of what he stood to earn by helping Harriet.”

“Do you believe he’ll blackmail her?”

“If anything, she could blackmail him.” Hermione sighed and rubbed at her tired eyes. Sleep had been difficult. Remus encouraged her to talk about what she was feeling—but what could Hermione say? She was gutted. She was scared—she was angry.

There is no grief like the grief that does not speak—.

Hermione cleared her throat. “Has Harriet replied to you?”

“In a manner of speaking. Her letters have been atrocious. Sirius says she only leaves her room when he or Mr. Flamel convince her to come down for supper.”

“She should have stayed.”

“No,” Elara disagreed. “She was too injured to go to class, and she hates the infirmary. It’s better she went home to heal, but I’m eager to see her.” She pressed her lips in a firm line. “She shouldn’t be alone.”

Which was why Hermione wished Harriet had been allowed to stay; she would have skipped class to sit with her in the hospital wing if needed. She’d barely been able to concentrate as it was.

“Did you say goodbye to Fleur?” she asked.

Elara’s eyes darted to her own, judging her reaction. Honestly, if Hermione was going to fall apart merely from mentioning another person’s significant other, she’d need a room in St. Mungo’s before too long. She could compartmentalize. She could close the doors on those softer memories, the whisper of Terry’s lips against her own, tentative fingers tucking a wild curl behind her ear—.

There is no pain so great as the memory of joy in present grief,” she recited in her own head. Aeschylus. Her father had a thick coffee table book on Greek figures, complete with many of their famous quotes. Hermione had devoured it as a child. She wondered if it was still there.

“We said goodbye before she left with the other Beauxbatons students,” Elara said, fidgeting with the gold chain linked to her shirt button. Her Atlas had suffered damage, and though it was still usable, attempting such a thing again would undoubtedly shatter it. Magic made fools of physicists, but that did not make it wholly separate from the laws of nature. Portkeys were not meant to be made at a distance. “I promised to write.”

“Will you?”

“I…I don’t know,” Elara confessed. “Things aren’t the same now.”

No. Nothing was the same, because Terry was dead, Harriet bore new scars, and Hermione was terrified of what would come next.

Exhaustion pressed upon her shoulders like a stone building slowly leaning into her. Or maybe Hermione was leaning into it. She couldn’t tell anymore.

“I did hear from Perenelle,” Elara mentioned.

“Oh?”

“Apparently, Mr. Flamel and Professor Dumbledore got into a row. The former wants her pulled from Hogwarts, and Dumbledore had to remind him an apprenticeship supersedes any kind of temporary guardianship he might be able to finagle out of a foreign ministry.”

Hermione’s eyes dropped to her satchel, pressed between her hip and the train’s wall. Professor Slytherin had cornered her in the entrance hall before she left for the Hogwarts Express. He’d shoved two books wrapped in Charmed—or Cursed—parchment paper into her hands.

“Ensure those reach Miss Potter,” he’d said, a telling look in his cold red eyes. “She’s staying with her godfather, is she not? Your guardian. How very convenient.”

Hermione hadn’t been able to say anything in reply, merely accepting the heavy volumes, feeling the vaguest prickle of Dark magic seeping through the paper. Harriet would hate them.

Slytherin hadn’t been done. He’d leaned closer to avoid the curious ears of passing students, and he’d hissed, “I hope you and Potter and the rest understand she’s allowed to stay there purely through my largesse. I could change my mind on a whim, and she’d be required to stay with me.” Hermione had gulped as he’d leaned closer still, nothing close to compassion in his scheming expression. “It’s a funny little thing. As a master, I am well within my rights to pull the records of my apprentice, and those records clearly state Harriet Dorea Potter is under the care of Petunia and Vernon Dursley. Muggles. Someone is playing Gaunt for a fool.”

Hermione had remained frozen, unspeaking, a lump forming in her throat.

“One word to the Ministry and she would be pulled from Black’s house—or where ever else Potter stays. You might very well never see her again if that happened.”

“One word to the Ministry, Professor,” Hermione had rejoined, hating the warble in her voice. “And they would dissolve her apprenticeship.”

“I know this,” he’d sneered, leaning away. “But does Miss Potter? If she ceases to be of use to me….”

On the train, Hermione shook her head and retreated from the memory.

The door to their compartment clattered open, and Hermione stirred in her seat—her breath leaving in a solid whoosh. Her eyes had caught upon the bronze and blue of a Ravenclaw uniform, and for a fraction of an instant, she thought it was Terry. She’d forgotten for that one second that he’d never open the door to their compartment again, never offer an insightful word, never wear that half-hitched smile he got when Hermione, Elara, or Harriet did something particularly outrageous. He was gone.

Her chest ached, too tight to inhale, too tight to breathe out.

“’Give sorrow words;’” her father read from his copy of Macbeth as little Hermione settled into her bed. “‘The grief that does not speak whispers the o’er-fraught heart and bids it break.’”

“Hello, Anthony,” Hermione said as Goldstein stepped inside and let the door slam behind him. He looked as tired as she felt, his eyes bloodshot and his robes rumpled as if he’d slept in them. He didn’t smile when Hermione addressed him; he stared at her, his features blank, a slim line forming behind his brows.

“I want to know the truth.”

“What?”

“I want to know what really happened,” he repeated. “I want to know what happened to Terry. What Potter did.”

“What are you on about?” Hermione replied, her confusion turning to frustration. She’d tried to speak to Goldstein once this week, but he and the other Ravenclaws had been acting rather insular, especially toward Slytherins. “Harriet did nothing.”

“That’s not what everyone’s saying though, is it?” Anthony demanded. “She was the only one there. And all this bung about You-Know-Who—.”

“It’s not bung!” Hermione stood, heart pounding. “It’s the truth. He’s the reason Terry’s—.”

“You-Know-Who’s been dead for years! Dumbledore’s gone bloody senile—and how can you stand there defending Potter?” he shouted. “I knew Terry shouldn’t have gotten involved with you. All you lot are the same, always closing ranks. All Slytherins—.”

“Get out.” Hermione pointed at the door. “Get out. I won’t stand here and listen to this a moment longer.”

“You know something you’re not telling us. You’re protecting Potter when she probably killed—.”

A sudden burst of magic arced from Hermione, and it shoved Anthony backward, his back colliding with the door. Glass cracked, and large splinters appeared in the window at Hermione’s side.

Anthony took the hint and left without further argument, though his expression could have withered a growing plant. Silence lay thick in the compartment, no one daring to breathe until Hermione marched to the door Goldstein had left open, slammed it shut, and drew the curtains.

“This won’t be the last time we hear about this,” Elara murmured. “People have always been quick to blame Slytherins for everything, and Harriet is an easy target.”

“Then it won’t be the last time I tell someone off,” Hermione replied, finding her wand. “I won’t allow people to blame this—this tragedy on Harriet when she’s suffered more than any of us. Terry died trying to protect her, and we’re not going to let them make a mockery of his efforts. This is Voldemort’s fault, and no one else’s!”

Hermione turned to the window. Then, brandishing her wand, she incanted, “Reparo!”

The splinters in the glass reversed themselves until it was whole once again. Hermione stared at her own reflection superimposed over the moving countryside and the wet streaks of rain.

If only everything could be fixed as easily.

 

Chapter 223: a sign of the times

Notes:

(See the end of the chapter for notes.)

Chapter Text

ccxxiii. a sign of the times

 

Harriet stood next to Sirius as they listened to the distant whistle of the incoming train.

“We’ll have something good for supper,” Sirius said, his arm around her shoulders. “With everyone home—and Remus! Though, he may be a tad late, tying up things at the school. It’s not Hogwarts food, but it should be good.”

“As long as you don’t cook it,” Harriet grumped.

“Oi! I’ve been practicing!”

Harriet hummed under her breath, lacking the energy to banter. Truly, she’d barely had the energy to leave the house, but she wanted to see her friends, and staring at the same four walls of her bedroom had gotten dull.

They wore Muggle-passing clothes, and the others on the station barely glanced in their direction, standing near the Floos. The shoulders of their jumpers had been soaked by the drizzle as they’d elected to walk over Barnsbury Estate from Islington. The clouds that had been hanging around finally started to rain.

“Is anyone else going to be there?” Strange wizards and witches had been popping by Grimmauld Place ever since Harriet came home, and they had whispered conversations in the dining room, going quiet when Harriet passed through. She didn’t know what was going on, but she gathered it was serious.

It’s because of Voldemort, she told herself. Because he’s back.

“No. Tonight’s just for family. And—maybe don’t mention the others right off? I will have to find a way to bring it up with Elara….”

Harriet fidgeted, staring down at her trainers. She’d left them at Grimmauld last summer, and they’d gotten too tight in the toes now. She hadn’t mentioned anything about it to Sirius; with everything else happening, getting her new Muggle shoes felt like a petty concern. Water had soaked through the canvas top and down through the laces.

“They’re coming in now,” Sirius said, patting Harriet’s shoulder. “Right on time. You feeling all right, Harriet?”

“I’m fine,” she replied, sighing. She’d been saying that a lot lately, usually through the bedroom door. Mr. Flamel had been staying at Grimmauld for a few nights this last week, and sometimes he could coax her out to eat, and other times he couldn’t. Harriet hated sitting at the table and pretending nothing had happened, that everything hadn’t been flipped on its head. That, and the medicine Madam Pomfrey sent Sirius to give to her made Harriet groggy. She spent an inordinate amount of time in bed, Livi coiled around her middle, tossing and turning between nightmares.

Harriet picked at the bandage poking out from beneath her sleeve.

“Stop that,” Sirius muttered. “It’s not going to heal if you pick at it.”

Harriet grunted.

As the red train pulled in, a great plume of steam hissing from the front stack, more parents and families began to meander onto the platform, eager to see their children. Harriet joined them, stepping away from Sirius, wanting to greet her friends first. He seemed to sense this and hung back, waving her off with a smile.

What if Hermione doesn’t want to see me? a weak but insidious voice in the back of her mind asked. What if she thinks what happened to Terry is my fault?

Every morning this week, Harriet woke up and stared at the growing stack of letters on her desk and despaired. She didn’t know what people wanted her to say, how she was meant to react. What should one’s response be to being tortured, assaulted, threatened, and kidnapped? What kind of letter should that be? What should she write when thinking of a friend’s sudden murder? What was she supposed to send Hermione?

What if she blames me for what happened?

The train doors opened, and the first group of students came hurtling out—mostly first years running for their parents, already babbling with excitement. They passed Harriet without a second glance, but the next group, older students from Hufflepuff, saw her and started whispering under their breath.

Harriet squared her shoulders and pretended not to see.

When Elara and Hermione finally disembarked, neither looked much pleased, the former levitating their trunks while the latter had a dark look on her face. That didn’t bode well for Harriet, and she braced herself for what was to come.

“Absolutely ridiculous. The whole lot of them, behaving like children—Harriet!”

Stiffening, Harriet didn’t know what to expect—and then Hermione collided with her, arms slung around her neck. The sudden cloud of puffy hair in her face took her breath away—and Harriet burrowed closer, taking in the familiar smells of parchment and jasmine and spilled ink. Warmth bled through her rain-dampened clothes, and only then did Harriet realize how cold she’d been.

“You had me so worried!” Hermione chided, pulling away to see Harriet’s face. She tucked back her messy fringe, the hair hanging in her eyes. “Why haven’t you replied to my letters?”

“I—.” All of her excuses suddenly sounded weak and silly, the kind of stuff a coward might say to escape responsibility. Harriet didn’t want to be a coward. “I…thought you might be angry with me. About what happened.”

Distress colored Hermione’s expression, and the hands still on Harriet’s narrow shoulders tightened. “I would never do such a thing. Do you understand? Never. It was not your fault.”

Harriet’s face crumpled, and she nodded, allowing Hermione to yank her forward into another hug. “I’m sorry,” she croaked. “I’m so sorry about Terry.”

A muffled sniffle buffeted her ear, there and gone as Hermione pulled away and wiped her eyes. “Thank you, Harriet.”

Settling the trunks, Elara stepped forward and delivered a soft smack to the back of Harriet’s head. “Ow!”

“Idiot,” her god-sister said before tugging her jumper, pulling her into another hug. Harriet grumbled into her school robes, too short to see over her shoulder. “Did you really believe she would blame you?”

“I dunno. I blame myself,” she admitted, voice soft. Elara rested her cheek atop her head, and Harriet felt small but safe tucked under the arm of Elara’s robes.

“Idiot,” she gently repeated.

“Have…have you seen Snape?”

“No. He hasn’t returned.”

Harriet closed her eyes and tightened her hold on Elara, curling her fingers into the back of her blouse.

“Where’s Sirius?” Hermione asked. Harriet let go of her god-sister to turn around.

“He’s over there by the Floos,” she said, pointing, though she couldn’t see him through the crowd. The last of the students had jumped off the train, cramming the platform with bodies and luggage and familiars. Suddenly, the idea of food didn’t turn Harriet’s stomach. Thinking about being home with her family, no matter the shadow hanging over her head, sounded perfect.

“Hey, Potter!”

Harriet winced at the call of her name, but she nevertheless looked around for the speaker. She spotted Cedric Diggory struggling through the throng until he reached their little group.

“‘Lo,” Harriet said, peering up at the taller boy. “I read you won the Tournament. Congratulations.”

“Thank you!” Cedric replied as he caught his breath. “And I mean that—sincerely. I wanted to thank you for all the help you gave me over the year. With the dragons, with the egg, even the list of spells you thought I might need in the last task. I needed quite a few in the end.”

“Yes, well.” Shrugging, she glanced down at her dirty trainers again. “So long as Longbottom didn’t win, I guess it’s okay for Hufflepuff to have a victory.”

“I couldn’t have done it without you.” He bent forward suddenly and Harriet startled, stunned motionless when Diggory pressed his lips to hers in a quick peck. He retreated, wearing a wide, glittering grin. “I’ll see you around!”

Harriet couldn’t formulate a response and may have blurted out a noise worthy of a beached fish as Diggory departed into the crowd. Her face blazed scarlet—and Elara burst into laughter.

“It’s not funny!” Hermione scolded. “He should have asked first! Harriet, are you all right?”

Harriet just nodded, not convinced she could speak yet.

Elara’s laughter trailed off into guffaws. “How does it feel to have snogged a Triwizard Champion?”

“That wasn’t even a snog.” Harriet shook her head and felt her cheeks, her palms cool against the overheated skin. “Merlin’s pants.”

The trio broke into breathless laughter—the kind of laughter Harriet hadn’t felt in so long. Not since that day a year ago, when they fled into the trees chased by Death Eaters and they printed the Dark Mark in the morning paper. Not since she saw the centaurs murder Greyback. Not since the Mirror of Erised shattered and rained upon the dead body of Quirinus Quirrel.

And then—.

Heavy hands landed on her shoulders. At first she thought Diggory had returned for some reason—but the hands were too old, too rough, and she caught sight of maroon sleeves in her peripheries.

“Harriet Potter,” said the gruffer Auror of the pair manhandling her. “You are under arrest for the murder of Terry Boot.”

Her stomach dropped.

“Wh—what?!

The second Auror grabbed her arms and maneuvered them behind her back. People turned and stared. Someone shouted, “Murderer!” Harriet’s ears rang.

“You do not have to say anything. But it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned something—.”

“What do you think you’re doing?!” Elara shouted. She made as if to move, but a third Auror held her back. “Let her go! Unhand me this instant!”

“Sirius!” Hermione yelled over the noise, but it was so loud. Harriet could barely breathe as the shackles closed around her wrists. “Sirius!

“I didn’t do anything!” Harriet cried as those strange hands gripped her by the upper arms and practically lifted her off her feet. “I didn’t do it!”

Her pleas fell on deaf ears. From one step to the next, the tight pinch of Apparition closed in upon her, and Harriet disappeared from Platform Nine and Three-Quarters.

 


END PART FOUR


 

A/N: That ’s the end of part four! Thank you all so much for reading, and I hope you’re as excited at I am to begin Part Five: The Order of the Phoenix!

Remember, there ’s a Discord where you can join the CDT community and stay up to date with new releases. The link can be found in the end notes of this chapter.

Harriet: “I’m going to have a nice, peaceful summer.”

Gaunt: *activates trap card*

Notes:

CDT Discord: https://discord.gg/mCyKd3xmfP

Chapter 224: new rules

Chapter Text

5 - THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX

woman is at once apple and serpent - h. heine

 


 

ccxxiv. new rules

 

The summer air crept humid and thick with the promise of rain through the boroughs of southern England.

It clung to the nape of Hermione’s neck like a physical hand placed upon her, sticky palm hot and cloying where it adhered to her skin. She rolled one shoulder beneath her damp t-shirt and leaned her elbow on the cluttered table, rubbing her fingers over her temple. Having the window opened or shut made no difference, as there wasn’t a breath of wind to be had.

Hermione didn’t notice. She didn’t notice when the door creaked open, either, only stirring when Elara tapped on her shoulder.

“Have you been to bed at all?” she asked, setting a cup of fresh tea at Hermione’s elbow. Or, well, atop the books stacked at her elbow. “Breakfast is over, and you said you’d pop down and have something to eat. That was an hour ago.”

“I’m not particularly hungry,” Hermione replied as she reached for the next book—only for Elara’s hand to gently land on top of it, holding it in place.

“Working yourself into exhaustion won’t help anyone,” she said.

“I’m not exhausted,” Hermione lied, giving the book a feeble tug. “Stop it. It’s been two days, and they won’t even confirm where they’re holding her—.”

“After seventy-two hours, they have to bring her before her barrister and can no longer stall. The Flamels have hired her one, and he’s waiting. I believe he and the Flamels have gotten as much sleep as you have.”

“They’ll postpone more when they can’t produce her guardians,” Hermione argued. “There—there must be something we can do, some law—.”

“Hermione.”

She took a breath, then another. The roaring in her ears didn’t want to abate, hadn’t dulled a wit since they took Harriet from the station—or from when she watched Professor Snape turn her boyfriend onto his back, and Terry’s dead eyes stared into the sky—.

“There has to be something we can do.”

“We can get food into you, and perhaps a nap.”

“How does that help with anything?!” Hermione demanded. She drove her fingers through her hair, shaking with frustration. “How can you be so calm? The Ministry’s arresting teenagers, allowing Dark Lords free reign, letting children die—and, what? I should take a nap and forget about it?”

“That is not what I said,” Elara snapped. “Don’t imply I’m not worried. I’m very worried, but I’m not stubborn enough to deny that waiting for them to play their hand might be best. Harriet doesn’t need to come home to us worried sick.” Elara visibly forced herself to calm down, though Hermione could see the tension lingering in her jaw and shoulders. “Come down to eat.”

Sighing, Hermione forced herself to turn away from the book, to straighten her spine and feel the fatigue cling to her bones. “I—I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to say….”

“I know. It’s—we’re all under a great deal of stress. And it’s absolutely boiling in here. The Cooling Charms are not working.” As if to demonstrate, Elara retrieved her wand and attempted to enact the spell, only for the house to reject it. “It’s Kreacher. He’s being a little monster.”

Hermione picked up the tea and sipped at it, letting out a breath. Her chest felt tight, but the edges of the knot loosened ever so slightly, and Hermione realized Elara had a point. She had worked herself into a frenzy, and she could barely recall a word she’d read over the last few hours. It bled together in a messy tangle of legal jargon and antiquated nonsense. The whole of the Wizarding world seemed built upon loopholes, loopholes the pure-bloods could use to do whatever they wished, all in the guise of lawful behavior.

Lawful behavior had stolen Harriet from Platform Nine-and-Three-Quarters and had denied Sirius the right to see her. Lawful behavior allowed the Daily Prophet to run an article claiming “Hogwarts student arrested under suspicion of murder.” It didn’t have Rita’s salacious spin, but there was no shortage of people willing to bend to Gaunt’s administration and write rubbish. It was enough that they gave Harriet’s name.

Hermione’s fingers tightened on the cup’s handle.

Harriet had left her Atlas at home—which, all things considered, was probably for the best. They didn’t know where she was, but the Atlas remained in Elara’s keeping rather than the Ministry’s, whom Hermione did not trust a wit with anything of Harriet’s. They had thus far refused to answer what the charges were and where they held her—and didn’t have to comply until seventy-two hours had passed. According to Sirius, who’d been in direct contact with the barrister, the DMLE would have no option other than to present Harriet or evidence to further her confinement at that time.

Hermione drank her tea, scalding her mouth with how quickly she swallowed it down. She hadn’t realized how thirsty she was.

Had they been able to show her guardians, the Ministry would have been forced to present her earlier—but they couldn’t very well bring the Dursleys in. As far as Hermione knew—and she flattered herself in thinking her research and knowledge extensive—the Wizarding world protected lineage and family records better than anything else, especially for a family like the Potters. She imagined it would be embarrassing for someone representing themselves as a pure-blood in politics to have their enemy drag out evidence of muddied family relations, so the Ministry stored the records in a department devoted to their keeping. Even the Minister couldn’t simply waltz into the archives and demand they be pulled.

They ’ll delay more when Harriet’s guardians don’t come forward. They’ll make it worse—.

She stared at the remnants of her tea, swirling the flecks of leaves.

Elara attempted another Cooling Charm, cursing house-elves, old houses, and her entire bloodline as it failed to take hold.

Gaunt was laughing at them. He’d been laughing at everyone since he’d become Minister in 1982. He reminded Hermione of a child who’d snuck behind a very old and very intricate tapestry, and he was plucking at the threads, ruining the integrity of the image on the other side with no one any the wiser. He ruined it because he could, not because he had to, or for another purpose. He just wanted to cut the lines and watch it all fall apart.

Hermione swallowed, her eyes heavy.

But he doesn ’t own the Ministry. No matter that he thinks it so, no matter how he severs the threads, the Dark Lord does not control everyone. He doesn’t control it all. Maybe—.

Thoughts turned over in her head, half-formed but bright like sparks blooming in the belly of a new bonfire—.

“Scorched earth,her father said with a playful glint in his eyes as Hermione stood and watched the smoke rise from mummy’s garden. He’d soaked the old tree of heaven’s stump in kerosene and set it ablaze. “It’s invasive,” he’d explained. “It’ll destroy the rest of mum’s plants if left alone. But burning away the stump and roots will start the garden fresh—.

“Are you coming down to eat?” Elara asked.

“Yes,” Hermione replied, collecting her empty cup and saucer. “Yes, let’s head down.”

She followed Elara from the room, and though the tea had given her a much-needed dash of energy, her head still swam as she stood on the landing and let her eyes adjust to the lamps. Elara continued to mutter imprecations under her breath about the abysmal weather.

They had just reached the first landing when they heard the front door open, and familiar voices flooded into the foyer.

“—that’s right wicked. Look at that door knocker—.”

“It’s a Slytherin house, Nev—.”

“But blimey, you’d think they’d brighten it up a bit—.”

“Merlin, are those heads—?!”

Elara froze as if hit with a Full Body-Bind, looking down the stairs at the gaggle of red-heads who’d come stumbling through Grimmauld’s front door. Most of the Weasley children were present aside from Percy and Charlie, and Neville was with them, along with his father, Frank.

They had luggage.

“What are you doing here?” Elara asked, and Hermione knew if Frank hadn’t been with them, she would have spoken with much more venom. The lines of her back had gone stiff as iron rods.

Before anyone could answer, Sirius came out of the adjoined parlor. “There you are! All right, Frank?”

“Good morning, Sirius,” the Auror replied, sharing an uncomfortable look between him and Elara. “Ah, we were expected, right?”

“Of course, of course. The kitchen is down in the basement if you lot want something to eat. Breakfast was left out. You can leave your trunks here. When’s Molly and Arthur coming?”

“Later, after Arthur gets off work.”

“Good to hear.”

Hermione couldn’t see Elara’s face, but she could see how her head tipped, and she imagined her gaze was burning a hole through Sirius. The Weasleys and Longbottoms retreated to the basement, and no sooner had the door thumped closed than Elara flashed down the steps until she was in front of Sirius.

“Why are they in my house?” she hissed. He leaned back.

“Now, Elara. It’s not your house—.”

“Cygnus left it in my keeping while you were rotting in prison—so yes, my house!”

Hermione shut her eyes, repressing a sigh.

Sirius reigned in whatever retort brought the scowl to his face, biting the inside of his cheek. “They’re here for the Order,” he told her. “Molly, Frank, Arthur, and their oldest boys are part of it, and the least we can do is offer this rubbish tip as a place to have meetings and shelter their kids.”

“What ‘Order’? You didn’t even mention this!”

“The Order of the Phoenix.” Sirius scratched his cheek, frowning. “It’s Dumbledore’s group—has been since the beginning of the war. It’s people who fight against You-Know-Who.”

“And you thought it was a good idea to invite them here?” Elara snapped. “Harriet has been taken by the Ministry, and you’ve decided to open the house to what is essentially a terrorist cell? To open her home to a bunch of boarders?”

Sirius took exception to Elara’s tone—though Hermione didn’t completely disagree with Elara. Already, the fight to have Harriet returned to their custody would be difficult—impossible, whispered a horrid voice in Hermione’s mind—so inviting who the Ministry would see as insurrectionists into Grimmauld wasn’t a well-timed decision.

What does it matter? she thought. Criminals or not. What would they do that they hadn’t already done?

“I opened the house to the people doing all they can to help Harriet!”

“Fat lot of good they’ve done her so far!”

Elara and Sirius began to argue, a situation not entirely uncommon in the house, and Hermione forgot all about food as she headed back upstairs, empty cup and saucer still in hand. She walked until she reached the floor she shared with Elara and Harriet, and she stopped outside the latter’s door.

One more day. One more day, and the Ministry could stall no longer. But what would happen then, Hermione didn’t know.

“Please be okay,” she whispered, throat tight. The summer heat burned against her skin in the quiet dark of the corridor. “Please.”

 

xXx

 

As the hour grew late, the many hands of the many clocks stashed in the offices and departments of the Ministry of Magic spun to the midnight hour and began to chime.

The resulting jumble of music spilled through the empty corridors and halls, echoing on the stone walls and through the solid earth. Those few sleepy witches and wizards who remained at their stations heard the sound and brushed it off, used to the noise. They returned to their tasks or naps, some flipping through an evening edition of the Daily Prophet. The main article blared the title Speculation Continues on Hogwarts Murder, and below the bold words flickered the image of a startled, black-haired girl taken well over a year before its posting.

The chimes died—one final, lingering gong coming from a clock just slightly out of tune. Just as the quiet returned, boot heels echoed in the passages of Level Eight, home to the Department of Magical Education—and the Pedantry, Publications, and Annals Archival.

Jeannette Juneberry heard the footsteps approaching her desk before the great, gilded gates, but she paid them no mind, engrossed in an article in her Witch Weekly. Whoever it was, she could hear the slight, high-pitched intonation of the wards registering their passage, registering them as a member of the Ministry. Though the hour was odd—or, really, downright bizarre—she imagined they were on their way to the Wizarding Examination Authority. Really, very few people ever visited the Archives.

With that thought in mind, Jeannette startled when the footsteps stopped before her desk. She nearly fell from her seat when she lifted her eyes and looked into the face of the Minister for Magic.

“M-Minister Gaunt!” she stuttered, jumping to her feet. Of course, she’d never met the wizard in person—she wasn’t nearly important enough for that!—so he didn’t know who she was. He smiled, though, that signature smile often featured in the Prophet and reduced many witches into giggling messes. He dressed so well—smelling of expensive cologne, his hair carefully coiffed. True, his red eyes could be a tad unnerving, but being the subject of his intense gaze was intense.

Jeannette nearly missed the presence of the second wizard. She didn’t recognize him; he wasn’t very tall, nor overly handsome. Silver threaded through his dark curls and short beard, and his robes were decidedly dated. Definitely not Witch Weekly material.

“What can I do for you, sir?” she asked with a breathless titter. “It’s so late! I hope everything’s all right?”

“Perfectly fine. We need a few records pulled tonight, Miss—?”

“Juneberry,” Jeannette said, blushing.

“Miss Juneberry.” Minister Gaunt nodded. “If you could…?”

Jeannette bustled around the desk, fishing out her special key. She unlocked the gate—and stumbled when the Minister and his guest brushed past her.

“Is there anything specific you need help with?” she asked, rushing after the pair as they crossed the aisle with a clear destination in mind. The Archives went on for quite some ways and contained all manner of information gathered from across the United Kingdom. There were dozens of gates Jeanette was responsible for, all matched to the many keys connected to her belt.

The Minister and his companion didn’t reply, and Jeannette decided they must be in a hurry, searching for something important. She had never helped with something important before! No one ever needed anything necessary from the archives, and no one like the Minister himself ever came down here. Usually it was old duffers from the Wizengamot or the Department of International Magical Cooperation on the Fifth Level. One time, she had to assist a handsome French ambassador from Paris, and that had been the most exciting thing to happen to her all year.

A distant part of Jeannette, the part not starving for adventure and intrigue, realized this was all very irregular, and something was…peculiar about the Minister. She had been to a dozen of his public political rallies over the years and had seen him about the Ministry itself many times. He didn’t seem to be carrying himself the same tonight. There was something different in his bearing, a slight hitch to his step that wasn’t familiar. Of course, Jeannette ignored all this in favor of hurrying along the poorly lit aisle. They kept the candles and mage-lights to a minimum to spare the more light-sensitive records.

Her heart sank when she realized where they were headed.

“Oh—oh, Minister?” she spoke up, slightly out of breath. The Minister paused and turned his head to stare at her. “I—I’m afraid I can’t open the Family Records. Not—not without a permit ratified by the W.A.S. and brought by a member of the DMLE.”

“Not even for a moment? Just a quick peek?”

Jeannette wanted nothing more than to comply—really! Who was she to deny the Minister over some silly records?—but she’d be fired in a heartbeat if she violated the rules! Especially this rule. Even for Minister Gaunt.

He stared at her, the corner of his mouth hitching upward ever so slightly. He stepped closer, and in the low glow of candlelight, Jeanette thought the skin about his eyes was moving, and wasn’t that curious? His hair was…shortening.

Unseen by Jeanette, a wand rose in his hand. “Imperio.

A pleasant haze overcame the witch, and the little doubts building in her thoughts suddenly disappeared.

Open the gate.

Jeannette moved, her fingers easily sorting through the many keys at her waist to find the correct one, inserting it into the lock. The many gears and tumblers turned, the enchantments dispelled, and the wards protecting the entrance went down. The iron gate popped open.

The second wizard wasted no time rushing inside.

Gaunt’s features continued to change—but only minutely so, some small indicators of age regressing, his body losing bulk. He hummed with indifference as he used his wand to adjust his attire, changing his modern, professional coat into more elegant robes. His edges seemed to meld with the shadows themselves as he and Jeannette entered the restricted area.

“Well, well. Aren’t we fortunate the wards recognized me as our dear Minister? That will give us more time.”

“‘e iz not my Minister,” the second wizard said, not looking around at Not-Gaunt. The trio made their way quickly along the many, many rows that found home in the Family Records, Jeannette struggling to keep up in her heels and delirium. The bearded wizard led the way with his lit wand held aloft—until they came to the row devoted to ‘Pl - Pr.’

Not-Gaunt watched on with indifference as the second wizard moved with speed, the movement of his hands frantic as he set his wand to float by his ear and pulled down a sheaf of documents. He was obviously searching for something specific. Usually, Jeannette would have helped, but she found herself quite content to watch, her mind floating like a leaf buoyed on a swirling tide.

“Do remember the price for my assistance, Flamel,” Not-Gaunt said, and the wizard—Flamel—finally had a reaction, his head whipping about to fix Not-Gaunt with a furious, hateful glower. He didn’t linger, however, instead reaching for a newer portfolio, studying the contents. Whatever was inside must have been what he sought, as he snatched it up and marched farther down the row to the nearest desk.

“You act as if you ‘ave no benefit being here, Slytherin,” Flamel said. Jeannette’s attention, vacuous as it was at the moment, drifted over the open document. Harriet Dorea Pott—. “Or do you enjoy za one called Gaunt making a mockery of you?”

Not-Gaunt sneered as Flamel found a quill and ink. He plucked his wand from the air and vanished letters from the parchment before him, then began forging new information.

“I do wonder what dear old Albus would think of you willingly working with me. My, my. Wouldn’t he be disappointed?”

“I am not Albus, boy.” Flamel continued to write without pause. “You cannot blackmail me in this manner. Tell him all you wish.”

“Just note the girl belongs to me after you finally relinquish this mortal coil.”

Flamel’s dark eyes shifted.

A candle was lit, wax melted, dribbling in a fine, crimson line onto the parchment. Flamel retrieved a familial seal from his waistcoat and pressed it into the little pool, using his wand to cool the wax. Slytherin snatched it from him, reading each line. His red eyes flickered from side to side like a snake’s tail.

“Adequate,” he pronounced, thrusting the parchment back into Flamel’s hands. “The gold, now.”

Without protest or much emotion, Flamel reached into his robes and retrieved a hefty purse. It disappeared into Not-Gaunt’s pocket, and he smiled, smug, before flicking his wand at Jeannette again.

Notarize it.

Jeannette stepped forward to do as told—but, in doing so, she had to step between the young but handsome Not-Gaunt and the desk, reaching for the quill. She blocked his line of sight with the document. In that intervening moment, Flamel’s hand twitched.

Words wavered on the page. Jeannette’s glazed-over eyes caught lines of ‘GUARDIANSHIP—’ and ‘IN THE EVENT OF DEMISE—,’ ‘NICOLAS FLAMEL—,’ ‘TOM SLYTHERIN—.’ But, when Flamel’s hand twitched just below the table’s level, ‘TOM SLYTHERIN’ dissolved into ‘ALBUS DUMBLEDORE—.’

Of course, Jeannette said nothing and simply notarized the document. Flamel snapped it closed as soon as she finished, sealing it with a ribbon. A final swish of his wand returned the record back to its proper place, snug among the thousands of similar documents left to gather dust.

Footsteps in the outer hall turned their heads, and Flamel blew out the candle he’d used to melt the wax.

Puissé-je ne plus jamais revoir ton visage,” he said to Not-Gaunt—and, in the next breath—Disapparated. Slytherin cursed as the footsteps approached, their owner alerted by the resounding crack! of Flamel’s departure. His wand flew up, and he pointed it at Jeannette’s blank face.

Obliviate!

 

xXx

 

Auror Lonie Rabbot came through the open gate to Family Records with his wand ready, having hurried from Level Two after the wards indicated a problem. He heard the crack of Disapparition—followed by a second. Running, he raised the lights, and found the archivist standing in the middle of the aisle, staring into space.

“Miss Juneberry?” he called, searching for intruders. Lonie approached when she didn’t reply. “Miss Juneberry?

The witch turned, her wide, empty eyes blinking in the sharp luminance of Lonie’s Lumos. He called her name again, and her mouth opened.

“Who?”

 


A/N:

Inb4 someone comments what a good/helpful guy Slytherin is.

He isn ’t. He’s a bad, bad man.

Jeannette, looking at Flamel: “Definitely not Witch Weekly quality.

Perenelle: “And I took offense to that.”

Chapter 225: the illusion of safety

Chapter Text

ccxxv. the illusion of safety

 

If one of the Aurors on duty in the reception area of Azkaban prison had thought to pay attention, they would have heard counting coming from the only occupied holding cell.

“One. Two. Three!

Feathers rustled, and a body collided with a solid surface. A groan followed the soft thump, completed by a low utterance of “Shit.”

On the cell floor lay a scrawny witch not yet fifteen years old, eyes pressed closed as she rubbed her sore arm. Dirt covered her Muggle clothes, smeared across the jacket, staining her denim trousers. It painted hazy, careless tracks across her skinny cheekbones and darkened her unclipped nails. The girl groaned, and she opened her eyes. Dark circles were smeared underneath them as if pressed into the skin by ink-stained fingertips.

Harriet Potter wasn’t entirely sure what she’d expected of Azkaban after listening to Sirius’ stories about it. She’d never intended to visit, so hadn’t given it much thought. She guessed she had it better off than he had, what with being in a holding cell rather than in the prisoner block. She had a bed, void of mattress though it might be, and access to the loo if she griped at the Aurors enough. The window set high on the wall provided some murky sunlight and fresh air in the daytime. There was a table with two plain, wooden chairs stuck to the floor, facing each other.

Really, it was better than the cupboard had been.

Harriet sorted the Aurors she’d seen into three groups. The first treated her the best, those that saw a teenager in Azkaban and didn’t think it right, regardless of guilt. The second group thought her guilty of Terry’s death and mostly ignored her, while the third group was the Aurors who belonged to the Guardians of the Magical Right. Harriet looked for the pins on their lapels and was clever enough not to talk to them.

They wouldn’t tell her anything anyway. No one had told her a bit of information after they’d pulled her from Platform Nine and Three-Quarters and dragged her across the North Sea by boat. Harriet’s first glimpse of the prison had been through a veil of mist glowing in the dying evening light. It had made the place look like it was on fire.

She didn’t know how much time had passed since then. Meals were irregular, and though the Dementors didn’t linger overlong near this section of the tower, their influence sat heavy overhead, so much so that standing up straight could be challenging, and sleep came in erratic, nightmare-filled bursts. She knew Elara and Hermione and everyone else had to be looking for her, but she had to wonder why no one had come yet.

How long has it been? A day? A week? I can ’t tell.

Staring up at the rough stones of the ceiling, Harriet inhaled a deep breath, her chest rising and falling. Holding it, she curled her knees toward her chest, then shot her legs straight out, using the momentum to spring to her feet. Her muscles ached, the prison not exactly the best place for her injuries to recuperate, especially her arm. Harriet pressed her fingers into the spot where Crouch had plunged the dagger, and it hurt. It shouldn’t, not after Madam Pomfrey had finished patching her up, but it did.

Sighing, Harriet redirected her attention to the window. It was perhaps a meter or so over her head, a little more than two meters off the floor. “One. Two. Three!

She reached for the tightly wound ball of magic inside herself, and it unspooled, rolling over her like a thin, cold sheet. Her body shifted in an instant, and Harriet braced her little bird legs, jumping before frantically beating her wings. For an instant, she thought she might collide with the wall again, but she managed to rise sharper this time, and her claws scrambled at the window’s stone edge. Harriet clacked her beak in satisfaction.

Finally!

Naturally, they’d warded the windows against Animagi—probably having done so once the details of Sirius’ escape came to light—but the air felt nice, and practicing gave Harriet’s mind something to latch onto instead of circling the drain. She liked being in her second form. Her thoughts hurt less.

Mr. Flamel had said she was a carrion crow—just like Hugh—but younger, with the blue eyes of a juvenile and a tuft of messy feathers sticking up from her crown. He’d held her up in front of a mirror, and Harriet had hopped about in a circle to see all her feathers, Mr. Flamel laughing when she’d very nearly careened off her perch onto the floor. It had been a brief moment of levity in a week otherwise saturated by darkness.

The bird didn’t have the same brain as Harriet did in her proper form. Her worries lessened, lost urgency; she was still Harriet, but crows lived more in the moment, and that thinking reflected itself in her mind. She concerned herself more with the harshness of Azkaban and the drudgery of time than the crippling remorse and guilt of what happened in Riddle Manor.

She looked toward the gray, frothing water, the sharp, colorless walls of the prison formed by magic, not by hand. No sea birds rode the waves—only the black, haunting shapes of Dementors roving in the mist like some horrid creature out of a child’s nightmare.

Restless, her wings churned, little talons tapping on the cold stone. She hummed softly in her own thoughts. “Hogwarts, Hogwarts, Hoggy Warty Hogwarts! Teach us something please—.

Still, the darkness intruded.

I’ll let them know how hard you tried in the end. How very well their pet did—.”

Her hold over her magic warbled, her shape losing its unfamiliar form. Harriet’s knee scraped the sill as she fell backward and hit the floor with a thump.

Ouch.”

No Auror came to inspect the noise. In fact, Harriet hadn’t heard much of anything out of them for a few hours. She peeled herself off the stones again, and instead of having another go at transforming, she sunk onto one of the chairs, kicking her trainers against the floor. She’d had enough of falling on her arse for today.

“Hiding already, little Harriet? My, I didn’t think I was such a bad host. You haven’t even seen the best part!” The Basilisk’s heavy coils caused the Aerie to groan under its weight—.

Fire crawled up her throat and burst from her in a mist of red. Poison, poison, she ’d been—.

Harriet leaned forward, dropping her head onto the table with a groan.

At a distance, she heard footsteps. That in and of itself wasn’t odd; Harriet heard footsteps all the time, and the long, solid walls of Azkaban lent themselves to echoing. It was the softness of the steps that caught her ear, how they sounded against the surrounding silence. She hadn’t realized how quiet it’d become. Where were the Aurors? Where were the guards?

Nervous, Harriet sat up as the steps came closer—and her heart dropped from her chest when the iron door opened, and the person came into view. Gaunt stood at the threshold, drops of water darkening his stately coat, not that he seemed to notice. He stared at her, and as she watched, a smile unfurled across his face like the slow creeping of thorn-covered vines.

Set stirred in the murky shadows thrown by the yellow candlelight, pulling and pushing at Gaunt’s feet like an unseen tide. Harriet let herself glance toward him, then away.

“Good afternoon, Miss Potter.”

She didn’t answer as the wizard entered the cell, and the iron bars at his back clattered closed. On instinct, she tried to rise and move away from him, but Gaunt lifted his hand, and a sudden force stuck Harriet, slamming her backside into the chair. She struggled and tried again to move, and the magic pressed against her as if someone physically held her down.

Gaunt approached and slid into the seat opposite Harriet, though not before he dipped his hand into his cloak’s pocket and removed something. He tossed it onto the table, to the side, and Harriet could only give the strange object a momentary glance before facing Gaunt again. It looked a bit like a stamp someone might find in a library, meant to press the date into the return slip. Why he had that, she hadn’t a clue.

“Have you enjoyed your stay so far, Harriet?” Gaunt asked. “I may call you Harriet, yes?”

“No,” she replied. “No, I haven’t. And no, you may not.”

“It’s in your best interest not to be difficult.” Gaunt tilted his head, resting his pale hand on the table. “After all, you’re going to be here for a while.”

Liar. Harriet didn’t know much about laws and whatnot, but Elara did, and Harriet listened when her friends talked. She knew her friends would not stop looking for her, and there’d been many witnesses on the platform who saw the Aurors grab her. Elara had told her about Azkaban before, and she knew they couldn’t hold her here indefinitely unless she was convicted of a violent crime. For that to happen, she had to be brought out for trial.

“They’re coming for me.”

“Are you so sure?”

Her throat tightened, panic lurking, threatening. “I don’t know what you want, and I don’t care,” Harriet told him, forcing her voice to be bolder than she truly felt. “You’ve expended a lot of effort for nothing.”

“I wouldn’t expect you to understand anything, Potter.” He leaned forward, delighting in her discomfort. He exuded exultation—as smug as any pure-blood git Harriet had ever met, though she knew better. He was less a pure-blood than she was. “No…too busy kept in the dark by Dumbledore and Slytherin. But they’re not here now. It’s just you and me.”

Harriet dropped her gaze to her legs. Her hands balled themselves into fists and shook against the chair’s arms with the effort to pull themselves free.

“Well, let’s not linger on pleasantries. I’ve better places to be.” Gaunt sniffed, and his tone darkened. “What do you know about Hallowe’en, 1981? Hmm? What has the old man confessed to you?”

What is he talking about? The night Voldemort tried to off me?

“Look at me.”

She squeezed her eyes shut. I won’t answer, she thought. I won’t give him what he wants. I won’t.

LOOK AT ME!

Harriet couldn’t stop herself from obeying, taken aback by the volume of his voice. It echoed in the cell and out into the passage, Gaunt’s eyes blazing when they met her own. He seemed almost startled by his own outburst, his amusement gone, one hand rising to comb back the loose strands of his styled hair.

There’s a monster in him, Harriet reminded herself. It could be difficult to remember sometimes—veiled as he was by the charming smile, the handsome face. Certainly she didn’t like Gaunt—or Slytherin, for that matter—but what they were inside went beyond petty emotions. The sheer wrongness of them could come spilling out like a tipped jar of beetles, glittering, crawling, swarming. The blackness inside of them pantomimed normality, dressed up every morning and put on a pretty, human face, but Harriet knew the Dark Lord must have abandoned humanity long, long ago.

She was trapped here, stuck alone with one of Voldemort’s Horcruxes, a piece of the bastard up and walking around on its own without permission.

In a flash, Gaunt’s arm rose from the table, and he closed his fingers over Harriet’s jaw, holding her in place. She startled and tried to pull away, his nails driving into her skin. His eyes bore into her own.

Legilimens!

The red of his irises spiraled, and Harriet plunged downward as if through a long tunnel, smothered by an otherworldly blast of cold feeling. It pressed forward, deeper, and her mouth opened to shout, but no sound escaped.

She passed the Muggle Studies professor in the corridor, the funny bloke with a turban. Harriet thought he was looking at her but—

“If you scream, I will kill you—.”

The turban unspooled from the wizard ’s misshapen head, garlic dropping to the floor—.

“You’re not worth the time I wasted brewing that poison—.”

Fire, it came like fire, burning, rising from her gullet until it burst out in a curtain of red mist, and Pansy shrieked—.

“I can give them back to you, silly girl. What Voldemort takes away, he can return….”

Harriet kicked against the sensation, lashing out as if with both her feet, landing a solid blow. The feeling thrashed like an alligator in a death roll, frigid pain spiking behind Harriet’s sightless eyes.

“I will let you share in that eternal life, Harriet…. You and your family could live forever—.”

She leaned into the side of a curly-haired wizard on a garden bench, haloed by the white moonlight. “Sometimes I’m afraid I’ll be tempted again—.”

A flicker, a reflection in an enchanted mirror, a green-eyed man and a red-haired woman smiling—.

“But I know better now. I know nothing is forever—.”

“Get out of my head!” Harriet gasped, reeling. The Minister crouched in her mind like a thing made out of metal, scouring her brain with sharp, bladed prongs. “Stop it, stop it—!”

Dumbledore looked down at her small form lying in a hospital bed. “You are one of his mistakes, Harriet,” the elderly wizard said. “Greater than you know—.”

Gaunt grunted—a singular, frustrated noise. Harriet attempted to blink the world back into being, and it came in blurred blotches, her temples pounding. Then, Gaunt was on his feet and around the table, affording her no chance to breathe before the spell came again.

She was back in the storage closet under Quirrell ’s wand. “He thought to trap me, Dumbledore, that wretched old fool—.”

Shards of a broken mirror pinging upon the stones—.

Want suffused her being as she gazed into the glass at her parents holding onto the younger siblings she ’d never have—.

Gaunt ripped through her mind with impatience, roving like a madman in a library, yanking books from the shelves in search of something without ever considering the titles. Harriet’s memories tried to drift and connect in natural patterns—but Gaunt kept jerking her back to that afternoon, that horrible day trapped in the closet with Quirrell and the Dark Lord.

“Master, I do not know what to do—!”

A lipless mouth opened and sharp teeth shone, red eyes peering right at her—.

Quirrell raised the wand and, still smiling, said, “Avada Kedavra—!”

Green light, green light like that night—.

“No, please, not Harriet—take me instead!”

It collided with Quirrell, throwing him back—.

Voldemort screamed—.

Gaunt pulled free, and Harriet choked, trembling under his punishing grip. Her scar blazed like a thousand suns confined under her skin, digging trenches into her bones, into her soul, scalding, molten—.

She swallowed her scream and glared at Gaunt, the wizard looking at her as if unsure of what he was seeing. Curiosity gleamed in his gaze, as malevolent as anything else in his cold little heart, brimming with new fervor. Harriet watched his eyes bounce back and forth, and a deep furrow dug between his brows.

Whatever answer he sought, Gaunt hadn’t gotten what he wished.

His eyes narrowed, and he began to pace the small space allotted between the wall and the table. Harriet didn’t care what he did so long as he stayed out of her head. Her skull’s insides felt as mashed up as the feed Hagrid fed to his flobberworms, and her thoughts came sluggish and dazed as if pickaxes had carved up the roads they usually took.

It worsened the Dementors’ lingering pall.

“What has he told you?” Harriet realized Gaunt towered over her again, and she flinched, shutting her eyes when his cold, careless fingers formed a fist in her hair to jerk her head upright. “What do you know about the prophecy?”

Harriet found she could move her hands again and clapped them over her face, hiding it from Gaunt, not caring how his grip stung at her scalp.

The wizard scoffed. “No matter,” he muttered. “I’ll find the truth of things myself.”

A gesture of his free hand summoned the odd object from the tabletop to him, and he grasped it by the wooden handle, swiveling it to inspect the head. It really did look very much like a stamp with its twistable dials—but there was no ink.

“Normally, this is reserved for permanent residents,” Gaunt hissed, clicking different numbers and symbols into place. “But, ah, let’s make an exception this one time, shall we?”

He yanked her head to the side, and Harriet dropped her hands in time to see the object lower toward her bared neck—.

“This is going to hurt,” the Minister crooned.

A brand, it ’s a fucking brand—!

Gaunt pressed down, and Harriet screamed.

 

xXx

 

Hours later, Harriet sat trembling in the dark, holding her head between her knees as the cold permeated her chest. She knew he’d ordered the Dementors closer after he’d left. She knew he’d done it just to be spiteful. Harriet sat alone with all her worst memories as company, the air settling like despair in her quivering lungs.

Hogwarts, Hogwarts, Hoggy Warty Hogwarts,” she breathed through chapped lips, clinging to something familiar, something happy. “Teach us something please—.

What if I never return? What if—? What if—?

Her neck ached. She could feel the symbols raised against her clammy flesh under her dirty fingertips.

“Did you like that, little girl?” Riddle crowed—.

Greyback found them, his lumbering shape at the ravine ’s start, peering through the crevasse with wicked delight. Only one yellow eye remained, and the other dripped red beads like pomegranate seeds—.

“Look at it,” Snape ordered. “Look at it, Potter! You wanted to know so badly! I told him because I was a Death Eater! Because it was my job to do so—!”

“Frigid little thing, aren’t you?” Crouch asked, lip curling. He shuffled closer, pale face looking up into Harriet’s own—.

Voldemort pointed his wand at her. “Then it will be just me—.”

Harriet drove her fingers into her hair and pulled, rocking with her back against the wall. All the little pieces of herself felt strange, misaligned, loosening at the seams no matter how she grasped the threads and attempted to tighten them. She didn’t cry. Harriet refused to cry anymore. She simply held onto herself as best she could and choked on her misery.

Then, from above, came the sweet, gentle warbling of birdsong. It glowed summer-warm on her skin, and Harriet sucked in a breath, looking up.

“Fawkes,” she whispered upon spotting the phoenix perched on the opposing side of the window bars, his red wings and neck hunched in the cramped space. He didn’t look particularly happy, but he sang all the same, and the music fell on Harriet like a warm blanket. She shut her eyes.

She was there in Professor Dumbledore’s office, sunshine easing through the tall windows, the silver instruments chiming, the portraits softly snoring. The venerated wizard sat behind his desk, a quill in his hand, the nib scratching over a piece of parchment. She could smell lemon sherbet.

Her family stayed with her—the Flamels, ensconced in the lurid melody of easy French, Sirius and Remus lost in stories of boyhood, the former letting out a loud bark of familiar laughter. Hermione and Elara chatted about Charms by the fire, and next to Harriet sat Snape. She couldn’t see him, but his presence had a palpable heat, and she breathed in the cloves and pine that clung to his wool cloak.

As the Headmaster is so fond of saying…you are not alone.

Harriet eased her eyes open to the grim, austere interior of her Azkaban cell. “Thank you, Fawkes,” she told the bird overhead, and he kept singing. Harriet leaned against the wall with her arms wrapped about her legs, staring into the middle-distance, clinging to that small, tenuous bubble of safety, even if it was just an illusion.

They’re coming for me, she told herself, her heart steeled against doubt. They’re coming. They’re coming.


A/N: I ’ll get into this more in later chapters, but the DoM is not like it was in canon. If you’re wondering why Gaunt hasn’t sauntered in to hear the prophecy himself, it’s because he can’t, and so far it hasn’t mattered to him.

Chapter 226: play the villain

Chapter Text

ccxxvi. play the villain

 

A sudden crack broke the sleepy summer silence that lay thick upon the grounds of Hogwarts, and the black, staggering form of Severus Snape appeared before the castle’s waiting gates. For a moment, his robes caught and eddied upon the passing breeze, then the Potions Master swayed, collapsing against the iron gates with a solid thud. He retched up his guts.

Really, it hadn’t been any worse than Severus had expected. He’d seen worse—experienced worse. The vast majority of Lord Voldemort’s Death Eaters were incarcerated and just as bloody mad as the Dark wizard himself, so Voldemort didn’t have the option of turning away or slaughtering prospective followers, especially those as capable and well-placed as Severus. Both he and Dumbledore had known this before he went to the Dark Lord—just as Severus had known there’d be a price to pay for his “swaying allegiances.”

It was the lot of a spy to sit on the fence, and they were always the first to catch the fucking backlash.

The pounding in his head had yet to abate. In fact, Apparition had only worsened it, a sick, swollen pulsation stealing through his mind, the pressure spiking until Severus tasted blood on his lips and vomited out the bile swirling in his stomach. His chest hurt. Merlin, it hurt—.

Without prompting, the gates swung in on their own accord, taking away what support Severus had, and he landed gasping on his knees. Agony bolted through his right shin—.

Kneel, Severusss,” spoke the high, shocking voice of the figure half shrouded in the dark, and Severus hesitated, hesitated too long, because the hex flew at his knee and he—.

Severus gasped again, louder, breathing in heavy, ragged gusts of air. The castle was there, just there, lights on in the mullioned windows, waiting for him to—.

“Get up,” he whispered, spitting into the gravel. “Get up, get up—.”

Again, the pain in his knee almost took it out from under him, but Severus held onto the feeling, anticipated it, welcomed it into his bones. He embraced the burning in his joints, in his nerves, the slick, sticky pull of cold sweat under the torn wool of his coat. His hair stuck to his neck—not sweat, not sweat, don’t think about it—and Severus held his shoulders stiff, forcing one foot in front of the other until he was walking with some semblance of his usual dour aplomb.

He flexed his pale, trembling fingers, and they burned. He told himself it was a wanted burn, like that first pull of Firewhiskey straight from the bottle—Merlin, it felt like it’d been years since he’d had a drink. Had it been years? He couldn’t remember. Severus laughed, voice echoing against stone—and he choked.

Oh, no.

His shields were slipping. Many a time in the past, years and years ago when he’d been little more than a snot-nosed brat himself, Severus had tried to explain to Albus that this was the most difficult and dangerous part of his double life, this liminal time after a violent interrogation in which he wandered and his shields began to pull back. Standing before Voldemort or Slytherin presented their own kind of thorny difficulty, but Severus thrived on adversity and took perverse pleasure in subverting their attempts to subsume his mind, like hammers falling against palace walls, battering the stones but never managing to break through. The Dark Lord had no trick, no tool in his torturous little arsenal that could break the ice of his thoughts.

It was now, when he returned—crossing into the perceived safety of Hogwarts’ quiet halls, crossing the soft, feathery comfort of familiar wards—that his Occlumency began to fail, like a breath held too long, like adrenaline leaving one’s veins when danger passes by. The danger hadn’t passed—it would never pass—but even a man like Severus Snape could only bear so much before bending, releasing pressure from his own subconscious until it hissed through his thoughts like steam from a valve. Manic emotion roiled inside him, and he directed it as best he could, letting fury set in, then grief, then fear—fear for himself, for Hogwarts, his home, the girl, the war—.

He was in the entrance hall. When did he get there? Dungeons, go to the—.

You dare show yourself to me, traitor?

“I have and will always remain your servant, my Lord.”

“Prove it.”

Needles in his mind, the facsimile of emotion, broken images pieced together into something agreeable, something for the Dark Lord, the twisted musings of a madman—.

His foot missed a step, and Severus fell, the dark rising up—.

He was twenty years old, kneeling on a windy hilltop, withering below the gaze of the world ’s greatest wizard.

“You disgust me.”

Disgust, yes, he understood disgust so well, after all.

“Yer a poncy little freak like yer worthless mother!” the Muggle boomed. “Feckin’ devil-worshippin’ bullshite—!”

The cold stones of the wall pressed hard into his back, and Severus held his breath against the pain.

Flecks of red on the floor of that rotten manor, dirty, bare feet circling him—.

Red, like red hair, like candied apples gleaming in the torchlight—.

“I’m so sorry, Lily—.”

“Why are you sorry for calling me that when—?”

No, Severus told himself, forcing the images connected to his physical pain away, disassociating them, prying free the lingering sting of emotional agony, guilt, and shame. He needed something, anything else—.

Adrenaline fired through his veins, the crisp, electric burn of spellfire in the air as Death Eaters dueled and young Severus ’ hands shook—.

“You’ve done well, Mr. Snape. Or should I call you Ssseverus?”

Pride—sickening, hateful pride—welled inside him, and it morphed into terror—.

Heart thundering, he watched Apollo Goldstein from the Board of Governors step aside, ushering inside a familiar, hated face—.

A darkened hall, Stunned bodies at his feet, Severus stood alone as the Dark Lord approached and clapped—.

A familiar face at Hogwarts ’ threshold, a cold, boyish smile—.

“Faculty, I’d like to introduce you to your new Defense instructor, Mr. Tom Slytherin—.”

“SLYTHERIN!” the Hat bellowed, and little Severus slipped from the stool, slipped from his hopes, delved into the dungeons where everything good goes to die—.

Dying, Voldemort ’s fallen followers were dying on the floor of the darkened hall in the wake of the melee—the trial, the audition—and the Dark Lord clapped with glee in his eyes—.

Eyes, red fucking eyes that looked down at him upon the abandoned manor floor with cool, unmoved clarity as Severus screamed—.

“Severus?”

Shite, the Potions Master thought as he registered the sound of McGonagall’s voice.

“What in the devil are you doing? Where have you been?! Are you drunk—?” She touched his shoulder, and then—no doubt feeling the hot wetness soaking into the woolen fibers of his cloak—drew that hand back. “Severus!

“Shut up,” he hissed as his name echoed in the dungeons’ narrow confines. The last thing he needed was Slytherin skulking by to investigate the noise, or one of the students. Were the students still here? What day was it?

“Och, don’t tell me to shut up, Snape! You need Poppy immediately—.”

“No.”

No? What do you mean, no—?!”

The wall cut into his back as he braced his good foot against the floor and tried to shove himself upright. Only Minerva’s hands flying out to catch him by the forearms saved him from falling again. Agony ravaged his chest and his back and his face, and he must have turned himself toward the torchlight because Minerva cried out. “Merlin have mercy!”

Shut up!” If he didn’t get her to quiet herself, if Slytherin came—.

Did you think your service finished?” the shorter wizard asked as he leaned closer to Severus. “Did you think the Dark Lord gone—?”

Severus pressed his flailing thoughts deeper into the iron-dark waters of his Occlusion until he felt as if he might drown with them. His vision swam, dipped, and he broke his nails against the wall behind him in a desperate bid to stay upright.

Magic swept past him, warm and bright as crystal, swirling like motes of dust in his wavering vision. His weight sagged forward, and he smelled Earl Grey and thistle and the slightest tang of whiskey—the expensive Muggle stuff, not Ogden’s or Blishen’s.

“Up you come, lad,” Minerva said as his cheek settled on her shoulder. Her voice was breathless with the effort to keep a man much larger than herself from careening into the floor, though the strain didn’t mask her fear. It shook beneath her thickening accent like something dying in a bush, trembling in its death throes. He hadn’t heard her so broken up since—.

He heard the soft, muffled sniffling coming from within the staff room and paused. When he pushed in the door, he did so with enough force to announce his presence, and he caught the briefest glimpse of his old Transfiguration professor ’s face crumpled in grief, her ring finger freshly bare—.

“I’m sorry,” Severus said into stiff silence, feeling awkward, wishing he’d not stepped inside—.

An arm pressed into his wounded back and Severus groaned. “Albus will be here. He’ll know how to sort you out—.”

Disgust distilled in a pair of hard blue eyes—.

Blue as the sky overhead as they walked the grounds and Severus winced in the harsh sunlight. “You can admit you loved her, my boy,” Albus said, but the younger wizard could only say, “Not in that way—.”

Hands linked, the two children spun in the play park, laughing. He was nine years old and more patchwork doll than boy—clothes ragged, thin bones rising against dry skin, unclean hair and blue bruises—.

Blue as the gaze he found himself staring into now, Severus barely registering Dumbledore’s voice above the ringing in his ears. A warm hand settled against his cheek.

“Stay awake, Severus,” the Headmaster said. “Stay awake. Minerva, quickly—.”

He could withstand the lash. He could tolerate the Dark Lord’s cruel, thoughtless handling—but Dumbledore’s warmth broke him every time.

The dark rose again, and this time nothing stopped the Potions Master from falling into it headlong.

 

xXx

 

The clock on the mantel chimed the midnight hour as Albus Dumbledore blinked away wayward thoughts and sighed.

The room was quiet, still. Severus kept no trinkets, no photographs. His bedside table held only half-finished bottles of sleeping potions and balms meant to ease pain. Albus picked up an unlabeled jar to study and deduced it was an unguent meant to counteract the Dark magic in his eye. Given the state of the dust on the lid, Severus hadn’t been using it.

If not for the black robes hanging in the wardrobe and the boots on the shelf, one might think the unconscious man laid out in the bed was only visiting.

Albus studied Severus, his mouth forming a thin, grim line. Obviously, he did not often have call to see his colleagues or friends in their dishabille; the closest occasions would be when an emergency or wayward student brought one of them to his office in the dead of night, robed in pajamas. Even then, Severus was usually dressed, still fully suited in his day attire no matter the hour.

He had seen the younger wizard’s chest bare once before. It had been years ago, when he was a boy, just after that unfortunate incident between Severus and Remus Lupin. Remembering the event itself forced a tired exhale from Albus, as often happened when he considered his past mistakes.

He hadn’t handled the situation well. Severus had been an entirely unlikable Slytherin sycophant, and though Albus could now freely admit he’d had biases against the House thanks to Tom, Severus would have been a difficult child no matter where he’d been Sorted. Though, had he not been placed in Slytherin, perhaps the event in question would have never come to pass.

Albus hadn’t liked swearing the scrawny, terrified boy to silence that evening—but he’d had little choice in the matter. To allow Severus free license would have cost Remus his enrollment—his entire future—when he had done nothing wrong. In retrospect, Albus could blame the young werewolf for allowing his friends to make light of his condition, but on the night in question, Remus had been exactly where he was meant to be. Severus had been the one out of bounds, and if he’d spread word of what happened that night, Remus would have lost everything, and Sirius Black would have been expelled.

Truly, beyond Gryffindor fraternity, Albus reserved no particular affection for Sirius, not when he’d been young and not in adulthood. The charm of boyhood antics had grown grating as Sirius had been constantly dragged into Albus’ office for pranks, defacement of property, and breaking curfew. James and Sirius had shared a certain charisma that charmed most people in their acquaintance, but where James had been hard-working and ambitious, Sirius had been lackadaisical and too devil-may-care for his own good. It had been frustrating to watch him spoil his potential—just as frustrating as it had been to know that if Sirius had been expelled for his egregious and frankly stupid lark, the Black paragons would have rained retribution on Severus’ head. Orion and Walburga might not have liked Sirius, but he had remained their son, and to have him expelled over a squabble with a poor half-blood boy would have encited their offended rage.

Albus had not liked Snape—Merlin forgive him, but he’d barely recalled the poor boy at all after he matriculated—but he’d done what he’d thought would not only protect Remus, but Severus as well.

No perfect choices.

Ah, that was long ago now, though it remained the singular time Albus had seen Severus so disrobed, as Poppy had checked him over for evidence of werewolf bites. He recalled the lad being too skinny, but otherwise unmarked. It was the typical body of a boy who’d only just tipped the scales into manhood.

The candlelight flickered, and Albus looked at Severus again.

He and Minerva had wrangled him into his quarters and done what they could to rectify the damages visited upon him by Voldemort. Minerva retained some experience in field triage from her time at the Ministry, and Albus flattered himself in thinking his spellcraft quite broad and varied, but neither were medical professionals. They couldn’t call Madam Pomfrey in, as not only had she vacated the premises with much of the other staff when the summer holiday began, but she also wasn’t a member of the Order. Severus could not afford to have the state of his health leaked into the wrong ears.

He abhors weakness,” he once confessed to the Headmaster. “Any kind of infirmity, disability, or prolonged illness—he finds them all signs of unacceptable deficiency. His followers won’t even visit St. Mungo’s, lest someone bring their medical issues to the Dark Lord. He won’t accept acknowledgment of any wound unless he allows it.

Albus wondered if it had anything to do with Tom’s mother, if he perceived her death following his birth as a sign of inferiority in her magic. Really, Albus was inclined to think it had much more to do with the watered-down genetics in the Gaunt family tree—.

He huffed, passing his hand through his beard. Still Severus lay listless and unconscious, bandages peeking from behind his loose shoulders. Half of his torso rested above the sheets, and Albus beheld a terrible history written into Severus’ very skin. At sixteen, he’d been unmarked—and now, at thirty-five, few spots on Severus hadn’t been scarred in one manner or another. Cuts and burns, spiraling punctures and bites, gashes, pitting from acidic potions, lines from a flaying older than the one he’d just endured; few injuries could be thought of that weren’t represented on Severus’ body.

How many times had Severus walked around with a wound untreated? His was not a canvas painted in one go; the scars told a horrid, repetitive story of suffering debilitating blows day after day, year after year, and Severus had never told him. Had never said enough. Why did he never tell me—?

It was one thing to know in the abstract that Tom hurt his followers and another to realize that title included Severus, a person whom Albus had long since stopped considering a Death Eater. A person whom he’d come to value not just for his brilliance or courage, but for his friendship as well. He knew Tom was cruel, but this went beyond the pale.

Albus lifted his head to look again at the room. No photographs. No trinkets. A row of black robes, starched white shirts, an extra pair of shoes, and one threadbare Slytherin scarf.

As a young man, he would have said it was for the greater good. The sacrifice of one life for the betterment of many. He could still rationalize the difficult choices, the unfair ones, but Albus couldn’t stomach the losses he could prevent. This—the life of Severus Snape—was something Albus had traded away without considering the true value, and he could have changed that. He’d settled for having the boy come back to him breathing—sneering, snarking, prickly as a porcupine—but he hadn’t fully grasped what Severus gave in exchange for survival.

A choked gasp disturbed the unsettling quiet as the Potions Master stirred in his bed. He woke as one might anticipate a spy wakes—all at once, from unconscious to lucid in a single, rattled moment. His gaze darted across the empty ceiling, alighting on Albus with singular intensity.

“Minerva found you in the corridor,” Dumbledore told him without prompting. “And retrieved me. We moved you to your quarters and have done what we could to heal your injuries. I sent Minerva off to find her bed and have stayed with you here. I believe it’s just passed one in the morning.”

Some tension leached from Severus’ body, though he winced when his shoulders pressed more firmly into the mattress. He reached up to prod at the potion-treated gauze secured to his lingering wounds.

“Were you discovered?” Albus softly asked. “Is that why—?”

Severus snorted—then coughed, clearing his throat. His usual baritone sounded coarse and ragged. “Had that been the case, I would not be here. No, as we expected, he cannot afford to turn away followers at the moment. Especially not one as well placed as I am, loathe though he is to accept any of the old crowd. He masks it as well as he masks anything else, but he resents the Death Eaters who failed to search for him.” A low, exhausted sigh left his parted lips, his fingers twitching with discomfort. “He’s hideous.”

“Yes, so Harriet mentioned.”

Albus subsided into contemplative silence as Severus cataloged his injuries. It was only when he attempted to sit up that the Headmaster spoke again.

“You need to rest.”

“I cannot. If Slytherin learns I’ve returned and didn’t go to him first—.”

“Severus, see sense. Your eye—.”

The younger wizard paused and passed a hand over the left side of his face as if only just realizing the eye in question was missing. Given the bruises and abrasions, Albus guessed the boy’s face had been propelled into something solid and rough, such as the floor, and the orb had been dislodged.

Severus’ hand jerked, the motion irritated, pained. “I have a spare.” He grunted and cursed at the bandages pulling against his skin. “We should count our blessings it didn’t cause the Dark Lord to finish me off.”

Guilt poured through Albus like rain through a gutter, the sensation just as cold, just as gutting.

“Severus,” he said with gravity, reaching out to grasp the other man’s arm. His skin felt clammy and chilled. “If this is the condition Lord Voldemort sees fit to return his followers home in, we will need to reevaluate sending you to his side—.”

Severus recoiled, his eye widening. “That is precisely the Dark Lord’s intention,” he snapped. “It’s a test. He knows you’re soft, Albus. He knows you’ll offer salvation, and so he tests my loyalty to see if I will return. He will do so again. Only a loyal servant tolerates the whip.”

“He nearly killed you. If Minerva had not happened upon you after leaving the kitchens, you wouldn’t have survived the night alone. I cannot in good conscience ask you to continue this.”

“Then do so in bad conscience!” Severus yelled. His voice broke and angry color bled into his pale face. “Do not do this to me, Headmaster.”

“It is precisely because I don’t wish this upon you that we are speaking of this now, Severus. We will make do with what we can glean from Slytherin and those Death Eaters willing to speak with you.”

“This is ridiculous. We need information from the inner circle—it’s the whole fucking point of me being a spy, Albus!”

“And if he kills you? What purpose will that bring?” Dumbledore’s voice rose to match his. “That will simply be another good man dead at Tom’s hands. Yes, we need information, but there is so much else you can do, so much else you can become—.”

A harsh exhale left the Potions Master, and when he spoke again, his voice was softer, almost pleading. “It is hard enough to crawl before him and pretend obedience when I am ordered. Do not make it harder by forcing that choice upon me, Albus. Do not make it my choice to endure. I am not strong enough for that.”

Albus shut his eyes and passed his hand across his brow, fingertips pressing at the lines of stress found there.

The information Severus provided by spying among the loyal Death Eaters had often proved vital in the past—and now, with Tom’s full return, Dumbledore knew it would only be more crucial in deciphering Voldemort’s plans and saving lives. There was also Slytherin to consider. The Defense professor had demanded Severus bring details about Voldemort just as Albus had; should Severus stop spying, he would have to flee not only the Dark Lord, but Slytherin as well. He would have to leave Hogwarts. He would have to leave the country, and in doing so, he’d have to forsake helping Harriet.

Albus knew Severus would not leave. No matter how he might protest, Albus understood Severus wouldn’t abandon Harriet to her fate. A promise to a dead woman had kept him at his post for years, but Severus had stopped serving guilt and Lily Potter years ago.

But, the question yet remained of how much the wizard could withstand before it simply killed him.

You let him go,” Harriet Potter croaked from her hospital bed. “You let Snape go. He’s going to die.

Albus opened his eyes. “Very well,” he said into the quiet, an invisible weight pressing upon his chest as he considered his words. Severus watched him closely. “Very well.”

“You understand?”

“Yes. We will continue the path.”

What Albus truly understood was that Severus needed his strength. He needed someone to blame, someone to hate. The younger wizard had made his choice, but that didn’t lessen what he must endure, what he must experience. The pain would only worsen if Severus had to shoulder his own decision and forsake the easier path. If the choice were taken away—even if only in illusion—it lessened his burden.

 Albus could do that for him. The Headmaster could play the villain, the cruel man ordering his men to march, if it meant Severus didn’t need to suffer more. He could take the blame for the Potions Master’s suffering and inevitable death, even if the grief of it destroyed him.

Clearing his throat, Albus straightened in the padded armchair he’d conjured at Severus’ bedside. “Tell me, my boy, what you were able to learn, and we will plan our next steps.”

Gratitude glittered in Severus’ black eye, there and gone before he hardened his expression once more. He started to speak.


A/N: Occlumency and Legilimency have always really interested me, and for all that Canon!Snape reprimanded Harry for thinking of it as simple “mind-reading,” I feel like it comes across just like that too often in the books. I like to think of as a kind of suggestibility, with Legilimency being the ability to suggest, interpret, and trigger specific emotional stimuli, and Occlumency being the ability to both organize and protect the mind, and control emotional responses. I’ve probably already mentioned this before, but it’s eventually an area that gets its own dedicated arc, though not necessarily where you might expect.

Not-so-fun-fact: McGonagall ’s husband, Elphinstone, died in 1985, a time when I imagine her friendship with Severus was still very tentative and unformed.

Albus: “Well, might as well snoop while I’m here.”

Albus: *finds Snape ’s diary*

Albus: “…”

Albus: “It’s all drawings of me getting stabbed.”

Chapter 227: devils among us

Chapter Text

ccxxvii. devils among us

 

Holding her breath, Elara reached out to slowly open the waiting door.

Harriet’s room sat quiet and mildly dusty, smelling of broom polish, dried flowers, and faintly of old socks. With every inch the hinges creaked inward, Elara’s nerves rose, and she had to force her feet forward. Her god-sister’s possessions remained just as she’d left them: trunk open, her Atlas on the nightstand, a collection of letters building upon the desk.

Elara swallowed and stepped inside, the dead rabbit procured by Mably hanging from her gloved fist.

She didn’t have to wait long before movement disturbed the otherwise quiet space. “Sssss….” The deep, displeased hissing preceded the heavy shift of an unseen body moving against the floorboards. Elara did her best not to flinch when the Horned Serpent revealed himself from under the bed, but it was difficult to stare down more than two meters of irritated snake when his master was present, let alone when she was not.

Of course, Harriet never saw anything wrong with it. She adored things and creatures lesser witches and wizards could barely bring themselves to consider at all. Harriet saw snakes, especially big magical ones like Livius, as people—whereas everyone else just saw a big magical snake. A big, magical, angry snake.

Livius raised himself, and Elara’s heart skittered in her chest, unnerved by the reptile’s blue-eyed stare as his violet tongue flicked in her direction. He was close enough for her to see the crack in his horn and the scattering of scars marring his scales.

“Harriet’s not here,” she said slowly, never quite sure how much he understood. The angry hissing didn’t level off. “She will be. Soon.”

His tail thrashed, curling about the bedpost, his spikes driving small divots into the antique wood. Elara’s eye twitched.

She levered the rabbit up, swinging it once, then into the air as she’d seen Harriet do. The movement caught Livius’ attention, and he struck, taking his prize down. Elara pointedly ignored the serpent swallowing his meal, moving instead to shift his body aside and tug the blanket he used for a nest out from under the bed. Using her wand, she vanished any mess, and sighed when she noted he’d gotten ahold of one of Harriet’s cloaks and shredded the material.

Lovely.

Crouching, she kept a wary eye on Livius and poked through the wrinkled fabric. For several minutes, her searching turned up nothing. “Come on now. Where—?” Elara gasped when sharp little fangs closed onto her knuckles, grinding her teeth as she lifted her hand to find a skinny green snake dangling from it. “There you are, you little—.” She chose not to voice her frustration further, plopping Kevin onto the bed. A quick search turned up Rick and Howard as well.

She retrieved the jar of mealworms from her robe pocket and cracked the lid, a noise of mild disgust escaping when she plucked one up and fed it to Howard, then to the others. The golems proved much less hostile than Livius when distracted by food, though the task was no less distasteful. Elara could stomach the worms more than the crickets, though. Something about the kicking legs rose her gorge.

Someone bumped their knuckles against the open door’s jamb, and she looked around.

“Hello,” Remus said, blinking at the sight of Livius now coiled partly below Harriet’s desk, a noticeable lump in his middle. The Horned Serpent took note of him and hissed, drawing himself deeper into the shadowed recess. “How are the snakes doing?”

“As well as can be expected, I guess.” She pinched another mealworm between her fingertips and gave it to Kevin, moving before he could make a second go for her fingers. She shooed Rick from the jar and fastened the lid again. “Livius is very upset.”

“Yes, I can see.” Remus glanced at the snake in question but had the good sense to stay at the threshold. “Do you need any help?”

“No, I’m done in here.” Elara pushed the nest below the bed once more, though she took the trio off the bed and placed them on the heated rock on Harriet’s nightstand. She straightened, then stripped off her right glove, observing the bleeding bite on her knuckle.

“That’s the green one that does that?” Remus asked.

“Yes,” Elara sighed. “Kevin.” She said the name with a measure of loathing. Harriet may love the little monster, but Elara surely didn’t. She retrieved her wand and muttered, “Episkey,” healing the mark.

Overhead, something heavy hit the floor, then scooted across it. Male voices echoed in the stairwell and stiffened Elara’s spine.

“They’re rearranging furniture to make room for beds,” Remus explained, his eyes rising to the ceiling. Muffled laughter followed another thump. “The Headmaster mentioned coming by to apply a few Extension Charms so the boys and the Weasleys can all stay comfortably in one of the bedrooms and what I think was a nursery before. The other room is being prepared for any agents who need to come to the house and stay overnight.”

“Where are you staying, then?” There were three bedrooms on the fourth floor, which did not include the empty nursery or the dusty game room. The attic above that contained servants’ quarters and storage, but Elara had locked them years ago on Cygnus’ word that there were many Dark artifacts kept up there, out of sight.

Remus suddenly found the crown moulding quite fascinating and couldn’t look away from it as he answered her. “In the master.”

“Ah.”

He cleared his throat, clearly uncomfortable, and laced his hands together in front of himself. Elara chose not to comment further on the matter.

“I’m surprised Sirius didn’t demand Hermione and I give up our bedrooms and come sleep in here with the snakes.”

“Actually, Molly posed the question of whether or not one of you girls would be willing to double-up, but Sirius was adamant you each had your own space.”

“Hmph.” Elara grumbled under her breath as she slid her glove back on, not quite sure how to take that information. It was something, at least. That meant the third level was entirely theirs, unless someone decided to convert the office or the study. Elara swore if she found one of those disgusting boys in the washroom down here, they’d never hear the end of her anger. It’d been festering in her since the moment they stepped foot in her house.

Remus considered her, a slight frown tugging at the scars on his face. “It can be difficult to remember sometimes how young you and Hermione and Harriet are still. You don’t know anything of the war.”

The comment took her off guard. “What does that have to do with anything?”

“You wouldn’t understand how very uncommon a house like Grimmauld is, and what the people fighting He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named had to give up. In some cases, they had to leave behind their families, their lives. The Death Eaters were unrelenting and backed by You-Know-Who’s incredible knowledge of spells and wards. Unless you had someone like Albus Dumbledore securing your home, there wasn’t a single barrier they couldn’t break through eventually, and even Professor Dumbledore’s protections weren’t infallible. That meant spending sleepless nights wide awake, terrified the Death Eaters would come. Defying You-Know-Who meant never knowing safety again.” Remus tipped his head. “Would you begrudge the Order the usage of the house to help people who may very well end up sacrificing everything yet again to fight the Dark Lord?”

Elara didn’t answer.

“The protections in Grimmauld are exceptional. I know you’ve read into the family wards a bit and understand how the decades have changed their power. Professor Dumbledore intends to add a Fidelius Charm on top of that when Harriet is returned to us.”

“Then why can’t he do that to some other place?” Elara snapped. “Why do they have to be here? I do not want them here, Remus.”

“The Fidelius doesn’t take to every property. It won’t bind to the Burrow, nor to the Longbottom’s house.” Remus sighed. “Only ancestral homes will work.”

Elara released one long, aggravated breath. Again, something thumped overhead. “I should have been consulted. I should have been told.”

“Yes, you should have,” Remus agreed. “I won’t deny that. But it isn’t as if you weren’t told out of malice, dear. We’ve had a great deal on all our minds.”

Yes—Dark Lords returning from the dead, murdered students, Harriet being arrested and abducted off a train platform. Still, Elara liked to think someone might have had the common sense to mention the impending horde about to descend upon her home.

Not a manner between them. None.

She squeezed her hands together, watching Livius as he slithered out from under the desk and made his way below the bed once more. At the end of the day, Grimmauld was naught but timbers and nails and tatty wallpaper; Elara had immense familial pride, but not so much so she would deny people safety against agents of the Dark Lord. She had a great deal of regard for those who were willing to fight Voldemort despite their fear and his overwhelming influence.

They could show more respect for the property, however, and stop banging the furniture about.

Elara took a final look about the room, wishing Harriet were there. Livius grew more agitated, louder hisses and rustling coming from the dark space below the bed frame, and so Elara quickly stepped back and joined Remus at the entrance. They exited into the corridor and shut the door tight behind them.

“Have you heard anything more about Harriet?” she asked him, hopeful.

“Not yet. But Professor Dumbledore will know more this evening when he goes to the Ministry with Mr. Dirigible.”

Elara forced a breath through her nose, then out through her mouth, willing her blood pressure to cease climbing. This night marked the official passage of seventy-two hours since Harriet had been taken from Platform Nine and Three-Quarters. The Ministry would have no choice but to present Harriet to her barrister—Mr. Dirigible, who worked from the same discreet chambers as Mr. Piers, Elara’s own solicitor.

Worries continued to rove through Elara’s mind like physical ghosts—cold and pulsating, almost as sharp as a migraine. It had been one of the longest seventy-two hours of her life, and she was absolutely terrified that when it ended, the Ministry simply wouldn’t bring Harriet forward. What would they do then? What could they do?

Besides burn the Ministry down, Elara thought with little humor. She should probably find it alarming she wasn’t being entirely facetious. The desire pressed itself just behind her ear like soft, warm lips, muted words reminding her she knew the perfect spell to get the job done. She could do it, and she could do it so easily—.

Footsteps came down the steps, and Sirius’ trainer-clad feet appeared first, followed by the rest of him. He chatted over his shoulder with the Weasley twins, who were coming down behind him. Elara immediately honed in on the box tucked under her father’s arm.

Sirius opened his mouth just as Elara demanded, “What is that?”

He grunted, letting out the breath he’d taken. “Just some rubbish.”

“What is it?”

She saw the aggravation he held back by tightening his jaw, but Sirius kept his tone level and calm as he said, “It’s junk Snape left here before buggering off last summer.”

Snape. No one had seen hide nor hair of the man in over a week, and if he had contacted the Headmaster, Dumbledore wasn’t telling. Elara’s feelings towards the Potions Master were mixed; without peer, Snape could be an intolerable bastard, an absolute son of a bitch, but Elara understood, for all his sharp comments and verbal barbs, Snape could be worse. She would never forget he’d saved their lives in the Aerie, and then again in the Forbidden Forest when he forced Wolfsbane down Remus’ throat. So, despite her personal opinion of the wizard being less than amicable, he was quite capable, intelligent, and not without character.

If he failed to return, if he died, she knew Harriet would be devastated. Unlike Elara, Harriet actually liked Snape. She liked Snape in the same vein she liked snakes; the acrid, dour face and prickly behavior didn’t stop Elara’s god-sister from seeing something in the man others didn’t understand. If he died after Harriet had begged him not to go back—.

Elara swallowed. “Give it to me,” she instructed, holding her hands out for the box.

“What? It’s going in the tip.”

“You’re not destroying Snape’s possessions. Hand me the box.” She would set it in Harriet’s room. Whatever Snape’s fate, she would leave it to her god-sister to decide what to do with his things.

“Don’t be ridiculous. I’m not giving you Snivellus’ leavings, who knows what nasty curses he has on the shite. Elara.

Guffaws rose from Fred and George, the latter sticking his hand into his trouser pocket to fish out a gold coin. “Told you,” Fred snickered as he accepted the Galleon. “It’d be no time at all until they were at each other’s throats. Didn’t I tell you, Georgie?”

For some inexplicable reason, this was the final straw for Elara. What composure she’d managed to knit together this morning and don like a black veil fell to pieces—but she didn’t cry. It was anger that came roaring out of her like steam through bellows, her face red and her hands shaking.

“Do you find this amusing?” she demanded, the twins falling silent in an instant. Elara didn’t care. She strode closer and didn’t stop until she had to shove Sirius aside to mount the stairs. “Do you think it’s funny how we argue? It’s all a good laugh? Oh, I’m sure it’s all very hilarious, though I don’t see the humor in it myself. So, tell me, just what about this situation do you think is worth mocking?”

Fred and George both stared at her in stunned silence, shaken by the sudden volume of Elara’s usually level voice.

“Do you think it’s funny to be in my house making your little bets about the Black family? Waiting for us to go at each other like it’s a sport? Are you enjoying your stay? Damaging the furniture, keeping us up at night with your stupid experiments. The floor is not soundproof, you pair of fatuous, cackling half-wits! While we’re at it, my half-sister’s the one who gave the money for that rubbish, so please! Enjoy yourselves, scorching the walls and the floorboards while Harriet can’t even come to her home because she’s being held for a crime she didn’t commit! She could very well be suffering undue cruelty at the hands of our twee Minister, but so long as you’re having fun!”

Elara was shouting by now, heads popping over the railing to peer below and watch the spectacle. She had to stop. She had to pull back—but the rage continued to flow like blood from a punctured artery.

Fred and George looked properly shamed. “We didn’t mean nothing by it—.”

“Just a bit of banter to lighten the mood, is all—.”

Laugh!” Elara commanded, her lips pulled back in a snarl. She climbed the steps, her vision red. Footsteps rushed behind her. “I swear to God, it’ll be the last time you do!”

The gas lamps flickered, the walls groaning. Elara wanted to reach out and grab them by the throats, let her fingers pull through the skin like they had when she’d held that rat out to Accipto—.

Sirius and Remus seized hold of her arms. “Down you come,” Sirius ordered, the box of Snape’s belongings abandoned on the landing. “There’s a love.”

They had to physically pick Elara up, hands braced about her bent arms, jarring her when her feet hit the floor again.

“Tea,” Remus said in his best professor voice, the one that brooked no arguments. “And boys—return upstairs, if you would. Now.”

The Weasleys rushed to comply, as did the ones up above, quickly moving away from the railing before they could be spotted. “Let’s get a nice cuppa, yeah?” Sirius told Elara as he gently held her by the shoulders. Elara hadn’t realized how strong her trembling had become until that moment, and she fought to still herself, her entire body feeling hot and cold in equal bursts. She stared at the empty stairs. “Elara, look at me.”

She did so, her gaze swinging back to Sirius’ face.

“It’s going to be all right,” he affirmed. “Okay?”

“Yes—okay.”

“Let’s go find you something to calm down with before you start thinning the red-headed brood. Cleaning up dust is bad enough without bloodstains….”

 

xXx

 

After Molly Weasley prepped a cup of tea and an afternoon nibble for Elara, it was decided Sirius needed to take her and Hermione out of the house for a bit of air while they waited for further news on Harriet. So, they grabbed hooded cloaks despite the pressing summer heat, tied back their hair, and headed out to Diagon Alley.

Neither Hermione nor Elara showed much interest in the district, though they were happy to get out and stretch their legs. The only store Hermione wanted to go into was Flourish and Blotts, and only to venture into the rarely visited section set aside for magical history and law. They passed the entrance to Knockturn Alley, and Elara suddenly wished to venture there, but they had Sirius with them, so she squashed the desire.

It was while they meandered along the more posh surroundings of Empiric Alley that they noticed the crowd. They sidled up behind it, and it was Hermione who first pointed out the banners before the noxious, hated voice magically enhanced to float through the cobbled square reached their ears.

“He’s campaigning for reelection,” Hermione muttered as they peered over the many shoulders of the witches and wizards in front of them, all eyes faceted on Gaunt. They kept their hoods firmly in place and turned their heads away from the Aurors patrolling the perimeter. Many Ministry officials wearing the gold badges given to Guardians of the Magical Right milled about the alley. “Traditionally, the campaigning season happens every three years and opens on Beltane, candidates chosen by Mabon, and closing with the official vote done by the Wizengamot on Yule, unless there’s a full moon, in which case the vote is delayed by one day.”

“Bigoted arsehole,” Sirius commented without bothering to lower his voice. “I can see that Skeeter bint has a front-row seat there.”

Elara turned her head to Hermione, lifting one brow, and Hermione rolled her eyes and shrugged. “If she’s writing about Gaunt, she’s not haranguing me about Harriet. Our arrangement included her, so I warned Skeeter off even mentioning her name in any write-up she did. The bug has been sending me nasty letters about censorship ever since.”

Elara could believe that. Skeeter struck her as the kind of person who’d not often heard no, and even then didn’t obey. She returned her attention to the stage.

“And what of our children’s safety?” asked a reporter from the Prophet, calling his question up to Gaunt. “With recent reported dangers at Hogwarts, what will your administration do to protect them?”

“My administration is highly concerned with the state of our most hallowed institution,” Gaunt said with an air of solemn gravity. “In my new term, I will continue pushing for more regulations in safety to not only protect our children while they learn, but to protect our mores and daily values in a rapidly changing landscape of modern encroachment. I will continue serving our world to not only enact change, but to preserve the sanctity of the Wizarding world.”

Hermione scoffed. “He wants to implement more changes at Hogwarts,” she translated. “And stamp out Muggle influence. The same thing he’s been doing for years.”

“More like kill Muggles for no fucking reason.” Sirius cleared his throat, realizing he was in mixed company. “I haven’t been around for long, but it’s nothing new from what I gather. He knows the buttons to press and the right words to say, and magical kind sings his praises.”

Elara watched Gaunt through heavily lidded eyes as he flashed beatific smiles at the crowd from his podium, the wide banner scrolling behind him and his arrayed cabinet. Gaunt for Minister. Tradition, justice, perseverance. He stood there proud and unbothered as if he hadn’t stalked and facilitated the kidnapping of a teenager, as if he weren’t responsible for the slew of laws that pricked against them like growing thorns and encouraged the slow, bleeding genocide of the Muggleborn population. What was worse, the crowd cheered him on through the recitation of his foul, denigrating dogma, blind as only the most ignorant could be.

“What about the rumors of He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named’s return? What is your stance on that, Minister?”

“My stance is that it’s ridiculous. The Dark Lord is not here anymore. We shouldn’t be afraid of ghosts.”

Elara watched them, the grinning, besotted witches who saw a handsome wizard and couldn’t bring themselves to say a negative word, the wizards who clung to tradition and nodded along because the vaguest strains of change frightened them. The families who were frightened, the mothers who just wanted their children to be safe. It did not matter that they stared the Dark Lord in the eyes; these people would not listen, would not see. They would choose what was familiar because it was better than admitting the monsters had never really left.

The monsters had been with them all along.

Elara folded her hands before herself, her spine straight, her eyes narrowed. A decision formed in her mind with all the certainty of an inviolable fact: the sky was blue, magic was real, and Marvolo Gaunt would not be Minister again.

If they will not see, she thought as the crowd cheered and Gaunt smiled. Then we will force them to look.


A/N: Elara ’s temper is on a hair-trigger. Welcome to the downward-spiral of Dark magic addiction.

Elara: “I learned a new spell, watch.”

Elara: “Hippity hoppity, get off of my property.

Chapter 228: storyteller

Chapter Text

ccxxviii. storyteller

 

When the Aurors finally arrived, Harriet was beyond exhausted.

She barely registered them opening the door nor ordering her forward to accept the pair of magicked shackles upon her wrists. Her knees shook as Harriet mutely followed the two maroon-robed wizards into the corridor, and they held her by the arms as they marched to the prison’s entrance. The bracing wind helped wake her up, though she still staggered forward like a stunned Inferius on uncooperative legs.

The larger Aurors hefted Harriet up and nearly dropped her into the boat before boarding themselves. Harriet blinked dumbly at the frigid, gray spray that flecked her glasses and soaked the sleeves of her jacket. A few complicated incantations later, and the rickety dinghy zipped off against the tide through the perilous field of jagged rocks. When they reached the guarded dock on the mainland, she was transferred to another pair of nameless Aurors and Apparated away.

Harriet had a vague sense of space and noise—voices in an open hall, smooth stone under her too-tight trainers, Charmed magelights illuminating the way. They boarded a lift, her stomach swooping, then disembarked through a long passage. Harriet had very little idea of where she was until the left Auror opened a perfectly normal-looking door and pushed her into the new room. Harriet stumbled into a pair of arms, breathing in the smell of roses and gardenia.

“Oh, Harriet,” Perenelle Flamel said, the relief evident in her voice as her grip tightened on the tired teenager slumped against her front. Harriet knew she probably smelled like nervous sweat and body funk, but she didn’t care. She pressed her face into Perenelle’s shoulder and sighed. After a minute, she found the strength to step back.

“If you could remove these from my client,” said a dark-skinned wizard Harriet didn’t know, indicating the shackles on her wrists as he spoke to one of the Aurors. The Auror did as told, and Harriet winced as she rubbed her skin. “Some tea as well.”

“What?” the Auror sputtered. “I’m not a servant.”

“Well, today’s your day for promotion. Tea?”

The wizard had a manner of asking questions so they came out as demands, and though the Auror had to be two stone heavier and a good half a foot taller than the older, slightly pudgy man, he nonetheless grumbled and went off as commanded. The wizard smirked, then turned to Harriet. He wore familiar pin-striped robes and a plum-colored ribbon on his lapel.

“Good evening, Miss Potter. I’m Dorian Dirigible, and I’ve been hired by your guardians to serve as your representative.”

“My—?” Harriet’s gaze drifted to Perenelle, finding Mr. Flamel and Professor Dumbledore completing the group waiting for her. The room was quite cramped, what with five people, a table, and assorted chairs cluttered inside. Harriet quickly embraced Mr. Flamel, and then Professor Dumbledore, who seemed surprised by the action but nonetheless patted the top of Harriet’s messy hair.

She let the Headmaster go, and the barrister cleared his throat, indicating the chairs. Harriet sat between the Flamels on one side while Professor Dumbledore joined Mr. Dirigible on the other. A quick flick of Dumbledore’s wand added extra cushions to their seats and a second light in the otherwise drab, dingy space. The Auror glared at it when he returned with a tea service.

“There we are,” the barrister said as the door snapped shut. “How do you take your tea, Miss Potter…?”

Harriet blinked. “Oh. Uh, just plain is fine. Thanks.”

Mr. Dirigible scooted the cup over to her, and Harriet took it, blowing the steam from the surface. After the first drop hit her tongue, she couldn’t stop herself from guzzling the rest down, scalding or not. Mr. Dirigible poured her another cup—and another, after which Harriet felt more aware and less like a dried bit of jerky found in the back of the pantry. A plate of ginger newts appeared, and Harriet quietly accepted one. Her stomach ached after only one biscuit.

“What’s—what’s going to happen now?” she croaked, folding her hands together in her lap. She fidgeted a moment later, reaching up to tug on her oily hair and ensure it covered her neck. She didn’t want to talk about what Gaunt had done. Not right now, not while she was sitting in what must be an Aurory interrogation room.

Mr. Dirigible produced a folder from a hidden pocket, a pad of parchment, quill, and ink set joining after. The wizard tested the quill’s edge against his thumb, then gave it a delicate dip in the open inkwell. “Now, Miss Potter, you will tell me all you can remember about the evening of June twenty-fourth.” At Harriet’s blank expression, he explained, “The night of Mr. Boot’s death.”

“Oh.” Harriet looked to the Flamels, then Professor Dumbledore. Black spots peppered the edges of her vision, and she forced a breath, her hand shaking as she adjusted her glasses. She should have anticipated this. They needed this for the investigation, right? She would’ve thought the Aurors were meant to interrogate her, but things were different in the Wizarding world, and they seemed to differ even more when it came to Gaunt’s whims. “I—I don’t know where to begin.”

“Perhaps from the last place your presence was noted?” Mr. Dirigible suggested. “The Great Hall?”

“Okay. Professor Dumbledore had just—well, it was time for the third task, in the Triwizard Tournament. Most everyone left the Great Hall to go down to the Quidditch Pitch.”

“Why weren’t you among them?”

“I had gotten covered in grease paint and glitter, so I went to the dormitory to clean up and—.” Feed my familiar, she nearly added before common sense kicked in and she shut her mouth. No need to bring her accidental felony theft into the mix. “Can’t they just ask me these questions with Verit—Veriterserum? They’d know the truth then.”

Veritaserum. And no, they cannot,” Mr. Dirigible answered. “It is against the law in a criminal case. You went to clean up, as you say, in your dormitory. You are in Slytherin House?”

“Yeah. Why does that matter?”

“It will put into perspective how long it took to journey from the Great Hall to your common room. Continue.”

“Err—I got the rubbish off of me and changed my shirt, then I went back upstairs.” Harriet looked over to Professor Dumbledore, who sat quietly without interrupting, just like the Flamels. “Sir? Can’t they use—memories? Like how the Pensieve works?”

“Unfortunately, no,” the Headmaster told her. Mr. Dirigible kept writing in his parchment pad. “The Ministry added an addendum making memories inadmissible, deeming that—as memories rely on personal perception—such things unduly swayed the court. They had to change the law in, oh, the eighteenth century or so, after Everest Eglet was charged with assault against two Muggles and was nearly acquitted after his memory showed him attacking two Inferi. Witnesses couldn’t corroborate his story, and it later came to light Mr. Eglet had consumed a great deal of very curious fungi. They altered his perception of reality, and because it was deemed possible for memories to be tampered in such a manner, the Wizengamot ruled their usage unreliable and leading.”

Harriet slumped in her seat. “The memories would prove everything. Are you telling me I can’t use them because some arsehole—sorry, Professor—got sozzled on mushrooms three hundred years ago?”

“Basically, yes.” Professor Dumbledore exhaled through his nose and tugged on the bottom of his beard. “I can tell you from my own prior experience as Head of Wizengamot, the law does not always make perfect sense, and there are those who take its weaknesses for granted to twist it to their own aims.”

Gaunt, Harriet supplied, nervously patting her hair against her neck.

“Even if the court would accept your memories, I worry certain parties would twist them to, perhaps, slander your person.”

“They would claim you’re une folle,” Mr. Flamel grumbled. “A madwoman.”

Harriet stared at him, hardly daring to believe he was telling the truth, but Mr. Flamel’s stern expression didn’t falter. He reached out to touch her arm, warm fingers curling around her wrist.

“If we could return to our current task?” Mr. Dirigible asked in that same polite but no-nonsense tone of his. “You returned upstairs, Miss Potter?”

Harriet swallowed, wishing she was anywhere but here. She’d almost rather be back in the cell, waiting to leave. “I returned upstairs. I think most everyone had already gone on ahead.”

“You think?”

“Well, it’s not like I knew where every person on the grounds was,” Harriet replied more testily than she meant to. Mr. Flamel’s fingers tightened ever so slightly against her skin, and Harriet muttered a quiet apology.

“It’s quite all right, Miss Potter. I understand it can be frustrating to be exact in the details,” Mr. Dirigible replied, unperturbed. His quill whipped across the parchment without issue. “To your best estimation, the majority of the staff and student body had left the main castle for the Quidditch field. Is that correct?”

“Yes.” Harriet fidgeted. “So I started toward the Quidditch pitch. It was getting late—I dunno, just around sunset? I hadn’t gone all that far when Krum showed up out of the dark. But it wasn’t—.”

“Please recount the events as you remember them at the time.”

Harriet released another peeved breath. The law does not always make perfect sense, Professor Dumbledore had said. Getting annoyed and angry wouldn’t help her right now.

“A person I thought to be Viktor Krum approached me.”

“And what was your relationship with this person?”

Harriet fidgeted again. “We’d gone to the Yule Ball together. I thought we were friends, of a sort.”

“Was this relationship romantic?”

No,” Harriet snapped. “I—no. It wasn’t.”

Mr. Dirigible continued writing. “He approached you on the grounds?”

“Yeah. I was confused because I thought Krum was supposed to be getting ready for the task. I could hear the school song and everything in the distance, so I knew it was about to begin.”

“Did he say anything to you?”

“He was mad about a letter he’d given me. I didn’t read it.”

The wizard asked her to explain, and Harriet removed her spectacles to rub at her eyes as she backtracked through the story, telling how Krum—or, well, the bloke she’d thought was Viktor Krum—had handed her a letter in the library one day, in what she’d assumed was a misguided attempt to rekindle their defunct friendship. That, in turn, forced Harriet to go back even further and discuss how “Krum” had approached her, how Skeeter’s article in the paper had incited a flood of harassment, how his behavior during the Yule Ball had—in hindsight—made her quite uncomfortable.

“You never mentioned this,” Mr. Flamel said, almost sadly, Perenelle rubbing small circles on her back. Harriet flushed and shrugged one shoulder.

“And what were the contents of that letter?”

“I dunno. I didn’t read it. I chucked it in the fire.” She shivered, and added in an undertone, “Probably bloody cursed anyway.”

Mr. Dirigible paused in his writing and tapped the quill’s nib on the page. “The court will find that difficult to believe.”

Harriet’s brow furrowed.

“That you, a fourteen-year-old witch with a reported prior attachment to Viktor Krum, a celebrity of some renown, would destroy—let alone disregard—a letter from him.”

“But why would that matter?” she asked, unable to help how her mouth gaped. “It’s the truth. It’s not believable I might not read a letter from a bloke I didn’t want to talk to? Why? Because I’m meant to be a silly, twitter-patted ninny?”

The barrister didn’t react to Harriet’s tone, only moving to cross out something he’d written. “We won’t mention the letter. Mr. Krum, or the person you took to be Mr. Krum, approached you on the Hogwarts grounds as you made your way toward the Quidditch pitch. He was seemingly upset about a failure between you to communicate. Continue.”

Harriet slowly shook her head, an unpleasant ache pinching in her temples. “He pointed his wand at me.”

“And you can verify this was the wand of Viktor Krum?”

“Well, obviously not.” Again, Harriet couldn’t help but be tart. “Since it wasn’t Viktor Krum.”

Mr. Dirigible lifted his dark eyes from the parchment pad and leveled Harriet a long, blank stare, waiting.

“No,” she said. “I don’t think I’d ever seen him use his wand outside of the Tournament’s tasks, and that was always from a distance.”

“What happened next?”

“The bloke had a wand on me. He said—no, I said, ‘what are you doing?’ and he answered, ‘whatever my Lord bids of me.’” Harriet’s mouth dried, and she reached again for the teacup, ignoring the slight tremble in her hand. The dread started to reach through her like a prickly bush growing through her bones. “That—that was when Terry showed up.”

“From where did Mr. Boot appear?”

“The school. Err—so, that was behind me.”

“Why was Mr. Boot not at the task with the others?”

“I don’t know.”

“Next?”

Harriet drank more tea. “And then Cr—Krum, wanted me to go over to him, kept demanding it. I—I tried—I told Terry to go ahead, but he wouldn’t. He could tell something was wrong.”

“Did you pull your wand?”

“N-no.”

“Did it not occur to you to do so?”

The wizard’s words hit Harriet like a bucket of ice water. No, she hadn’t pulled her wand. She hadn’t done anything at all. And Terry died.

Mr. Flamel’s hand enfolded her own, squeezing, pressing his warmth into her ice-cold fingers. “It is many a great witch and wizard who are taken unawares, never thinking to use their wand for ‘elp. Would you not agree, Monsieur Dirigible?”

“Yes,” the other wizard agreed, still unmoved by Harriet’s pallor or glassy, stricken eyes. “Please don’t mistake my manner for lack of personal affront to your plight, Miss Potter. It is simply best to be emotionless when collecting facts that will be challenged and picked apart by the Wizengamot. When I question whether or not it occurred to you to pull your own wand, it helps establish your character and the spontaneity and speed of the event.” Mr. Dirigible took a sip from his own doctored tea, patting a napkin against his mouth. “The record of the Reverse Spell applied to your wand when it was confiscated will go a long way to proving your innocence.”

Harriet could only nod. Her head hurt. Her eyes stung with exhaustion; how bloody late was it? Had it been night outside? It had, hadn’t it? She couldn’t remember. All she could recall was the sound of Terry’s last words and the ghoulish flash of green.

“Continue, Miss Potter.”

Her heart thumped in her chest, loud in her ears despite the stifling silence. “Um—.”

“Go, please.”

“No, I don’t think I will. What do you think you’re doing, Krum?”

The sudden twitch of a wand. “Avada Kedavra!”

“I—I asked Terry to go ahead. He said no. Krum used the—the Killing Curse.”

How fast it all fell apart, how simple it was to summarize. Terry said no. Crouch killed him. There was no monologue, no culmination of action—just the single motion of a wand and two words.

“And then?”

And then, and then, and then—. “And then he was dead,” Harriet snapped, voice bordering on shrill. The words barely made any sense anymore. They drummed against her forehead like drops of water.

No time for spares—.

The quill scratched against the parchment. “You’re familiar with the Killing Curse?”

Harriet’s eyes flicked toward Professor Dumbledore, unsure of how she should answer that. She had more familiarity with the spell than she’d ever wanted to have.

“Professor Slytherin teaches about the Unforgivables in Defense Against the Dark Arts,” she replied, which was technically true—though not until fifth year.

“So, familiar enough to recognize the spell. What color was it, if I may ask?”

Like acid, like rot—like poison curdling everything good into decay—.

“Green,” Harriet told him, hoarse. “It’s green.”

The quill scratched indifferent letters. Harriet wanted to break it into pieces.

“Continue.”

He said it as if it were simple. Terry was dead. Continue. On to the next page.

“Do I have to?” she asked, her voice strained. “Isn’t this—isn’t this all about what happened to Terry?”

“I need the entire story, Miss Potter.”

She squeezed her eyes shut. Perenelle’s hand kept rubbing circles, but the offered comfort didn’t reach the coldness that lurked in Harriet’s heart like a troll hunkered beneath a bridge.

A part of her screamed how unfair this was, how unfair her whole bloody life was, all while people kept expecting her to act mature and take it on the chin. No matter that Mr. Dirigible was meant to help her, Harriet wanted to tell him to bugger off and storm out of the place. Why couldn’t she be normal? Why did everything in her life have to go to shite? Why did she have to sit there and relive this—this—.

Harriet pressed the heel of her palm into her temple and closed her eyes.

“What about Krum? The real Krum. He was at the Tournament, wasn’t he? Being controlled? Can’t he—I don’t know, corroborate anything?”

“Mr. Krum was found to be under the Imperius Curse and glamoured to seem in good health. Unfortunately, he never saw his attacker and was, as far he understands, kept drugged or blindfolded for the length of his incarceration. The witnesses at the task cleared his name in this crime, but his testimony on your behalf has been thrown out.”

Harriet’s nails sank into her skin. Goddamn Gaunt.

“He—the person I thought was Krum grabbed my arm. He used a Portkey.” She could remember his clammy skin on her wrist, the flare of blue light in his closed fist. “We appeared in a graveyard.”

“Do you know where this graveyard is located?”

“No. It’s by a house that used to belong to some well-off Muggle toffs called the Riddles before Voldemort killed them.” Harriet opened her eyes in time to see the hand on the quill flinch, splattering ink. She took some sick satisfaction in that. “By then, I’d started to realize Krum wasn’t Krum. His skin was moving, like it does when Polyjuice Potion starts to fail.”

“Do you have much knowledge of Polyjuice Potion?”

“I know what it looks like.” Harriet refused to say more on the matter. “He tried to use the Imperius Curse on me, but I shook it off.”

Mr. Dirigible’s brow rose.

“We struggled. He managed to get ropes around me, then floated me into the house. The Riddle house.” She lowered her hand from her face to stare at her filthy fingernails. Throwing herself around that grubby holding cell, bird form or no, had covered her in grime from head to foot. “He dragged me up a set of stairs. There was a room with a cauldron—a big cauldron—waiting.”

The barrister stopped writing to reach into the folder and withdraw several photographs. “Could you perhaps identify the cauldron from these images, Miss Potter?”

Harriet thought it a funny thing to ask, but she bent her head to have a closer look. At the time, she hadn’t given the cauldron much thought, but the scene from the manor was so starkly engraved in her memory, she could recall the unique scrolling on the lip, the impression of special runes gilded in the firelight. “That one there, I think.”

“You think? Can you be certain?”

“No. It was dark, and Crouch had just bounced my head up a flight of stairs. Sir.”

Mr. Dirigible’s mouth twitched. “I would refrain from mentioning the prospective head injury. The court will use it to cast doubt upon your recollection.” He cleared his throat and returned the images to the folder. “We suspect the cauldron to be the Pair Dadeni, an artifact stolen from the Blevins family in 1982. But that is neither here nor there. Continue.”

“By then, the Polyjuice had worn off fully.”

“Did you recognize the man?”

“No. But he said who he was—said he killed his father, Barty Crouch Senior, earlier that year.”

Mr. Dirigible nodded along with this as he found more photos in the folder, laying three face down before Harriet. “So, prior to this incident, you had no familiarity with Bartemius Crouch Junior’s appearance?”

“No.”

A tap of his finger flipped the photographs over, startling Harriet. “Is the wizard who attacked you and Mr. Boot present?”

Harriet blinked at the images—three different mugshots out of Azkaban, no names attached, just the stark, unhappy faces of prisoners in their rough robes, holding placards with their identification numbers. Harriet’s hand went to her neck, playing with her hair. “He’s was that one, there.”

Mr. Dirigible shared a look with Professor Dumbledore, nodding. “That is indeed Barty Crouch. The court will, of course, attempt to say you had familiarity with his countenance from old trial papers, but this will surely help.” The photographs went back into the folder. “Go on.”

Harriet detailed the scene further, her voice growing toneless as she pushed back the phantom stirrings of panic and distress licking at her mind. She told them about the chair, the bindings, the cauldron. She told them about the second wizard.

“I don’t know who he was,” she said, shaking her head. “He never gave a name.” And she couldn’t very well say, ‘oh, he was just another bit of the Dark Lord, mate. A Horcrux, innit?

More photographs got laid out, then flipped over. “Is he pictured here?”

Harriet looked down the line of Azkaban mugshots, almost losing her tea and ginger newts when she saw Snape. Pale, bruised as he’d been in Professor Dumbledore’s old memory. Her gaze lingered on the photo for several long moments.

“No, I don’t see him.”

Back into the folder the haunting images went. “You were bound to a chair?”

“Yes. Crouch tied me up—said I was going to have to watch. He took my wand—but not my—my necklace.” She didn’t mention the second wand. She didn’t mention Crouch’s cold, lingering touch against her thigh or her own horrified terror. She didn’t owe that to the Ministry. She didn’t owe them anything.

“Your necklace?”

“It’s a little glass trinket I picked up in France on holiday. It comes in a set of three. Just a pretty amulet. You know, the kind of thing a silly, twitter-patted ninny would like. That’s believable, innit?” The sarcasm dripped from Harriet’s mouth. “I gave the others to my best friends.”

Dumbledore and the Flamels said absolutely nothing to Harriet’s blatant lie, though she thought Mr. Flamel might have smiled for a moment.

“The other bloke told Crouch to get on with the ritual—.”

Mr. Dirigible made a soft, interrupting noise. “I was led to believe you were hurt by Mr. Crouch?”

Harriet ground her teeth. “Yes. I was tortured.”

“How so?”

“In the usual manner. How do you think?”

“Miss Potter, we must keep the story consistent. Even small deviations to spare sensibilities will be torn apart in court.”

“Does the Wizengamot get a laugh out of hearing how a girl screams under Cruciatus?”

“‘arriet,” Mr. Flamel said in gentle reprimand, leaning closer to her ear. His hand on her shoulder felt warm, grounding. “Pretend you are telling a story as it ‘appened to someone else. Someone fictional.”

“But it didn’t happen to someone else. It happened to me.”

“These people are not your friends. Zey do not deserve your emotion.”

Harriet swallowed, forcing her jaw to unlock, though she couldn’t bring herself to look at Mr. Dirigible and his wretched quill. “I head-butted Crouch and broke his nose. He punched me in the face, and I hit the floor. Me and the chair. Then he used the Cruciatus Curse. I don’t know for how long. It’s not like I was counting.”

Professor Dumbledore cleared his throat. “Hogwarts’ healer has documented these injuries, Mr. Dirigible.”

“Yes, I have a copy here.”

“The second bloke told Crouch he was wasting time and to get on with the ritual.”

She described the ritual as it had happened, including the appearance of the shambling horror comprised of dead flesh, the smell, the agony in her scar, the coffin, the dagger plunging into her still-aching arm.

“Evidence of its use in a Dark ceremony,” Professor Dumbledore explained as he came around the table and knelt to inspect Harriet’s arm. “The magic is connected to not just the blood, but to the injury itself, inflicted upon an unwilling victim. The pain will subside with more applications of Equill-Emollient.”

She told them the words, told them about Crouch’s finger going into the cauldron. She told them about the blazing surface of the water, the final burst of steam—and then the pale, wet body rising to stand.

“It was him,” Harriet whispered, rough. “It was Lord Voldemort.”

 

xXx

 

Hours passed. The worst night of Harriet’s life was retold in exacting detail, and she relived every moment as it was birthed again by her own voice. If she wasn’t exact enough, Mr. Dirigible asked her to clarify—and he questioned her, pressed, came at the story from every angle to seek weak spots in its telling.

Harriet knew he did so because it was his job, because the Wizengamot would do worse—but she couldn’t help but despise the wizard for his clinical cruelty.

She left out very few details. She confessed Voldemort had taken her because he failed to kill her as a child, that he saw her as an enemy because of what had happened then, and because of what had happened in ninety-two. She said he clearly had designs on the Ministry and on Hogwarts, with a particular hatred of the Headmaster. She gave every word of his stupid, self-aggrandizing speech and recanted every spell he’d cast upon her. She outlined every harried, terrified memory of her harrowing escape.

Two things, in particular, Harriet did not tell Mr. Dirigible. She pointedly kept her status as an Animagus secret, adjusting the story to suit, and she did not mention Mr. Malfoy, instead claiming the sixth Death Eater hadn’t been named. She didn’t do it out of loyalty for the priggish arsehole, but rather because she couldn’t understand why he’d helped her. There was no misunderstanding his clear assistance in getting her out of the graveyard, and though the Malfoy patriarch might be able to shake off her accusations of being a Death Eater, if word got back to Voldemort of what he’d done that night, he’d be dead. His whole family would probably be dead.

Harriet held her head in her hands after the last of her story had been told. Her throat hurt and her body ached, fatigue like a boot heel digging into the middle of her back. Mr. Dirigible continued writing for quite some time, and when the quill finally ceased its incessant scratching, he released a long, exhausted sigh.

“I will be honest with you, Miss Potter,” her representative said. “It is my professional opinion you should not mention You-Know-Who or anything beyond your kidnapping from the grounds of Hogwarts. In solidifying your testimony, we will claim you were rendered unconscious and returned via use of the trinkets you explained to have. Or, we will redact names and certain allusions to clarify these Dark wizards had no known affiliation to You-Know-Who or his organization. Quite a bit of editing will need to be done and memorized.”

Slowly, Harriet lifted her head to stare at the wizard. “What?”

“Frankly, it is fantastical.” Mr. Dirigible watched her, his eyes heavy, almost sad. “You’re a fourteen-year-old witch claiming to not only have escaped the Darkest wizard of the age, but to have also outwitted a contingent of his most loyal Death Eaters. Even I struggle to accept it, and I am not a wizard who doubts the word of Albus Dumbledore.” He sighed again. “It will be difficult enough to claim Barty Crouch, a Death Eater recorded as imprisoned and deceased, was behind Mr. Boot’s death. Stories of a re-born Dark Lord will not be believed.”

“But it’s the truth.”

“I am not here to beat about the hedges, Miss Potter. I was asked to represent you by the Flamels and to see you released from incarceration before all else. The Wizengamot adheres to the law of parsimony. Do you understand what that is?”

“No.”

“It is also called Occam’s razor.” Mr. Dirigible folded his hands against his middle. “The simplest explanation is more probable than the complicated one. A story of dead men, Dark Lords, and dashing, midnight duels is less believable than a story of you and Mr. Boot getting into a scuffle, and Mr. Boot ending up dead.”

“But we didn’t! That’s not what happened!” Harriet cried. “And—and my wand! I never used the Killing Curse!”

“And that is our best piece of evidence of your innocence. As it stands, Minister Gaunt is staunchly against all speculations of He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named still being alive and has been since rumors began circulating some years ago. His party makes up a substantial voting body within the court, and they will vote with him if he proclaims you addled or an insurrectionist. Furthermore, you named a reportedly upstanding member of the Wizengamot itself as a Death Eater. Bringing Mr. Yaxley into question might very well be the final nail in your case’s coffin.”

Harriet could hardly believe what she’d heard. It barely made sense in her tired, angry mind. “‘Whenever you have eliminated the impossible,’” she recited. “‘Whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.’”

That got a smile out of Mr. Dirigible. One of his teeth was plated in gold. “You won’t get out of this by quoting Muggle literature to the Wizengamot, Miss Potter.”

“Merlin-forbid they learn something.” Harriet returned her head to her hands.

“It is not our goal to teach old wizards new tricks. It is our goal to see you cleared of all charges. If you wish to be free, Miss Potter, do not tell the Wizengamot that You-Know-Who has returned.”

Harriet merely nodded, blank eyes glued to the table.

It shouldn’t matter, really. Being free and getting home was all she should concern herself with—but Voldemort’s final, parting remark lived on in Harriet’s head. She told him the Wizarding world would never submit, and he said, “Then it will be just me.”

Voldemort did not care if they all burned to ash so long as he could be king of the ruins.

If Harriet lied to the Wizengamot, she wouldn’t be able to go back and claim Voldemort had returned. No one would believe it. Maybe that seemed an unimportant thing, but if the public simply assumed Harriet a documented liar, they’d think everyone who believed her a fool or a liar as well. They’d discount everything they were told. What did that mean for the Wizarding world? If she couldn’t warn them about Voldemort—.

Gaunt intends to keep everyone blind. He would rather let people die in ignorance than let anything affect his leadership—.

“I will arrange with the Aurors to have her released into your custody, Mr. and Mrs. Flamel,” Mr. Dirigible said as he gathered his documents once more. “I will submit a plea of not guilty, and we will hammer out the details of testimony later. Pending trial, she will need to be placed under monitor and kept in house arrest. I understand the premises is under heavy enchantments and as such the address cannot be spoken aloud, only recorded in legal documentation?”

Oui,” Mr. Flamel answered. “Only by residents or people held in esteem by residents.”

“Very well. If she leaves the property or fails to appear for her trial—.”

“We are aware of the consequences, Mr. Dirigible.”

The wizard nodded, getting to his feet. “I will see that the proper paperwork is pushed through so we can all return home. It was a pleasure meeting you, Miss Potter. We will speak again soon.”

Harriet barely took notice of Mr. Dirigible’s departure, and he was wise enough not to wait for her to say anything further. The room returned to silence, and she could not bring herself to move or make a sound, waiting for whatever happened next. Some time passed with quiet conversation exchanged between the Flamels before Perenelle rose to find a loo, and Mr. Flamel decided to see if he could hurry things along with the Aurory.

That left Harriet alone with Professor Dumbledore, and when the door clicked shut once more, she turned her heavy head to look at the older wizard. She caught him when he wasn’t watching her, instead peering into space, lost deep in thought, and Harriet studied his tired, worried face. She wondered if he, too, was thinking about what horrors an unchecked Voldemort could unleash upon a misled, unsuspecting world.

“What am I going to do, Professor?” she asked.

For once, Professor Dumbledore had no answer for her.


A/N:

Harriet: “The worst part of prison was my cellmate. Prison Mike.”

Chapter 229: house-arrest

Chapter Text

ccxxix. house-arrest

 

They Apparated into the open park, and Harriet’s legs finally went out from under her.

“Mind yourself, Potter,” growled Alastor Moody, his wooden leg thumping on the dry grass as he turned in place, surveying the barren estate. As far as Aurors available who were available to escort her home, Mad-Eye wasn’t the worst choice. At least he was loyal and supported Dumbledore, so he wouldn’t go running back to Gaunt with details about the area. However, Harriet still thought he was an arsehole.

Firm fingers gripped her under the arms, and Harriet startled. “Allons-y,” Mr. Flamel muttered as he lifted her, and Harriet forced her wobbly legs to cooperate.

“Thanks.”

The empty eyes of blank townhouses watched the motley group. Dawn lingered on the horizon behind the row, bathing the edges in dim lines of peach and gold. True daylight wouldn’t break for several hours yet, but it made for a strange, ethereal time to arrive home after being released from prison. No one was awake, the heat had yet to set in. It felt as if the whole world slumbered, and breathing too loud would shatter the illusion.

“We need to get out of the open,” Moody grunted, jerking himself into motion. Harriet thought it was more suspicious for him to rush, swinging his head from side to side like Dudley after pilfering the biscuit jar, but she kept that comment to herself. She did, however, hear a soft, exasperated sigh from Professor Dumbledore.

“Of course, Alastor.” He offered his arm to Perenelle as they set off. Mr. Flamel rested his hand on Harriet’s elbow, which proved useful when she stumbled on a rut hidden in the dying grass and almost landed on her arse. She clenched her jaw and forced her back straight.

Mad-Eye was the first one up the stoop, and he stopped at the door, rounding Harriet. She almost took a tumble, startled by the motion, and barely managed to keep her feet.

“Arm out, Potter.”

Confused, Harriet did as he said. Moody pulled out his wand and held the point just below the top of her hands, not quite touching. He began to recite an incantation, twitching his wand in the specific, practiced motion of runes, an amorphous band of silver forming around her wrist. Then, the strangest thing happened; Mad-Eye suddenly looked skyward, both eyes, pointedly turning his attention away. Mr. Flamel’s hand slid against Harriet’s arm, pressing two fingers over her wrist. Doing so caused the ugly silver bangle to solidify larger than it should have.

Moody cleared his throat, and Flamel moved his hand. “Now,” the Auror continued, all business. “That’s the Aurory’s monitoring Charm, set to alert the DMLE should it leave the wards of this house. Do you understand me, lass?”

“Yes,” Harriet snapped, wishing he’d get out of the way.

Grunting, Mad-Eye lowered himself just enough to force Harriet to look at him. He smacked his solid, gnarled finger against the bangle. “This cannot leave. Do you understand?”

Ah. Harriet’s gaze flickered toward her wrist, then to the side where Mr. Flamel stood just behind her. The Charm was meant to mold to her wrist, but now—. “Yes, sir.”

“Good.” Moody straightened, nodding his head toward Dumbledore and the Flamels. “I’ll return to file confirmation of her drop off. One less thing for them idiots to fuss about.”

“Thank you, Alastor.”

He departed then, getting around Harriet by clapping her rather hard on the shoulder. She thought it might have been meant in a friendly manner—or, as friendly as the strange, paranoid bloke got. Whatever it was, Harriet ignored the departing Auror and reached to lay her hand on the door. The wards recognized her presence, and it gently creaked open.

Stepping into the cool, dark foyer of Grimmauld Place felt like sinking into a warm bath—or like laying your head down on a fresh, crisp pillow after a long, frustrating day. She paid no attention to the Flamels or Dumbledore as they came into the house after her and the door shut, sealing out the rest of the world. Harriet simply let her shoulders drop and sighed.

The stairs creaked under bare feet, cloth rustling, and Harriet gasped as a body collided with hers. Then, she wrapped her arms around Elara’s middle as the other witch pressed her tight to her front. Hermione’s weight settled at her side, squeezing them both.

Heure d’aller au lit,” Mr. Flamel muttered to the trio, and when Harriet blinked at him, lost and dazed, he remembered himself. “Time for bed, girls. You two should not have stayed up, waiting all night….”

Harriet remembered little else of what happened, only the strain in her calves as she climbed the stairs, then the murmur of hushed conversation in the corridor. She entered her dark room, the only light coming from the diffused gleam of Muggle lights outside the window, and threw herself atop the bed. A moment later, the mattress dipped, and a second body slid next to hers, and the warm, furry weight of a dog settled on her legs.

“I’m so glad you’re all right,” Hermione whispered. Harriet didn’t know what all right meant anymore.

Sleep rose up over her like a tidal wave. Harriet did nothing to stop it.

 

xXx

 

Only a few hours passed before Harriet startled awake.

Early morning sunshine warmed the covered window—and the room, the heat skirting the edge of intolerable. Harriet blinked dry, tired eyes and didn’t move, staring inside at the ceiling as she often did after nightmares. She couldn’t remember if she’d had a nightmare, but her reality of late had been terrible enough without her dreams also going to pot.

Grunting, Harriet finally stirred herself into moving, dragging her sweaty arm out from under Hermione, who continued snoring unabated. She had more difficulty shifting Elara, the great beast of a dog just as heavy as an actual human body, but eventually she managed, and Harriet sat up, rolling her sore shoulders.

The sheets stirred. It pulled back enough to reveal a large, horned head and dark coils of a riled Horned Serpent. “Misstresss.

Hello, love,” Harriet muttered, trailing her index finger over his snout to the gem atop his head, giving it a tap. “Miss me?

He scrunched his head as he preferred to do when agitated, tongue flickering. “The Misstress went misssing.

Not by choice. They made me go. They took me away.” Harriet sighed, swallowed. “Livi…if I have to go away, if they make me leave again, but for a long, long time, I’ll make sure you go to Hagrid. You remember him? The big man with a beard? He’ll take care of you.

Livius’ head twitched, his body tightening. “The Misstresss will not go.

Sometimes we don’t have a choice.”

There isss always a choiccce.

Hmm.

Shifting, Harriet caught one whiff of herself and grimaced, rising to find proper pajamas. She’d fallen asleep in the clothes she’d worn in the prison, though someone had thought to remove her spectacles and trainers. She wiggled her toes in relief to finally have the bloody things off her feet.

Harriet eased herself out of the room on tip-toes, holding her bundle of fresh clothes close as she made her way to the washroom. She ran a hot bath, pillaging Hermione’s shelf for bubble bath, the smell of orange and vanilla rising off the water. Harriet yanked off her clothes, fully intending to toss them in the bin, and sank into the tub with a shuddering exhale.

Not two minutes later, the door popped open, and Harriet sat up with a yelp.

What are you doing?! she demanded of Livius as he came slithering inside, heedless of the door he left open to the hall. “Livius!

The Horned Serpent ignored her, swaying ever so slightly as he rose up and slid into the water with her. When he broke the surface again, he hissed, “They will not takesss you.

Oh, for Merlin’s sake!” Harriet went to grab her wand, but naturally, it was still in Ministry holding, and her second wand was tucked away in her room. Cursing, she got out of the tub, dumping water on the floor, and hurried to shut the door. “You’re such a brat.

The remainder of her bath consisted of Harriet attempting to persuade a stubborn Horned Serpent out of the tub, finally giving in and muttering darkly under her breath as she conditioned her hair and checked the snake’s scales for any concerning spots. Livi preened, tail swishing, spikes leaving scratches in the porcelain tub.

When she finished and dressed, Harriet wrapped her unruly curls into a towel and scrunched her nose at her reflection, swiping steam from the mirror. The scar on her collarbone remained stark as ever, perhaps a bit irritated, the white branches edged in redness. The shoulder had a new scar ringed around it from when Madam Pomfrey removed the arm after her disastrous first Animagus transformation. That scar was smaller, thinner, because Madam Pomfrey had taken her time in regrowing the limb and applying Derma-Bond.

Bracing herself, she tipped her head and studied the mark on her neck. The brand stood out, dark and raised, a single line about as wide and long as her index finger. She grimaced at it, shame and hate toward Gaunt curdling in her belly. She should tell someone, if only to see if it could be healed, but thinking of the fallout weighed on her like a sack of bricks. They’d be upset, angry, saddened—and for what? Clearly Gaunt wouldn’t be punished for what he’d done. If anything, he’d point a finger at a Guardian who’d take the fall with a forced apology and an “Oops.” Harriet didn’t want to inflict that on her family and friends.

Harriet ferreted through Elara and Hermione’s things until she found a bit of magic concealer, gooping it on her finger before spreading it across the brand. It didn’t completely mask the mark, though the concealer changed to match her skin tone and rendered it less legible, blurry. It looked as if she’d smudged ink on herself.

She squirreled the bottle away again, wondering if she could convince Elara to part with it while not explaining why she needed it. She certainly wouldn’t be going to Diagon Alley to get her own any time soon.

Harriet continued to look at herself in the mirror until she couldn’t stand the sight. She tugged on her pajamas, but instead of returning to bed, she decided to pop down to the kitchens for something to drink. Then, she’d be right back to sleep. She might sleep the entire day just for an excuse to stop thinking for a little while.

Livi resisted all attempts to persuade him back into the bedroom. Instead, he followed Harriet, insistent, going so far as to bite the hem of her loose t-shirt when she tried to dash on ahead. His weight dragged her back.

You’re being ridiculous,” she muttered, tugging herself free. He’d left holes in the fabric. “Oh, come on.

She trudged down the stairs to the foyer, then to the basement, Livius keeping close to her heels. Harriet walked into the kitchen, yawning—and immediately stumbled to a halt, her mouth frozen wide.

There had to be a dozen people inside, all surrounding the large dining table covered in dishes from an early breakfast, papers, goblets, used quills, and an ashtray dotted with smashed cigarette butts and the refuse from wooden pipes. The air had a pungent quality, a mix of fried eggs, ink, tobacco—and frustration. Harriet hadn’t realized it, but she must have strolled right through a Silencing Charm, as she got hit with a singular blast of noise before everyone fell quiet at once.

They stared at the hissing Horned Serpent.

For an inexplicable reason, Harriet’s reaction was to yank the towel from her head and cover Livi’s, hiding him. The snake shook it off, and it hit the floor with a wet slap.

A chair creaked. Sirius leaned back from his place at the table and grinned. “Harriet!”

Her godfather rushed to get up, and Harriet released an “Oof!” when he caught her in a bone-crushing hug. “All right?”

At the head of the table, Professor Dumbledore said, “I believe there’s nothing further for us to cover this morning. We’ll reconvene in two days’ time.” His dismissal was answered by a wave of shifting bodies and muttered acknowledgments, chair legs screeching across the floor. Harriet peered past Sirius’ shoulder and caught a glimpse of Muggle newspapers sprawled open before the witches and wizards Vanished them.

She hooked an arm around Livius to drag him out of the way as the group left the kitchen. They went one by one, some known to her, some not. Most were clearly spooked by the large magical serpent, and each person peered at Harriet with consideration, intrigue, fear, or irritation. After the first person went, Harriet kept her gaze averted, ears burning.

Sirius scratched the back of his neck. “Didn’t think you’d be up this early,” he confessed. “Not after getting in so late.”

The last to leave was Professor Dumbledore, who stopped to give Harriet’s shoulder a friendly squeeze before hurrying on his way. “Who’re all these people?” she asked as Sirius directed her to take a seat. Remus was still there, looking as exhausted as Harriet felt, and he smiled at her over his cup of tea.

“The Order of the Phoenix,” Sirius explained as he held a chair out for Harriet and she sank into it. Livius slithered up to rest as much of himself on her lap as possible, draping over the sides. “It’s a group Dumbledore heads that fights You-Know-Who and all his bell ends.”

Mrs. Weasley came out of the kitchen then, wiping wet hands on her apron. “Oh, Harriet dear,” she said. “I wasn’t expecting you girls to be up until noon. You must be famished!”

“Must I?” Harriet said, dry, but Mrs. Weasley didn’t hear her, already bustling toward the hob. Mably hummed at the sink as she scrubbed dishes, and Kreacher lurked about the peripheries, grumbling under his breath. Harriet didn’t have much of an appetite despite having had very little to eat in the prison. An empty knot twisted itself together in her middle, and she didn’t think she had much room for food alongside it.

Sirius accepted a fresh cup of breakfast tea from Remus, who then poured another for Harriet, preparing it as she preferred. “Thanks,” she muttered as he handed it to her. Mrs. Weasley settled a bowl of porridge in front of Harriet.

“Something light,” she said. “To not upset your stomach. Can’t imagine they’ve given you a decent meal in that place. The nerve of them….”

“Thanks, Mrs. Weasley.”

Harriet forced herself to tuck in, pushing her spoon through the oats and darker swirls of cinnamon and honey dotted with walnuts and chunks of fruit. Sirius and Remus watched her without saying anything, though understanding sparked in Sirius’ eyes. Of anyone there, he probably understood best how the Dementors made one’s stomach turn on itself.

Harriet cleared her throat, giving Livius’ head a nervous scratch. “What was that lot doing here, then?”

Sirius shrugged one shoulder and exchanged a look with Remus. “Dumbledore’s had the Order more or less operational for the last twenty years or so, but what with Voldemort’s return, things are intensifying. I, well, opened the house for them to use. It’s protected—better protected than any other place, save Hogwarts. I don’t know all the ins and outs of what everyone in the Order does, but a lot of the shite is dangerous. It could follow people home to their families. So, the Order meets here, and sometimes people have to kip overnight. I may not like this rubbish tip, but it has its uses.”

Harriet spooned porridge into her mouth. “How’d Elara take that?”

“Oh, you know. Brilliantly.”

Remus snorted into his tea and quickly set the cup down, apologizing. Harriet almost felt like smiling. “Did she hex you or someone else?”

“She had a go at Molly’s twins, but everyone has been on their best behavior ever since. I made it a rule for the summer; everyone gets along. No fighting.” Sirius scratched his neck again, something Harriet had learned was one of his tells. “Listen, I—. Yeah, Elara’s not the happiest about this, but war’s not exactly a happy time, is it? And it’s gonna be war; make no bones about that. Voldemort might be keeping a low profile, but that won’t last. It’ll be another war in the end.”

From across the table, Remus sighed. “Sirius.”

“What?” Harriet’s godfather bristled.

“Let her eat her breakfast in peace.”

“She has a right to know what’s going to happen.”

Remus’ reply came sharply. “She has a right to enjoy not hearing about this grim dross only hours after coming home. There is a time and place.”

It occurred to Harriet to be indignant about them deciding what she should or shouldn’t hear, but all she felt was an overwhelming sense of fatigue. A heavy, buzzing numbness fell over her, and it blunted the anger, the stress, the grief. War. Harriet had very little idea of what that word really meant, not when her entire life had passed her in a continuous, bloody battle. Terry was dead, Voldemort was alive—but had he ever really been gone?

Harriet thought of Professor Slytherin standing at the front of his classroom, red eyes looking down upon his nervous, naive students. She thought about Gaunt’s fingers tightening in her hair as the brand came down against her skin.

Remus and Sirius argued. Harriet just ate her breakfast and said nothing at all.

 

xXx

 

The letters covered almost every inch of her desk.

Harriet made a go at sorting them, trying to force a system that would help her tackle the pile. She stacked them by date, by sender. She shuffled them by parchment color, then by envelope, then scroll. Nothing she attempted made the task any less insurmountable. Even one letter would be impossible. Harriet simply couldn’t summon the energy to reach for her quill.

She could hear movement in the rest of the house. The Weasleys and bloody Longbottom were the loudest perpetrators, but the others occasionally moved through the rooms or spoke, voices drifting through the door Harriet had left ajar. Molly Weasley scolded her children to pick up after themselves, or Sirius would bark his harsh, abrupt laugh. Remus chatted with Hermione about some past Ministers for Magic, and Elara and Ginny were in the bedroom across the hall, voices too low to understand. Once, someone jumped too loud on the stairs and triggered Sirius’ mum, her screams leaving a ghoulish silence in their wake.

Harriet wished for it to be quieter—or louder. She wished the silence would eat her thoughts or the noise would drown them, but either way, she wasn’t going to get what she wanted. She shuffled letters around, took a deep breath, and tried again.

None of the words made any sense. She didn’t even know who’d sent what she was reading.

Gaunt’s voice kept rattling in her ears. “What has he told you? What do you know about the prophecy?”

Harriet didn’t know rubbish about a prophecy. She knew there’d been one, that Snape had given it to Voldemort, and it sent Voldemort after her family—but she didn’t know more than that. What did the prophecy say? Did Gaunt know it? Slytherin? Would Professor Dumbledore tell her? Did Harriet want to ask?

The floorboards creaked. Startled, Harriet turned toward the door—and found a familiar wizard standing just inside the threshold. Her mouth popped open in a silent gasp.

Snape arched one unimpressed brow, holding a stack of books under his arm. “You couldn’t stay out of trouble while I was away, could you, Potter? How unsurprising,” he drawled. Livi hissed at him, but Snape remained unmoved. “Though, I hardly expected Azkaban to be the forerunner of your holiday destination choices.”

Suddenly, Harriet was on her feet, and before Snape could react, she’d embraced him around the middle. The Potions Master stiffened as the wool of his frock scratched her cheek, and relief pierced the overwhelming fugue that had taken over her mind. He hadn’t died. He hadn’t died.

“This is inappropriate, Miss Potter.”

“Sorry,” Harriet said, not giving a fig what was and wasn’t inappropriate, but she did let Snape go, stepping back. She smiled at him, even as he scowled. “You’re alive!”

“Obviously. Do refrain from repeating the obvious in my presence.” Snape delivered the retort with no heat, his eyes settling on her face and remaining there. He looked as if he’d been ill, and Harriet wondered what nastiness Voldemort had forced him to endure. Dark circles marred the skin under his eyes, and he could use a shave. She wanted to ask a million questions—where he’d been, what he’d seen and heard, what he knew about the Dark Lord, why no one thought to fucking tell her he was alive—but Harriet took a breath.

“You…saw him, yeah? He let you go. Which means…your cover’s intact?”

Snape inclined his chin once.

Harriet exhaled, a small, breathless laugh leaving her. Easy as that. “He’s ugly as sin, isn’t he?”

Snape rolled his eyes and shifted, bringing his arm forward to hold out the stack of books he’d brought. “Take these.”

“What for?”

“They’re from Slytherin.”

Grimacing, Harriet accepted the tomes, already dreading what she’d find. They didn’t have titles on the spine, and she guessed they’d be as dry as anything Slytherin ever assigned. She’d nearly forgotten about the stupid apprenticeship.

“He expects a summary of the contents within the week. He views house arrest as the perfect excuse for you to dedicate time to your studies.”

Harriet cursed but didn’t argue, knowing there wasn’t a point. She knew Slytherin was going to be unreasonable in his demands. He always was.

The professor studied her and seemed ready to leave, but Harriet spoke before he could. “Snape?”

“What is it?”

She hesitated, fidgeted, then turned to set the books down on the mess of letters. Half of the scrolls and envelopes fell, and Livi scrunched himself deeper into the recess under the desk. “Is—is Slytherin angry? About Vol—the Dark Lord? What should I expect?”

Snape crossed his arms. Harriet noticed his hands for the first time. The long, thin digits had shallow scabs across the back of them. “No, he is…pleased, so far as I can tell. Slytherin’s mind is his own.”

“…Pleased? Gaunt’s furious.”

Again, Snape nodded, just a single sharp jerk of his chin. “Gaunt’s the head of a political state, and no political state wants to be the one battling a terrorist. Gaunt built much of his early administration off the idea he assisted in defying and defeating the Dark Lord. Naturally, public credit lies with Longbottom, but Gaunt capitalized on the uncertainty that followed. The Dark Lord’s return discredits him; it will make him unpopular, destabilize his platform. It won’t prevent him from being reelected, but it will present unseen hurdles in his plans.

“Slytherin, in contrast, views this as serendipity. It draws attention away from him and his schemes and destabilizes his rivals. If magical Britain is fighting the Dark Lord, they are not watching Hogwarts’ Defense professor. He moves best in silence, unseen, Miss Potter. He wants nothing more than for the Dark Lord’s presence to be exposed.”

Harriet listened to what he said, then nodded, her brow furrowed. “They want me to lie,” she told him. “About what happened. The barrister said to lie about the Dark Lord returning.”

“As well you should. If it keeps you out of a cell, say whatever you must.”

“But what if that hurts other people? Lying lets Voldemort do as he wish without people any the wiser to his presence.” Harriet lowered her eyes to the floor. “And it’s not a given I won’t go back anyway. If I could make people aware—.”

The idea of martyrdom went against every Slytherin stereotype the magical world believed. People would call it a Gryffindor trait—bravery, self-sacrifice. Doing for others wasn’t something associated with her House, and Harriet disagreed. If she could—.

Snape stepped forward, robes sweeping over the floor, and gripped her by the arm, startling Harriet. He lowered his face toward hers when Harriet looked up to meet his black eyes.

“You will not go back to Azkaban.”

“You don’t know—.”

You will not go back.” His fingers tightened for a moment, then released, though Snape didn’t back away. “Do as your barrister says, but if they return a guilty verdict, you will not be taken back.”

Harriet searched his face, not understanding.

Snape had no intention of explaining himself, the moment hanging between them, the wizard unmoved by her confusion as his eyes blazed. Then, he blinked, and his expression shuttered. He turned to the desk and dropped an impatient hand on the top book.

“You will need to refer to Melicast’s primer for this one. He will drill you on Druidic Meditations and how you can apply it to Caldwell’s thesis. The thesis revolves around speculations of Roman spell-creation and etymology on the color spectrum.”

“That sounds bloody complicated.”

“It is,” Snape agreed, shoving the top book aside to point at the second. “This is on the relationship between color theory and elemental bases. Spell-creation starts with a rudimentary understanding of where and why certain magics are conjured in the body, and which sanctified words trigger those pathways. This, here, is on golemnry, and I advise cornering McGonagall to help you disseminate the material.” Straightening, Snape adopted one of his favored sneers, though truly he appeared too tired to hold it steady. “It’ll be too much for you to get through. Memorize Caldwell’s thesis and the meditations. The rest you can bluff through.”

“Oi, are you helping me cheat?”

“I’m helping you survive, dimwit.” The wizard snorted, then dragged a hand through his lank hair. “Do try to stay out of prison before our next meeting, Miss Potter.”

“No promises.”

He departed then, gone in a flick of dark black robes, and Harriet sank once more into her desk chair. Livi’s tail curled about her ankle as she stared at the books Snape had left behind, and exhaustion made itself known in her chest. It settled heavy as steel in her poor, weathered bones, but Harriet lifted her hand and opened the first cover.

She started to read.


 

A/N:

Harriet: *hugs Snape*

Snape: “Gross.”

Or

Harriet: “Who the fuck are all these people?”

McG: “Language, Potter!”

Harriet: “Sorry. Whomst the fuck are all these people?”

Chapter 230: threads of the loom

Chapter Text

ccxxx. threads of the loom

 

The tinny noise of late-eighties music jittered over Hermione’s head.

She could feel the clerk’s eyes boring into her back as she perused the little shelf of office supplies. The shop offered an assortment of items, mostly convenient snacks and whatnot customers could pick up on their way home from work. Elara had her hands full with Ginny, who’d apparently inherited her father’s zeal for all things Muggle. She kept chirping, “Brilliant!” over innocuous things, and the clerk’s expression had only grown more and more suspicious as time passed.

Hermione sighed through her nose. She found the packet of dusty sticky notes and picked them up, turning them over in her hands. Diagon Alley sold something similar; you could tap them with your wand and they’d change color, stick to pages, sort themselves, even chime reminders or read notes aloud, but sometimes Hermione craved the familiar. She grew up with those notes. Her father showed her how to use them.

She stared at the little package, unmoving.

“Blimey! Look at this!” Ginny had a blue stress ball in hand, and when she squeezed it, it turned bright red, pink stars swirling against the stretched material. “I thought Muggles didn’t have magic?”

Elara cleared her throat and coughed, Ginny blushing as she realized her gaffe. The big black dog waiting outside the front door barked.

Hermione quickly brought her selection to the register, startled when Elara and Ginny suddenly joined her, dropping Mars bars, a bag of strangely flavored crisps, and the stress ball onto the counter. Another bark sent Elara back to the sweets, grabbing nonsense at random before shooting the dog a frustrated glower.

The clerk watched this with a strained expression.

Hermione smiled at the man as she brought out the wallet she hadn’t used for years. “That’s it.”

He rang up their purchases—and Elara stood on Ginny’s foot before she could comment on the scanner.

“Nine-fifty.”

Hermione forked over the pounds, thanking the man with a strained smile as she accepted the two plastic bags and made a beeline for the door. The sensor chimed as they crossed under it—and Ginny made two goes under it, giggling, until Hermione and Elara wrangled her back into walking.

They wandered along the street toward the avenue, and Sirius circled them, snapping his jaws together when he nudged the bag.

“Stop it,” Elara hissed. “You’re a wretched escort, do you know that? We’re supposed to be discreet!

Their little expedition this afternoon had been a last-minute decision, a small break from the oppressive atmosphere inside Grimmauld Place to get outside and have a nice walk. Of course, they’d dressed as inconspicuously as possible, donning their most bland Muggle-style clothes. Elara wore shorts and had her hair down, Hermione’s hair charmed sleek and blond. She still felt they stood out too much, but it was worth an hour out of the house.

Longbottom had been entirely too nosy of late—a complete and utter nuisance, he and the Weasley twins, who wanted nothing more than to figure out what happened in the Order meetings held in the basement. It drove them all to distraction. He kept watching Harriet when he could, a scenario far too similar to what had occurred in their second year for Hermione to stomach. Elara had already had words with him, but Longbottom claimed he just wanted to talk with her.

Well, if Hermione had her way, Neville could stay as far from Harriet as possible.

In the privacy of her own mind, and quite apart from having Longbottom around, she could admit she rather liked Grimmauld Place with more people inside. Peace and quiet had their uses, but the warmth of human presence permeated those cold, despairing corners of Elara’s home like firelight spilling from an empty hearth. Mrs. Weasley all but smothered them in her motherly affection, her exuberance reminding Hermione fiercely of her own mother, of how she’d been before—before everything, really. She pondered if the Weasley children knew how lucky they were to have someone who loved them so baldly, without reserve.

The steady tromp of Order members through the house brought with them a different pall. Where the Weasley matriarch did all she could to remind them of their youth, to make their summer as normal as possible, the Order was a burr that couldn’t be ignored. Sometimes there were injuries, other times they came through grim and officious, barely sparing a glance for the younger witches and wizards. Most of them carried Muggle papers from every corner of the United Kingdom—official local issues and less reputable rags alike. When Hermione stole glimpses at them, each reported a similar theme; Muggles were disappearing.

“Why did you want to go in there, anyway?” Elara asked as they walked, stirring Hermione from her spiraling thoughts. “If not for something to eat?”

“Oh. I needed new supplies.” Need was a strong word for it, but Hermione had wanted to get out of the house regardless of the reason. She hadn’t wanted to stay behind like Harriet, who’d put in a token protest about being left but hadn’t argued more than that. “For a project.”

“A project?”

“Mhm.” Hermione explained no more than that, letting the plastic bags sway from her grip as they made for the crossing. It was surreal to be back amongst the purr of engines and fast, flickering electric lights after so long in the Wizarding world. In many ways, Hermione missed the certainty of it, the assurance of physics and unilateral knowledge coming from unassailable facts. Magic shattered reality in a manner most awe-inspiring—and horrific.

Hermione felt like she would never catch up.

They returned to Grimmauld Place, walking casually up the pavement. As they did so, they crossed wards sketched into the ground, layered to mask their passage in gradual increments. The first distracted, the second blurred, and by the time they reached the steps to Number Twelve, Hermione knew anyone watching from the estate would have lost track of their presence. She looked over her shoulder as Sirius nosed the door open, but as she stared across the park, she failed to see any Aurors waiting.

They could be hidden, Hermione reminded herself. Don’t let yourself be fooled.

Once indoors, Sirius changed forms, and he grabbed a bag from her. “Excellent,” he extolled, reaching inside. “Curly Wurly! Oh, I fecking love these. We used to get these all the time when we’d pop out and give ol’ mummy the slip. Did cost a bomb, though, didn’t it? Nine pounds fifty? Merlin’s bollocks.”

As he tore into the sweet, Hermione went about setting her appearance right, and Elara used her wand to charm her hair back up into a bun.

“It looks nice down,” Ginny assured, but the other witch grimaced. Elara tied her hair into place, then reached out and snatched the plastic bag from Sirius.

“Give me that,” she snapped. “It’s not all for you.”

“All right, all right…” He held his hands up, mouth full of caramel. “Don’t haff to ask twice—.”

Elara started up the stairs first, and Hermione came after, Ginny on her heels. They could hear Mrs. Weasley in the kitchen below, raking her boys over the coals for yet another infraction, and Hermione hoped for their sakes that hadn’t broken anything new. Elara’s temper couldn’t be described as anything but thin of late.

The stairs creaked under their weight as they climbed higher, Elara extracting the crisps from the bag of snacks before handing it off to Ginny. On the level that housed their bedrooms, they pushed open the door to the office, which remained ajar as they’d left it. Also exactly as they’d left it was Harriet, having slumped half off the chaise to the dusty floor, her menacing familiar loosely wrapped about her skinny legs.

“Oh, for Merlin’s sake,” Hermione sighed. “Have you moved at all? I thought you were going to go to the kitchen for a tea?”

“Mmm.” Harriet remained on her back, staring at the ceiling. She’d done the same ever since returning to Grimmauld.

Hermione had expected more from her—more curiosity about the strangers in the house, more frustration, more anger. Harriet had never been a meek girl, always the first to react, to throw the first punch, quick and bright and flaring like sunlight blinding against steel. But, since returning from Azkaban, Harriet had been slow. Quiet. She moved with lethargy if she moved at all, staring into the distance with no mind behind her dull green eyes.

Even now, she seemed to collapse in on herself like a balloon deflated, all the air gone, left on the floor to be found after a child’s birthday party. When Hermione looked at her, she felt as if she was watching her best friend bleed out, and everything that made Harriet herself leaked from a wound Hermione couldn’t find.

Well, that wasn’t entirely true; she could find the wound. It came from being betrayed, tortured, and constantly thrown upon the whims of petty boy wizards who played with others like a cat plays with a mouse. It left marks in predictable ways—but the wound itself burrowed deeper than plasters or magic could reach. If Harriet kept bleeding, what would happen then?

Worse, what would happen if she stopped? If suddenly all that anger and hate had nowhere else to go—.

Elara threw the bag of crisps at Harriet’s head with some force, startling the other witch. “Prat,” Harriet hissed—then she rotated the bag round the right way up and read the label. “Dill pickle and spicy shrimp? Brilliant.”

“Stop resembling a rug.”

“Bugger off.”

She opened up the bag, and Hermione sputtered at the smell.

“How on earth did you know she would eat those things?” she demanded in an undertone. Elara shrugged as she passed, going to the chaise Harriet had abandoned, stepping around Livi’s unraveled coils.

“I didn’t.”

Hermione’s mouth formed a thin moue, but she said nothing more and walked across the room to the window, urging it open enough for fresh air to filter inside. The thick summer breeze crossed the desk and scattered a few of the top sheets of loose parchments. Sighing, Hermione dropped her news sticky notes on the desk and bent to clean up the mess.

Ginny came over to assist, and, displaying her natural Weasley curiosity, couldn’t help but read some of what had been written.

“Hermione,” she asked. “What is all this?”

Hermione didn’t answer at first. Rather, she gathered the material that had fallen and re-sorted it back into its proper place. “I’ve been—well. What with the Minister for Magic election happening at the end of the year, I’ve been tracking the Wizengamot.”

Elara had been watching Harriet munch on her crisps, but she looked around when Hermione spoke, eyes sharpening. “What do you mean?” Ginny nodded as well, clearly wanting to know.

“You know how the election works, yes?” Hermione asked, fiddling with the paper. “There’s an election every three years. The season opens on Beltane, then runs until Yule, with the election being held around that time. The candidate ballot is confirmed on Mabon in late September. All this gets thrown out the window if the Minister passes away, of course; the Ministry enters a state of emergency, wherein the government is closed until the Wizengamot can be convened and a new election held.”

The three other witches listened to her, Harriet thoughtfully munching on her snack. Seeing their attention, Hermione gathered her confidence.

“The final election is decided by the Wizengamot’s vote. Originally, when the Ministry first came together in 1707, three hundred and thirty-three families and circles who’d previously been a part of the Wizard’s Council selected representatives and were inducted into the WIzengamot. Centuries later, those three hundred and thirty-three families have mostly merged, gone extinct, or married, but the original three hundred and thirty-three votes remain, now disseminated into sixty-six theoretical bodies.”

Hermione unfurled a parchment, showing the long, winding list of names. The others gazed at it, leaning closer.

“I say theoretical bodies because a number of the open or pending Houses are in different kinds of limbo. For instance, the Prewett family.”

Ginny perked up.

“That’s my mum’s family.”

“Yes. The last known heirs—Gideon and Fabian, your uncles—died in the war, and the votes went to the only living descendant, Molly Weasley. The House would, in practice, vote alongside House Weasley in the Wizengamot, and when Molly passes, the Prewett specification would meld into the House Weasley, down the ruling bodies to sixty-five.”

Ginny wrinkled her nose. “I think I remember something about this from way back when. I haven’t heard my parents talk about it in years—but I know Dad isn’t in the Wizengamot despite working at the Ministry.”

Hermione nodded and continued. “The Weasleys couldn’t afford the dues to keep their House active—or otherwise chose not to renew. The rights were purchased by House Malfoy, but will remain in a kind of ‘custody limbo’ for one generation. House Malfoy has, in fact, purchased the rights of many Houses over the centuries, a leading cause of several old families being stricken from the Wizengamot.” Hermione tapped her lip in thought. “Three hundred and thirty-three votes. In practice, sixty-six voting bodies. I’ve had a touch of difficulty sleeping of late, so I’ve been looking at records—anyway. I’ve tracked the voting trends for the last thirty years and formed a simple aggregate of which way a House is most likely to lean.”

Hermione gave one sheaf a tap with her wand, and the list projected itself into the air. She sat in the middle of the floor to give it more room, and the other witches all watched as the net of lines and numbers formed itself. The lines connecting each House to their recorded votes were color-coded either red, yellow, or blue. The Omega symbol marked the red votes, the Lambda symbol for the yellow, and the Alpha symbol for the blue.

“The Omega party, as I’ve taken to calling it, usually falls in line with agendas that support Minister Gaunt or other Dark designs. The Lambda faction is more unpredictable; they’re neutral, for lack of a better term. Sometimes they’ll agree with Gaunt, sometimes they won’t. The Alpha party almost always opposes Gaunt, for better or worse.”

“For better or worse?”

“Not everything Gaunt passes is inherently evil. Wouldn’t make for a very good politician then, would he? The Alpha party will vote in opposition to him to destabilize his platform, even if it means striking down inherently good changes.”

The light of the colors swirled across Elara’s face as she stared at Hermione’s notes. “This is all well and good,” Elara said, slowly. “But why have you been tracking this? What is the benefit?”

Hermione swirled her wand again, breaking the groups apart more cleanly. She hadn’t been ready to show this all to the others, her ideas still too nebulous, but she might as well do so now. “Three hundred and thirty-one votes. Forty-seven fall into the Alpha party. Sixty-five into the Lambda party, and…two-hundred and twenty-one into the Omega party.”

Ginny groaned, and the others looked suitably distressed. They understood, then. The vast majority of the voting body within the Ministry was—or, had been—firmly planted in Gaunt’s cushy pocket.

“That’s fucked, then,” Harriet grumbled as she flicked a crisp to Livius. The serpent studied the object, tongue flicking out, and decided whatever Harriet had tossed him was definitely not food. “Gaunt will be reelected.”

“Not necessarily.”

“Is anyone even running against him?” Elara asked.

“No, not at the moment.”

Harriet and Elara shared an exasperated glance. Even Ginny had to repress an eye-roll, and Hermione propped her hands on her hips.

“I’m being quite serious, you know. The odds are stacked against it—but I’m not about to resign myself to another three years of Gaunt. He thinks he’s infallible, but he is not. Our government may be corrupt, but it is still a democracy, and no matter how the numbers come about, it will follow the Wizengamot. Not Gaunt.”

Harriet chewed another crisp, brow furrowed. “But even if the Lamb people—.”

Lambda, Harriet. It’s about halfway between Alpha and Omega.”

“Even if the Lambda party all voted against Gaunt’s election, that’s—what? A hundred and odd change votes in total? Because everyone in the Omega party would vote to have him elected again.” She waved a hand at the large mass of red in Hermione’s diagram. “That’s more than double the whole Lambda and Alpha parties put together. That’s fucked.”

“And that’s where we need to concentrate,” Hermione said, bringing her hands together. “If we could convince people to change their minds—.”

Elara scoffed. “A great deal of them are families who had dyed-in-the-wool Death Eaters in their ranks during the war. They won’t be convinced of much else.”

“Well—.” Hermione’s voice cracked, and she forced herself to clear her throat. “Well, we’ll just have to persuade them to change their minds. Even if they don’t want to.”

Silence followed her bleak pronouncement. Harriet broke it by snorting, “You’ve gone barmy. But go on. You’ve a plan, don’t you?”

“I think—I think it’s possible,” Hermione rushed to explain, warmed by Harriet’s faith. “There’s been a large shift in the number within the last five years. It rattles the odds. House Black voting power was proxied by the Malfoys through Narcissa—.”

“But not now,” Elara finished. She tilted her head, thoughts turning behind her colorless eyes. “We had only just turned twelve when Gaunt was up for reelection. Remember, Dumbledore theorized he organized everything with Selwyn and the Diadem to create chaos in Hogwarts?”

“So he could solve everything and be the hero, innit?”

“That’s right. I had Mr. Piers rescind voting power as soon as I understood enough of what was going on. I haven’t voted on anything that’s come up in the Wizengamot, as they can’t summon minors from Hogwarts and I simply don’t have the time to research things being proposed, but Sirius….”

Yes. House Black has control of thirty votes—including two from the House McKinnon. With Sirius in control of the votes now, a massive bit of the voting power for the Omega power has been taken away.” Hermione couldn’t help how she wriggled in place, feeling again the sudden burst of energy she’d first felt when she’d run the numbers. She’d been reticent to share her ideas, thinking she’d surely overreached this time, but her friends were listening. Understanding. “I think if we concentrate on Houses that are susceptible to our arguments—people who are suffering under Gaunt, or fallen out of favor—we can sway the vote. See, here—.”

Hermione swiftly highlighted a few of the Omega party families she felt would be best for them to sway. “If we got these families to change their minds and swung the Lambda votes, the Alpha candidate in opposition to Gaunt would have one hundred seventy-two votes to Gaunt’s one hundred sixty-one!”

“But that’s only if the neutral party aligns in the way you’re projecting,” Elara argued. She started to pace. “Some of those families are Dark in all but name. Greengrass, Hawkworth, Higgs. They’re nominally free agents, but in a vote for Minister, they’ll vote for Gaunt. The margin is too thin, Hermione. We would need something larger.”

“Yes,” Hermione agreed, sighing. Her excitement waned. Even assuming every single Lambda vote went against Gaunt, the prospective candidate would win by only a handful of votes—and then, that was hoping that every House in her aggregate that had voted into her Alpha party’s parameters didn’t stray.

She dismissed the design with a wave of her wand, shutting her eyes. They needed someone willing to challenge Gaunt. They needed something more.

“It’s somewhere to begin, at least.” Hermione opened her eyes again to find Harriet watching her, a familiar warmth in her tired, lined face. “It’s mad. Utterly mad. You’re talking about upending the Ministry, Hermione, not rigging a vote for Quidditch captain. But, if anyone can figure it out, it’s you.”

Elara agreed as she found her place on the chaise again, head in her hands. “God help us all.”

“So,” Ginny said, reaching for another one of the sweets left in the shopping bag. The wrapper crinkled. “Is this what you lot do during summer? A bit of plotting, a bit of scheming. Might take over the world before supper?”

From the floor, Harriet retorted, “Sometimes we have dessert, too.”

They burst into laughter.


A/N:

Gaunt: “I’m so clever and great. No one can beat me at my own game!”

Hermione, brushing up on politics: “We’ll see, bitch.”

Chapter 231: waiting

Chapter Text

ccxxxi. waiting

 

Severus Snape hated many, many things about his choices and the life they’d led him to lead—but one of the most regrettable consequences, in his opinion, was the constant fucking waiting.

He should have abhorred it less than the violence, the indoctrination, the literal torture, yet the waiting bore upon Severus like kneeling on rock salt. He could handle pain with more aplomb, as it was expected for his hands to twitch, his body to quake, or his face to grimace—but waiting? Waiting involved sitting in a state of perfect, obedient serenity when all he wanted to do was rip someone’s bloody head off.

There were different kinds of waiting. Looming over a simmering cauldron was anticipation, the knowledge of a finished product brought together under his hand. It was creation—patience, timing. Sitting behind his desk watching his students was boredom, but he could always preoccupy himself with a different task, and though he’d curse himself before admitting it to the likes of Minerva or Albus, there was fulfillment in teaching. Not with every class, not with every student, but when one of the muling little pustules actually perfected a brew and their eyes lit up, it resonated with Severus. It gave the boredom meaning.

Waiting at Slytherin’s side in complete stillness was not anticipation or boredom. It was simply apprehension—because no matter what Slytherin had him doing or saying or how he expected him to behave, Severus remained conscious of the danger that hung above him like the sword over the idiot Damocles’ head. Unlike the fool of Cicero’s tale, however, Severus could not simply ask to be excused. He had to wait, knowing the sword was there, knowing it could be cut by accident or miscalculation or by madness, but it would be cut all the same. The sword would descend.

Over the years, he’d questioned whether or not Slytherin knew of his discontent, or if the bastard truly needed such prolonged moments of strained silence to gather his thoughts. The Dark Lord didn’t—or the version Severus had known in the past, before Slytherin and Gaunt and Merlin knows who else made their appearance. The Dark Lord as he existed now spent much of his time trying to repress his rage; he didn’t have enough followers to curse them senseless as he wished to do.

Slytherin continued to stare into the belly of the hearth, his fingers steepled before himself. The firelight made for an eerie reflection in the man’s crimson eyes, like visions of hell projected from his turbulent soul. If he had a soul. Severus sometimes had to wonder.

“Gaunt will be dealt with in his own time,” Slytherin finally said, voice soft as a whisper, almost lost to the pops and snaps of the fire burning in the common room. Part of his young face remained lit by the fire, the other drenched in a leaching, aquamarine glow coming through the windows abutting the lake. Severus himself remained standing somewhere in between, his back straight, his posture stiff. His gaze occasionally drifted toward the windows and the stray shafts of sunlight that pierced the water. He felt like a boy just then, a distant hankering to go above ground, to set aside his studies and feel the fresh air. An echo of a memory, ephemeral at the summer sun.

Have you come out of your dungeon then, Sev? C’mon, let’s go outside!

He blinked and lowered his eyes to the fire.

“Tell me, Severus. Have you ever heard the story of Oruneth of Trevisto?”

“I do not believe so, my Lord.”

“He fashioned himself the greatest wizard of his kingdom. Powerful, handsome, intelligent. Perhaps he was, or perhaps not. For what is power or charm or knowledge in the hands of a man unable to use it?” Slytherin’s pale, boyish fingers traced the edge of his robes against his knee, every stitch careful laid into the fabric. “Oruneth fashioned himself a king, and he reached too greedily into the pockets and hearts of his neighbors. He lacked…finesse. The true King of Trevisto did nothing to stop him. When his advisers asked him why he did not act, the King simply said ‘wait, just wait.’”

Severus withheld an annoyed sniff. More fucking waiting.

“And so the King waited. Oruneth claimed his people for his own, and in doing so, made powerful enemies. Humans—magical or otherwise—are resistant to change, Severus. It must happen slowly, like the drip of water against stone, carving a steady, narrow path, because if it happens too quickly—.” Slytherin splayed one hand open, a vague gesture that caused the fire in the hearth to swell like heaving lungs. “It inflames, like an irritant under the skin, causing infection. Rot. Demise. Oruneth may have been a great wizard, but we will never know because the people he sought to control simply turned upon him and ate him whole, so to speak.” Slytherin smiled. “And the King of Trevisto never lifted a finger.”

He fashioned himself the King in this strung-out metaphor. Severus wondered if the Dark Lord had ever heard of the Tortoise and the Hare, or if he found himself too grandiose for such a simple comparison. Or boiling the frog, which was a much more apt description of what he meant to do to the wizarding world than whatever shite he’d developed in that contrived and clearly fake story.

“Patience, my boy. Patience. It is something they have grown beyond and left behind, to their detriment. Movement creates waves, and waves drown the unprepared. Gaunt is his own problem. We need not lift a finger for what comes next.”

Severus did not reply because Slytherin did not require it. He wanted allow to dictate and hear himself speak, and the Potions Master remained his ready servant, taking in the words, letting them either sink into or skip across the cold, roving waters of his mind. Perhaps that was why Slytherin seemed so unmoved by Potter’s arrest and incarceration. The man surely felt nothing towards the girl other than a petty form of possessiveness like a favorite tool, not wanting to lose it—but ultimately able to replace it if needed. He expected for Gaunt’s designs to fall through, or knew something Severus didn’t. Or, more likely, he simply expected those around him to act in a manner that would benefit him. After all, many people wanted Potter free; Slytherin didn’t need to act to see it done.

The onus sank upon others—upon Severus—because he was not the slow, lazy king of Slytherin’s pretentious story. He understood if something must be done, then he would have to do it himself.

Another quiet, purposeless hour of attending passed before the snake within the portrait called Slytherin’s attention away, and he dismissed Severus as if only just remembering he was there. Severus didn’t mind; he always counted his blessings when able to walk away from a meeting with Slytherin without kissing the floor for the privilege.

On his way to the door, Slytherin’s voice caught him short. “Oh, and Severus?”

“My Lord?”

“Do remember to pass my message to Potter.”

Severus’ stomach sunk to the floor and he bowed low, then exited the common room, robes catching and flaring in the breeze of his passage.

Your message? he thought, fingers curling into fists at his side, hidden in his sleeves. No, fuck that. Because Slytherin wanted her to go before the Wizengamot and tell them all about the Dark Lord. He wanted Gaunt and the Dark Lord to be at one another’s throats, even if it meant throwing Potter to the wolves. If she sparked a feud that better his ends, Slytherin would see her purpose as being a fulfilled.

A tool used, broken, discarded.

Thinking of the girl brought Severus to London without focused intent, his black boots gliding over the scorching tarmac, hidden from the Muggles beneath a Disillusionment Charm. He crossed the estate and climbed the steps to Number Twelve, the door opening of its own accord when it sensed his presence.

Noise permeated the house in a manner Severus had come to expect with its new occupants. The Weasley twins and the Longbottom idiot came clattering down the stairs, chattering loudly about something one of the older boys held in his hand, though Severus couldn’t see what it was. The youngest pair of Arthur’s brood sat in the parlor, a chess board between them, and piano music drifted through the closed door to the conservatory. He dismissed the cloaking spell as he strode to the steps and climbed them.

Where the dog and his mooning werewolf were, Severus didn’t know. Little evidence of any adult presence could be spotted, and so he assumed they’d relegated themselves to the kitchen or the rooms of the top floor. Granger sat in the study, so engrossed in the books before her, she didn’t notice Severus pause at the door, his dark eyes sweeping over the space. He continued on.

It hadn’t been his intention to search for Potter. He didn’t know what he meant by coming here, only that Slytherin’s final, lingering word stirred Severus into motion like a rock thrown into a nest of snakes, and he wanted nothing more than to get away from the bastard, at least for a few hours. Checking on Potter seemed the appropriate response. It came over him like a compulsion once inside the house, that he simply had to see if the girl was well, that she was in Grimmauld Place among her strange little family, and not in a cell on a rock in the middle of the North Sea.

After Severus first rose from the Dark Lord’s tender mercies, Albus had assured him Potter was “well—as “well as could be expected.” The last decade or so of his life had taught Severus that “well had many shades to it, a kaleidoscope of colors kept tight under one universal blanket. Severus himself was well; he did not mention the ache in his joints, the fiery burn of the marks still healing on his back, or the numbness in his extremities as his heart had yet to be fully repaired. He had another two week regiment of potions to take before that would happen, and the stairs would stop taking the breath out of him. Still, when Dumbledore or McGonagall asked, he was “well.

Potter was not well.

He found her in the attic, looking through the grisly collection hoarded by the Blacks in their long, miserable years. She’d lost weight, and even in the unsteady, flickering light cast from the candle in her hand, the dark circles below her eyes made themselves readily apparent. Dust from the rubbish coated her Muggle trousers and jumper, rendering her one step away from becoming a relic herself.

The absurd notion of the girl fading to nothing right before his eyes lit an inexplicable panic in Severus’s chest, and he snapped, “Potter!”

She slammed her head into a rafter.

Bloody fucking—ow! What are you on about?!” the girl complained as she clasped a hand to her crown. He almost felt sorry for scaring her shiftless. Almost.

“Come downstairs,” he ordered, adding, “For practice,” after a moment of thought.

“The Ministry has my wand.”

The look he gave her could have debased a lesser man.

“You told me I’m not supposed to use that one.”

“Come downstairs.”

He could hear the girl muttering darkly under her breath, but he thought it better than the silence, the malingering in dark corners with that wretched snake at her heels. Even now it came out from behind her, hissing, and Potter gave it instructions as she licked her thumb and put out the candle.

The back door to Black’s hovel screamed on its untended hinges as Severus stepped into the garden, eyes sweeping over the expanded space. A bit of time and effort on the behalf of the residents had thinned the weeds and cleaned the fountain’s thick skin of algae, though much of the garden remained under the shadow of the large, sprawling oak tree. Dead, decaying autumn leaves lingered in the pale grass.

“How’re we supposed to practice out here?” Potter complained as she followed him, making sure to shut the snake inside. “Merlin, Livius—.” She trailed off in a frazzled stream of Parseltongue.

Severus checked and firmed the wards surrounding the garden, especially the ones disguising the view from the outside. Potter joined him, managing to wriggle her second wand out from under the cuff of her trousers. Severus crouched and picked up a stick, turning it over in his hand. He pointed his wand at it. “Sylva Ferro.

The stick changed in his hand, becoming a short, roughly hewn sword.

Moderantum.” He tapped the blade, then his open left hand. The sword wobbled, then raised to float above his left shoulder.

“Oi, what’s that?” Potter asked.

“Exactly what it looks like.”

“But why? What for? I thought we were practicing?”

Severus didn’t roll his eyes, though it was a near thing. He lifted his left hand, then held his index and middle fingers together, thumb up, latter fingers folded like a priest giving a benediction. The sword followed the motion of his fingertips until he relaxed his hand.

Potter crouched with him, picking up a stick of her own. “How do you do it?”

“The incantation is Sylva Ferro, with emphasis on the former. The iron rune, lateral, drawn backward is the wand movement.”

It took Potter two tries to get the incantation just right, making a sword roughly the length of her forearm, if crooked and less than coherent in design. Really, it resembled a lumpy branch more than a dull blade. Severus explained the puppeteer spell, which she managed just fine in a single go—though she immediately swung the her fingers in a loop and whacked the pair of them over the heads.

For fuck’s sake, Potter!

“Blimey—sorry! I didn’t realize—.”

“You didn’t realize the spell to control a weapon would control the weapon? Dunce.”

Her sword came quite close to clipping Severus in the face, so he sent a small Depulso at the girl, shoving her back several feet. Potter grunted as the spell hit her in the middle and nearly sent her toppling.

“Right, sorry.” She made a show of holding hold her hand loose, and the sword remained passive above her left shoulder. “What’s the point of this, though? It’s wicked—but what’s the point of it in a fight? It’s faster to hex someone then get in a sword fight.”

Severus scoffed as he stood, covering a wince as the skin of his back pulled. “In a true conflict, magical kind often misjudges the effectiveness of having a physical object they can utilize against enemies. Godric Gryffindor was a wizard, was he not? And yet he is reported to have utilized weapons and shields on many occasions.”

Potter only appeared to be half-listening, testing how the sword spun with the motions of her fingers. Smirking, Severus fired a jinx at her—and Potter blocked it with a quick Protego, but that didn’t catch the pebble Severus had secreted into his other palm. He lobbed it over the shield, and it bounced off her forehead.

Ow!

“Now, imagine if you had something with which you could quickly divert an incoming projectile while shielding from a second assault. You could block a projectile—or a spell you otherwise could not divert.”

“Right, right, I got it….”

They continued in this fashion for some time, Severus lost in thought as he volleyed simple spells and whatever bits of yard debris he could Summon into his open hand. The more she practiced, the faster Potter reacted, managing to only catch herself on the blunt sword four or five times before she found a better rhythm. Then, she started sending hexes in Severus’ direction, and his ruminations and worries over Slytherin fizzled.

The summer sun poured upon them, reflecting from the surface of the fountain. The heat sank through the dark fabric covering his shoulders, and Severus could admit it was almost pleasant—the weather, the exertion, forgetting the world was falling to pieces just outside the door. Merlin forbid, it was almost fun.

Severus flicked his wand, then twisted his wrist, stepping into the motion to quickly layer his spell casting. She blocked the first spell, the second, but the third knocked the sword out of the air, and Severus tossed another pebble. He expected it to hit her, but then—.

Lumos Solem!”

His fist closed in his robes, and he jerked the long sleeve in front of his eyes, sparing them the sudden vivid, burst of light.

Plunk!

The stone sunk in the fountain. Severus lowered his arm, ready to reflect another jinx back at Potter—but the girl had vanished. The conjured sword laid in the weeds.

A crow perched in the oak tree. It picked its way carefully along the branch, staring at Severus.

He tipped his wand up, scoffing. “Homorphus.”

The crow’s answering squawk turned into a strangled yelp when Potter reappeared—and the branch bowed wildly, slipping from under her weight. Severus lurched forward, half-stumbling over the fountain’s edge, cold water sloshing over his knees as he reached out before the girl plummeted head-first into the stone basin. He caught her behind the knees and back, nearly tipping the both of them over in the process.

Potter stared up at him, stunned, her wand still in hand. The silver bangle shone about her wrist. “Hang about—that’s not fair. How’d you know it was me?”

The water sloshed inside his boots, and Severus waded to the edge. “There isn’t a single bird that would tolerate the spell-fire and remain so still in the tree.”

Potter scowled as he dropped her feet onto solid ground, then pulled himself out of the water, sloshing it over the grass and flagstones. Severus grunted as he sat on the fountain’s stone edge, jabbing his wand toward a trouser leg to start drying it.

Potter sat as well, avoiding his wet robes. As Severus worked, the girl studied the wand in her hand—Lily’s wand—cataloging all the minor imperfections, the grooves and slight spots of fading from where he mother’s fingers had worn away the stain. She played with the Ministry’s monitoring bangle, her expression flat, the slight flush in her cheeks fading away.

“Professor?”

“What is it?”

“D’you think all this will be worth it?” she asked, letting go of the bangle. “Will any of this matter?”

Severus didn’t answer immediately. “Do you believe I would waste my time if I didn’t think this would ‘matter’?”

“I don’t know.”

He finished with his boots, though he’d need to change his socks when he returned to the castle. He stared at his own reflection in the puddle that had formed beneath him; a dark silhouette against a bright, featureless sky. His back ached, something having opened again.

Many times in his life, Severus had stopped and questioned the value of continuing, in fighting and spying and dragging his worthless hide out of bed in the morning—or off the floor, sore and bleeding. He questioned the waiting, the untold nervousness and neuroses, the same feeling Potter must be experiencing knowing her freedom hung by a thin thread.

“The only meaningless pursuit in life, Miss Potter,” he intoned, looking toward the house. “Is surrender. It invalidates all that came before it and makes a mockery of your effort.”

She gave no comment on his pronouncement. After a minute of quiet contemplation, watching the final, fading ripples in the fountain, she stood up and retrieved the Transfigured sword. She Charmed it to again float at her shoulder, and Severus shoved himself back to his feet. Potter turned to face him, determined.

“Again.”

 


A/N: What Severus said early on in the chapter is paraphrased from a Kennedy quote: “Every man, woman and child lives under a nuclear sword of Damocles, hanging by the slenderest of threads, capable of being cut at any moment by accident or miscalculation or by madness.”

Chapter 232: the bones of the operation

Chapter Text

ccxxxii. the bones of the operation

 

When Sirius first heard Hermione’s plan to oust Gaunt from the Ministry, he laughed.

It sounded like a lark, like something he and his mates would dream up in one of their large, more grandiose teenage fits. They’d sit around the dorm, sneaking tipples of smuggled firewhiskey in bottles of lukewarm Butterbeer and say ridiculous things. They’d talk about becoming Minister, fighting Death Eaters, or solo dueling Voldemort in submission. All their nonsense came to the same result in the end; nothing.

Afterward, when he had a moment to think about it, Sirius let his mind replay Hermione’s tentative outline, and he realized he may have made a mistake. Remus often pointed out the girls weren’t like others their age, and they definitely weren’t a group of boastful Gryffindor boys like he and the Marauders had been. Elara, Harriet, and Hermione weren’t anything like the witches he remembered in his youth.

The contrast had never been as sharp as it was with other teenagers in the house. The Weasley children and Frank’s boy worried about their summer assignments or which Quidditch team advanced in their bracket. The twins talked about their inventions and baubles while Neville lamented not going abroad for the holidays and McGonagall assigning too many projects. Arthur’s youngest two traded their Chocolate Frog cards, bemoaned the Chudley Cannons, or speculated on the Order. The looming war touched their lives, but it didn’t shape them. Not yet.

On a good day, Sirius or Remus could coax Harriet to meals and have her eat more than a few mouthfuls. Otherwise, she spent her time holed up in her room or staring at the bangle on her wrist, numb to the world around her. Elara’s explosive fits happened more often, rattling the timbers of the house—and Hermione obsessed over her notes day and night. The notes for the scheme Sirius had laughed at.

Fred, George, Ronald, Neville, and even Ginevra had heard about the Order of the Phoenix and had immediately wanted to join. Naturally, they’d all been denied as minors, and Molly had a row with Arthur when he’d pointed out the twins were very nearly of age. All the Gryffindor children complained bitterly about the decision, criticizing how it wasn’t fair when they were already neck-deep in it, and Sirius had been inclined to agree. He remembered what it was like to be young and feel ineffectual, stuck in school.

“That’s absurd,” Remus had told him when they settled into his room that evening, either wizard laying on his side of the bed, a stretch of empty sheets between them. Sirius felt like an entire gulf of resentment and old anger rested there too, but it was nice to be close. It was nice to hear Remus’ comforting voice, thick and raspy with sleep. “They’re too young, just as we had been too young. We were stupid, frankly.”

“It’s not stupid to stand against oppression.”

“Of course not.”

“If we’d sat back, too afraid to tell Voldemort and his lot to piss off, everything’d be more fucked than it is, Remus. Don’t they have a right to fight for what they believe in?”

“Not yet. And we were intolerably young and naive. All of us—Peter included. Don’t give me that look. We drew battle lines in the sand, then went about starting families barely out of school, throwing ourselves knee-deep in the muck of it. Look where that got us all.”

It took Sirius longer than it ought to have to realize Harriet, Elara, and Hermione hadn’t said a word about the Order—or, at the very least, any desire to join in. Elara had plenty to say about it when she got on a tear, but none of the trio of Slytherin witches had expressed interest in partaking in the group’s activities. At first, it’d alarmed Sirius. He’d wanted to know why they wouldn’t seek to help or take a stand, why they differed from the other teens—and the answer turned his stomach.

The Weasleys, Longbottom, and their lot knew about war. They’d lost family members to it, and they knew—in the abstract—how dangerous it could be. A new war was bubbling like a cauldron left untended on the hob, as Voldemort wouldn’t stay silent forever, and those kids were as earnest to fight against him as Sirius and James and Remus had been at their age. They had an idea of what was to come and wanted to assist, but they still didn’t know. Not really.

Sirius hadn’t understood at first that for Harriet and Elara and Hermione, the first war had never ended. They weren’t looking at the future as a spectral bogeyman about to descend; it’d already landed on them years ago. People had been trying to kill Harriet since her birth, and Elara grew up among religious zealots not afraid to tell a little girl she was a monster. Hermione might not have been involved for as long as the others, but her entire life in the Wizarding world had been indicative of Voldemort’s continued dogma. Her boyfriend had been offed for no good fucking reason. She hadn’t seen her parents in Merlin knew how long.

They didn’t need to join the Order to fight the Dark Lord and do what was right. They’d been doing so already. Sirius needed to remember his girls weren’t normal teenagers. They never had been and never would be.

“Tell me your plan again,” he told Hermione the next time he caught her in the study. “From the beginning. I want to hear it once more, please.”

She hesitated, clearly stung by his prior amusement, but Sirius kept his face earnest, and Hermione eventually relented. She tugged out her notes and, from the beginning, began to outline her designs for the Minister election at the end of the year.

Sirius listened, and when she ran out of breath, he went to get Professor Dumbledore.

Hermione repeated herself again.

The old Headmaster showed none of Sirius’ initial irreverence when Hermione spoke, no matter that she wasn’t yet sixteen nor fully confident in her plan. Her voice faltered at several points, and she’d cast her eyes down, brows furrowed, before she rounded her shoulders and went on. Professor Dumbledore waited, expression thoughtful, until she came to an end.

He leaned back in his Conjured chair, tucking his long, wizened fingers in his beard as Hermione folded her sheaf of notes together again.

“It may surprise you,” he said. “But we’ve seen similar ideas implemented before. Or attempts, at least.”

Hermione’s shoulders visibly dipped. “Oh?”

“I haven’t seen so organized a plan put together, to be sure! Excellent work, Miss Granger.”

“Thank you, sir. But if it’s not useful—.”

“Forgive me, I didn’t mean to imply it isn’t useful. I simply mean to point out more variables than you might be aware of, my dear.” He cleared his throat. “As soon as Minister Gaunt was elected, the Order sought to invalidate his appointment or gather the resources to have him unseated in the next election.” Professor Dumbledore turned his face toward the window, seemingly lost in distant thought. Sirius leaned his shoulder into the wall, crossing his arms to get comfortable. “He rose very swiftly—and silently—to power within the Ministry, and utilized an emergency election to hang the Wizengamot’s vote. When an emergency vote is convened, the entirety of the able Wizengamot—those whose Houses are not tangled in legal dilemmas that preclude their ability to vote—are not required to attend or abstain, though one Minister candidate suggested within the meeting must reach one-hundred votes to qualify as Minister. Mr. Gaunt, as he was then known, managed to throw the Wizengamot into a quandary, as they refused to come to a consensus and grant one candidate one-hundred votes. The meeting would have been reconvened and the vote held again at a later time in normal circumstances, but Gaunt’s election came so very precariously close to the end of the war, and the Wizengamot refused to leave our world without a government in such a tenuous time. It was finally decided that Gaunt would be our Minister.”

Sirius hadn’t known a lot of this information. He knew the ascension rites and whatnot had gotten rather blurred after the war—after Sirius himself got shut up in Azkaban on that godforsaken island. Habeas corpus had been suspended for many trials, Department heads in the Ministry got shuffled like a deck of cards, and one of Gaunt’s terms had actually been extended for one year through a vague loophole that briefly saw the Wizarding world operating under military rule. Remus had explained it to him as a result of the ICW’s reclassification of ‘state of emergency’ and the Americans threatening war if the Ministry didn’t do something about its magical fugitives fleeing across the pond.

Sirius shook his head. Hermione fidgeted as Professor Dumbledore spoke. “Professor?” the young witch asked, her voice quiet but firm. “Did Minister Gaunt kill Minister Bagnold? Because of the emergency vote?”

“It is very much my opinion that yes, he did.” The Headmaster’s voice matched Hermione in severity, an old, tempered echo of anger rattling about like a ghost in Dumbledore’s eyes. “Millicent Bagnold was a friend of mine. She was a wise witch who survived much during the war as she led our government. Her death coming so swiftly after the war’s end, though ruled an accident, rattled her supporters and family. Yes, Hermione, I do believe the man who calls him Marvolo Gaunt was responsible for her end.”

Sirius saw Hermione’s throat bob as she swallowed, her hands tight upon her notes.

“Millicent’s fate might very well be a factor in why successive legal coups have failed against the Minister. We have, on separate occasions, attempted to split the vote of what you have cleverly named the Omega party. I understand our Muggle government has political parties, but such a custom—for better or worse—hasn’t flourished among Britain’s magical counterparts. Oh, there’s been movements before, a particularly memorable one when I was still a lad—but I digress. The lack of parties makes it a touch more difficult to predict how votes in the Wizengamot might be placed, and doesn’t account for other circumstances that suspend votes from being counted. The fluid nature of House politics and rights means the volume of votes might not be fully present. For example, I myself have held the ballot of House Potter in abstention to keep it from falling into Lucius Malfoy’s hands while Harriet is a minor, though I refrained from using those votes myself.”

“Why so, Professor?”

“Oh, several reasons. To apply those votes to my own would mean to proxy the House, and that would suspend Harriet’s rights until she came of age. As it is, and because I’ve never used those votes to register with my own, she may take up the mantel of House Potter within the Wizengamot as she pleases. Many other Houses are tangentially counted apart from a singular whole on paper, but are still in proxy.”

“You mean the Death Eater families, don’t you, sir?”

“Certainly. But also the Houses of several lines that went extinct in the war, poor souls. The proxy for those Houses may have used those votes differently in varying settings within the Wizengamot meetings. This is why our attempts to split the vote and dissuade those ‘Omega’ families from voting for Gaunt has failed in the past.”

Hermione frowned at her notes. “…some of the numbers would be skewed, then. If some proxied votes don’t follow the Houses that are proxying them. He…he does that on purpose.”

“Yes.” Dumbledore peered over his half-moon spectacles and studied the young woman’s face. “Make no mistake, Miss Granger. Mr. Gaunt is a calculating, devious opponent, both within politics and without. He is notorious for purposefully having his followers skew statistics with their votes to thwart probability predictions. He preys upon technicalities and weaknesses in the law that create exploitable points of pressure, often utilizing panic to sway those he might not usually have in his camp. I would say he is not a wizard to be underestimated in any circumstance.”

The more Dumbledore spoke, the more Hermione appeared disheartened. “So it’s impossible to try. If you and the Order couldn’t do it—.”

“No, no, Miss Granger. You mistake my meaning.” Dumbledore held up his hand to forestall her quiet defeat. “If I have learned anything in my long years, it is that very few things are impossible in this world if one is willing to put in the effort and challenge convention. Why, I’ve seen you and your friends do a dozen impossible things before! Simply because others have failed in this endeavor does not necessarily mean you will as well.” Dumbledore smiled. “If you wish for my advice, Hermione? Someone must be convinced to run against Minister Gaunt before any further thought to votes should be given. It may prove a task more difficult than anything else.”

When Dumbledore finally took his leave, Hermione exhaled as if she’d just shoved a huge weight from her shoulders, and she sagged into the chair behind her. “Well,” she commented, tossing her notes onto the desk. “That could have gone worse. Could have gone better, but could have been worse.”

Sirius agreed.

 

xXx

 

Over the next several days, Sirius couldn’t shake the conversation in the study from his head, no matter how busy the Order got or other impending worries such as Harriet’s trial. It crept up on him in the dead of night, and he’d rise to stare out the window or go pace the garden, desperate for a drink and feeling mad for want of it. He’d throw his mind into anything to escape his demons for a while, and Hermione’s plan proved a worthy distraction.

For all that Sirius had been born and raised in one of the most preeminent pure-blood households, he didn’t much understand nor care for the intricate nature of Wizarding politics. He followed along with Hermione’s explanations of voting priorities and trends, but it settled like nettles in his brain, a frustrating crown of ineffectual jargon tying all their hands. Sirius was the kind of man who saw an enemy and identified him. He wanted to jab a finger in Gaunt’s face and shake the nearest idiot, screaming, “That’s him. That’s the bastard. Why can’t any of you see it?!

But he couldn’t. People had tried. Dumbledore had all but named Gaunt the Dark Lord himself in the early days, and he’d lost his position as the Head of the Wizengamot. Every year, he sought help from the International Confederation of Wizards, but he had to be careful in slandering Gaunt, lest he lose yet another avenue of aid. Allies had done everything they could to open people’s eyes—all to no avail. People didn’t want to open their eyes. The truth was as bright as a midday sun, and no one wanted to look it dead on.

Tied hands, Sirius thought.

He didn’t like politics. He’d taken no part in them for as much of his life as possible, but Sirius was a Black, born and bred, and he despised having his hands tied, doing nothing. He grew up surrounded by witches and wizards who made it their business to play the Ministry, toying with their strings until they skipped to their tune. He knew the game, and twelve years in Azkaban had done little to diminish the weight behind the name of Black. With a bit of effort, he could throw it around better than his daughter could.

In this way, Sirius found himself strolling the hallway of the Ministry on a Thursday afternoon, on his way to an impromptu meeting with the head of the D.M.L.E.

He found Amelia Bones seated behind her desk, making efficient progress through an obscene pile of paperwork. Even as she worked—hands moving like lightning from quill to stamp to parchment and back again—Sirius watched folded notes fly through the open transom and continue to stack themselves upon the teetering inbox pile.

“Black,” Madam Bones said without looking up.

“Amelia!” Sirius replied, sweeping into an exaggerated bow. “It’s been too long! I think last I saw you, you were deciding if I should go back to rotting in prison.”

The witch’s eye twitched. She was a stern woman, cut from the same tartan cloth as McGonagall—without the nurturing urge that sent Minerva to Hogwarts and kept Bones here, heading the Aurory. Her monocle flashed when she finally raised her head, and Sirius detected the faintest bit of softening around her pressed lips. He’d known her sister, Abigail, in school, and had met Amelia more than once in his youth. He always made it his business to get the older witch to laugh—and never really succeeded.

“My assistant assures me your need for a meeting is urgent.”

Of course he did. Sirius had shoved half a dozen galleons into the greasy little man’s grasping hands yesterday at the pub, and had waited for news. “Nothing terribly pressing. I promise, I’ll be out of your hair before you know it,” Sirius assured her, inviting himself to sit on the wooden bench set before her intimidating desk. He pondered why she didn’t have bloody chairs—until he noted the rings recessed into the floor, perfect for attaching the chains of prisoners’ fetters.

He grimaced.

“Why are you here, Mr. Black?”

Sirius appreciated Bones’ forthright manner, especially when so many other people in her position wanted to mince words and play games.

“I mean to bend your ear about the upcoming election for Minister.”

Bones huffed. “That isn’t until the end of the year, as you well know.”

“Course. But candidates have to put their names forward by Mabon, and that isn’t nearly so far away.”

She caught on to his purpose then, her hands stopping their endless, easy rhythm as she fixed Sirius with a gimlet eye. It was common knowledge prospective Ministers usually came from two of the government’s sectors, either the Department of International Magical Cooperation or the Department of Magical Law Enforcement. Outliers existed, and people outside of the Ministry could get pushed for candidacy if they had enough support, but a usual shoo-in for nomination was always head of the D.M.L.E.

“Don’t waste my time,” Bones said. She picked up her stamp and swung it with some force on the next sheet of parchment. It rolled up and scampered away.

“Who’s wasting time?” Sirius held his hands up and open. “Here I am, just making conversation. Have any thoughts on who’s running this year, Madam Bones?”

“You’d have made for a poor Slytherin,” she informed him. “Your brother was much better at appearing guileless.”

The remark about Regulus stung. The poor, dead bastard.

“Fair enough. I’ll be honest with you, Madam Bones—Amelia. If anyone asks, I came in to talk about my goddaughter’s pending case, but I mean to speak with you about running for Minister.”

Bones retrieved her wand and fired a silent spell at the door, sealing both it and the transom above. Little purple notes began to pile up outside the frosted glass immediately. “You’d be better off asking for the Potter girl’s amnesty,” she retorted, sliding her wand back into the pocket of her robes. “For all the good it will do you.”

“Well, if you’re offering—.”

“Mr. Black, I have a demanding schedule. If you intend to dither about—.”

Merlin’s arse, he groused in his own thoughts. “Right. So you’re not looking to run, then? Why’s that? Content to have Gaunt run things?” Sirius lowered his voice. “You’re not daft, Amelia. You have an idea of what he is, even if you dare not say it aloud.”

Her eyes cut toward the door again, the to Sirius, narrowing. “It’s a fool’s errand to run against him. At the last election, he swept the Wizengamot. He was unopposed because the lad who’d put his name in suddenly got…cold feet.”

“You’re no green toadie about to be run off by threats, idle or not.”

“No,” Bones agreed. “But I strive to keep both my department and the Ministry as a whole running as efficiently as possible. There’s a plethora of immediate dangers out there, Mr. Black.” She pointed at the stack of parchment waiting to be processed. “Causing problems won’t help me address them.”

Sirius fidgeted on the bench, clasping his rough hands together between his knees. He wasn’t getting anywhere. He needed to try something else. “My best mate was an Auror, you know?”

Some of the tension in Bones’ shoulders relented, regret flicking through her lined eyes. “Yes. I remember Mr. Potter well.”

“He told me how you lot were taught a bit of emergency triage, just in case. You never know what you’ll be walking into as an Auror, and it was always possible to come across someone too hurt to make it to Mungo’s. So James told me the first thing you had to do was stop the bleeding. It was the most…immediate danger.”

Sirius tipped his head toward her work.

“In the end, it wasn’t the bleeding they had to worry about so much as infection. Muggle or wizard, if there’s dirt behind the wound, it doesn’t matter if you seal it up and stop the bleeding; it’s going to fester. It’s going to rot and kill you.”

Bones grimaced, her nostrils flaring, though she didn’t look away. Sirius leaned forward so he could press his hand onto the surface of her desk.

“They arrested my goddaughter,” he said, his voice low and steady, thick with anger. “A fourteen-year-old girl. They arrested her under absurd charges and threw her in an Azkaban holding cell for three days.”

The witch startled, almost unseating her monocle. “That’s not protocol,” she snapped. “I have no knowledge of this!”

Sirius leaned back, keeping his expression aloof despite the frustration gleaming in his eyes. “That’s the kind of Ministry Gaunt runs. It’s his doll house, and he treats you all like his puppets, moving you how he likes. Imagine what else could be happening around you without your knowledge.”

“All right,” Madam Bones relented. “Yes, I see your point. It doesn’t negate mine, however. Even if I were inclined to entertain the idea, a competitor can’t win against Gaunt. Not with the Wizengamot as it is.”

“What if I told you there were to be…waves? A healthy jolt of reconsideration among the voters?”

Brow rising, Bones quickly said, “I’ll hear nothing to do with any form of insurrection or outside group moving against Ministry officials, Mr. Black. Not a word.”

“You’re no fun, are you, Amelia?” Sirius stuck out his lower lip. “A bit of mayhem is good for the soul.”

“So it may be, but not in my hearing range.” He suspected Bones treated with the Order on occasion, but only in the strictest of confidences, as it’d mean her job and most likely her head if Gaunt could prove she’d anything to do with Dumbledore’s group. As far as she knew, the Order of the Phoenix didn’t exist.

“This has nothing to do with anybody other than a private citizen making polite inquiries and promoting the benefits of a new Minister,” Sirius told her. He didn’t roll his eyes, but it was a near thing. “It’d be nice to see a different face in the office, wouldn’t it? Maybe a few less of those ugly pins about the department? Gaudy gold things.”

The corner of Bones’ mouth twitched in a half-smile. Oh, Sirius could only guess at how it must rankle a no-nonsense, rule-stickler like Amelia Bones for the Guardians of the Magical Right to infiltrate her Aurory and form weaknesses in the ranks. Gaunt had spies in every corner of the Ministry, like a pervasive weed with roots reaching far past its perceived limits.

“I make no promises,” Bones finally replied. “I need time to consider it, but I cannot disagree with you, Mr. Black. It would be nice to see someone else as Minister, and if no one else is willing to try…so be it.”

Sirius decided it best he leave her with her thoughts before he annoyed her into changing her mind. “It’s nice to see good people still in the Ministry.”

“There are no good people in the Ministry,” Bones corrected him, a heavy solemnity replacing her pensive mood. She returned her attention to work before her, and like Sisyphus, started in once more. “Only those who want to do what’s right and those who don’t. Good day, Mr. Black.”

Sirius excused himself for her office. The door shut behind him with a click.


A/N:

Hermione: “I want to overthrow the government.”

Sirius: “Ha, good one.”

Hermione: “…”

Sirius: “…Oh no.”

Chapter 233: for bravery

Chapter Text

ccxxxiii. for bravery

 

The sun beat against Harriet’s legs where they stuck out beneath the shade of the rangy, umbrella-like shrubbery.

She laid on her back on the warm earth, her hair spilling across the dry grass, hearing the insects buzz in the undergrowth. She wore a T-shirt and a pair of short trousers, her feet bare and warm in the direct light. Movement stirred beneath her neck as Kevin and Rick debated among themselves the best way to lure and catch the noisy little bugs, and the occasional ripple of water broke the monotony as Livius shifted in the fountain, breaching the surface to sun himself upon the stones.

Harriet turned another page in the old book she read. She squinted at the yellowing paper.

“—the netting, as described in this chapter, may be created with as few or as many runes as the creator wishes to utilize. The weaving is anchored to the golem’s construct and will react when given the proper inertia [See CH. TWO, SECT EIGHT “Defining inertia”, CH. FOUR, SECT TWO, “Keying inertia”]. The concision or complexity of the runes used to form the netting directly relate to the simplicity of the active golem and its set behaviors. Furthermore, the various runes will have different reactions to different materials, and pairing runes [See CH. EIGHT, “The language of rune crafting”] deepens the range of delineation and how variables can be interpreted—.”

A soft hum left Harriet’s mouth as she passed her lower lip through her teeth and nibbled at the dry skin. Considering what she’d read, she set the open book down against her chest and reached up behind her neck, retrieving Rick.

Releassse me, releassse!” Rick complained as he wriggled in her hand.

Calm down,” Harriet sighed as she gently stretched him between her fingers, holding him up so she could see his paler belly. Her mum’s wand was tucked beneath her thigh, and she grabbed it, pointing it at Rick. “Revelio.”

A thin sparkle of magic trickled over the red snake. Tiny runes appeared, glowing through his dusky scales. There weren’t many, but what was there—ehwaz, for movement, kennaz for vitality, ansuz for…communication?—were joined by a different rune Harriet had to look for in the book.

Ger or Ior,” she read. “In the futhorc, symbolizes the year, generous harvest, or the world serpent or other snakes.” She scratched her head, wondering why someone would mix the permutations of runes and what that changed. Maybe it was like English in that it often borrowed words from other languages to capture a meaning. Brow furrowed, Harriet let go of Rick—shooing him before he could escape into the open sleeve of her shirt—and instead picked up Kevin, holding him as she had Rick. Repeating the spell revealed the runes on his pale, lime-colored belly, and they were all the same—aside from the addition of tiwaz.

Harriet flipped through the book. “Tiwaz—the rune of Tyr. For bravery,” she read aloud. She eyed the little green snake attacking her finger for her manhandling. “Huh.”

She didn’t want to admit it, but she found studying this information fascinating. It was like a big puzzle she couldn’t make heads or tails of until she figured out enough of the pieces, and her brain filled in the missing parts. Harriet hated thinking anything Slytherin assigned her was interesting. She wanted anything he considered worthy of pursuit to be boring or horrible, thereby associating what Slytherin taught as boring or horrible too—but the truth was Harriet enjoyed the reading insofar as anyone enjoyed lengthy, complex textbooks.

She didn’t know how to feel about that.

Slow, unhurried footsteps crunching through the dry grass turned Harriet’s head. She grimaced, thinking it might be Sirius or Remus coming to check on her again; the pair of them had turned into right ninnies, looking at her like she might bloody explode or break or—Harriet didn’t know. She just wanted to be left alone. She peered beneath the branches, prepared to hide, but it was only Ron.

He had a tatty old Quaffle in his hands and looked as if he’d been tossing it up in the air when he’d spotted Livius swimming in the fountain. He gave Livi a wide, cautious berth, which brought him closer to the shrubberies—and Harriet’s legs sticking out from underneath.

“Potter?” he said, quickening his pace. “Potter! You all right?”

“I’m fine.”

He blinked, staring. “Er—what’re you doing?”

“What does it look like I’m doing, Weasley?”

“I—dunno?”

Sighing, Harriet grumbled, “I’m hoping the weeds will accept me as one of their own,” but Weasley didn’t find humor in what she’d said. “I’m reading.”

“Oh.” Weasley shuffled from one foot to the other. “Want to pass the Quaffle around?”

Really, Harriet had nothing better to do aside from study Slytherin’s books and exist in existential dread over her approaching trial, so she got up and swiped the grass from her short trousers, leaving the snakes with her things. She and Ron found a suitable place in the garden, and he tossed the Quaffle to her, Harriet returning it with a lazy overhand throw.

“Why aren’t you out here with Longbottom?” she asked him after a couple of minutes. “Does his fat head not fit through the garden door?”

Instead of coming to Neville’s defense, Ron gave his shoulders an uncomfortable shrug.

Harriet had noticed Longbottom and Weasley didn’t seem as close as they used to, and that it’d been a long time since she’d last seen the pair together without the buffer of Finnigan or Thomas or one of his brothers between them. “Are you still brassed off over that Tournament shite?”

“I’m not brassed off at anyone,” he argued.

“So you’re just what? Not talking?”

He didn’t reply immediately. Harriet didn’t think he’d reply at all, given his mulish expression and flushed cheeks, but the topic must have been weighing heavily on his mind, because he burst out, “We just don’t get on like we used to.”

“Find out he’s a prat, did you?”

“No, Neville’s great.” He threw the Quaffle with more force, and Harriet let out an “Oof!” when she caught it. “He just—he doesn’t need me around, does he? He’s got the whole ‘Boy Who Lived’ legend, and that’s all anyone really cares about, innit? I’m his sidekick, and I wouldn’t care so much if Nev didn’t bloody believe it too.”

“He doesn’t.”

“He does, though. He thinks he’s at the center of everything, and he doesn’t get why it might bother a bloke to be considered his hanger-on.”

“That’s rubbish,” Harriet told him. “The only people who care about Longbottom supposedly being the Boy Who Lived are Longbottom and a bunch of arse-kissers not worth your time anyway.”

Ron’s expression turned puzzled, and Harriet wondered what that was about—until she realized she’d called Longbottom supposedly the Boy Who Lived. Bugger.

“What d’you mean by that?”

Harriet rushed to correct herself. “I mean that he has a fat head and I’ve always said that. Why do you care what I mean anyway? I’m just a Slytherin.”

Ron laughed. It was loud and self-effacing, almost nervous. “Some of you lot are all right. Some.”

Most of us are more than just all right,” Harriet retorted with a superior sort of look, fighting a smirk. “Except for Lestrange. He can go get bent.”

“And Vuharith.”

“Vuharith.”

“And Malfoy.”

“Nah. Malfoy’s a big-headed prat like Longbottom, but he means well most of the time. He just runs his mouth.”

They chatted for a time until they grew bored of the Quaffle and Harriet went to retrieve her things and Slytherin’s book. Merlin forbid it got ruined; he’d probably murder her and make it look like an accident. She also scooped up Kevin, Rick, and a sleepy Howard, though Livi wasn’t inclined to return indoors yet. He hissed at her to leave him be, and Harriet huffed, wishing it was so easy for her to do the same when he was in one of his clingy moods.

Ron saw her coming toward the door with her hands full and grimaced. “Why d’you have so many snakes, Potter?”

“No particular reason. Does it matter?”

“I guess not. It’s just—creepy.”

An old hurt prickled in Harriet’s chest, and she suddenly felt smaller, conscious of her ill-fitting clothes stained by the grass, her limbs too skinny, heavy black circles under her dull eyes. Heat poured into her face. “Yeah, I know I’m creepy and weird.”

“What? No, that’s not what I—!”

Harriet pushed by Ron and entered the house, her eyes struggling to adjust to the sudden darkness inside Grimmauld. She heard him clamor after her, not that she turned to look. She took the stairs, intent on going back to her room and sealing herself inside—but when she reached the upper landing, she ran into a cluster of bodies. The twins and Longbottom stood at the railing, whispering, which wouldn’t be that odd—but Elara, Hermione, and Ginny were there as well.

“Ah, there’s our illustrious patron!” George said, grinning widely as Harriet climbed the stairs. He gestured her closer—though Fred’s expression tightened when she saw the snakes in her hands. Harriet had long come to suspect he had a fear of them. She felt rather contrary at the moment, but Harriet still gently tucked her golems away in a pocket and approached.

“What are you lot up to?” she asked as George dragged her to the front of the group, jostling Neville aside. Ron joined them, elbowing his sister to find space, and Elara leaned forward to rest her chin on the top of Harriet’s head so she could see what George held. “What’s that?”

“This, Potter, is one of our newest inventions. We’re calling it the Extendable Ear!”

He handed over the pink, fleshy thing—and Harriet almost dropped it when she turned the object around and saw the ear. It looked and felt quite real except for the long tube-like structure attached to the back, held at the end by George. “Did you have to make it feel real, too? Urgh.”

The twins chuckled, and Longbottom told her not to be a baby.

“Whatever. What’s it for? What’re you doing with it?”

“It’s for listening! And the fleshy feel helps it hold the Charm, watch—.”

George took the ear from her and tossed it down the stairwell below, still holding the other end. She noticed the tube stretched, and he had to give it a hard swing to knock the ear toward the steps into the basement. He twisted a green dial on the ear’s other end, and the whole ear faded under a shoddy Disillusionment Charm.

“There we are. We’re still working on how to get the listening part to wriggle where we want it to go, but—here!” He offered her the end of the tube. “We’ve been having a bit of a listen to what the Order’s on about in the dining room.”

Harriet side-eyed the Extendable Ear before taking hold of it. “You know what they say about eavesdroppers.”

“They hear all the best gossip?”

“Hardly.” Harriet went to put the end in her own ear when Hermione stopped her.

“Here, clean it first! George just had that in—.”

“Ugh! I don’t want to share ear wax, Weasley—!”

“Picky, picky.”

Elara sent a Scourgify at the thing, and Harriet inserted the tube into her ear. A sudden dizziness overcame her as the noise adjusted, but it passed in a moment, and the echoing ring coming from the other side turned into the scuff and chime of dishes, joined by voices.

—cycling through pins again,” someone said. Snape, she thought, recognizing that deep, drawling baritone anywhere. “Which isn’t entirely unexpected, though he has been springing these new circulations on his followers more frequently. It’s increasingly difficult for me to find suitable candidates to Polyjuice as to gather information from his camp….

That is just as well, Professor Dumbledore replied, sounding thoughtful. “We will need to concentrate our efforts on securing another agent for the Minister’s cabinet—.”

Static interrupted, and Harriet winced. Someone must have walked by the door, their footsteps like massive drum beats booming in her head.

“—concerns in the guard rotation—.”

“—his interest should be focused on the election, but in these last weeks, those around him can only report a sudden obsession with the Department of Myst—.”

“Fucking hell,” Harriet grumbled when the person passed by the door again, and she pulled the tube out, rubbing at her ear. “Someone’s pacing down there, and it’s like getting punched in the head.”

Fred took the end and began fussing with it. “Yeah, it’s just a prototype still with a few kinks we need to hammer out. But me and Georgie have some great things to show you later!”

“It’s not those sick boxes, is it?” Hermione demanded. “I’m of half a mind to report you to Professor McGonagall for those!”

“They’re just sweets, Granger. Lay off…”

“Sweets that make you ill! You have those, those Vomit Pears or whatever they are! Fever Fungus!”

“Fever Fudge, thank you very much. Don’t think Fever Fungus would sell would it, George?”

“Not at all, Fred.”

“Maybe a Muddling Mushroom?”

“Toasty Toadstools?”

“Silly Psilocybin,” Longbottom put in, grinning.

“Doubt anyone would know what to do with that,” George laughed.

“What’s psilocybin?” a puzzled Ginny asked.

“Look what you’ve done, Nev. You’re corrupting the youth—.”

Movement stirred downstairs, the old floorboards shifting and groaning as bodies started moving in the basement.

“Oh, shite—!”

Fred frantically started reeling the Extendable Ear in. A shadow surged out of the kitchen, and their group quickly leaned away from the railing. Unfortunately, they didn’t move before Harriet spied familiar billowing black robes and suspicious face. The stairs creaked.

“Merlin’s arse—! Go!”

The others scattered farther up the steps, but Harriet remained where she was, leaning her elbow on the balustrade in a bid to appear casual. She didn’t know how successful she was, but when Snape climbed the last step, he found her standing there alone, her friends long gone.

The Potions Master slowed, his eyes narrowed as he studied Harriet. His gaze flicked once toward the next level of stairs, but he seemingly had no interest in chasing the others. “What are you up to, girl?”

“Nothing,” she replied, the picture of innocence. “I live here, can’t I stand wherever I want?”

Below, she could hear the Order members exiting the basement at a more sedate pace. Most would probably head for the front door, though some would stay for Mrs. Weasley’s excellent cooking. Harriet didn’t have much of an appetite these days, but she could appreciate the smell wafting up from the kitchen.

Snape noted the book tucked under her arm. “Have you finished that yet?”

“No, not quite.”

She studied his reaction, but it was easier to read tea leaves than it was Snape’s expression. Stoic git. “He’ll be expecting a letter from you soon.”

Harriet knew that, and she muttered exactly where she thought Professor Slytherin could shove his bloody letter. Snape either didn’t hear or pretended he didn’t, opting instead to come a few steps closer to Harriet. She frowned, having to crane her neck to look up in the looming wizard’s face. The furrow between Snape’s brows deepened as he stared at her, his black eyes flat and steely, letting in none of the light thrown by the gas lamps.

Snape blinked, then swept to one side. “Go have your lunch.”

“I’m not hungry.”

“Go eat anyway.”

Harriet rolled her eyes, though she didn’t protest further, too tired to fight the direction. She shoved off the railing and went to pass Snape, when his hand flashed out and caught her loosely by the wrist, stilling her movement. Harriet looked up at him, confused.

Snape let her go as if burned, clearing his throat. “Give me those wretched snakes before you give Mrs. Weasley a heart-attack.”

Harriet scoffed. “She raised Fred and George. I don’t think a few snakes would faze her.” Nonetheless, she reached into her pocket and pulled out her motley nest of false serpents, and unlike Fred or most of her friends, Snape showed no hesitation in accepting them. He didn’t even flinch when Kevin sank his teeth into his pale skin.

The snakes disappeared into one of his voluminous pockets. Harriet knew she’d get them back after practice later.

“Go.”

Harriet tromped back down the stairs, leaving Snape on the landing to silently watch her as she left. She didn’t see him frown, worry shadowing the severe man’s sallow complexion like a delicate veil. She didn’t see his fists clench—and she didn’t see the Confringo that reduced one fleshy ear on a string into ashes.

Chapter 234: a new idea

Chapter Text

ccxxxiv. a new idea

 

The long, interminable days stretched on without word of Harriet’s pending trial.

They knew it would be soon. In the Muggle world, these things could take years, cases pending for months and months on end until they came to the docket—but the Wizarding world was different, for better or worse. Harriet’s fate would be decided before summer’s end. They just didn’t know the day.

Half the residents of the house were unbothered by the wait. To them, the trial existed as a banal fact; the sky was blue, grass was green, Harriet Potter would go on trial for murder. The outcome or thought thereof didn’t impact them in fundamental ways.

For the other residents, it keened as wildly as a death knell—silent, but no less piercing as it shook in their very bones. Hermione hated the inevitability of it more than anything, more than the sheer injustice or stupidity involved. It did not matter where they looked, which laws they invoked, which amendments they cited; Harriet would stand trial.

She would stand trial before a Wizengamot loyal to Marvolo Gaunt.

Sirius and Remus were worried. They pretended not to be, the former making casual, blase remarks about future holidays and asking Harriet if she was looking forward to returning to the summer Quidditch league. Remus kept up a steady stream of interest in her studies, encouraging her to stay focused on schoolwork. All the while, Hermione saw their expressions tense when they thought no one was aware. Sirius spent an inordinate amount of time in conversation with Nicolas Flamel when the old alchemist could spare the time, and Remus kept making tea. That wouldn’t be such an oddity if not for the fact that he could have four or five cups of it already sitting on the table or desk and still go back for another.

Harriet was simply drained. Hermione wasn’t a doctor, but it seemed her best friend suffered from shock or some form of post-traumatic stress. She would have sharp moments of lucidity where she’d be herself—vivid, jocular, cheeky—followed by longer periods of languor, as if exhaustion had taken the legs out from under her without letting her mind shut off. Harriet would stare into the distance, blank, unseeing, and weakly stir only after being prompted several times. She had something on her mind—something heavier than the death of Terry or Voldemort’s return—but she wouldn’t share.

Hermione herself had much on her mind. It was one thing to make plans in which she could theoretically sway the agendas of Wizengamot families to vote for someone other than Gaunt and quite another to execute it.

Sirius had it on good authority Amelia Bones would be putting her name forward as a running candidate that Mabon. As far as choices for Minister went, Bones wasn’t bad, in Hermione’s opinion. She had a solid background in the Ministry, was pure-blooded, and well-respected among the voting Houses. They could do worse. She wouldn’t make waves, but finding someone to unseat Gaunt wasn’t about waves; it was about being steadfast, someone with a hard enough head and solid bearing to withstand the sheer upheaval that would have to happen to root out the Guardians of the Magical Right. A future Minister could enact change so long as Bones helped the Ministry survive.

Hermione grumbled to herself about putting the horse before the carriage yet again. Having an alternate candidate wouldn’t matter a whit if she couldn’t convince people to change their votes, and Hermione kept getting forcibly reminded how very little presence she held in the Wizarding world. She wrote letters, attempting to use what scraps of Slytherin charm and guile she could muster, but most of the Houses had no interest in listening to the Muggleborn ward of the Black family. Those who decided to return her letters at all usually did so with scoffing dismissals.

Feeling defeated after reading the latest letter—from House Clagg, who at least humored Hermione with a polite response—Hermione flopped on her bed, disturbing Crookshanks. She reached out to the Kneazle and rubbed her fingers along his ginger head.

“I must be going about this the wrong way,” she muttered, her familiar turning his large, golden eyes on her. “If I can’t even get a conversation out of House Clagg, who control one measly vote and are already prone to vote against Gaunt, what use is my plan at all? There must be another way to go about this….”

Hermione rolled to her back again, glowering at the ceiling as she folded her hands against her middle. Absolutely infuriating. She could see the end goal and exactly how the pegs should slot themselves, but the unfortunate pegs in her plans were people with their thoughts, wills, aspirations, and political agendas. It has always been a failing of Hermione’s, ever since childhood, to lack a certain grasp of empathy. Her parents used to—.

She sucked on her teeth, her cheek twitching.

No matter the odds stacked against her, no matter how she may break in the quiet, candlelit solitude of her room, Hermione wouldn’t admit defeat. She was not going to wash her hands of anything and just—just thumb her nose from the sidelines! Terry was dead, people were dying, and Gaunt wanted to send her best friend to prison for the rest of her life—.

No, Hermione was not going to let a few pompous windbags change her mind. What she could change were her tactics, even if she wasn’t quite sure how to go about it.

Sometimes, Hermione desperately wished someone else would take this burden from her. Someone older, someone who had all the answers, while Hermione could simply be sixteen and worry about inane, teenage nonsense. It wouldn’t happen. Hermione was almost an adult herself—one year off from the age of majority in the Wizarding world—and no one else was going to do a single thing if not forced into action. She had no choice. None of them did.

We need something more. It’s not enough. I could convince a dozen House Claggs for all the good it will do us in the end. We need—.

Like a shot, Hermione sat up in her bed. The motion was so fast it startled Crookshanks, who hissed and stole away from her, diving for safety under the bed. Hermione scrambled to stand and dashed for her desk.

The idea lit through her brain as fast as a lightning flash, connecting the thinnest of threads together into a barely comprehensible picture, but if she connected the lines just so, if she played her hand just right—.

Hermione grabbed the first sheet of empty parchment she could lay her hands on and started to write with a fury.

 

xXx

 

The next afternoon, Hermione sat outside a Muggle cafe, sipping a terrible latte.

It was one of those popular coffee houses that had sprung up and caught on, and though Hermione could see the draw of convenience, she found they brewed an awful tea. Their coffee was not much better. It was fairly close to Grimmauld however, only a few blocks away, and—more importantly—close to an appointed stop for the Knight Bus.

She could not help how her foot bobbed as she drank and waited. Lying on the ground by her chair’s legs, the shaggy black dog huffed at her, and Hermione stilled.

“Yes, yes, of course,” she muttered, clearing her throat. She couldn’t leave Grimmauld without an escort, necessitating Sirius’ participation this afternoon. The danger in the middle of a busy Muggle street was nominal, but a nominal risk did not amount to zero risk. After all, the chance of Harriet being arrested and nabbed off a busy platform not three yards from her godfather had been nominal.

Hermione’s foot bobbed again.

After another fifteen minutes or so, a familiar blond head appeared in the crowd.

Draco Malfoy did not look at all happy to be walking along a Muggle street, but he dressed appropriately—if a little fussily for it being summertime—and navigated the road with none of the gawking gaucheness other wizards and witches were prone to exhibit. He flinched when the larger lorries trundled by, though, apparently unconvinced they wouldn’t jump the kerb onto the pavement.

Honestly, after having seen how the Knight Bus drove, Hermione didn’t blame him.

She almost raised an impatient hand to beckon him closer, but she reeled in the instinct and waited, Sirius giving her trainer a small nip to stop its increased bouncing. Malfoy neared and eyed the sign, then spotted Hermione. He hurried over.

“Granger,” he acknowledged, sliding into the chair across from her. The position placed him directly in the sun, and given his black jacket and shirt, his face took on an immediate flushed hue. “Wretchedly hot out here. How do the Muggles make do without Cooling Charms?”

Hermione lifted one brow and wordlessly gave the umbrella propped between them a small push. It didn’t sit quite level in the base beneath the table, so it wobbled and rotated, pouring shade over Draco.

“Oh.”

“Oh,” Hermione mimicked, though she smiled. “Thank you for coming.”

He made a show of straightening his sleeves and puffing out his chest. “Of course,” he said in a passable pure-blood drawl. Hermione nearly kicked him under the table. “Your letter said it was important and best not to mention where it could be intercepted. I do hope you’re not wasting my time, Granger. I’m very busy this summer and need to get back soon.”

Hermione traced a bead of condensation along the side of her plastic cup. “He’s staying at your house, isn’t he?”

The air went out of Draco’s bluster as his eyes widened, and Hermione found herself sitting across the table from a frightened teenager instead of a handsome young man. She hadn’t said the name—hadn’t even uttered one of those insipid pseudonyms—but Draco had still startled as if struck. “I haven’t a clue what you’re talking about.”

“Mmm.” She didn’t push the subject but felt her caution validated. Truly, she’d been more worried about Gaunt seizing post at Malfoy Manor, but it occurred to her that of the few followers Harriet indicated returned in the graveyard, the Malfoys were by far the richest and best appointed. They didn’t know much about Tom Riddle, but they did know all his incarnations enjoyed comfortable, parasitic lifestyles off the affluent.

“I won’t keep you long. What I truly wish is for you to arrange a meeting between me and your dad.”

Draco blinked, confused. “Father?” His nose scrunched. “Why in the world would you want to talk to him?”

“What I have to say to him is important, and we cannot afford for it to reach Gaunt’s ears.” Hermione laid her hands on the table and exhaled. This was a long shot, and yet she had to ask. Had to try. “I believe Lucius and I can help one another if he’s willing to listen.”

“Granger, I don’t, I can’t say—.” Draco took a flustered breath, and Hermione saw the muscles of his jaw twitch as he sought the right words. “I couldn’t say if he’d come. I couldn’t say if he’d listen. It isn’t a…good time, right now.”

“I can only ask you forward my request. That’s all.” Hermione lifted one of her hands to knead at her temple, pressing down with her thumb and forefinger as if she could find the root of her headache and pluck it right out of her skull. There was no point in writing Malfoy senior; he would bin it directly if Gaunt didn’t get his sticky fingers on it first. She needed him to listen, to really bloody listen to her. Just for a minute. If she could have that minute—.

Draco watched Hermione, his pale eyes skimming over her face, the exhausted slouch of her shoulders, the old ink staining her small hands. “You look a fright, Granger,” he said.

“Thank you,” she replied, opening her eyes to glare.

He grinned, all white teeth and arrogant smugness, but the look faded fast, replaced again by a tired, hollowed-out look behind his eyes. There was a certain dryness to his faultless skin as if he’d spent quite a bit of time with his head in his hands, wearily rubbing at his face.

“I’m sorry about Boot.”

The reminder opened already weeping wounds around Hermione’s heart as she again recalled how she’d never see Terry again, never share an afternoon listening to his insightful mind, never again feel that rush when his lips would press against her cheek and her stomach would twirl in her middle. It wasn’t fair. It simply wasn’t fair.

Hermione’s face crumpled, and Draco reached a tentative hand across the table to lay over hers.

“You didn’t even like Terry,” she managed to say in a steady voice, only sniffing once. He hurried to find a handkerchief and handed it over, Hermione dabbing at her nose.

“Of course I didn’t, but not liking a bloke doesn’t mean I wanted him dead, for Merlin’s sake.” His hand lingered on her own for another minute, offering silent comfort before he withdrew, clearing his throat. “I have to get back. With how awful that bus driver is, I need time to ensure I return in one piece.”

His scathing account of the Knight Bus earned a weak twitch from Hermione’s lips. She nodded.

“Do you need an escort home, Granger? It’s not safe, not even in Muggle London.”

“No.” She tipped her head downward, and Draco peered at the shaggy dog leering up at him. “I have it covered.”

“Ah,” was all Malfoy said, straightening his buttoned jacket. “I’ll see if I can pass your message along, but I…he may not listen.”

“I know.”

Draco swallowed and raised his head, peering in the direction of the magical bus stop. Hermione thought he looked as if he didn’t want to return, as if he would rather sit here and melt in the Muggle sunshine than go home. His pale hands curled into fists at his side, and he swallowed, sweat dotting his brow.

“I’ll see you later, Granger.”

“See you soon, Draco.”

 

xXx

 

That evening, Hermione had her window open to allow the cooler air into her bedroom. A sleek black owl swept inside, rushing to drop a single, tiny scroll into Hermione’s waiting hands.

When she unraveled it, she found only a date, a time, and a place.

Hermione memorized it before setting the scroll aflame. The resulting light danced over her relieved smile.


A/N:

Draco, excited: “I got your letter. You need me~?”

Hermione: “I want your dad.”

Draco, not excited: “This is not how I expected this conversation to go.

Chapter 235: training pains

Chapter Text

ccxxxv. training pains

 

Elara turned the rock over in her hand, feeling the weight tug at her glove. Over and over she let it revolve beneath her thumb—until her arm lashed forward, and she threw the stone

Harriet’s Transfigured wooden sword whistled through the air and swatted the rock, sending it clattering to the ground. Elara succeeded in breaking the other witch’s concentration, however, as her Shield Charm wavered and Hermione’s Stinging Hex bounced on her thigh.

“Ow—hell!” Harriet cursed, hopping in place.

The trio had spent more than half an hour in the garden, insisting on getting Harriet to do something other than stare at the walls. They’d finally settled on supplementing her recent training. Though Harriet had managed to block half the spells and small stones flying her way, half of the projectiles had still found their mark, leaving Harriet a bit battered in appearance. “This is so much harder than Snape makes it look, the wanker!”

Hermione lowered her wand and nibbled on her lip. The light faded from the sky, but the garden remained warm, now littered with gray stones and scorch marks. Elara smelt burning leaves. “I don’t understand why the sword. Why not a shield? A buckler, perhaps?”

Harriet shook her head as she dabbed at the mark left by one of the hexes, her nose wrinkling. “No, it’s too big. There’s too much—what would you call it? Drag? I asked Snape the same thing and he let me try it out. It pulls on the spell a lot more than the sword does and doesn’t have the right momentum, so it’s slow. That and it makes big ruddy blind spots if it drifts too close. Snape hit it with a Concussive Blast and almost brained me.”

Through an open window, laughter grated against Elara’s ear. Hermione could hear it too, because she turned toward the back of the house and frowned.

“Should we ask Longbottom to help?”

Harriet choked, then sputtered. “Are you having a laugh?”

“No. He’s a better duelist than me or Elara and would give you better practice.”

True or not, Harriet didn’t look happy about it. Elara couldn’t say it pleased her either, the thought of asking Longbottom for assistance. The thought of him being in her house rankled like claws dragging against her back, and Elara had already had to take a potion for the enamel on her teeth because she’d been grinding them so much in the last weeks. The constant, incessant noise in her home drove her spare.

Whether they liked it or not, it was decided Longbottom should come down to assist—and with him came the twins and the younger Weasleys, the practice session devolving into a spectacle before it even began. Hermione already wore a grimace, regretting having gone upstairs to retrieve them.

Longbottom had a smarmy grin, already holding his wand. From the moment he and the Weasleys learned Grimmauld had the proper wards around it to allow underage magic during the summer, they hadn’t stopped whipping out their wands for the smallest of things, much to Elara’s frustration. It meant enduring a plethora of odd noises at all hours of the night when she already struggled to find sleep. She almost wished Snape still lived there; he would have put the fear of God into the twins and their damn explosions.

“So, you want to duel me, Potter?” Longbottom asked, propping a fist on his hip. The Slytherins had been mocking his pose for years, but the Boy Wonder kept doing it. “What are the rules?”

“I don’t want to duel you,” Harriet replied, impatient. “I need to practice.”

“All right—then, let’s practice.” Longbottom stepped forward, already leaning into a dueling stance when Harriet snapped at him.

“You don’t even know what I’m practicing!” She went on to describe the exercise, gesturing at the little pile of stones they’d gathered, the stones being fairly small to avoid damage. Elara saw the mulish, impatient look in Neville’s eyes and wondered if anything ever penetrated his fat skull.

Fred and George took over the task of throwing the stones. “It’s our job,” they explained. “As Beaters!”

“Don’t aim for my bloody face.”

Hermione came to sit by Elara as Harriet and Longbottom moved to their places. Ginny and Ron sat on the stack of firewood nearby. Both looked as uncertain as Hermione and Elara did.

“I already regret this,” Hermione muttered.

“You had a point about Longbottom being a better duelist,” Elara returned, the words bitter on her tongue. She crossed her arms against her chest, and her fingers dug tightly into her biceps. “But he’s also an idiot.”

Harriet stood facing Longbottom. She stared at him, her face blank, before turning her head in such a manner to force small pops from the bones in her neck. The hair on Elara’s nape stood on end.

Longbottom scowled.

He barely waited before Harriet had the wonky wooden sword in the air again before firing a Disarming Charm. Harriet swatted it aside, the red light curling the long blades of grass. The sword smacked against the first stone, but Harriet stepped aside to avoid the second. Her jaw firmed, green eyes blazing.

Longbottom incanted another spell—then quickly added another. Harriet didn’t bother to block the first; she drove the sword downward into it, used a shield formed against earth to ricochet off the rocks, and ducked the second spell. Suddenly, her hand flicked, lobbing a hex of her own. Longbottom jerked out of the way with a yelp.

“What the hell, Potter! You didn’t say you’d be attacking!”

“What’s the matter, Longbottom?” Harriet taunted. “Aren’t you the one with all the fancy training? You’re always banging on about all the masters you spend your holidays with, and you’ve complained non-bloody-stop about what a waste this summer is. Can’t handle when someone fights back?”

Bitterness leaked around the edges of Harriet’s words like sludge around cobblestones, and the amusement in Longbottom’s expression faded. It was replaced by a bruise when Harriet ignored the next two stones thrown her way to layer two spells against Neville, hurling him to the ground with a hard Knockback Jinx.

“Oi, Potter. Take it easy,” Fred complained. Harriet didn’t answer him. She turned her face, and in the sunlight, Elara thought her eyes flickered strangely, a gleam slanting across the surface through the lenses of her spectacles—.

“What’s the point of all your privilege if you’re this weak—?”

Longbottom fired a curse from the grass, rolling to his feet, and Harriet blocked it with a dramatic sweep of her wand. Her other hand twisted, fingers held out, and the sword knocked another thrown stone back toward George.

They started to fight in earnest. Harriet pulled none of her spells, not as she did when she practiced with Hermione or Elara, and Longbottom volleyed as best as he could. The growing berth between their skillsets had never been so prevalent in class as it was now, with Longbottom crashing into the ground or the woodpile more often than not, dazed and roughed up while Harriet sneered. She gripped her wand so tightly it looked ready to break.

Something is wrong.

Elara couldn’t rightly say what that something was, but it pricked anxiety in her heart. The longer she watched, the faster her heart beat, lurching inside her chest like a bird trapped in a too-small cage—and one look at Hermione showed her expression to be similar.

“The Boy Who Lived,” Harriet snarled, wand twisting. “Don’t make me laugh—.”

Elara jumped to her feet. “That’s enough,” she commanded. No one listened. “I said that’s enough! Harriet. Harriet—!”

CRACK!

Elara smacked into the grass on her back, the air punching from her lungs in a burst. It took a moment for what had happened to catch up with her—the final swing of the sword, the stone connecting with the wooden blade, then with her head.

For God’s sake—!

She struggled to sit up, and the garden swam in a blur of murky colors before settling into stark reality.

“Elara!”

Her brow throbbed with heat. The others crowded around her, and Elara threw out her hand, warding them away. “Just—stop,” she growled. The garden swayed again as she got her feet under her and stood. For an instant, her vision darkened, and Elara feared she might collapse into the dirt again, but then it firmed, and she took a deep breath.

“Black, you need—.”

Don’t tell me what I need!” she yelled. She’d reached her limit for people today—in fact, she’d say she’d far surpassed it. “Just shut up.”

Elara didn’t look for her friends as she turned and stormed toward the house. Idiots, all of them. Including Hermione and Harriet, the former for suggesting Longbottom had any other use aside from wasting oxygen, and the latter for letting herself get so carried away—.

She wanted silence. She wanted to be left alone—.

She probed at her aching face, the place near her left temple stinging. Blood welled warm and slick, trickling through the hair of her brow and threatening to leak into her eye before she angrily swiped it away.

Elara retreated to the conservatory rather than her bedroom, knowing the others would look for her there first. Besides, the temperature stayed cooler in the lower levels of the house, heat rising into the living quarters, and Elara was too frustrated to cast more Cooling Charms. She was too frustrated to cast anything; she threw herself onto a wooden bench by the inner wall and pointed her own wand at her face, trying to cast Episkey, but her hands shook too hard.

Jaw clenched, Elara set her wand aside and yanked off her ruined gloves. She balled them up and pressed them to the wound, closing her eyes. An annoyed exhale escaped her.

What in God’s name was wrong with Harriet? It’d taken considerable coaxing to get her out of her own head and outside in the sunlight, and she’d been reticent to do anything aside from practice. Elara knew her god-sister harbored certain resentments against Longbottom—well-founded resentments, in her opinion—but she’d never acted so brazenly about them. Normally she’d call him an arsehole and be done with it, not sparing him the thought or effort.

The Boy Who Lived. Don’t make me laugh.

That intonation. The lilt and deeper tenor. Who did that remind Elara of—?

The sound of the door creaking had her opening her eyes a sliver, already glaring at whoever dared break her solitude. She forced the contempt from her expression when she saw it was Andromeda. The older Black witch was one of the adults set to watch them that evening.

“The girls said you were hurt, and I saw you come in here.” The door closed with a quiet breath of displaced air, Andromeda’s heels clacking on the solid floor as she approached. She stood in front of Elara and sighed. “Let me see, love.”

Reluctant, Elara pulled her hand and gloves away from her face. Andromeda made a sympathetic noise and probed the injured area while Elara gripped the bench’s armrest, trying not to flinch.

“We’ll need to send for Bruise Balm from the apothecary, but the cut itself won’t scar. The area will be tender; the bone is bruised.”

Elara said nothing as Andromeda retrieved her wand and started to heal the injury. The uncomfortable tugging of skin coming together had tears welling in the corners of her eyes.

She almost didn’t notice when Andromeda stiffened and the tugging paused. Elara opened her eyes again to peer at her, and saw how Andromeda’s gaze had flicked to the side toward Elara’s right. Elara looked down—and yanked her hand away from the rotted, crumbling arm of the bench, curling her trembling fingers into a fist.

Andromeda continued healing, and Elara kept her hands pinned to her chest, shaking. Despair welled as quickly as the blood had, though it dripped cold and sluggish and left an irrevocable stain. The silence hurt worse than any wound.

“I know a witch,” Andromeda said, her voice barely louder than the quiet. “One who could help with that.”

Elara ceased glowering at the floor and glanced up, peering through her lashes.

“The family has always…struggled. Not with your precise problem, but with addiction to Dark magic—or simply addiction in general. Don’t ask me why; I’ve long since stopped demanding Merlin explain why the Blacks are afflicted with such troubles. You’ve undoubtedly heard others call it the Madness, and maybe there’s a measure of truth to it, and maybe not. Maybe it is only the cyclical nature of abuse and negligence manifesting through the ages.”

Elara didn’t respond. Andromeda closed the last of the wound and siphoned away the blood, inspecting her handiwork.

“The woman I know can help. But I won’t take you to her unless you agree to see a mind healer.”

The answering grimace came at once. “I’m not mad.”

“I never said you were.” Andromeda tucked the loose hair that had come free from its tie behind Elara’s ear. “You don’t have to be mad to see a mind healer. It’s their job to help—.”

“I don’t want their help!”

“Then I won’t take you to the witch.” Andromeda’s sharp retort silenced Elara’s protests. Oh, the older woman already knew how badly Elara wanted this. She would do anything to quiet the insidious impulse coiling in her veins and to understand her curse. She lived in fear it wouldn’t be an armrest next time. She’d thoughtlessly touch someone and—.

“Do we have an agreement?”

Frowning, Elara nodded.

Andromeda cleaned the rest of the blood, and Elara shoved her hands back into her stained gloves. Without another word, she rose and left the other witch standing there, leaving the conservatory. The stairs creaked under her weight as she climbed them, her mood still black but strangely hopeful, her thoughts so muddled she almost slammed into the person standing in front of her bedroom door.

“Elara,” Harriet said, reaching out to clasp her sleeve. “Are you all right? I’m so sorry. I didn’t—I dunno what came over me.”

Elara stared at her—stared and studied her eyes, finding them clear and green and slightly damp with distress. “I’m fine,” she said, voice soft. Relief eased through her, and Elara needed time to examine why that was. Relief? Relief for what? What was she not realizing? “I’d just like to be alone until dinner.”

Harriet didn’t move at first, but then she did, sliding her feet against the landing as she got out of the way. “Sorry,” she mumbled again, bowing her head. She darted back into her own room, and Elara almost called her back—but she didn’t. Instead, she opened the door to her bedroom, and as she stepped inside, all she could think about was that peculiar glimmer she’d seen in the garden.

What’s the point of all your privilege if you’re this weak—.

The door clicked shut.

Chapter 236: a corridor below

Chapter Text

ccxxxvi. a corridor below

 

After the Longbottom incident, a new rule was implemented at Grimmauld: no wands.

Harriet didn’t know what aggravated her more—the fact that the git’s smug face had set her off, or the fact that Sirius and Remus were quite serious about no one under the age of twenty using magic in the house. It meant a drastic reduction of noise during the day and night, but also resulted in all of them doing chores when they inevitably tried to subvert the rule. Mrs. Weasley had the twins scrubbing the downstairs loo by hand. Twice. Harriet had to beat dust from the curtains in the drawing room, and Elara had to sweep every inch of the stairwell.

Harriet mostly kept to the quiet of her room or joined Hermione in the study. If she wandered elsewhere, she found Longbottom haunting her steps. Not as he had in their second-year, like an obsessive stalker, but as if he wanted to get her alone to listen to something he had to say. Naturally, Harriet made certain to stay away from him lest she have another fit.

She didn’t know why sparring with Longbottom had provoked such a reaction from her. Frankly, thinking about it embarrassed her. A lot of what she’d learned over the years in regard to dueling was the importance of control; she could almost hear the echo of Snape’s drawl in her head, or Mr. Flamel’s patient explanations. Both had extolled how important it was to keep her wits about her, and Harriet definitely hadn’t in the garden. She was glad neither wizard had seen her act so stupidly.

She sat on her chair at her desk with her legs pulled up with her, her knees folded against her chest. She perched her chin on them, her mouth set in a crooked grimace, still thinking about their fight. The weather slunk with particular heat that evening, the sunlight heavy and thick as mist where it swaddled the whole of London in its tenacious warmth. Thick orange beams shone through the window and sliced across the floor, half the room dark, the other half seemingly on fire.

Harriet remained on her chair, glowering at the fresh sheet of parchment spread atop her desk and the waiting inkwell. She was meant to be writing a letter. She knew Slytherin wanted one—had been told half a dozen times by Snape and even twice by Professor Dumbledore. Neither Snape nor Dumbledore was used to saying things twice, but Harriet still hadn’t written the blasted letter.

She kept thinking of Longbottom and that strange, hateful rush blazing in her veins.

Restless, Harriet dropped her bare feet to the floor and started to pace. Her snakes made for lazy observers, content to bask in the sun and simply follow her with sharp flicks of their tongues. Harriet wondered what they tasted of her mood, because she couldn’t rightly say what it was herself. Disoriented. Angry. Despondent.

What does it matter? It doesn ’t. It doesn’t matter at all.

She went to the window and opened it, the rails screeching in the track. Not a whit of air blew inside, and Harriet shut her eyes against the stifling warmth. The bangle at her wrist glimmered, almost beautiful in how it caught the light, but Harriet thought it an ugly, dehumanizing thing. Without another thought, she pried it over her hand as Moody implied she could, letting it hit the floor. She pulled at the magic nestled in her middle and let it shift her form, a mussed crow jumping onto the open window sill. Harriet beat her wings and flew upward to the roof.

She landed on one of the dormers, hopping, then transformed, wincing at the scalding feel of the shingles under her toes. She didn’t quite have the control over her Anigmagus form that Elara or Sirius did. Old memories of Hermione and Elara chatting about the skill returned to her, talking about how its difficulty increased the farther one’s form took them from human. Avian was decidedly farther than canine—though Harriet had no bloody clue how Rita Skeeter managed. Ruddy insect.

She sat in the shadow of the chimney where the roof wasn’t so hot, legs sprawled in front of herself, savoring the thinnest breeze reaching across the rooftops. Her wrist felt lighter without the bangle weighing it down, but she knew she’d have to put it back on as soon as she returned inside. Escaping it would not be that easy.

Harriet tucked a hand through her fringe, sighing. Sweat prickled against her neck.

“—Podmore’s dead.”

“No—.”

“—found him in—.”

Harriet blinked, turning her head. She could hear voices coming through the window to the attic, opened to ventilate the sweltering rooms. Curious, she eased herself closer to the dormer, sticking to its shadow so she wouldn’t burn, and she could better hear Remus and Sirius as they spoke.

“—Mungo’s aren’t sure how he died exactly, only that it wasn’t quick, and it wasn’t easy.”

“Merlin,” Remus softly sighed. “And there hasn’t been any sign of who—?”

“No. No great fucking green sigil in the sky, if that’s what you mean. Dumbledore’s almost certain it was Wilkes. Or Crouch. He doesn’t believe the other Death Eaters would make the same spectacle in the Muggle world.”

“I’m guessing Severus doesn’t know?”

“Apparently not. Worthless tosser.”

“Sirius—.”

Something creaked, like an old sofa bending under weight thrown on its cushions. “I imagine that Dark Lord cunt is keeping Snape’s nose out of it. Doesn’t matter if he needs men, Snape’s still knee-deep in Dumbledore’s business, and if I was a great Dark wizard twat, I wouldn’t trust the bloke as far as I could throw him. Guess I can’t blame Snape for that, but I can be angry about what’s happening.” Sirius let out a loud, aggravated breath. “Damn Podmore.”

“He was a good man.”

“He was. He didn’t deserve that.” The sofa shifted again, footsteps hollow on the floor. “Ah, fuck, Remus. It’s all so—.” Sirius cut off. “Podmore, all the Muggles. Their Ministry’s making announcements telling them to be careful, and they don’t have a bloody clue what they’re up against. Dozens of Muggles vanishing every week, and Gaunt’s sitting there like the knobhead he is while the rest of us do nothing.”

Their conversation went silent, replaced by the bump and shift of boxes moving. Harriet wagered they were going through the old Black rubbish, a preoccupation for idle, restless hands they’d all taken to doing when they needed distraction. Harriet folded her arms around her legs and leaned her head against the dormer, still out of sight of the window. The sunlight warmed her face, and she knew her cheeks would be sunburned later.

Remus broke the lull, and his voice came out so quiet, Harriet wouldn’t have heard it if he hadn’t been near the window. “I’m worried about Harriet.”

She sat up.

“What? More so than usual?”

“I’m not joking, Sirius. You, of all people, should realize what’s at stake here.”

“Why me ‘of all people?’”

“Because, Merlin’s forbid, what’s to happen if—? I don’t even want to say it aloud—.”

Sirius grunted. “She’s not going to Azkaban.”

“You can’t know that. They’ll have her trial date set any day now. If the verdict—.”

“—comes in guilty, she and the Flamels are leaving for France.”

Remus paused. “You expect her to live on the lam? As a criminal?”

“It’s a damn sight better than that place, but no. Nick and me have been working out a deal. You know the French are sympathetic to Dumbledore’s views? Especially their Ministry and that big woman, what’s her name—?”

“Madame Maxime?”

Sirius snapped his fingers. “Her. Their Ministry’s prepared to offer Harriet and the Flamels asylum for unjust persecution without threat of extradition.”

Remus must have been too surprised to respond, and he wasn’t alone. Harriet hadn’t heard anything about this—not from Sirius, and not from the Flamels. They’d been reticent to discuss the case with her beyond encouraging her to listen to her barrister, Mr. Dirigible, who remained adamant she should say absolutely nothing about Voldemort and play a stupid, gullible victim. He wanted her to appear “harmless” before the court, while the mere thought of pretending weakness in front of Gaunt made Harriet want to vomit.

She hadn’t known about the Muggles dying. She’d met Mr. Podmore before and had found him a gruff, rather shy wizard, but also someone with incredible skill in potions and quite loyal to Professor Dumbledore. It felt surreal to know he was gone without warning.

“The Ministry would have to release her,” Remus said. “If the Wizengamot finds her guilty, she will go directly into custody, and the Ministry will have to accept the asylum order and release her. Gaunt will have to let her go.”

“We won’t give him a bloody choice, if it comes down to it,” Sirius argued. “Harriet will not go to Azkaban. I’ll kill the bastard with my bare hands before I accept that.”

“You know it isn’t as easy as that.”

Sirius laughed—a rough, uneven bark, a defeated exhalation caught in an incredulous net. “I know,” he admitted. “I know.”

Harriet sat in the fading afternoon light and stared off toward London. The sky stretched above, smeared blue and yellow and orange as evening approached—and she wondered what it would be like never to see it again.

 

xXx

 

The floorboards creaked under her trainers.

Harriet stared at the carpet, transfixed by the pattern woven into the fabric and how it seemed to ripple in the thick, putrescent light dripping from the gas lamps. She held herself still, but the floor kept groaning, as did the walls. Dust fluttered in the air.

A shadow moved at the end of the hall, hallowed by the glow coming through the door at his back. The click of hooves echoed.

“There is great evil in this world, and it exists in places we least expect,” the centaur said, blue eyes blazing. “You will always choose to fight it, Harriet Potter, but you will not always win.”

The floor kept creaking—wood snapping, cracking, splintering. She whipped around, gasping, the shadows rippling and pulling between the ruined boards until they massed into a hulking shape. Pale claws skittered across the wallpaper, the house wailing—.

A single golden eye leered from the face of the half-rotted werewolf. Greyback snarled, lips pulling back, then howled.

Harriet turned around and bolted. The centaur had vanished, replaced instead by the hazy silhouette of dragon scales peeling from the ceiling, Harriet ’s trainers seeming to melt as she ran. Fire licked against her shins, and she pushed against it, pushed against the pain ravaging her neck, ran as fast as she could from the beast at her back—.

The door waited. She grabbed it, threw it open—.

She was walking in a cool, dimly lit corridor. Stone and marble comprised its walls and floors, the solid heel of her shining oxfords snapping hard against the surface. Her bespoke cloak tugged at her broad shoulders as she moved, striding with purpose, her gaze fixed upon the door at the corridor ’s end.

It was not a particularly striking door, perhaps unusual in the placement of the knob at the center, a band of aged gold surrounding the outer edge, but otherwise painted black to match the black wall, the knob either gold or brass to match the fixtures for the torches and magelights. It held her attention with a singular focus, and as Harriet got closer, her steps slowing, something about it seemed to loom.

Her hand brushed its surface, large, pale fingers skating over an invisible barrier. Magic as thick as a brick writhed beneath her touch, and it turned upon her like a thousand open eyes, a great monster peering from its dark, shadowy nest.

She touched the wall by the door, her tongue flicking out across her lower lip. She would get inside. This wouldn ’t block her forever, she simply needed—.

“Minister Gaunt.”

A figure had appeared from a crossing passage, garbed in dark navy blue robes with the hood pulled over her head. The brim of the hood was pointed, nearly reminiscent of a bird ’s beak, and magic dripped from it like a veil, obscuring the woman’s visage.

“You’re not meant to be here.”

Harriet lifted her hand from the wall, and the magic disappeared. “My mistake,” she said, unctuous, but her insides practically boiled with rage. She would get inside. She would get inside. They couldn’t stop her forever, how dare—. They couldn’t deny—.

Let me in—LET ME IN—!

“Harriet!”

A hand upon her shoulder yanked Harriet from that dark, cold corridor into the lamp-lit heat of Grimmauld Place. She panted for breath as her gaze snapped from the front door, the knob twisted under her hand, to Remus at her side. The both of them dressed in their night things.

Skeletal hands comprised of cool, moving shadows held tight to her ankles, driving into her flesh like stinging talons. They might have been the only thing keeping her indoors, sparing her from breaking her house arrest.

When had she gotten there? What was she doing? The last Harriet remembered, she’d slipped back inside her bedroom window, tired of listening to Sirius and Remus speculate on her future, and she’d laid down after skipping supper—.

“Harriet?”

Her body trembled, her skin drenched in cold sweat. It darkened the front and back of her old shirt, practically dripping from her face. She tried to turn her head but couldn’t from the pain spearing through her neck.

Moving slowly, almost as if nervous about how she’d react, Remus pried her hand from the door’s knob. Her nails ended in ripped, jagged points as if she’d been clawing at the barrier.

“Let’s get you back to bed, all right?” Remus said, taking a firm hold of her arm. Harriet couldn’t move until Set released her legs, and only then did she lurch into motion, the heaviness of her dream still clouding her mind.

There had been a corridor, a door. A woman in blue.

Had…had Harriet been Gaunt?

Remus saw her back to her room, back to her rumpled sheets and suspicious snakes, Livi’s eyes following them from the darkness below her bed. He tucked her in, and exhaustion gripped Harriet like a clenching fist, the air quick to leave her lungs as she stared at the ceiling above.

Remus said goodnight, and she pretended she didn’t hear him lock the door after he left. She shut her eyes and let sleep take her.

 

xXx

 

As dawn crested the city of London, an owl flew toward the houses of Grimmauld Place. The letter clasped in its beak bore the official seal of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement.


A/N: I think I ’ve mentioned before, the Department of Mysteries is not like it was in canon, and while we’ll get more into those differences later on, suffice it to say Gaunt cannot simply stroll inside.

Chapter 237: the malfoy problem

Chapter Text

ccxxxvii. the malfoy problem

 

Hermione nervously patted her plaited hair for the thousandth time, then forced her hands away. Her teeth dug into her lower lip, and she sighed.

Naturally, Lucius Malfoy would not stoop as low as his son and agree to meet her in a Muggle building; he had opted for a Wizarding establishment in Coventry, outside of London. It was a gentleman’s club, a brick building hidden behind thick wards meant for stuffy lords to find peace from their witches and families, suitably far from the purview of London society. It wasn’t a brothel or the like—Merlin no—but it wasn’t the kind of place a Muggle-born witch felt comfortable walking inside.

Sirius strolled alongside her in his Animagus form as Hermione entered the building, thrusting her shoulders back to appear as if she belonged there. Of course, the host saw right through her and scowled, looking ready to throw her out without a word. Hermione rushed to speak up as he approached.

“I have a meeting with Lord Malfoy,” she said, adopting her best privileged airs, feeling absurd. She must have looked absurd, because the host very nearly rolled his eyes before dipping into the appropriate bow.

“Ah, yes. Lord Malfoy’s guest. He’s been waiting.”

He gestured her toward the corridor, the rest of the grand house quiet and empty. He brought her to a door, leaving her with a sharp word not to wander elsewhere.

Hermione grimaced as he took his leave. “I don’t know who he’s more afraid of peeing on his carpet; me or you.”

Sirius huffed, then nudged her knee with his nose, clearly knowing Hermione was stalling.

“Yes, yes. I’m going.”

She rapped her knuckles on the door twice but didn’t wait for permission to enter. She simply shoved the door in and stepped over the threshold, bracing herself.

It wasn’t a large room, but what it lacked in size, it made up for with auspicious decor and revolting splendor. The wood paneling had the tell-tale grain of a scarce magical tree from the east, and gold fairly dripped from the long chandelier arms that curved away from the overhead fixture toward the walls like festoons. Flowers of crystal burst from a delicate vase, diamonds glittering in its base.

The room’s sole occupant appeared unmoved by its granduer, seated upon a large padded chair at the table, turned so he could watch the embers pop and snap in the deep-bellied hearth. One slim hand held a cigar above a glass tray, and when the ashes fluttered from the end, they vanished into thin air.

Hermione felt rough and poorly hewn standing there, while Lucius Malfoy matched the interior in easy refinement and careless deportment. Though, for all his good looks, Mr. Malfoy made for a poor host by ignoring her completely. Sirius shifted forms and brushed by her arm.

“Malfoy,” he said, sharp, and the other man merely sniffed.

“Your nursemaid can wait outside, Miss Granger,” Malfoy said without looking up. “Or I can see myself out.”

Neither Sirius nor Hermione moved for a moment, then Hermione nodded to her guardian. He opened his mouth to argue, then stopped, huffing. He jerked the door open, stepped through, and slammed it shut. Hermione felt the echo down to her bones, and his absence made her all the more uncertain.

No, I cannot be uncertain. He’ll smell it like a shark sensing blood in the water.

Mr. Malfoy lifted the cigar to his mouth, drew in, lingering, then casually flicked the rest of it into the fireplace, dismissing the smoke with an idle wave of his hand. Only then did he deign to glance in Hermione’s direction—brief, dismissive. “I know why you’re here, girl. You’re wasting my time.”

“That’s not my intention.”

Malfoy stood, adjusted his cloak, then turned the chair toward the table rather than the fire. To Hermione’s relief, he resumed his seat; she’d feared he’d been about to leave, but he’d simply made himself more comfortable, leaning his cane against his leg. His hair had been gathered at the nape of his neck by a ribbon, and when the light glanced off his high cheekbones, Hermione noted the shimmer of a glamour glowing like highlighter against his skin.

“Whether or not that’s your intention, you are wasting my time. People talk, Miss Granger, and lately people have quite a bit to say about you.”

Hermione swallowed but didn’t let Malfoy’s scathing tone put her off. She marched up to the table and pulled out the opposing chair without invitation, taking a seat. She’d known it was possible the pure-blood families she’d reached out to would gossip and mention the Muggleborn girl opening conversations with them. She had hoped the gossip wouldn’t reach Malfoy just yet, but she’d accepted the possibility of it happening.

“Mr. Malfoy—,” she began, but Hermione swallowed her words as she stared at the older wizard and he met her gaze without issue. She’d prepared a speech for this meeting—had gone over it three times and done half a dozen revisions only that morning—but now she actually sat in the reality of the moment, felt the plush cushion under her backside, the extra heat of the fire, the hum of magic in the walls. She stared at Malfoy and found he didn’t quite match the wizard in her memories. He’d always been an unpleasant man—a hard, severe sort of person with an expression to match, but there’d always been a humor in his face, a poncy superiority that lit his colorless eyes and curled the corner of his mouth. Lucius had none of that humor now.

Fatigue lurked in the blue blush discoloring his eyelids, wariness in the twitching tightness of his jaw, his limbs as stiff as a statue’s. His flesh gleamed unnatural under the pretty glamour. A stray blow could have shattered him into so much dust. This was not a man who’d sit and listen to a young witch’s impassioned speech on morals and values and doing what was right.

Hermione inhaled to quell her racing mind and thrust her speech aside. She knew he wouldn’t listen, and so she would follow her intuition, just this once. She had to pray it would work.

“May we order tea?” she asked. Malfoy lifted a brow, clearly having expected her to say something else, and though he scoffed, he nonetheless ordered tea. He summoned one of the establishment’s house-elves, and the poor creature brought along a steaming pot. Hermione poured them both cups, and when she sat down with her own, she breathed in the tannins of a rich, expensive oolong.

Malfoy didn’t touch his. He sat as if on tenterhooks, hands on the table, waiting. Hermione did not keep him long.

“I need you to vote against Gaunt in the election at the end of the year.”

“Ha,” Malfoy said. “Presumptive chit. You’ve decided to cut to the heart of the matter, then? How Gryffindor. Allow me to return the favor: no.”

Hermione didn’t react. She continued to swivel the delicate silver spoon through her tea, watching the few loose specs of leaves eddy in the current. “When Draco came to you with my request, you must have realized what I wished to discuss, especially if you’ve spoken to any of the families I’ve written letters to.”

“Of course I did. How you’ve not learned an ounce of discretion in Slytherin House, I cannot fathom. It’s almost as if you’re attempting to bait Minister Gaunt into making your life miserable.”

Again, Hermione ignored his remark. “And yet, despite your disparaging thoughts, here you are.”

Mr. Malfoy’s hand hesitated ever so slightly, then reached for his tea. “My son asked a favor of me. So yes, here I am.”

“I don’t believe you.”

“It hardly matters what you believe, Miss Granger.” The particular emphasis he placed on the word made his meaning clear. It didn’t matter what Hermione—young, Muggleborn, a woman—thought.

Hermione pursed her lips, her tongue pressing against the back of her slightly too-large teeth as if she wanted to spit at the wizard, but she kept her tone light, affable. “Did you know Minister Gaunt’s very first piece of legislation was the MPA law? He pushed the Wizengamot to vote it through only weeks after his appointment.”

“Do you mean to state purposeless facts for my consumption? I assure you, I had my fill while you were in residence at the Manor.”

“Oh. So you must be aware he also allowed for the DMLE referendum in 1983 permitting the Department to search and seize suspected Dark items with warrants?” Again, Malfoy showed the minutest sign of hesitation, just as Hermione assumed he would. Very few people were aware of what she’d mentioned, as finding out involved following an old, tedious chain of paperwork back to Gaunt’s office. “Or perhaps you didn’t know. The Minister is quite fond of playing two sides of an issue against each other, especially when it suits his needs. Like the mandate issued through one of his puppet Department heads in 1983, allowing all items taken during raids to be reviewed and reallocated by the office of the Minster. A further addendum in 1984 slipped by in a law’s footnote allows the Minister to freely garnish suspected seizures—to ostensibly fund the Aurory, though no accounting can be found on where that money goes.” Hermione stopped stirring her tea. “I wonder how often the DMLE has gone through Malfoy Manor, and how often you paid fees, Mr. Malfoy. Gaunt probably told you it would all be swept under the rug at his discretion, that he’d bring the Department in line, when it was his will guiding them all along. He offers you bread, never showing the underside is thick with mold.”

Malfoy stared at her, and Hermione slid her spoon for her cup, gently tapping it on the rim. She lifted her cup by the scrolled handle, placing the rim against her lower lip. “You know who he is, who he is a part of.” She sipped. “You also know who Harriet is.”

The wizard’s lip curled. “Be very careful in your assumptions, Miss Granger. It almost sounds as if you’re accusing me of belonging to a certain illegal organization that doesn’t much care for your kind.”

“And if I was accusing you of such?”

“Then how stupid are you to be in a room alone with me?”

Hermione’s stomach lurched, but she kept herself steady, pretending to drink tea until she felt assured her voice wouldn’t quiver. “I know why you’re here, and I know it’s not because Draco asked you.”

“Oh? Enlighten me, then, before I tire of this farce and Obliviate it from your mind.”

Hermione lowered her cup, her hands unsteady, forcing them to fold together in front of herself. “I lived in your house for years. I would pass through the halls late at night, leaving the library or the study, and I would hear conversations. I…I would see the bruises, Mr. Malfoy. When a law failed to go through, when an unflattering article was published, I would see you return, and I would see you falter. The stilted way you walked, the glamours you wore—and I know it hasn’t stopped. It’s accelerated, it’s…spread.” She shifted in the chair, swallowing again. “He was upset after Crouch’s death. He was upset at how it made his Ministry appear incompetent when one of the Tournament’s main organizers went ‘missing,’ and he took that anger out on you…and Narcissa. He sent her to St. Mungo’s last spring.”

One of Malfoy’s pale hands formed a fist on the table.

“I imagine you can’t accept that. You can barely accept the abuses being committed upon yourself, let alone your wife, or potentially your son. You understand, don’t you? It won’t end with you or with Narcissa. Especially not now, what with Gaunt having formed new…alliances.”

Hermione allowed her gaze to drift from the wizard toward the fire, then back again, steeling her nerves. “Others of my association believe Gaunt sent you to the Dark Lord’s side in June, but I don’t. Surely you spun him a story later about carrying information back to him from You-Know-Who, and yet…you were too quick, Mr. Malfoy. Too prompt to answer the call. I imagine it was almost a relief to feel your old master returning, and in those moments before arriving in the graveyard, you weren’t thinking about Gaunt. You were thinking about yourself and your family—for how better to counter a man fashioning himself as a Dark Lord than with the Dark Lord himself?”

Silent moments ticked by, heavy and ponderous, though Hermione didn’t allow her words to steep too long. “It must have disappointed you to realize You-Know-Who is no different than Gaunt, that your gamble had only compounded your metaphoric debt. This isn’t what you wanted when you bought into the snake’s words all those years ago. He promised you power, prestige—a magical utopia in which magical kind are not beholden to the laws of Muggles. He is not the first Dark wizard to do so, and won’t be the last—and like his predecessors, the visions he has preached have broken apart at the seams, leaving only a weak, tattered tapestry barely masking the monstrosity he has twisted our society into. You can see it. You know everything is falling apart.”

The longer she spoke, the less composed Mr. Malfoy’s face appeared. Oh, it certainly kept its clean, well-polished beauty, but fault lines appeared as the skin around his eyes tightened, and his pallor reached ghost-like hues. “If you’re so convinced of my loyalties,” he uttered on a breath. “Then why chance meeting? Why bother asking for what you know I won’t give? What I won’t risk?”

Hermione interlocked her fingers. “Because I’m not finished with my scenario, Mr. Malfoy.”

He blinked, and Hermione took that as permission to go on.

“You arrived in the graveyard in June seeking a way to rid yourself of Gaunt, and instead found a twisted, half-human monster, the mere shadow of the charming leader You-Know-Who once presented himself as. As the Muggles would say, you found yourself between a rock and a hard place, already forming plans to obscure your planned dissension to the Minister. However, as you bowed and scraped and applauded, the Dark Lord told you something quite interesting.”

Hermione’s eyes narrowed, and Mr. Malfoy didn’t look away.

“He told you Harriet’s the Girl Who Lived. The real one.”

Malfoy held himself so still, he seemed to barely breathe.

“It’s not believable, is it? She’s small for a fourteen-year-old and underwhelming at first impressions. Not at all like Longbottom, right? And yet…she escaped the Dark Lord. She escaped. And when you came across her in the graveyard, you pointed her away from the Death Eaters. You told her how to escape because she’s the Girl Who Lived—our world’s best hope against You-Know-Who and his other personalities, and you want him dead. You want Gaunt out of power and the Dark Lord out of your house before your family suffers. They will suffer, Lucius. We will all suffer. You took a risk for the first time in your life because the writing is on the wall, and the sword is due to swing. I chanced meeting with you because I hope your self-interest has enough prudence to know our situation cannot continue.”

Malfoy’s eyes found the fire again and remained fixed upon those simmering embers. His hand—still a fist—shook on the table. The longer he went without speaking, the more Hermione feared she’d miscalculated, that she’d pushed at the wrong moment and he wouldn’t—.

“They assigned my family another ward.”

Hermione’s brow furrowed, caught off guard by his sudden segue. “Oh?”

“They would hardly leave the space open; you yourself are aware of how competitive the most prestigious Houses are under the MPA law. The Ministry placed a new Muggleborn in my home at the beginning of the month. A blond boy, not entirely unlike Draco in appearance. Quite like him, in fact. Barely eleven years old.”

The implication didn’t occur to Hermione immediately, but it overwhelmed her an instant later, a sudden, horrified wave that had her slapping a hand over her mouth as if she might be sick. A child. A Muggleborn. A Muggleborn at the Manor, the Manor where—.

“The house-elves can’t get the blood out of the carpet,” Malfoy said, his tone flat, empty. He kept staring at the fireplace. “He forced Narcissa to watch, and I had to bury what was left of the body. Before the snake could get to it. I imagine he also killed the parents to ensure they cause no problems when Yule arrives and their son does not return home.”

Hermione didn’t know whom Malfoy meant—Gaunt or the Dark Lord—but it didn’t matter. It was too late.

“You are naive, Miss Granger. So terribly naive to what He is capable of.”

“And so you would let him continue? When you have the means at your disposal to stop him? War is not easy, Mr. Malfoy—and I assure you, that is exactly what we intend. It will be war, or it will be death for all of us.”

Hermione stood, unable to sit still and composed any longer. Another boy was dead—a child, having not even started at Hogwarts yet. Hermione could not pretend she wasn’t affected.

“Harriet has her trial soon.”

Malfoy softly tutted, sounding distant, unmoored. “I had wondered when you’d ask for me to give your little friend freedom.”

“I’m asking no such thing; criminal trial votes are in body, not volume, and you are only one body among many. No, only the truth can sway the minds of the Wizengamot, and I must place my hopes in facts and Harriet’s barrister.”

“Then what is your point in bringing it up, Miss Granger?”

“My point is, Malfoy, that certain details of that evening are bound to come out, especially if Harriet doesn’t mind her tongue. Maybe at the trial, or perhaps at a later date. Some of those details could possibly include a certain blond, pure-blooded wizard aiding her in the graveyard.” Malfoy’s head snapped around at that, his eyes widening. “The Wizengamot might not believe her. The public might dismiss it as rubbish—but if those details got back to interested parties, I’m sure that wizard’s life would be in peril.”

By now, fine droplets of sweat had appeared on Malfoy’s brow. “You wouldn’t,” he said. “You wouldn’t. Because it wouldn’t just be my life—.”

“It’d be Narcissa’s. It’d be Draco’s.” Hermione raised her nose in the air and willed herself to be cold, to be emotionless as stone. “And I don’t want that, but I cannot tolerate watching the Wizarding world place power in the hands of that maniac for another three years. I cannot stand by and do nothing. The question is, what will you do, Mr. Malfoy?”

The wizard watched her as if he’d never really seen Hermione before, and after a moment of startled gawking, he settled and almost seemed to smile. “Well played, Miss Granger. Well played.”

Hermione walked toward the door without saying anything else. Her hands shook, and her eyes burned. Her mind overflowed with images of Terry—and a nameless blond boy, torn from his family, torn too soon from this world. She wanted to go home.

“You’ll have my answer soon.”

“I’ll be waiting.”


A/N:

Hermione: “I brought a gift.”

Lucius: “Is it blackmail?”

Hermione: “It’s blackmail.”

Chapter 238: queen of wands

Chapter Text

ccxxxviii. queen of wands

 

They set her trial for July thirtieth.

Harriet laughed when she opened the Ministry’s letter and read their chosen date. She didn’t know if having it the day before her birthday was better or worse. Sirius had spoken tentatively of a shared party for her and Neville, but the looming trial cast a pall on the festivities, and really, Harriet wasn’t in the mood to celebrate. No matter what anyone said, her first day of being fifteen years old might mark the beginning of a life sentence in Azkaban.

She had no energy for her letters, no energy for anything, spending many of those final days numb and trapped in her own head. “‘arriet,” Mr. Flamel had told her, warm hands settling on either side of her face to urge her to look at him. “All will be well, oui? You must know you are not alone.”

Harriet had only nodded at him.

On the evening of the twenty-ninth, Hermione and Elara had enough of her moping and dragged her out of her bedroom. They hid in the trophy room, which was less a room for trophies and more a catch-all for the burgeoning rubbish and collectibles they cleared from the rest of the house. The heat seemed to settle there with a vengeance, like a sweltering Boggart lurking out of sight, creeping out from under the curio cabinets to lounge across the carpet. They allowed themselves one candle, lest the light leaking from under the door attract attention from their house guests, and sat together on the velvet sofa.

“Don’t get used to this,” Hermione said with clear warning as she exposed a bottle hidden in her pocket. “I really don’t approve, but just for tonight—.”

Harriet took the bottle and turned it toward the light, whistling low. “Firewhiskey? Really?”

“I may have nicked it from Sirius and blamed the Weasley twins.”

A laugh escaped Harriet, the feeling rusty. “Barmy. Barmy, but brilliant.”

They conjured small glasses, and there was only enough in the bottle to split once between the three of them—though that proved plenty. They each took one sip and sputtered, heat flaring through Harriet’s mouth and nose, bringing tears to her eyes.

“Oh, that’s awful,” she choked, and then started laughing again. “This is a bloody awful idea.”

Elara’s face looked like she’d licked tarmac, and Hermione’s cheeks glowed red. “Merlin!” she coughed, wrinkling her nose. “Well, it is called Firewhiskey. It stands to reason it would burn.” She looked into her glass with a critical eye. “Shall we toast to something?”

“Reckon I don’t have much to toast to at the moment,” Harriet grumbled, so it fell to Elara, seated in the middle of them, to lift her drink.

“To Terry,” she said, and that was something Harriet could toast.

“To Terry.”

“Terry,” Hermione added. In the dim, orange light, her eyes glowed with moisture, though she didn’t cry. “And the Muggles. And the Muggle-borns.”

Harriet turned her head, about to ask what she meant—then, brief flickers of conversation, snippets of newspapers from across the country, the unmoving pictures of people reported missing rose in her mind’s eye. So she lifted her glass again and clinked it with the others. “The Muggles.”

They sipped their drinks, the terrible taste matching their terrible spirits and not mingling well at all with the muggy heat. Nonetheless, Harriet found herself relaxing into her corner of the sofa, watching the Firewhiskey glitter like gold as she swiveled it inside the Transfigured tumbler. Hermione hummed part of a song from the wizarding wireless, and around them, Grimmauld Place creaked and groaned like a tired ghoul.

Shifting, Elara reached into her pocket and withdrew a deck of cards.

“Oh, not that nonsense,” Hermione huffed as Elara hooked her foot around the leg of the coffee table and tugged it closer. Harriet sat up a bit, blinking, and realized Elara held her tarot deck.

“Something being nonsense to you doesn’t mean it’s nonsense to me,” Elara said coolly, already stripping off her gloves to shuffle with her left hand. “Thousands of years of successful Divinations should show you it’s not all complete bunk, Hermione.”

Hermione only huffed again, but she sat up like Harriet did, folding her legs underneath herself. She balanced her glass on her knee. “All right, then. Divine something for us, o fortune teller.”

Elara rolled her eyes and bumped Hermione’s leg with her own. “I’ll divine a good curse for you, Granger, once we’re back in school and not under threat of chores if we’re caught out.”

“Half the challenge would be getting away with the crime, though.”

“Who are you, and what have you done with Hermione Granger? Harriet, our swot has gone missing.”

Hermione only flicked her arm, though her mouth had formed a smug grin.

Elara split the deck once, twice, three times, then slid it together. “One of you twits ask a question.”

A dozen questions popped inside Harriet’s mind like champagne fizz, some more serious than others, though the first to come out of her mouth was, “Why is Neville Longbottom such a prat?”

Elara smirked, then held her bare hand flat over the deck before drawing the topmost card. “Queen of cups, reversed. He has difficulty expressing himself. I’d say he’s an insecure, needy knob.”

Harriet snorted while Hermione only took the card from Elara to study the gruesome picture. As far as Harriet knew, the deck had been in the Black family for some three hundred years, so it contained some rather bleak images carved and pressed into the magic cards. They didn’t move—or weren’t supposed to, but Harriet swore she’d seen the crude little people change into different poses. It was unquestionably eerie.

“Is that really what it means?” Hermione asked with a skeptical inflection as she handed the card back. “Or are you having us on?”

“I am most certainly not ‘having you on,’” Elara replied. “It symbolizes emotional instability—a dependence, perhaps around the identity he’s built his entire life around. He is definitely insecure, and possibly questioning his purpose in life.”

Not for the first time, Harriet felt a stab of pity for the Boy Who Lived—for the boy who had been fed a lie since birth in what was now a defunct bid to confuse the Dark Lord. The pity didn’t last, however, when Harriet recalled Neville had been handed absolutely anything he desired from the time he could walk, while she had festered in the dark of a boot cupboard.

Clearing her throat, Harriet said, “Do another, then. How about…hm. Will Gaunt fall into an acromantula pit and be devoured by giant spiders?”

Hermione giggled, her cheeks flushed.

Elara shuffled, then drew a card. “Ten of pentacles. Everything will work out well for him; he is due a windfall.”

“Boo!” Harriet cried, and Hermione burst out into proper laughter, the pair of them having to stifle themselves before someone came looking for the noise. “That’s rubbish! Do another!”

They continued asking Elara questions, almost all of them absurd—including “Will Albus Dumbledore fulfill his lifelong dream of becoming a ten-pin bowling champion?”, “Will Luna Lovegood ever find the Crumple-Horned Snorkack?”, and “Will Minerva McGonagall find love with a handsome tom cat?” Eventually, their breathless laughter settled, and the firewhiskey’s muddling effect eased. Their small group subsided into a thoughtful silence. Harriet leaned her head on her godsister’s shoulder while Elara shuffled the deck once more.

“Could you do a proper reading for me?” she softly asked. “Not a silly one, I mean. A real one.”

Elara paused, but then she wordlessly nodded and concentrated on her task. Harriet noted how she put more effort into her movements, more ceremony. When she passed her hand over the deck, rather than drawing one card, three magically lifted and laid themselves face down on the table. Elara tapped the first with two fingers before turning it over.

“Past: seven of swords. Deception, consequence. Your path began with lies and close betrayal. You were driven to escape through subterfuge.”

Harriet scoffed even as she arched an eyebrow. “My aunt being a right cunt seems to fit ‘close betrayal.’”

“It could refer to Snape,” Elara added. “About what he did before, though I assume you’re correct. The meaning is open to some interpretation.”

She moved on to the middle card. “Present: ace of pentacles. You are about to start a new beginning, but it must be nurtured to see fruition. There is something you have not yet done that needs to be completed, or your efforts will be for not, and the new cycle will fail.”

“Mmm,” Harriet replied. She downed the last of her drink and let it burn down her throat.

“Maybe this year’s going to be great,” Hermione chimed in. “Once the trial is over. That could be what you need to complete before having a ‘new beginning.’”

“You don’t believe in tarot readings, Hermione.”

“Well, no—but I can go along with the spirit of it, can’t I?”

Harriet grinned and shook her head, earning an eye roll. Elara moved on to the final card.

“Queen of wands. Representative of the feminine spirit, symbol of strength, courage, and determination. You’ve divined your path, and you’re bound to walk it with your head held high.”

Harriet studied the three cards laid out under the candle’s yellow sheen, the faded ink carvings seeming particularly ghastly in such inadequate lighting.

“Codswallop,” Hermione hiccuped.

“God bless you,” Elara drawled as she returned the cards to the deck and shuffled.

“Oh, you know what I mean.”

They continued to bicker, arguing the merits of Divinations over Arithmancy until they devolved into talking rubbish about Trelawney, something they both equally enjoyed. The three witches chatted until the hour grew later, the candle dwindling, and they dozed together on the sofa. Harriet stirred from the warm, familiar haze after the others had dropped off to sleep, and she was about to stand when she caught sight of the tarot deck abandoned on the coffee table.

Quietly, listening to the soft flutter of Hermione’s snores, Harriet lifted the little wooden box and slid back the lid, the cards neatly tucked inside. One by one, she flipped them over until she found the queen of wands again, and Harriet studied the image, holding it close. The ugly woman printed there seemed to watch her.

You’ve divined your path, and you’re bound to walk it with your head held high.”

Harriet returned the deck to its box and set it on the table once more. Standing, she kissed her godsister and best friend both on their brows before blowing out the candle and making her way upstairs alone.

 

xXx

 

The dawn of July thirtieth found Harriet Potter at her desk, writing.

The quill’s nib scratched over the surface of her parchment, the black ink gleaming in the thin fingers of sunlight coming through the curtains before it dried dark and lusterless. Harriet’s eyes followed the movement of her hand but otherwise appeared dim and still, her lids bruised by a long, sleepless night. She’d already washed and dressed, wearing her best robes, her hair limp against her back in a tight plait, her blouse colored blue as Mr. Dirigible had requested. He’d actually suggested she wear her school robes to forcibly remind the Wizengamot of her age, but Harriet had refused. She would not be seen as a child.

The trial was not set until later that evening, but as they had done with Sirius, Harriet knew the Aurors would arrive early to take her back into holding. The thought of going with them terrified her, but she wouldn’t be alone; the Flamels had arrived late last night in anticipation of the Ministry spiriting her away before they could alert her guardians. She wouldn’t be alone, but that did little to mitigate her nerves.

Her necklace with the Atlas and Hugh’s skull lay on the desk. So did her second wand, neatly tucked into its leather leg brace, and the bit of charmed, stolen silver Hermione had gifted her years ago. Harriet finished writing, scrawling her signature at the bottom of the parchment before letting it dry and folding it in thirds. She applied wax to the edge, then magicked it closed with her seal.

Harriet wrote a name across the front, then set the letter aside with the others. They neatly lay in a row, waiting.

She licked the pad of her thumb and grabbed another sheet of parchment.

Everything in the room had been carefully tidied or put away, even the nest below her bed removed and sorted, her den of snakes tucked into their proper carrier inside her buckled trunk. Little sign of habitation remained.

A knock at the door gave her pause, her hand stilling, heart turning inside her chest. “Come in.”

She hadn’t thought much about who might be coming for her—Sirius or Remus, perhaps, or Mr. Flamel—but she was still surprised when Snape’s dark, looming form opened the door and crossed the threshold.

Why is he here? Did he come to see me off? It ’s not like he’ll wish me luck or anything.

“Your escort has arrived,” he said, voice flat, giving away none of his inner thoughts. “Early, as predicted. The only time the Ministry can be expected to be early.”

Harriet took a steadying breath and nodded, turning to finish her final letter. Preoccupied, she didn’t see Snape’s black eyes move about the room, taking in the stack of waiting missives, her possessions laid out or neatly packed away. His brow furrowed—and then his head jerked, his gaze all but burning a hole in the witch’s head.

Harriet finished her task, then set aside her quill and capped the inkwell. She stood, confused as to why Snape was still there, and why he was staring at her with his face set like stone. She felt like she was perilously close to getting told off, so she wiped her hands against her robes, then picked up one of the letters she’d left sitting out. Turning, Harriet extended it toward Snape.

“Here,” she said. “Take it. You might as well have it now.”

The Potions Master snatched the letter from her, flipping it to reveal his name carefully written across the front. He stared.

It happened quickly; Snape’s hand formed a fist, and the letter burst into flames, combusting without a spell. “What do you think you’re doing?” he thundered.

Harriet stepped back, startled, and he stepped closer, stirring the ashes with his robes as they swept across the floor. Her leg bumped into the chair, and she had to grab it before she fell into the desk’s edge. His eyes flashed with sudden, inexplicable rage, and Harriet’s breath caught in her chest as she looked up at the furious wizard.

“You little fool—!”

He flicked his wrist, his wand snapping into his hand, and he raised it toward the desk—.

Harriet lurched forward, blocking his aim before he could burn the rest of the letters. He moved the wand away, but Harriet thought she might turn to soot just from the look he gave her. She hadn’t seen Snape so angry in a while.

“Do you think making yourself a martyr will change anything?!” he demanded.

“I have to try.”

“No, you do not. You need only do what that insipid, mawkish barrister instructs you to do! What part of that do you find difficult to understand, Potter?! How dare you—!”

Harriet forced herself to meet his gaze and not flinch. Normally she didn’t have a problem doing so, but Snape was bloody livid. She should have known he’d be the first to guess her decision, but she thought he, of all people, might understand.

“I—.” She sighed, but he had no intention of letting her speak.

“How you could conceive of being so utterly selfish, so—!”

“People are dying, Snape! Or disappearing! Bloody loads of them! If I can change that by speaking up, I can’t stay quiet. I can’t lie—I’m not a coward. I’m not going to play into Gaunt’s stupid games,” she said, willing him to believe her. She slowly gripped his wrist to push his wand farther still. Her loved ones and friends deserved those letters, and she didn’t want him to destroy them. “Somethings are more important.”

Snape ripped himself free of her, Harriet’s hand falling between them. “No,” he spat, enunciating each word. His eyes gleamed and flashed like fresh ink. “They’re not.”

He left with one final, scalding look, his temper gathered about him in a veritable storm as he swept from the room, slamming the door behind him. Harriet listened to the echo of it and tried to breathe through the sudden lump in her throat, her hand still in the air, holding nothing.

Selfish.

She lowered it to her side again. On the floor, her final words to Snape left a mess of blackened bootprints, one feeble corner of the parchment scorched and singed but still somehow intact. The rest—cinders.

Someone called her name from downstairs. Harriet blinked and stepped over the ashes. She opened the door, and prepared herself to meet her fate.


A/N: That ’s an actual reading I did for Harriet lol.

Chapter 239: lying little witch

Chapter Text

ccxxxix. lying little witch

 

Harriet kept her eyes fixed on the dent in the wall.

She couldn’t decide how it’d gotten there, but in the hours she’d been sitting at the crooked table, she’d created half a dozen scenarios in her head to explain where it’d come from. As far as she could tell, someone had been slammed against the bricks, most likely by an overzealous Auror.

Her stomach rumbled, protesting having missed breakfast, lunch, and most likely dinner by this point. She’d been given water and one bathroom break but otherwise told to wait, that she needed to have patience while the Wizengamot assembled. Harriet stayed in the tiny room allotted to her and made up stories for the marks on the wall to spare herself from being sick.

She wondered if this was the room they’d taken Snape to after his trial. It looked familiar.

Mr. Dirigible kept talking to her as he paced. He had to cut a narrow path in the negligible space, and his hip kept nudging the table’s edge. “They’ll commence the trial by bringing forward the charges. They are charging you with the premeditated murder of Terry Boot and the use of Class-A prohibited magic, but they know the best they can get is voluntary manslaughter, which still carries a fifteen-year sentence in Azkaban.”

Harriet stared at the wall. She’d only been alive fifteen years; she couldn’t conceptualize what spending the next fifteen in Azkaban would be like.

“The prosecution will present their evidence, we will refute it, and they will challenge that refutation. We will give evidence to your innocence, they will refute it, and we will challenge their refutation. It’s a very reciprocal process. We will have to be patient.”

Harriet nodded, feeling very far away from herself, far from the room and far from the Ministry. She looked down at her hands—hands that seemed to belong to someone else—then at her lap, her blouse, her robes and skirt. None of it fit quite right after she’d grown a few inches and missed a few too many meals. Harriet felt like a snake still wearing old skin, too weary to shed it.

“Their argument hinges on Bartemius Crouch Junior having been convicted and imprisoned within Azkaban at the time of his recorded death, thus unable to commit the crime. It will be difficult—.”

“But you had to be difficult,” Crouch hissed, his pale, sweaty face too close to her own as his hand skated against her thigh—.

Harriet bit her tongue and scowled at the table, forcing the image out of her head.

“—consistency in your story will give them nothing to challenge. No matter the political leanings of the current Wizengamot, no one will be keen to send you to Azkaban, Miss Potter. Even if you were guilty, you are still the last of a Noble House, and it is seen as bad form to end a line in such a manner. So long as you do as I have told you—.”

“What has he told you?” Gaunt demanded, mania in his voice, fingers twisting like long spider-limbs in her matted hair. “What do you know about the prophecy?”

Harriet didn’t scoff at her barrister, though it was a close thing. Oh, there certainly were people on the Wizengamot who would see her off to Azkaban with smiles on their faces, no question about it. Truthfully, Harriet wasn’t sure Gaunt was among that number. Having her carted off to a cell in Azkaban suited him fine, but if it was what he wanted, he would have pushed the Aurory and DMLE to make the charges against her ironclad. He would have ensured she never saw a trial, suspended her rights via some old, outdated law, and she would have disappeared into the system. As Mr. Dirigible had pointed out to her before, there were a lot of holes and suppositions in what happened, and if Harriet fought, the case would fall apart, insubstantial as it was.

No, Gaunt had already gotten what he wanted: a quick peek in Harriet’s head, though what he’d been looking for in there, she wasn’t sure. Now, he wanted Harriet to lie. It was what he needed and what he expected of her, what he would expect of any self-serving Slytherin witch. He wanted her to tell the Wizarding world it had been a tragic accident and let them continue blindly under his leadership, if only to save her own skin.

Harriet’s hands balled into fists.

Many wouldn’t consider it very Slytherin of her to risk her freedom like this. They said self-preservation was a key trait of her House—and Harriet didn’t disagree, but she thought it all came down to how one defines self. Where did she decide to draw the line on what she was willing to defend, on what she considered hers? At the end of her skin? Her family? The magical world? Humanity?

“It doesn’t matter if you kill me, if you kill Dumbledore—until it is just you, the Wizarding world will never be yours.”

“Then it will be just me.”

She shut her eyes, breathing in, forcing her hands to relax. It didn’t matter if she went to prison; for the sake of her loved ones, for the sake of the world that had saved her from the drudgery of Number Four’s boot cupboard, Harriet would tell the truth. She considered it a greater act of self-preservation than her lying would be. After all, what point was there in freedom if she traded the gray walls of Azkaban for the gilded bars of Voldemort’s dream?

Mr. Dirigible sensed Harriet’s distraction and stopped speaking, peering down at his young client. He exhaled a short, exasperated burst of air through his nose. “Have you heard a word I’ve said, Miss Potter?”

She nodded, mouth twitching, though she didn’t look up. An impossible weight leaned itself against her shoulders, and for the moment, Harriet wanted to rest. She would need her strength when she walked out of that room. “Do you have family, Mr. Dirigible?”

The question gave the usually unflappable man pause. “…Yes.”

“Have you told them—you know? About what I’ve seen? What the Headmaster said?”

He shifted. “No. I haven’t.”

Again, Harriet nodded, having expected as much. “It’s scary, innit? Thinking he’s out there?” She tilted her head enough to flick her eyes in the wizard’s direction. “Scary, but not as scary as pretending he isn’t there. That’s the real nightmare, sir.”

Mr. Dirigible shifted again, then placed both hands on the opposite end of the table, leaning forward. “Miss Potter, let me be frank. You are about to prod a sleeping dragon in the eye. If you go into that courtroom and tell them You-Know-Who has returned, Minister Gaunt will do all he can to see you put in Azkaban.”

Harriet looked away. “His name is Voldemort.”

The Aurors came soon afterward, and they laid manacles around Harriet’s wrists—cold, unyielding iron inscribed with runes meant to inhibit magic. They sat against her skin like sharp, prickling knives, the edges pulling and scraping, threatening to cut. The Aurors allowed her to walk under her own power as they escorted her into the corridor, and they needed only to go a few meters to reach the required door. One Auror opened it, and the other urged Harriet inside.

Heads swiveled, dozens upon dozens of eyes gleaming ghoulish and grotesque in the harsh torchlight as they watched the young witch enter the courtroom. Silence fell over them in a heavy veil—but whispers continued beneath it, wending through their breathing, quieter than the loud jangle of the chains around Harriet’s wrists.

A chair waited for her, wreathed in chains, but the Aurors chose not to lock her in when Harriet lowered herself to sit. She told herself to be grateful for that, but all she could think about was the chains jerking to life when she wasn’t paying attention and snaking around her throat. She swallowed and lifted her chin.

She couldn’t guess how many people were there, what with how the light shielded their faces from view in the pit, but Harriet could see rows and rows of plum-colored robes joined by sets of maroon and black. There were Aurors, both those who wore the golden pins and those who didn’t, and other Ministry people. There were people in civilian clothes and what looked like a reporter with his long quill and scroll of parchment. Harriet turned her head, desperately searching until deliberate movement in the periphery of her vision brought her gaze to the front row on the left. Mr. Flamel had leaned forward against the rail so she would see he and Perenelle were there. They smiled, and Harriet didn’t try to return the gesture, worried she’d sick up on her shoes.

At the head of the room, exactly where he’d been seated when Sirius was in her place, lurked Minister Gaunt, and just as he had during Sirius’ trial, he appeared bored with the proceedings. His red eyes roved over her, and his lips curled into a pleased grin.

Next to Gaunt, Madam Bones leaned down to listen to something one of the many Ministry twats said, nodding her head and muttering something in response. She called the room to order.

“Criminal trial of the accused, Harriet Dorea Potter, resident of the London Borough of Islington, held today, the thirtieth of July. The interrogators are myself, Amelia Susan Bones, Head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement, and Minister for Magic, Marvolo Cadmus Gaunt. Court Scribe, Anne Katrina Gambol. Counsel for the accused will state his name for the record.”

“Dorian Dirigible.”

“Charges against the accused are as listed: one count of murder in the first degree of Terrance Simon Boot, and one count of Class-A prohibited magic usage. How do you plead?”

The words flowed in an eerie mimicry of the sole trial Harriet had witnessed just last summer. For a moment, the memory tugged her in two directions—sitting in the stands, sitting in the pit—and Harriet didn’t reply. Mr. Dirigible cleared his throat, and she stuttered, “N-not guilty.”

Her answer barely broke above the swell of murmuring, crushed in the malignant echo filling the dark, vaulted chamber. Madam Bones called for silence again, sounding peeved.

“Please give your defense, Miss Potter.”

Mr. Dirigible jumped in before Harriet had the chance to open her mouth. “A terrible error of judgment has been levied against my client, dear members of Wizengamot. There is no refuting the tragedy of what happened to young Mr. Boot on the twenty-fourth of June, but the crime has simply been laid at the feet of the wrong person. Worse yet, a friend of the boy’s, who in his final moments attempted to save his life.”

Mr. Dirigible stood with his hands folded behind his back, his posture straight, unmoved by the many questioning eyes bearing down upon him.

“The only crime my client committed was one of punctuality; Miss Potter and Mr. Boot, hurrying to join their fellow students, fell afoul a third party’s heinous actions. Indeed, the record catalogs the injuries Miss Potter received that night, as verified by Hogwarts’ own healer, Poppy Pomfrey, and none of the spell damage inflicted upon her person is reflected in Mr. Boot’s wand. It is only possible that a separate attacker acted to give her those injuries, and it was not the result of an altercation between my client and the deceased.

“You will also find in the record that the mediwizards of St. Mungo’s Hospital for Magical Maladies and Injuries tested the body of Mr. Boot upon its recovery, and their findings are consistent with his life being ended by a Killing Curse. Testing my client’s wand will find no such curse having been—.”

Hem hem.”

Harriet had never heard someone clear their throat in such a pretentious way before, and it broke her from her stupor, head turning with the rest of the Wizengamot’s to a woman sitting in the benches put aside for Ministry members. Squat and rather square, she had a wide mouth and unblinking eyes, a touch of pink peeking between her short neck and the collar of her black robes. “You should note, Mr. Dirigible, the Office of the Inspectorate could not prove or disprove the usage of any magic in Miss Potter’s wand. It has been tampered with.” The witch’s large eyes narrowed and set themselves on Harriet. “We suspect Dark magic.”

This news irked the barrister. “Failure of Ministry equipment and personnel is not a reflection of my client’s innocence,” Mr. Dirigible retorted. “The shortcomings of your office have no bearing upon this trial, Madam Umbridge.”

Harriet’s mouth felt dry, perspiration beading the nape of her neck. What did that mean? They hadn’t been able to find what spells she’d used on her wand? That wasn’t bloody good.

As she considered this, the witch—Umbridge, apparently—glared at Mr. Dirigible. “I disagree and resent your implications against my office, Mr. Dirigible. This only proves your client has done something to hide—.”

Madam Bones raised her gavel and tapped it rather harshly against the banister. “Enough. There is plenty of supposition in this trial without the Office of the Inspectorate making claims that cannot be substantiated. If no record can be retrieved, Miss Potter’s wand is inadmissible to this trial for both the defense and prosecution. Continue.”

The only sign of Mr. Dirigible’s annoyance was a slight twitch in his cheek, there and gone. “Mr. Boot’s death is undeniably tragic, but the prosecution has mistakenly pointed the finger of blame at Miss Potter, and accusing her does nothing but impugn her exceptional character. Headmaster Dumbledore?”

The sudden segue stirred the audience as Professor Dumbledore, dressed in the same plum robes as everyone else, stood up.

“Could you give reference to your peers on Miss Potter’s behavior as you’ve observed in your role as her Headmaster?”

“Certainly,” Professor Dumbledore replied, giving a cordial nod. “Miss Potter is an exemplary student, well-liked by her professors and respected by her peers. She has performed great services for the school and her community and has recently become one of the youngest apprentices taken on by a master at Hogwarts. I have found her to be a witch of extraordinary talent, but beyond the attention she pays to her studies, she has shown her fellow students considerable compassion and empathy—.”

Gaunt let out a loud, ringing sigh, using enough volume to cut across Dumbledore. “We get the picture.”

Professor Dumbledore’s eyes tipped toward him. “Apologies, Minister. I find it difficult to be succinct when considering my students’ accomplishments, as many and varied as they are. I will summarize my thoughts by saying Hogwarts has been honored to have Miss Potter as a student, and in my opinion, she is incapable of fatally harming another human being, especially not in a manner as cold as unfeeling as what happened to Mr. Boot.”

“Thank you, Headmaster,” Mr. Dirigible said as Dumbledore resumed his seat. “As you can see, my client’s reputation precedes her. She has no history of violence against others—and no prior knowledge of the magic needed to commit this crime. Witches and gentlewizards of the Wizengamot, Miss Potter is yet fourteen-years-old. The curse we are speaking of, the curse that took Mr. Boot’s life, is magic most fully matured adults could not perform, even if they wished to do so. This is not a crime committed by a teenage witch, but by a dangerous Dark wizard.”

“But what wizard is that?” demanded a stocky Wizengamot wizard—and Harriet answered him.

“Barty Crouch,” she said, causing a ripple of movement in the crowd. Mr. Dirigible grunted, having wanted to blame the event on an unnamed wizard, but Harriet wouldn’t play the idiot anymore. “Barty Crouch Junior.”

Junior—?”

“That wretched fool who went to—?”

“Is she touched in the head—?”

“Barty Crouch Junior is dead!” another cried, and before further arguments could be had, Madam Bones reasserted control over the courtroom.

“Miss Potter,” she said, voice sharp and cutting through the lingering whispers. “I would appreciate it if you started from the beginning. Describe the events of that night as you remember them.”

Harriet nodded, her gaze darting to the man at Madam Bones’ side. Gaunt had gone still at her pronouncement, his interest settling on her like the hungry, malicious look of a cat trying to decide if he wanted to eat or torture his prey. She had his attention now. Her hands fidgeted.

What would he do when she told them Voldemort had returned? She imagined he might jump down and strangle her with his bare hands.

Harriet took a breath for strength and held it, a hard knot forming under her breastbone. She let it go, and it shuddered as the air left her lungs, and the first words of her story followed. It was the same as she’d told it before when Mr. Dirigible had her outline it, except Harriet forced herself not to stutter or rush the telling. She fixed her eyes on the railing in front of Madam Bones, refusing to let Gaunt unnerve her.

“He disguised himself with Polyjuice Potion to look like Viktor Krum, the Triwizard competitor. It was only later, after the potion fell, that he told me his name, and later still that I was able to confirm who he was. The wizard I saw kill Terry was Barty Crouch Junior.”

Wizengamot members shared alarmed looks—or laughed. “That Death Eater scum passed in Azkaban!” one wizard called from the back, others echoing the sentiment, but Harriet didn’t respond. She stared at Gaunt and watched as his lip curled.

Be careful, Potter,” he hissed, almost too quiet to be heard over the debate happening among the Wizengamot. Bones jerked in her seat, alarmed, though Gaunt continued to glare at Harriet. “Be VERY careful.

She pretended she didn’t understand him. It came as no surprise he’d been informed of her ability, though what he’d made of it, she couldn’t guess. It didn’t matter now; he wasn’t going to bait her into speaking Parseltongue in front of the entire Wizengamot, no matter if it was somewhat public knowledge.

The skin of her neck prickled and burned under her blouse’s high collar.

“Why—,” Madam Bones called over the din. “Would a man, supposedly dead, be on the grounds of Hogwarts?”

“Because he was sent there.” Harriet’s hands shook in her lap, palms tacky with sweat, parts of her body feeling numb as her heart raced like a charging Erumpent. “He was sent there by the Lord Voldemort.”

The name received a round of gasps and outraged exclamations, shouts of “Impossible!” and dramatic swooning. She saw Sirius in his plum-colored robes arguing with a bloke next to him, and Lucius Malfoy’s complexion nearly matched his colorless hair. He stared wide-eyed at the pit below, his mouth slightly agape. A witch had passed out, and the woman next to her fanned her face. That Umbridge witch looked like a puffed-up frog who’d eaten a bad fly.

The bloke from the Prophet had his quill out, making frantic notes as his partner’s camera went off with a pop!

“I will have order in this court!” Madam Bones boomed, her voice magically enhanced. Harriet shrunk in her chair as the noise rushed over her, and so did several of the more fidgety Wizengamot members. It didn’t matter now. Harriet had said what she needed to, and so long as word got out and some believed, Voldemort wouldn’t be able to move unseen. People would be ready for him.

“Potter,” Bones demanded. “What is your reasoning behind such a statement?”

“Because I saw him.” Harriet did everything she could to keep her voice level, reaching for a sense of equilibrium when all she wanted to do was scream and be belligerent. If she didn’t say calm or keep herself cool-headed, they’d write her off as a hysteric witch or attention-seeking teenager. Professor Dumbledore had taught her not to grow frustrated when presented with an impossible task, and Harriet couldn’t think of a more impossible task than getting the Wizengamot to believe her. “I saw him the night Terry died.”

“Explain yourself,” Bones said, holding up her hand to stall the audience’s objections.

“Crouch kidnapped me from the grounds—from Hogwarts’ grounds. Terry tried to stop him, and Crouch killed him.” Harriet worried her bottom lip with her teeth for a moment, then stopped. Mr. Dirigible remained next to her like a stiff, reluctant pillar. “There’s a rule—or a standard, I guess—in the Third Task that a Portkey has to be used? So the Headmaster has to change the wards during that time. Crouch and Vol—You-Known-Who found out about the rule, and they used it to their benefit.”

“Why would we believe this?” demanded a witch Harriet didn’t know. “What on earth would Dark wizards want with you?”

“I dunno,” Harriet lied. “It’s my guess he wanted Neville originally, but he’s not exactly easy to get to, is he? Crouch was probably running out of time, and he grabbed me as a last resort.” Her gaze flicked toward Gaunt, her tone dipping into sarcasm. “It’s the kind of mad, barmy choice a Dark wizard would make, innit?”

She had never seen him so furious before. It didn’t reflect in his face so much as his bearing; he sparked with unspeakable rage, color rising beneath his bespoke collar, his body as stiff as stone. She’d defied him, and he would make her bloody pay for it.

Harriet faced Bones again, straightening her spine. “Crouch needed blood for a ritual so he could return the Dark Lord to his full power. I saw him. I saw him, Crouch, and his Death Eaters. He’s back, and he’s hurting people—.”

“I think we’ve entertained enough of this fairytale,” Gaunt interrupted. He rose from his seat and leaned his hands against the banister, the gold ring upon his finger glinting like fire. His arms quivered. “I have no intention of entertaining the delusions of a manic, violent little girl—.”

“You’re the one who dragged me here,” Harriet stuttered. “You’re the one who put me on trial. If you didn’t want to hear the truth, Minister, you should have reconsidered!”

Bones banged her gavel. “Order—.”

“How dare you,” Gaunt boomed, and the torches within their brackets flickered, uneasy bodies shifting. The Guardians of the Magical Right flinched. “You come into my Ministry, spewing lies—.”

“I am not a liar.” Harriet stood, the manacles rattling around her wrists. “The Dark Lord has returned. The world needs to know. The world needs to know he never really left.

“The world needs to know you are a liar.” His eyes gleamed, ferocious as a dragon’s, cunning as a snake’s. “You claim Barty Crouch Junior killed that boy, and yet…you have no proof. Do you want to know what I think? I think you’re a deceitful witch wanting to make up stories for attention. I think Terry Boot, bright child that he was, disagreed with your nasty attitude, and you killed him. Didn’t you, Harriet? You killed Terry Boot.

“No!”

“Then where is he?!” Gaunt snarled, the banister groaning under the strength of his grip. Smoke rose in wisps beneath his bone-white fingers. “Where is Barty Crouch?!”

“I don’t know!” Harriet cried. “I don’t know, but—.”

“Sit down, Potter,” Madam Bones ordered before Gaunt or Harriet could say anything else. “I will not have this trial descend into a juvenile shouting match.”

In an instant, Gaunt’s enraged expression shuttered and blinked, replaced by a contrite smile. “Of course, Madam Bones,” he demurred, resuming his seat. “Violence against children always incites my passion for justice. You know how doggedly I’ve campaigned for their safety in my tenure.”

Liar, Harriet thought, hoping he could hear it, but he could probably read every letter in the glower she leveled at the bench. Murmurs thickened in the room again like a pervasive, choking mist, and Harriet’s stomach sank. Not everyone would believe her, she knew that, but would it be enough? When others told them Voldemort had returned, would they listen?

“Now, if we could return to the matter at hand—.”

The door to the courtroom popped open, and in trotted a portly wizard wearing a lime-colored bowler hat.

“For Merlin’s sake,” Madam Bones complained, taking off her monocle. She dropped it by her gavel with a dismissive flick of her hand. “We’ll be here through the night at this point. What now, Mr. Fudge?”

The wizard—Fudge—didn’t speak to the room at large, choosing instead to hustle up to the bench. Harriet thought she recognized the bloke, having seen him run errands for the Minister’s office. At the moment, he went directly to Bones rather than Gaunt, and he leaned forward to speak into her ear. His pale, sweaty skin trembled.

The annoyance drained from Madam Bones’ face as Fudge spoke, and her wide eyes flicked once toward Harriet, filled with alarm, before she rose. “This trial is in recess until this issue is resolved. Tonks, return the accused to holding. Aurors, with me—.”

People stood, and benches creaked as bottoms lifted, the men and women in maroon robes exchanging glances before they followed the head of their department. “Bones!” someone called from the crowd. “Bones, what in the blazes is happening—?” But Madam Bones said nothing as she rushed from the courtroom, trailed by the running Aurors.

Tonks tucked a supporting hand around Harriet’s arm and stood with her while the Wizengamot demanded answers, their voices rising in volume to cut over one another.

“Wotcher, Potter.”

Looking up at her, Harriet asked, “What’s happened? Where’s Bones going?”

“I dunno. I have as much information as you do at the moment.”

Turning her head, she searched for Dumbledore but couldn’t find him. At the room’s head, Gaunt stood and leaned upon the rail to peer down at Harriet, suspicion written across the sharp, clean planes of his handsome, hateful face. His narrowed red eyes remained fixed upon her even as Tonks tugged her toward the exit, and Harriet’s last glimpse of the Minister over her shoulder was of him watching her leave. Professor Dumbledore stepped toward him, his mouth moving, and Gaunt finally looked away.

The persistent itch in Harriet’s scar faded.


A/N: Much like Voldemort in canon, Gaunt underestimates Harriet. I struggled a bit with this chapter, wanting to capture different aspects of the characters: Harriet being determined and stubborn, but still being naive and fifteen, not always saying the right thing. Gaunt ’s wrong-footed, and we see those flickers of unbalanced rage while he’s still making an effort to keep his polite society mask.

Harriet, staring at Umbridge: “…”

Harriet: “…”

Harriet: “Pardon me, but wtf is that?”

Chapter 240: heathen king

Chapter Text

ccxl. heathen king

 

When Severus thought of his father, he remembered his temper best of all.

Tobias had been a man of many moods, and nearly all of them had been a shade of anger. He had once told Lily his father didn ’t care for much, and that hadn’t been a lie; Tobias hated everything, especially his son, though he did love to complain. He used to work himself up into a snit over nothing and would spend hours shouting until he made himself hoarse.

The worst of his tempers were not those spent yelling and raging, but rather those that came on quiet and cold, those that built behind his eyes as if every second was simply another piece of kindling stacked on a growing pyre. All it took was one spark to send it all up in flames.

Severus shared that with his father. He was capable of the same cold, malingering rage, and it existed below his usual fatigue, disdain, and derision. He believed himself above it, and no matter how stupid his puling students could be, he rarely felt anything past annoyance or disgust for their attitudes or misdeeds. True rage only rarely came to Severus, built slowly, stick by stick, log by log, until it exploded.

His temper began the moment Potter reappeared from the graveyard and he pulled her from the floor, her thin, bony arms trembling under her hands, small and scared and brittle as a bird. It built when she said the name Barty Crouch and recoiled from it. It built when she returned from Azkaban still reeling from the touch of Dark magic and spent her days staring blankly, hopelessly, at the walls.

It built when the Vow—the curse—burned around his wrist, and for once, Severus resented Lily for its presence. He did not need the fucking agony to keep him to his word.

He could not articulate precisely why seeing those letters waiting on Potter ’s desk had set him off. How dare she. How dare she! She expected him to take a paltry little note and be written off? Some nauseating farewell wrapped in fake sentiment? No. No, he wouldn ’t accept that. He hadn’t. He’d burnt the letter, and he wanted to burn the rest—.

Severus could withstand much. Hexes, curses, torture in the most literal sense of the word. But to behold that quiet defeat in her green eyes—. For her to simply submit—. How dare she—!

Like a wickerman, he was the rough outline of a body built by sticks, set alight—except the blaze in his chest kindled ice-cold, a blast of ice water swirling in his veins. It poured through him, and the memories of his own stay in Azkaban played like his own private horror film flickering behind his eyelids. It sent Severus from the house, past the Aurors and the other residents calling out questions, his heart pounding in his ears. He had to do something before Potter landed herself in prison.

He started pulling strings. Like a spider at his web, he plucked the strands to find what he ’d caught, and he spun through vague rumors and supposition, knitting together information from off-hand comments and reports of Order agents in the field. It was Severus’ responsibility to know where people were, what they were doing, what the Dark Lord—in any incarnation—intended. No, he wasn’t always successful, despite his best efforts, but today—.

The door to the dingy Muggle pub wailed on its hinges as he pushed it in, not that the noise could be heard over the drunken din inside. Welsh voices boomed in the narrow, crowded space, unsurprising given they were near Cardiff and the monitor above the bar displayed an ongoing football game. The odor of pipe smoke and spilled beer met Severus ’ nose, made pungent by the humid summer air. The Muggles booed in displeasure at something on the telly, fists thumping hard on the bar. No one took notice of the tall, scowling wizard in a pair of Transfigured jeans and jumper as he headed toward the back.

He found what he was looking for seated at a booth near the rear door.

The magical ward rippled as Severus passed through it, and the trio of wizards at the seemingly empty table fell silent.

“Well, bugger all,” Barty Crouch sneered over the rim of his pint. “The high and mighty professor descends among the peasants. I didn’t know we’d be seeing you here, Snape.”

Severus ’ eyes flicked from him to Wilkes and a newer recruit, Ebner Palmer, who wasn’t a Death Eater but rather a sympathizer—a thug who rounded out their little party. “I go where my Lord wills me to,” he drawled, forcing Wilkes to slide over with a look, allowing him to sit at the booth.

“He said nothing to me about it. ” Crouch sniffed. “Aren’t you usually too sensitive to run with my circle, Snape? Too cozy with your books and research, kissing Slytherin’s arse? Or was it Dumbledore’s? I’m not quite sure.”

Idly, Severus glanced at Wilkes and Palmer, then at Crouch. Crouch followed his look, then rolled his eyes, the unspoken concession being Wilkes and Palmer were worthless. Wilkes had never been incredibly bright and had turned to the bottle in the Dark Lord ’s fall, and Palmer had never been remarkable in skill or intelligence. Just a greedy little parasite snatching at the pieces of things he wanted.

“Whatchu looking at me for?” Wilkes demanded.

“Because you’re an idiot,” Crouch retorted. “Can’t be trusted to stay in line! Of course the Dark Lord had to send someone else.”

“Oi, fuck off, Crouch. Miss being led around by your daddy’s leash yet?”

Crouch curled his lip like a mad dog, but he kept himself in line. The Dark Lord tolerated very little disobedience since his return, and Crouch took his duties more seriously than the others. He moved past Severus ’ presence and Wilkes’ witless quipping, knowing the punishments met out at Voldemort’s hands would be worse than suffering these slighter indignities.

Severus folded his palm hands together, his heart pounding in his ears. The Muggles cheered at something on the telly.

“Look at them,” Palmer muttered, dribbling cheap beer over his bearded chin. “Oblivious to everything. Disgusting.”

“Let the pigs be happy until we take the strays to the Dark Lord,” Crouch remarked. He slipped his wand from his Transfigured shirt sleeve and casually Imperiused a waitress, pulling her through the ward to drop off another round of drinks, including one for Severus. He dismissed her again with a pleased sound. “It’ll all come crashing down on their worthless heads someday.”

The conversation turned to what it usually involved with this group—Dark magic, pure-blood women, and the Dark Lord. Occasionally there was a more thought-provoking word on current events, rare as water in the desert. It was Palmer who said, “It’s that Potter bitch’s trial today, innit? Think she’ll get it for that brat you offed, Barty?”

Crouch chugged the last of his drink, finishing with a small sigh. “Hmph. No. Not if what we’re hearing from the Guardians is anything to go by. But, if she’s stupid—.”

“They’d send a kid to Azkaban?” Wilkes interrupted.

“Why not? I was barely more than a kid when they sent me.”

Wilkes scoffed. “Might have something to do with using the Cruciatus on Longbottom’s wife until she kicked off.”

Crouch cackled. He had the laugh of a hyena, high, forced, and raspy. “They won’t. Potter will keep her mouth shut—and if she doesn’t, well.” His mouth spread in the eerie approximation of a smile. “No one will believe her, and our Lord will prove Azkaban’s not the fortress the Ministry makes it out to be. She’ll be like a nice present, all wrapped up and waiting for him.”

The hand Severus wrapped around his frosted mug twitched.

“He’s promised her to me. For all my dedication.” Crouch’s tongue flicked over his lower lip once, then again. The residue of his drink slicked his skin like gloss. “She’ll learn her proper place.

“Right,” Wilkes mocked. “You’re full of rubbish. If our Lord had sent me in your place, I would have had the girl panting for it in a week. She would’ve done anything I said. Potter made a fool of you for months.”

“Did you really spend all that time there and get nowhere ? Fuck, mate. ” Sensing Crouch’s growing ire, Palmer hurried to add on. “Not that I blame you. Potter’s not my taste, either, not with her mum’s dirty blood—.”

Crouch snarled, fist thumping on the table. “Shut your mouth,” he demanded, glowering at Wilkes, the Palmer. “Frigid bint. I couldn’t force the matter under Dumbledore’s nose, but she’ll learn better before the end—.”

The telly exploded in a burst of glass and smoke. The Muggles shrieked and bellowed in outrage, their game interrupted. The bartender could only stare at the mess and blink, confused by what could have happened.

Grunting, Crouch tugged a cheap pocket watch from his shirt pocket and judged the hour. “That’ll be a sign for us to be on our way, boys. Let’s see if Snape can pull his weight.”

“More like pull a Muggle’s weight,” Palmer snorted, sliding out of the booth as the others followed suit. Severus’ hand brushed Crouch’s arm as he shoved by the taller wizard.

None of the Dark Lord ’s minions noted Severus was barely breathing.

“I still don’t understand why we’re doing this,” Wilkes said as they walked toward the back door, opening it onto a quiet, shadowed alleyway. The lack of vegetation made the narrow passage hot despite the sun having dipped below the horizon, a scant blush of yellow light glimmering through the clouds overhead.

Crouch, Wilkes, and Palmer walked out in front of Severus. He shut the door—and silently locked it behind him. He lifted his hand, and the camera at the alley ’s head sputtered, dribbling sparks.

“It’s not for us to question the Dark Lord’s whims,” Crouch said, shoving his hands into his pockets. He trailed behind the other two. “It is only our duty to serve.”

“We get it, Crouch. You’re a martyr for the cause. But what’s he need all these Muggles for—?”

Red lights streaked through the alley, hitting first Wilkes then Palmer square in the back. As the pair crumpled like wet rags, Crouch ’s eyes widened and spun around, finding no one but Severus Snape standing there.

“Wh—?” He didn’t bother fully voicing his question. “ Traitor!

Crouch reached for his wand—and found nothing. Instead, Severus held it in his left hand, taken when Crouch had risen from the booth, and in his right, he aimed his own wand.

“When the Dark Lord finds out—.”

“Those two will remember nothing of my presence,” he intoned, voice frozen, emotionless. A distant part of his Occluded mind found it fascinating how cold, arctic rage could be articulated so quietly. Behind him, the Muggle lights fought to stay lit, and they cast his face into shadow. “And the Dark Lord never knew I was here.”

“You—!”

There was no ridiculous monologue, no seething outpouring of his animosity or antipathy. Severus had hesitated when he ’d had Otho Selwyn under his wand all those years ago, but with Barty Crouch it was easy. It was as easy as breathing.

Slytherin would have been proud.

Avada Kedavra!

 

xXx

 

It rained in Scotland.

If a person stood carefully on the edge of the Astronomy Tower, past where the students were allowed, just where Severus now leaned his weight, they could see storm sweeping from the lower dale like a dark, mist-clad longboat, propelled by unseen but urgent rowers. It came on silently and then, all at once, burst into a chorus of static as the rain reached the lake ’s shore.

He couldn ’t remember much after that sordid green light burst to life in the alleyway. It came in pieces, sensations: the rasp of his cloak and hood returning to their proper forms, the vibration of spoken spells against his lips as he changed Wilkes’ and Palmer’s memories, Crouch’s dead weight tugging on his shoulder, the pressure of Apparition. Then—cold water splashing his numb hands as Crouch landed in the Atrium’s fountain. Screams echoing in the cavernous stone hall. The hard soles of his boots clacking on the floor as he bolted for the Floo before it could be locked down.

He remembered the rush of Apparition as he jumped from location to location, covering his tracks. And then—laughter, his own, the grounding, crippling embrace of Hogwarts ’ wards welcoming home despite the things he had done.

Severus wondered if his father had ever felt like this after his temper was spent, if he too had shuddered in the sudden unrelenting stillness, the place in his chest where one should find a heart yawning wide and deep as a Gringott ’s cavern. His palms tingled with Dark residue, curling around his wrists like shackles.

The rain chased itself across the shore and, like a summer dream, began to break apart as swiftly as it ’d arrived.

Severus didn ’t hear the footsteps behind him, but he felt the two red, gleaming eyes that settled upon his back, sensed the shift in the air that brought smells found only in the colder, mustier reaches beneath the castle’s foundations. Slytherin said nothing to him, and Severus didn’t turn around.

Slytherin did not ask where he had gone, why he ’d been out all day, or what he’d done. He did not ask how Harriet’s trial had concluded. They shared only the unspeakable state of knowing—the will of a monster enacted by the all too willing hands of an ailing man.

Severus turned, leaning his weight against the railing. His body felt as if it weighed a tonne when he moved, his cloak ’s hem dragging on the stones. Slytherin stepped forward beneath the bright moonlight and raised his chin, staring down the length of his nose at the silent Potions Master.

Slytherin issued a single order with all the nonchalance of an owner directing his favorite pet. Fetch .

Severus stood, slouching back into the darkness instead of over the railing into the light, and he did as he was told. He passed by Slytherin and missed how the wizard ’s mouth twisted into a knowing grin.

 


A/N: Title is from a line in Johannes Carsten Hauch ’s “The Wild Hunt,” which I’m sure you can guess the subject of.

Wizengamot: “Ha, it couldn’t possibly be Crouch! He died in Azkaban!”

 

Snape: “Your DoorDash delivery is here.”

Chapter 241: a parting threat

Chapter Text

ccxli. a parting threat

 

Mr. Flamel’s snores filled the claustrophobic holding room.

Harriet sat squished between him and Perenelle at the table, bouncing her leg. Perenelle had one of Harriet’s hands tucked between her own, held atop her thigh. Every so often, her thumb would gently brush her knuckles in a slow, comforting pattern, though Perenelle’s eyes were close to closing as well. Harriet couldn’t blame the Flamels; they probably hadn’t slept in twenty-four hours, so on edge waiting for Harriet’s trial and relocation to the Ministry.

Harriet wasn’t tired. Not yet, at least. The Aurors had escorted her and her guardians to this room hours ago, and there they’d remained, no further information given. What had happened? Were they going to send her back to Azkaban to wait for the trial to be reconvened? Could she go home again? How much more would she have to endure?

Perenelle shushed her nervous twitching.

“What if it takes longer?” Harriet muttered. “What if—? Am I going to Az—?”

Non, ma choue,” Perenelle said, stopping her from finishing the thought. She yawned. “You won’t be going there. It is all right.”

“Is—? Do you need to go home? You’re both so tired. You can go home and come back—?”

Non,” Perenelle said again, her voice sleepy but firm. “We’re staying with you until you’re home.”

Mr. Flamel continued snoring.

Another half hour passed before the door opened, the loud sound of the metal catch scraping the lock jerking Mr. Flamel from his slumber. Harriet expected Aurors ready to escort her to the courtroom again, but it was Mr. Dirigible who entered the room, followed by Professor Dumbledore and Sirius. The latter looked odd in their Wizengamot robes, and Mr. Dirigible had the appearance of a man who’d just had a massive burden lifted from his shoulders.

“What iz it? What ‘as happened?” Perenelle asked, her hand tightening over Harriet’s.

“The Ministry has found Bartemius Crouch. Junior, that is,” Mr. Dirigible said, the air rushing from Harriet’s lungs as if she’d been punched in the gut. She gawped at the wizard, at a loss for words. “He was found deceased in the Atrium during the trial. Though dead, it is readily apparent he only found himself in that state within the last few hours.”

What?”

Mr. Dirigible nodded, then broke into a rare smile. “They’ve dismissed the trial.”

For a moment, no one spoke.

“You’re joking,” Harriet blurted out, hardly daring to believe what she heard. Maybe she’d fallen asleep after all. She would pinch herself if she didn’t think Sirius would tease her about it until the end of time.

“Quite serious, Miss Potter. The prosecution based your arrest warrant and the basis of this trial on the impossibility of Barty Crouch Junior being at the crime scene. Discovering he was not, in fact, incarcerated—nor dead in June—invalidates the warrant. In other circumstances, they might have tried to restructure their argument, but the court has decided to suspend all criminal charges against you. You will be free to go once the Aurors arrive with final release documents.”

Harriet continued to stare at her barrister, at a loss for words. It was almost hilarious. Months of worry and sleepless nights, gone in a snap. Gone with a simple choice of “suspending all criminal charges.” The Flamels made happy exclamations in French and hugged Harriet, squeezing what little breath she had out of her.

“I—I don’t understand,” she gasped. “It’s—over? Just like that?”

“Just like that. Minister Gaunt pushed for the dismissal,” Professor Dumbledore explained.

“Why in the world would he do that?!”

“Well, prior to this discovery, he was quite adamant there are no free Death Eaters, and Mr. Crouch’s presence proves that wrong. It also calls into question the efficacy of Minister Gaunt’s security at the prison and within the Ministry itself. No matter his personal desires, the last thing the Minister will want is to continue giving you a platform of willing listeners among the ruling body of the British wizarding world. He will want you silent.” Dumbledore smiled. “What liars fear most is the truth, dear girl.”

“What Albus means is that you made Gaunt appear a fool this afternoon,” Mr. Flamel grumbled. He flattened his hand against the front of his wrinkled waistcoat and tried to smooth it out. “He is being prudent by refusing to let you back into ze courtroom where you would give his dissenters the opportunity to make him look an imbécile.”

Harriet’s heart beat heavy in her chest, racing despite how breathless her lungs felt. Merlin’s beard, she thought, on the verge of hysterical laughter. It was too easy, too simple. One dead Death Eater, and suddenly no one cared to try the teenage witch in their midsts, Gaunt scrambling to spin the story and salvage his image. A mad part of her wanted back into that room, back in front of those witches and wizards so she could tell the whole story and make them listen—but the rational part of Harriet’s tired brain wanted nothing more than to walk out of there and never look back.

“Whatever his reasons—,” Sirius interjected. “Let’s get the fuck out of here before he changes his mind.”

Her stomach twisted when the Aurors arrived, but they only returned her wand and had her sign documentation for her release. Harriet didn’t even read the documents, leaving that to Mr. Dirigible, who grumbled under his breath as he read and pointed out which lines Harriet needed to quill her signature on. Then, the parchment was gathered and returned to the Aurors. The door opened, and Perenelle still held her hand as Harriet stepped into the corridor.

People crowded the passage. They crowded it all the way to the stairs and the lift, questions being flung over Harriet’s head as she kept her gaze averted to the floor. Stepping into the Atrium caused her to flinch from the noise—the boom of Aurors ordering spectators back, the sharp, rising cries of questions and accusations.

“We should have asked Bones if we could use her Floo,” Sirius groaned as they approached the masses, trying to find a way through. Alarmed, Harriet thought these people were there for her, but quickly realized most had their attention was fixed on the fountain. They found him in the Atrium, they said, Harriet remembered. Despite the distraction, some still turned to their group, and Mr. Dirigible cleared his throat.

“I’ll deal with the press. Please see yourselves home safe.”

“Thank you, Dorian—.”

They continued while Harriet’s barrister diverted attention, though they still found themselves trying to cut through the thick of it to reach the Floos on the far side of the Atrium. Harriet tried to peer past the shoulders surrounding her as their pace slowed to a crawl, wanting to catch a glimpse. Perhaps it was gruesome or morbid, but she wanted to see Crouch’s body for herself, even if from a distance, and only for a moment. Just to make sure it was really him.

Harriet’s fingers slipped from Perenelle’s when she stepped in one direction and the older witch in another. It happened in a moment, and a maroon-robed man slid between them. Harriet turned to find her guardian—and a hand clamped onto her shoulder, cruel fingers digging into the muscle connecting it and her neck. A solid weight leaned into her back as the person bent closer to her height.

Your little friends will die screaming,” Gaunt hissed with fury into her ear, bared teeth glancing against her skin. “And it’s your fault.”

His words hit Harriet like an ice bath, and she struggled, yanking herself away. The hand released as the Auror between her and Perenelle moved, and Harriet spun around—.

“Harriet?”

She searched the crowd, eyes flashing from person to person. Perenelle took her hand again, holding onto it more securely. Harriet caught sight of a familiar back moving away from them, striding with angry purpose as the two Aurors at his sides ushered people aside. Shouts of “Minister Gaunt, Minister Gaunt!” followed him.

A softer hand touched her shoulder where Gaunt’s had been, and Harriet winced, already feeling the bruise forming there. Mr. Flamel had his gaze fixed on the Minister’s back as well, narrowed in suspicion, and he guided Harriet and his wife away, hurrying after Professor Dumbledore and Sirius. “Come. Let’s get you home.”

 

xXx

 

When Harriet stepped through the Floo, she thought Hermione and Elara were going to crush her ribs.

She had only crossed the grate in the kitchen when she heard a loud exclamation, and her vision was blinded by a fuzzy cloud. Hermione collided with her first, then Elara, and the pair wrapped her in a hug so tight it pressed the air from her lungs.

She hugged them back just as tightly.

“I knew you’d come home! I just knew it!” Hermione cried, voice muffled by Harriet’s robes. Elara didn’t speak.

Pop!

Harriet blinked, then found herself covered in silver glitter and green confetti.

“Cheers!” Fred hollered as he set off another of their inventions, this time filled with gold and red material, his mother chiding him for getting it near the cake. Ginny clapped with him, grinning, and George popped another before Mrs. Weasley could argue. Mr. Weasley smiled from his place at the table next to Remus, who rose to greet the returning group.

Harriet and her friends moved from the hearth, letting Sirius through, Harriet clinging to Elara’s arm when her knees felt weak. She couldn’t believe it was over. This morning, she’d been prepared for Azkaban—ready for it, braced against the final blow—and now all the tension fled her limbs, Harriet feeling as limp as a noodle.

Hermione noticed and squeezed her arm. “All right?” she asked.

“Great,” Harriet replied, grinning. “Just—a lot to take in, innit? They didn’t even reach a verdict, they just—well, they dismissed the trial.”

Puzzled, Hermione replied, “It was a ridiculous trial to begin with, but I hadn’t expected they would come to their senses in the middle of it.”

“They didn’t. They found Barty Crouch.”

Elara gasped.

“They what?”

“Found him. Dead, of course. But Mr. Dirigible said they based the whole premise of their case on Crouch being dead already? So they couldn’t sit there like a bunch of numpties and keep dragging out that lie without looking like morons, so they let me go.” Harriet laughed, short and tired. “Apparently, Gaunt couldn’t get me out of there fast enough. I thought he might have an aneurysm if I kept telling everyone about the Dark Lord.”

Hermione frowned, catching the tension in Harriet’s voice. “He’s not going to be happy about this.”

Cold sweat gathered at the nape of Harriet’s neck, and the bruise hidden under her robes throbbed with heat. “No. No, he isn’t. But bugger him for now. The less I think about the Minister, the better.”

What had originally been a rather grim birthday party for the Boy Who Lived livened with news of Harriet’s acquittal, and Longbottom didn’t appear terribly bothered by being overshadowed at his own party. Sirius shared the story with the others of how Harriet’s trial had ended, and he crowed over Barty Crouch’s demise despite Remus reprimanding him.

“It’s probably best not to extol murder in front of the impressionable teenagers,” he said as slabs of chocolate cake got passed around with scoops of trifle.

“You can’t tell me he didn’t deserve it, Remus.”

“Well—.”

From his seat by Mr. Flamel, Professor Dumbledore interrupted the pair. “Murder is not something to be celebrated, Mr. Black.” He peered over his half-moon spectacles, accepting a top off of hot cider from Mrs. Weasley. “He deserved to serve his time in prison for his crimes, and though his demise has granted us great fortune, it should not be delighted in.”

At the table’s head, Sirius shrugged. He had his Wizengamot robes open and hanging off his shoulders, revealing his wrinkled day clothes underneath. “I have to disagree with you, Professor. Death is kinder than Azkaban.”

“Oh, I have no doubt it is, but you mistake my meaning. It is not about kindness, Mr. Black, but whether it is right for one man to take the life of another in his hands and to choose to end it.” Professor Dumbledore sighed, softly shaking his head at his own thoughts. “Whenever possible, such a decision should be avoided. I would have preferred to see Mr. Crouch returned to his cell rather than interred in the earth.”

Snorting, Mr. Flamel clapped him on the shoulder. “Your soft heart will be your ruin, ami.”

“Maybe. I cannot argue it is often inconvenient, but what is right is not always what is easy.”

Harriet listened to their conversation. Her brow furrowed as she poked at her cake, smearing icing along the plate’s rim as George and Ron sang another birthday song for Neville. She didn’t know if she agreed with Professor Dumbledore, but she didn’t disagree either. She never wanted to be in a position where she had to decide whether or not a person deserved to die. It sickened her. When she witnessed Greyback’s death, the Headmaster had told her not to mourn the creature he’d become but rather the potential he’d wasted and the people he’d hurt.

She wasn’t sad Crouch was dead—Merlin, no. More than anything, she felt…guilty for how relieved hearing of his fate made her. What happened wasn’t proper justice. He hadn’t been forced to answer for Terry’s death, to confess what he’d done, to give Terry’s parents peace of mind. Instead, he got to shuffle off into the afterlife and didn’t have to pay for the heinous crimes he committed or be held accountable. He was just gone.

Harriet stuck food into her mouth and chewed.

But Dumbledore had also mentioned there not being other options sometimes, or the right choices being difficult. If Harriet had to choose between Crouch going to Azkaban or being killed, she’d pick the former. But what if the scenario was more complicated and morally ambiguous? What if Harriet had to choose between killing Crouch or him hurting someone else? Or what if she had to pick between Crouch dying or her going to Azkaban?

Suddenly, Elara disappeared with a yelp—and in her place fluttered a black-feathered canary. Harriet dropped her fork and held out her hand on instinct, the little bird dropping onto her palm. Birds didn’t have expressions like a person’s, but Harriet decided this bird’s was decidedly stunned.

Then, in a puff of smoke, Elara returned, her hair mussed and body stiff. The Weasley twins roared with laughter.

“Like them?” George asked, pointing at the pastries Elara had sampled. “We’re calling them Canary Clusters.”

“Brilliant spot of fun.”

Boys!

Elara glared at the pair, carefully fixing her hair. “I’m going to hex your legs off.”

Mrs. Weasley gave her sons a thorough telling-off for not warning others of what they’d put on the table, while Sirius found the whole ordeal excellent and had to sample one of the pastries himself. He flapped over Remus’ head—and then landed on the other wizard when he changed back, resulting in a fair bit of cake going flying through the air, both blokes falling to the floor, and the group witnessing Remus Lupin’s colorful swearing.

Harriet laughed until her stomach hurt.

No one noticed when Snape slipped into the room. He slid past the gathering without paying it any mind, and he went straight to Dumbledore, bending to mutter something for his hearing. The good humor on the Headmaster’s face faded.

He cleared his throat as Snape straightened, standing too far from the main hearth for his expression to be visible. “Harriet,” Professor Dumbledore said as he stood and set aside his beverage. “Could we have a word for a moment?”

Popping a final bit of cake into her mouth, Harriet nodded and stood, squeezing past her friends to reach the door and follow the Headmaster and Snape up the stairs into the foyer. “Is everything all right, Professor?”

Dumbledore didn’t answer her immediately. “Yes,” he said, though in a tense, unhappy voice. “It has simply been brought to our attention that, with your trial being now settled, Professor Slytherin is requesting your presence.”

Harriet blinked. “Wh—what?” she sputtered, the taste of chocolate and cream turning sickly and heavy on her tongue. “But it’s summer holidays!”

“Your house arrest is the only reason you’ve been allowed to stay as long as you have,” Snape said. Harriet thought he sounded odd, but she was too upset by the news to consider why. “He wishes for you to return.”

“Professor!” Finding Snape blank and unresponsive, Harriet turned to Dumbledore. “Tomorrow’s my birthday! I only just—. I—he can’t—.”

Dumbledore shook his head. “As your master, he’s within his rights to require your presence, though we had hoped he would not abuse the privilege over the summer holidays.”

Harriet’s shoulders slumped as she accepted the inevitable, frustration replacing the relief she’d allowed herself to feel for the past hour. “Is it even safe to be with him outside of school?”

“He cannot visit undue harm upon you,” he told her, and his choice of words led Harriet to believe Professor Dumbledore had been reading up on the rules for masters and apprentices again. “A master’s care for his apprentice directly reflects his own status and abilities. He cannot deny you common necessities, nor can he keep you from contacting your guardians.”

“Yeah, just everyone else, right?” Dumbledore didn’t argue, and Harriet couldn’t help but sneer. “Brilliant. Just brilliant. Free from one bloody madman, then back under the thumb of another—.”

“I will be there.”

Snape’s interjection startled Harriet into silence. Indeed, it apparently surprised the Headmaster as well, as his brow rose and mouth flattened. “Severus?”

“I will stay with them, Headmaster.”

Something in Harriet’s chest loosened. She found the prospect of spending time with Professor Slytherin less terrifying if Snape was at least nearby. She knew Professor Dumbledore didn’t want any harm to come to her, but there was only so much he could do, only so far she could be protected. What rules mattered if Slytherin decided to curse her? Would that really stop him?

Instead of voicing her doubts, Harriet asked, “How long?”

And Snape said, “For the rest of the summer.”

She nodded, then headed for the main stairs to pack her things. She waited until she had a floor between herself and the professors before she lashed out, throwing her fist into the wall. It didn’t make her feel better; if anything, it made her feel worse, her knuckles scuffed and throbbing. The ache reminded her of the soreness in her shoulder.

Cursing, Harriet continued to her bedroom. It wasn’t fair, but that was the point, wasn’t it? Because other people got to enjoy things like holidays and day trips or lazy summer days spent at home with their families, and Harriet didn’t. Harriet didn’t even have a home or family—.

That’s not true, her own thoughts refuted. That’s not true at all.

Harriet released an aggravated breath and slammed her door shut behind her. Turning to the room, seeing her things already packed and sorted took the wind out of her aggression. Oh, she remembered. That’s right. I put everything together already because I thought—. I thought I wouldn’t be—.

Slowly, Harriet’s fingers uncurled from their tight fists and hung limp at her sides. She stared at her packed trunk and neatly made bed. The dull, distant glow of Muggles lights buzzed beyond her drawn curtains.

That was no point in her anger. Her life had never been normal and it never would. She was raised in a cupboard and made friends with shadows and snakes, and there were people out there who would do everything they could to hurt or kill her. She would never be a normal teenager, and the faster she accepted that, the better.

Listless, her gaze rose from the bed to the desk and the line of envelopes carefully folded and sealed. She recalled how difficult it had been to keep her lettering neat as her hands shook and trembled, but she’d been possessed by a need to record her final wishes—all her love and regret and memories, the things she wanted people to know if they never saw her again. She’d spent so long on those, hours and hours writing by candlelight. Harriet didn’t remember when she’d last slept.

Harriet tugged the rubbish bin out from under her desk and, one by one, dropped the letters inside. One flick of her wand and a muttered spell kindled a fire in the balled-up parchment underneath, and the smell of smoke tickled her nose.

This morning she’d assumed her life was over. She thought she’d never see her friends—her family—again, forced instead to endure an untold number of days between four gray walls on a cold island, visited only by the crashing echo of the restless sea and hungry monsters devouring her hopes and dreams. Her life was not what she wanted it to be and never would, but it was hers. Harriet was not ready for farewells and final wishes.

“Be careful, Potter,” Gaunt hissed from the bench.Be VERY careful.

She thought about Professor Dumbledore in the dining room, telling Sirius it was wrong to delight in murder. She thought about difficult choices.

Your friends will die screaming.”

“No, they won’t,” she whispered, voice fierce, the fire licking up the sides of the bins as the letters smoldered. The light flared across her spectacles. “Not before you do.”

The last envelope disappeared in a crinkling twist of soot and cinders, and Harriet doused the fire. She grabbed her trunk and Atlas left on her desk—then threw open the window before she left. The curtains fluttered, and the blackened ashed drifted on the breeze.


A/N: I don ’t picture Harriet as being pro-death penalty. She is, at heart, kind to a fault and very empathetic, and not someone who wants to hate others or wish them death. It’s something she’s going to struggle with, especially as Slytherin’s apprentice. For the majority of us, it’s an obvious choice between Crouch being killed or going to Azkaban—but Harriet finds the onus of that decision difficult to bear and accept. Thank Merlin she has Snape lol.

Chapter 242: deorc wendan

Chapter Text

ccxlii. deorc wendan

 

Saying goodbye to her friends almost proved too much for Harriet.

She didn’t cry because she told herself it wasn’t worth wasting the tears over. It frightened her to think of what Slytherin might do without the presence of other students or the Headmaster, but Harriet respected Professor Dumbledore enough to believe when he said Slytherin wouldn’t hurt her—or, at least, not hurt her excessively. So Harriet didn’t cry when she told her friends and family she had to leave, though it was a very near thing.

Snape didn’t speak as they left Grimmauld. He had no scathing comment for her watery eyes or unhappy pout as they passed through the front door and descended the steps, the night hot and humid and miserable around them. They crossed the road in the dark, the streetlights closer to the house all dim and busted, leaving a definite shadow through which they could walk without being readily observed. They reached the park, and Snape encircled her upper arm with his large hand before tugging her into Apparition. Harriet leaned into the feeling and held her breath until she felt solid ground beneath her feet again.

Hogwarts waited beyond the boar-flanked gates, looking glassy and stately, as if a fresh rain shower had given its stone walls a quick wash. Harriet’s nerves settled as she looked over the familiar setting, and she didn’t hesitate to follow Snape as he opened the locked gates to allow them passage. The crunch of their footsteps was loud over the humming insects and the distant slosh of water against the lakeshore.

“Am I just spending the rest of summer at Hogwarts, then?” Harriet asked, her eyes fixed on the back of Snape’s black cloak as he walked ahead of her. She wondered if he ever got hot in that. Cooling Charms only went so far in the height of summer. “You could have said something.”

Snape didn’t answer her. The locks to the school’s main doors thumped like falling hammers as they fell back from their chambers and released the wards, allowing the pair to pass into the foyer. Irked by the Potions Master’s silence, Harriet grumbled, “I wouldn’t have thrown such a fit if I’d known.”

Snape stopped, cloak falling flat against his legs. “Potter,” he said, looking ahead. “Mind your impudent tongue.”

“What? I was only saying—.”

“Not with me. With Slytherin. Do not be disrespectful. Do as he says, then make yourself scarce.”

He kept walking, and their path continued to the dungeons, Harriet’s lightened trunk thumping on the steps behind her. Well, spending the last month of holiday at Hogwarts meant staying out of Slytherin’s way would be easy. He’d probably set her to more bloody studying, and that could be done easily enough anywhere in the castle. Maybe she could visit Hagrid tomorrow or go down to the lake. She wondered if it was warm enough to swim in during the summer, though she couldn’t really do more than an awkward paddle.

Snape muttered the password to the common room door, and the wall opened to reveal the entrance. He stepped back to extend his arm, gesturing Harriet to walk ahead of him, and she sighed as she went, bracing herself for what waited inside.

Slytherin sat in his preferred place by the main hearth, the common room dark and desolate aside from the grim, guttering flames ensconced therein. He was writing in a bound leather journal, the pages tipped ever so slightly toward the light, but when they entered, he snapped the journal closed and tucked it inside his robes.

Harriet scratched her neck.

He watched her and Snape with his unyielding red eyes until they stopped by one of the sofas facing his chair, at which point his gaze roved away as if bored and uninterested. “Good evening, Miss Potter.”

“Er—hello, Professor.”

Master,” he corrected, the word flung sharp as a whip crack, startling Harriet. His head snapped around again to fix her with a glare. “That is my proper form of address.”

“Sorry, Master.”

“I find myself…displeased, apprentice. Though I have given you ample time and have been generous considering your circumstances, you have not checked in with your progress this summer. Explain yourself.”

He had his wand in hand—where it had come from, Harriet couldn’t see. She knew one wrong word would probably see her hexed in the face.

I should keep my mouth shut then, shouldn ’t I?

Fidgeting, Harriet tugged her wand from her sleeve, then stepped closer to Slytherin, bracing herself for a curse. When he did nothing but stare at her, she pointed at the empty goblet set on the end table, and Slytherin inclined his chin, a brow raised. Harriet picked up the goblet and, turning it round in her hand, pointed her wand to its side. “Serpensfiet.”

She winced as the glass heated itself nearly to the point of burning her palm, but it lasted for only a moment, the goblet’s shape melting and reforming into that of a solid glass snake. It was wonky; Harriet’s talent would never be in delicate, pretty Transfigurations, though it definitely had the right shape and the indents suggesting eyes and a mouth. Concentrating, she turned it over and cast the spell she usually used to sharpen her quills to instead carve small runes on the snake’s belly. Once satisfied, Harriet muttered, “Surgit,” and a trickle of magic wound itself into the creature. It glowed a gentle blue for a moment, then began to move.

“Hmm,” Slytherin said, extending his arm. Harriet let the weak little golem fall into his open hand, and Slytherin inspected it between his fingers with clinical detachment. It didn’t last for long, breaking apart into glass rocks that the professor repaired and returned to its proper cup form. “At least you’ve absorbed the material, though I did not ask for updates purely on a whim.”

“I—it won’t happen again?”

“It won’t.” Slytherin stood, the motion eerily similar to the easy, malleable roll of a snake raising its head. He dropped the goblet on the table, and his eyes flickered over Harriet’s clothes. “This is unacceptable.”

She glanced down at herself. She wore the same clothes she’d had on at her trial, a blouse and skirt that didn’t quite fit, her robes too short, the lot slightly wrinkled from her slouching over various tables and breaking into a nervous sweat. A fine misting of cake and icing splattered across her front.

“You are my apprentice, Miss Potter. The first Hogwarts has seen in decades, and perhaps one of the youngest ever selected for such an honor. Have respect for the position.”

Harriet’s response was an eloquant, “What?” Slytherin looked more peeved by the second. His eyes flicked to Snape behind her, then back to Harriet.

“Leave the trunk here. An elf will forward it.” He swept past her, and Harriet stumbled as she spun in place. “Come along.”

Dread replaced the relief Harriet had felt as Slytherin led them out of the common room and back up the stairs to the foyer. What did he mean by “an elf will forward” her trunk? Forward it where? Were they not staying at Hogwarts?

They trailed outside, back into the brunt of silvery moonlight. Slytherin passed through the gates ahead of Harriet and Snape, and he didn’t turn to acknowledge them as he held out his hands. Snape settled his forearm in one, and Harriet followed his lead, gingerly placing her wrist in the other. Slytherin’s fingers closed around it like the jaws of a trap slamming shut, and Harriet flinched when he pulled them into Apparition. He lacked the care Snape used, and she felt like sicking up her supper when they landed.

Harriet sucked in the warm evening air and squeezed her eyes shut, trying to regain her equilibrium. When the ground stopped moving under her feet, she lifted her head and looked around, finding they’d arrived on a dimly lit road with old-fashioned stone houses lining the cobblestones. Despite the poor lighting, it was a pleasant enough place, but there was a heaviness in the air, a stolid kind of haze Harriet couldn’t see or physically touch but could feel all the same. The lack of cars proved it magical, as did the old, flame-lit lanterns spotted along the lane.

They walked forward from the Apparition point at the road’s head, and Harriet tried to appear somewhat composed as she surveyed the buildings they passed. She thought most were shops, but they didn’t have proper signs with names over the fronts. Instead, the eaves above the doors had sigils or symbols. They walked by one using the alchemical mark for a crucible, the front windows a murky, bottle-green, and another with a skull, both the windows and door barred with iron.

Slytherin stopped them before a tall, crooked building bearing a simple thread and needle on its painted sign. They had to step through an archway and climb a dingy set of stairs to reach a solid oak door, and a bell clanged when Slytherin pushed it in.

Harriet dragged her feet coming inside, and from her place behind the professor, she peered around his side to peek at the interior. It was a tailor shop: the inner walls held thick shelves built of richly colored wood that shone under the warm orange light of the brass lamps, iron rods hung underneath stocked with robes, cloaks, belts, and scarfs. An empty mannequin with pins stuck in its blank face stood in attendance by the entrance, and it turned to the trio as they entered.

“The proprietor will be with you in a moment,” it rasped in a dry, strained voice that gave Harriet goosebumps. Snape shut the door at their backs, the bell chiming again.

“Uh, Pro—? Master?” Harriet corrected herself mid-word, and Slytherin tipped his head to indicate he was listening. “Where are we?”

“My personal tailor, Miss Potter.”

Obviously we’re at a bloody tailor, twat. Where is this place?! Harriet cleared her throat before her thoughts could get the best of her. “And it’s not—closed? It’s getting late.”

She sensed the eye roll in Slytherin’s answering quip of, “Of course not.”

“We are in Eyam, Miss Potter, in a closed magical hamlet that populates a hidden sector of the village,” Snape explained for her benefit, his voice more subdued than usual. “The shops of Deorc Wendan only open at night and serve a specific kind of…clientèle.”

“Oh.” What does he mean by that?

They didn’t have to wait much longer before a door in the back thumped and opened, a short, spindly gentleman with a monocle and thick white hair coming through with his arms full of heavy fabrics. He froze when he spotted their party, strange eyes widening, then dipped into the best bow he could manage at the moment.

“L-Lord Slytherin!” he said, his reedy voice matching the mannequin’s. “An honor, as always, as always. I was not—ah, expecting you. Was there an issue with your last order?”

“No, Mr. Jestergrass. I’m here for a different reason.” Slytherin placed his hand between Harriet’s shoulders and gave her a shove, forcing her to step forward. “I need you to make my apprentice presentable. A full wardrobe, though she’ll need something to leave the shop in as well.”

The wizard—Mr. Jestergrass—gaped momentarily, then fidgeted with his monocle as he regained his composure. “A—an apprentice? I hadn’t known—.”

“I haven’t acknowledged her properly yet,” Slytherin told him, cool, studying his sleeve rather than the shop or the man in front of them. “Which is why we are here.”

“Naturally, naturally….” He set his burden on the long mahogany counter and straightened, turning his attention to Harriet, sizing her up. Color returned to his nervous face as he studied her. “Such an honor to be selected for this—privilege. Your name, miss?”

“Harriet. Err, Harriet Potter.”

“Miss Potter. Forgive me; she appears quite young, my Lord. I was under the impression wizards did not take apprentices until they finished school?”

“It is my will,” Slytherin retorted, Mr. Jestergrass bowing his head. “And yes, she’s young, but Miss Potter is exceptionally skilled—though her manner of dress leaves much to be desired.”

“What’s wrong with how I dress?” Harriet blurted. All three men looked at her as if she’d asked something stupid, and Harriet flushed scarlet, glaring at the floor. Well, sod them. What does it matter how I look?

Sighing, Mr. Jestergrass urged the wizards to have a seat and wait, though Snape remained standing, and he gently chivvied Harriet behind a screen to start taking her measurements. He didn’t use his wand, his hands emitting a steady mint-green as he held the measuring tape between them. He would mutter numbers under his breath, and sensing Harriet’s curious look, he glanced up and flashed a small, anxious smile. His ears, covered by his hair, twitched.

“It marks the numbers in my ledger as I speak,” he explained. “So I can use the template later to create more of your needed attire.”

“Oh. That’s brilliant.”

“Yes, yes….” He stood, grunting at his creaking knees. “Now, let’s get you sorted. I would imagine you’d like the same materials your master prefers?”

Harriet didn’t have a clue what Slytherin had in his robes, but she nodded, deciding she had little choice in the matter. Mr. Jestergrass twisted his hands, and spools of cloth came off shelves from the opposing wall, flapping like strange, lopsided birds.

In short order, Harriet found herself tugged, pulled, and cinched into a pair of high-waisted trousers and a black, buttoned blouse, paired with a waistcoat done with something called jacquard silk. It had a subtle raised pattern of leaves that drifted and shimmered in the movement of the light. Mr. Jestergrass stepped back around the screen and spoke with Slytherin while she changed, reappearing at the right moment to make magical adjustments. Next came the robes, fashioned so the cuffs edged in gold fell just past her wrists, the hem below her knee. Then came the cape and hood, pinned at her throat with a gleaming silver brooch. Harriet glanced over her shoulder into the standing mirror to notice the inside of her hood was white. The rest of her outfit came in shades of black and gray, accented in gold.

“You’ll need this as well, as a finishing touch,” the tailor said, threading a bit of white rope under her hood and over her shoulders, letting it fall against her middle. Harriet plucked up one end and frowned as she studied the little tassel there.

“What’s this for?” she inquired as the tailor gathered her old clothes and deposited them in a paper sack. He handed it to her, and Harriet tucked it under her arm. “Is it a fashion thing?”

“It marks your apprenticeship with a division of Charms. You’ll want to wear the cord with your school robes as well.” Mr. Jestergrass stepped back to study her, adjusting the rope—or cord—so the ends were even. “How old are you, exactly?”

“Fifteen.” Or at least I will be in a few hours.

“Ah,” he said, the corners of his mouth twitching into a soft smile. He breathed in as if he wanted to ask something but then thought better of it. “I have a daughter about your age.”

“You do? What House is she in?”

“House?” he asked, puzzled, then understanding dawned on him, and he let out a short, twittering laugh. “Oh, my kind don’t go to Hogwarts. Not usually.”

“What do you—?”

Mr. Jestergrass ushered her back out from behind the screen, much to Harriet’s frustration. Slytherin looked up from the magazine he’d been flicking through and tossed it aside, standing from the waiting chair.

“Your work is as excellent as ever, Oak,” he pronounced as he came to stand before Harriet, inspecting her attire. Harriet felt odd and off-balanced under so much expensive fabric, and she wondered if Slytherin really expected her to last the summer wearing so much black.

Lost in thought, she flinched when his pale hands gripped her upper arms and pushed. “Stand up straight, girl. Like that.” He didn’t release her, not even when Harriet braced herself and brought her eyes to his. “This is how you will dress when you are in my presence,” he told her. “You are my apprentice, not a child’s ragged poppet, filthy from play. You exist as an extension of my name, a testament to my knowledge and ability. I have given you a great honor denied to many others. You will not sully that by appearing like an unfortunate Mudblood tart. Do you understand me?”

“Yes, Professor.”

One hand rose from her arm to settle on her shoulder, and his fingers dug in exactly where Gaunt’s had only hours before. Harriet almost whimpered from the pain.

“I mean, yes, Master.”

He released her, and Harriet wisely chose not to roll her arm or grimace as she stepped aside. Slytherin went to discuss having further outfits made with Mr. Jestergrass, and Harriet went to stand next to Snape near the door, directing a dark, unhappy glower out the clouded window panes.

“This is stupid,” she muttered under her breath. “There was nothing wrong with my clothes. My school things would’a worked just as well as any of this stuff.”

Snape said nothing. Harriet glanced up at him and found the wizard staring off into the middle distance, eyes open and unblinking. He’d been acting oddly since he’d shown up at Grimmauld, and Harriet hadn’t been able to understand why until now. He looked very much like a weathered house with all the windows dark, not a light to be seen; you knew someone was home, but knocking on the door would either be ignored or unheard altogether. If she hadn’t known better, Harriet would’ve said he was in a state of shock.

“Snape?” she asked, receiving no response. Harriet stretched a tentative hand between them and touched his covered wrist. “Snape, are you all right?”

He stirred at last, then blinked, looking down at her and her fingers tugging on his sleeve. He gave his arm a half-hearted shake to dislodge her. “Keep your hands to yourself, Potter.”

There’s something wrong, she thought, pursing her lips. Snape’s not one for a chat, but he’s definitely not one to go about in a daze like a bird who hit a wall. He looks like he’s waking up from a Stunner, for Merlin’s sake.

“Are you—?”

“Worry about yourself.”

At the register, Mr. Jestergrass finished compiling a price total and Slytherin drummed his fingers on the counter. “Yes, that will do. Forward the expense to the Potter account at Gringotts.”

Snape stopped Harriet’s outraged exclamation by stepping on her foot. She scowled at him instead.

“Now I have to pay for all these bloody clothes I didn’t want?”

“It’s better this way,” he muttered. “You don’t want to be indebted to Slytherin.”

Harriet relaxed, realizing the truth of the statement. No, she didn’t want to be indebted to Slytherin, and she’d much rather pay for this with gold than have Slytherin hold it over her head later.

She ground her teeth and exhaled through her nose, her gaze falling on the bespoke sleeve of her new robes. Madam Malkin’s and Twilfitt and Tattings made nice clothes, but these felt different—dense in a manner Harriet didn’t have the vocabulary to describe. Magic made its own weave in the fibers, prickly like the grazing heat of a fire but still bizarrely cold like lake water molding over her skin. She remembered how the man’s hands had glowed with unspoken spells, and she wondered if that had something to do with it.

They were nice clothes. They just weren’t what Harriet would have chosen for herself, and she resented Slytherin forcing her to get them.

“That will do. Send the packages to this address.” Slytherin waved his hand, ostensibly to magic something onto the parchment Mr. Jestergrass had between them. He turned, gesturing for Snape and Harriet to precede him out the door—when the tailor spoke up from his place behind the counter.

“I would be willing to forgive the debt, Miss Potter,” he told her with a slight smile. He held up the Gringotts purchase ticket between two of his skinny fingers. “If you are willing to trade.”

His words gave Harriet pause. Slytherin’s red eyes narrowed, but he nonetheless gave his head a negligent flick to urge Harriet closer, and she once more approached the tailor. It could have been a trick of the light, but he appeared taller than he had only minutes ago, peering at her with curiosity in his odd, reflective eyes.

“What kind of trade?” she asked. Mr. Jestergrass seemed to consider it for a moment, humming, then snapped his fingers.

“A secret!” he said—and suddenly all the odd and curious things Harriet had noted since her arrival in the village made perfect sense. He wasn’t a wizard; he was Fae. Deorc Wendan was a Fae settlement.

The revelation took Harriet aback for a moment, and she speculated whether or not it would be a good idea to slap a hand over her mouth and scuttle for the exit. The Fae could be mean, she knew, and they always wanted strange things. Mr. Flamel had told her bartering with them could be dangerous.

Sensing her hesitation, Mr. Jestergrass softened his voice. “Just one,” he promised. “A little one.”

Slytherin clicked his tongue. “Get on with it, Miss Potter,” he nagged. “We’ve places to be tonight.”

Snape said nothing.

Swallowing, Harriet took the last step to the counter and squared her shoulders, nodding to Mr. Jestergrass. He bent at the waist to lower his ear, which Harriet could see had a definite point to its end, hidden by his thick, pale hair. She took a breath and tried to think of what secret she could give him. Something unimportant. Something no one else but her would care about.

Harriet leaned closer, whispering. “The Minister branded me in Azkaban. I haven’t told anyone.”

Mr. Jestergrass straightened then, his brow crumpling as his eyes fell from Harriet’s own to her neck, then back again. He couldn’t see it, Harriet knew. She’d been particular in how she plaited her hair and had smeared Elara’s concealer over the area. Harriet didn’t know why she’d told him. Maybe because it was so outrageous it bordered on the absurd; cleared of all charges, but branded for life, just like a Death Eater. Sometimes it made her want to laugh until she cried.

The ticket vanished from Mr. Jestergrass’ hand. “I’ll throw in a cloak,” he muttered. Harriet nodded and stepped away from the counter, joining her professors.

“Good evening, Mr. Jestergrass,” Slytherin said as he turned the knob and opened the door to the summer night.

“Until we meet again, Lord Slytherin.”

The bell jangled one more time, and Harriet went down the steps and through the archway to the road beyond. More and more people had begun to filter into the lane, wizards and Fae alike, all dressed in varying dark, obscuring shades. Next door, the shop with a skull on the sign had ominous red light oozing over the threshold.

“Now,” Slytherin said with a pleased grin, straightening his robes. “Let’s be off to where we’ll spend the rest of our summer together. I’m sure they’re waiting patiently.”


A/N: I hope you enjoyed this little interlude at a new location! Happy Birthday, Harriet!

I ended up choosing white for the DADA academic color as a branch of Charms because A) it was my color when I graduated aha. It was the velvet lining of my hood and one of my cords. And B) because the general category of “arts” is also white.

Harriet: “All these clothes are black. I look like I’m going to a funeral.”

Harriet: “…”

Harriet: “A funeral for Snape’s sense of humor.”

Snape: “It’s being buried right next to my PATIENCE.”

Chapter 243: sang avant tout

Chapter Text

ccxliii. sang avant tout

 

Another Apparition nearly took Harriet’s legs out from under her.

Thankfully, Snape was the one who traveled with her, so the journey induced less nausea and dizziness, though it did little for her exhaustion. She had to lean on his arm to catch her breath, and surprisingly Snape remained still. A moment passed, and Harriet pushed herself off of him, muttering her thanks.

They’d landed somewhere far from the city, somewhere at a higher altitude that had Harriet’s head spinning until she could acclimate to it. They stood knee-deep in thorn bushes Slytherin wasted no time in blasting apart, the air redolent with the smell of broken, oozing greenery and crushed, bitter berries. Clouds muddled the sky, but where they parted, the stars gleamed bright and vivid, almost magical.

A cobbled path cut higher up the mountainside, and Slytherin led their little band to it, his tailored robes rippling in the breeze. This wasn’t the first time he’d seemingly led Harriet to the middle of nowhere, so her apprehension remained somewhat nominal, though “nominal” around Slytherin could be hard to quantify. Harriet couldn’t think of a single time she’d been anything less than horridly nervous in his presence.

Harriet wrinkled her nose at the feel of her new shoes biting into her feet, not yet properly formed, though the rest of her attire was perfect, and she imagined she looked something like Slytherin and Snape, wrapped up in dark colors, the thin dapples of moonlight rippling on the sleek, shiny silk. They strode along the path, three figures in the wilderness, silent aside from the rustling grass and kicked gravel.

Then, Harriet stumbled in the dark, and Snape’s hand shot out to grab her by the collar and keep her upright before Slytherin noticed.

A house appeared through the dense highland trees, a solid structure seemingly melded from the shadows against the brighter night sky, ringed in clouds like a priest’s untidy tonsure. It clung to the cusp of the mountain, soaring over part of a high, rocky cliff, its feet boring deep into the stone. To Harriet, it looked like a vulture, menacing with its wings hunched, Gothic windows gleaming instead of beady, watchful eyes.

There was no gate to stop them, only a sudden, intense buzzing in the air that prickled against Harriet’s skin and unnerved her like walking under a hornet’s nest. Without prompting, Snape muttered a curse under his breath and drew his wand across the back of his hand. The skin parted, and as the blood welled—Harriet’s stomach swooping—the buzzing abated to a tolerable level. Slytherin kept walking, and she forced herself to follow. Snape’s blood dripped along his skin to the ground below.

The building only looked eerier as they drew into the shadow thrown by the moon dripping past the sculpted eaves. Harriet’s eyes widened as her gaze rose higher and higher, taking in the details of the gables, the clawed dormers, the black patterned shingles like a dragon’s dark, fire-scorched hide. The milky sheen of candlelight waited beyond the crystal panes of the towering main doors.

“What is this place?” she asked. Slytherin obliged her by answering.

“The Tor, an ancestral home of a friend of mine,” he drawled, leaving Harriet with no doubt this person wasn’t a friend at all, but rather a follower. “He’s always been a great admirer of my work and is often privileged to host me and my attaché during the summer holidays.”

Harriet made the appropriate noises of acknowledgment, glancing toward Snape as they started up the stone steps. Moss grew between the cracks, and the slate had worn smooth and shiny where centuries of foot traffic had trampled through.

A house-elf opened the doors with magic, though they said nothing as Slytherin stepped over the threshold, only bowing until their dirty ears flopped on the flagstone floor. Harriet frowned but kept her mouth shut. She glanced around the foyer and found more of the grim, aging elegance exhibited outside. It looked old—but not in an extravagant way, more so that the walls were comprised of heavy, gray rock first stacked by Pictish wizards in a time so far removed it was difficult to believe. The windows, framed in oak, came later, the stone cut away to allow it, and the brass fixtures came later still.

The house-elf raised their wrinkled head to peer at her from under furry brows.

Nervous, Harriet fidgeted and tucked her hair behind her ears, fiddling with her spectacles. A smidgen of gratefulness toward Slytherin for forcing her to update her wardrobe wormed in Harriet’s chest, and she smothered it, not wanting to feel any kind of appreciation for a bloke who’d probably gladly watch her get tortured. Still, Harriet looked more the part of a distinguished apprentice and less like a scrawny girl in a blouse she’d grown out of and worn-out school shoes. At least the homeowner wouldn’t take one look at her and throw her out on her ear.

The house-elf disappeared with a small snap!, and the trio remained in the dim foyer, waiting. Harriet kept her hands knotted together in front of herself to prevent them from fidgeting more, though she couldn’t prevent her feet from wandering. Her new shoes echoed in the silent room, and she stared at the artwork framed on the walls as she slowly paced. The largest piece hung over the dormant hearth, a very poncy family portrait, though given the old clothes the unimpressed occupants wore, Harriet guessed they were dead.

“My Lord Slytherin.”

Harriet turned to see a man wearing a hastily knotted dressing gown had appeared halfway down the steps to the first level. Behind him came a woman, her hair plaited for bed, a decidedly peeved set to her pressed mouth. Their looks reminded Harriet of the Malfoys, what with their pale hair and sharp, upturned noses, but where the Malfoys were willowy and delicate, these people were tall, sharp, and Northern, as solid and unerring as the house they inhabited. The gaze the woman sent over the room could have chilled hot iron.

Harriet expected Slytherin to speak, but he didn’t until the wizard—his hand clenched tight on the iron railing—came to the bottom step.

So he’s not higher than him, she realized, barely restraining an eye roll. It was much too late for silly, pointless posturing.

“Gauthar,” Slytherin greeted, hands open. “At last. I anticipated being greeted by better company than your house-elf.”

“Forgive me, my Lord. We did not expect you.”

Slytherin smiled—a cold, rigid flick of his mouth. “I said we’d be arriving today. Have you misconstrued the date?”

“No, my Lord. Simply, we thought with the hour—.”

Slytherin waved his hand, tiring of his own game. “Enough.” He vaguely snapped his fingers behind himself, gesturing someone forward, and because Snape didn’t move, Harriet lurched into motion and came to stand next to him. Gauthar and the woman flicked their dark eyes from Slytherin to her and stared. “This is my apprentice, Harriet Potter. Potter, this is Gauthar and his wife, Nefaria Sangfort.”

Like many stuffy pure-bloods, the witch and wizard kept their facial expressions muted, but not even the weak gray moonlight and lowered lamps could hide the sudden surprise and fear in their eyes.

“Well—.” Gauthar’s voice cracked ever so slightly, and he cleared his throat. “When Lord Slytherin informed us he would be bringing a guest, we hadn’t known it would be someone so…distinguished.”

Harriet couldn’t quite decipher his tone, so she opted to say, “Right, yeah.”

Slytherin merely sniffed. “I would consider Miss Potter neither a guest nor distinguished.” He reached out to lay a hand on her shoulder, and when his fingers barely grazed her shoulder, Harriet begrudgingly stepped closer so the gesture was less awkward. “She’s merely an extension of myself. Is that understood?”

Gauthar and Nefaria nodded. “Of course, my Lord….”

“Considering your marvelous hospitality, I assume our rooms are prepared.”

“Yes, my Lord. They are prepared.” Gauthar hesitated then, his thumb passing over the thick gold ring on his middle finger, turning it as his attention fell onto the wizard still lurking behind Harriet. “I assume the—Potions Master will be on his way?”

Harriet noticed the slight hitch in his question as if he meant to say something else and didn’t.

Snape stirred. Not physically; he didn’t move a bit, but a shadow in his face tightened the skin around his eyes, and it was a look Harriet had grown familiar with when the Potions Master was on the brink of delivering a particularly cutting retort.

“Oh, let’s have him stay,” Slytherin said with an offhand wave. His teeth gleamed for a moment in a wide smile—there and gone. He moved on without waiting for a word from either party. “I tire of these pleasantries. The rooms, Gauthar. Now.”

Harriet didn’t get a chance to see much of the house after that. Mr. Sangfort led them straight from the foyer up the stairs, and they wended upward at sharp angles, lit only by the occasional candle in a glass globe, casting just enough light to see by. They came to a passage lined with dark paneling, a dozen doors on either side. Mr. Sangfort bowed Slytherin into the first room on the right before leading Snape further down the way. Meanwhile, Nefaria took Harriet to the door by Slytherin’s, tension easing from her posture. The glance she sent toward Harriet as she opened the door radiated suspicion, covered in a lingering blink.

Harriet stepped inside, the door swinging closed. Her eyes and feet were heavy, ready for sleep no matter where the bed after a day of continuous emotional upheaval. The curtains hung open over the window, and the cold light coming from the moon gave shape to the heavy, antique furniture: a wardrobe with an owl bar on the top, a desk, a padded chair, a large carpet, and a four-poster bed with a down counterpane and waiting hangings. Her trunk sat at the bed’s foot.

Exhaling, she stumbled to it and yanked the lid open after fumbling with the latches. She felt for pajamas in the dark, then grabbed the first one she found, dragging it out, heedless of the socks and other things that came with it. Her new clothes fell to the floor with soft, muted thumps, the fabric of her nightdress comfortably worn as she tugged it on over her head. A moment later, she flopped face-first onto a duvet that smelled of dust and, with her nose pressed into the sheets, surrendered to the insistent tug of sleep.

 

xXx

 

A solid, sliding weight on the center of her back woke Harriet with a snort.

“Whazzit?” she gasped, her cheek sticky with drool, glasses crooked on her nose. Pale, wispy daylight had just barely begun to bleed over the windowsill and creep upon the floor. At a glance, Harriet thought the room was empty, then she registered the weight on her spine and panicked, wriggling, but the weight went with her, rolling, until she slipped from the edge of the mattress, the hangings rattling on the bar—

And Harriet landed on her backside, several meters of irritated Horned Serpent spilling into her lap.

Livi!” she sputtered with relief, slumping against the bed. “You scared the life out of me! I thought you were—.

She paused, looking into the bright, unhappy eyes of her familiar. He wrapped his coils around one of her legs.

Oh no.

In her rush to get her things together at Grimmauld, she’d neglected to remember putting her familiar and golems in the trunk the morning prior. She’d thought it would be the best place to keep Livi and the other snakes safe should the worst happen, and Elara or Hermione could get them to Hagrid. Now, here she had Livius in a house of strangers, in a place where one bloke could see him, and another could understand him.

What was she meant to do now?

Misstresss,” Livi hissed, his purple tongue flickering in and out as he tested his new environment. He seemed unimpressed. “Thisss isss not the ssstone placcce.

No,” Harriet agreed, pushing her fringe from her eyes. “This isn’t Hogwarts.

There isss a ssstench in the air,” he continued, angular head turning. Harriet’s skated her fingertips under his jaw and along his smooth scales. “What isss it?

Dark magic, I reckon.” Harriet couldn’t be sure, given she couldn’t smell the difference like Livi could, and she didn’t know if the general uneasiness she felt was part of it or solely blamable on her nerves. She did feel—something. An awareness she didn’t have the vocabulary to describe, like an eye centered on the back of her head that wasn’t exactly open, but just as aware of her as she was of it.

The ssstone placcce iss bessst.

Yeah, it is.” She pulled at his coils to begin unwinding them from their tight hold around her leg. “It’s also a lot safer than it is here. Livi, you have to be careful.” She didn’t try telling him he needed to stay in his habitat inside her trunk; he could get out of it, as he’d demonstrated this morning, and though he listened to her on most things, he could be very willful. “Slytherin is here—remember, another Parselmouth? And I don’t trust him.

The Ssspeaker,” Livi said, his coils pulling in on themselves, his neck retracted as if readying himself to strike. “The foul one who carriesss the sssmell of the offender.

The wizard from the Aerie.

The offender.” Livi sounded downright menacing. “It carriesss the sssmell of bad sssleep.

Harriet frowned, but when she asked him to explain, he couldn’t. What did that mean, “bad sleep?” Her familiar had a way of conveying information she often only understood in hindsight—like when he’d continually called Pettigrew the “rat one,” unable to tell Harriet more than what he’d deemed necessary to know. He couldn’t conceive of how that might be unclear.

Sighing, she glanced around the room. Her things lay in a bunch, not unlike a pile of shed snake’s skin in an otherwise orderly space. She recalled from the night before the general layout of things, but with the light she confirmed the furniture reflected the decor of the foyer, though dust clung to the curtains and mantel, and if Harriet had to guess, she’d say the sheets had been changed only moments before Mrs. Sangfort showed her the door. The room wore its disuse like a thin, gray veil.

The quiet pressed in, close and thick, interrupted only by pockets of Livi’s hissing and sounds of the wilderness—loud, wild birds in the distance, the breeze playing in the shutters, the wood gently rattling against the stone. The enormity of her situation fell upon Harriet’s shoulders again, and she seemed to sink into the floor, her heartbeat picking up.

How did I even end up here? she asked herself, head resting on her knees. Bloody hell.

She allowed herself a minute to hug her snake close and to be frightened of what lay ahead, but she indulged for no more than that minute before accepting she couldn’t hide in her borrowed bedroom for the rest of the holiday. She was where she was meant to be—training, getting better, learning how to defend herself and her loved ones so people like Slytherin and Gaunt and Voldemort couldn’t hurt and threaten them. She wanted to be home, but being home wouldn’t do anyone any good in the end.

“All right,” Harriet reassured herself, taking a deep breath. “I can do this. Livi, remember the rules, right? No one but me can see you, especially not Slytherin.” She’d have to enlist Snape’s help in obtaining extra food, and she’d probably get an earful for taking her familiar to this place. Grumpy blighter. Do you understand?

Livi made his displeasure plain, turning his snout away from Harriet. “I will bitesss him.

Well, as nice as that sounds, I don’t think it’d get you very far….

After settling her snake and golems on an impromptu nest of sheets under the bed, Harriet got herself off the floor and went to gather her things and find a washroom. She counted herself lucky it was just across the hall, not a soul in sight to catch her quickly skirting along. She bathed and dressed in the same clothes from the tailor, taking particular care to ensure she looked just as put together as she had last night, even using the Sleakeazy’s Hermione had given her so the worst of her cowlicks laid tidy and neat. A glance in the mirror showed she didn’t entirely look unlike herself, and yet there was an unfamiliarity in the tidiness of her appearance, as if someone had painted her portrait and hadn’t gotten the details quite right.

Piqued, Harriet tugged at her apprenticeship cord, letting the ends hang unevenly against her middle.

Once she had her things tucked away in her trunk, she rolled her shoulders back and decided to brave the house. The feeling of being watched followed her through the corridor toward the stairs, and the dark eyes of former Sangforts muttered under their breath from their portrait frames, most still asleep and snoring, no living inhabitants up and about at that hour.

Harriet retraced her steps to the foyer, and though poking around a stranger’s house made her nervous, she forced her face to remain confident and blank as she went in search of the wizarding foyer where the main hearth would be, or the kitchens. She chose one promising archway and stepped through. She only stopped to look out a long row of black mullioned windows, studying the steep drop of craggy rocks on the cliff below. A narrow set of steps wound down the mountainside into the forest.

“Where did you wander in from?”

Harriet yelped and spun around, her back bumping into the window. A man had appeared in one of the many recessed doorways, unshaven and seemingly dressed in yesterday’s robes. He must have only just opened the door, as the smell of peat moss and scorched barley wafted through the air, clinging to his cloak. He was older than Mr. Sangfort, but Harriet had always been shite at guessing the ages of magical folks and so couldn’t say how old that was. He did resemble Mr. Sangfort, sharing the same coloration and general proportions. Grey tinged his light hair, kept just long enough to tie the ends together at the back of his neck, and the eyes under his raised brow flashed black as coal.

“Well?” he stressed when Harriet didn’t answer.

“I—uh, I came with Professor Slytherin?” she stuttered, clearing her throat. “I mean, I arrived last night with Professor Slytherin. I’m a guest. I was looking for the kit—dining hall.”

The wizard’s posture relaxed as his gaze swept over her. He snorted, then shoved the door open wider at his back. “Come along, then.”

Harriet followed, but hesitated at the threshold as the man ambled inside once more, either certain she would enter or indifferent if she didn’t. Beyond the door waited a much larger chamber than she’d expected, the ceiling lofted and ribbed with thick, ancient wood beams strung liberally with chained chandeliers. The light was needed, as the room served as some sort of workroom, many scarred tables arranged against the walls and through the room’s middle, forming aisles all under the purview of a raised platform where a circular table with an arrangement of comfortable armchairs had been situated. It took Harriet several moments to study the nearest workspace and realize the tools were meant for runecrafting.

Could it be a coincidence? Harriet pondered as she studied an expensive, engraved chisel, trailing one finger through the fine residue of stone dust left on the surface. An iron clamp attached to the table’s lip held a hewn bit of rock steady under a stationary magnifying glass. Slytherin has me studying golem-creation and spellcraft, and then has us summer in the house of a rune-crafter. A bloody good rune-crafter, if this equipment is anything to go by.

The wizard continued up the wooden steps to the raised platform, joining another wizard at the table who had his dragonhide boots propped up on a spare chair. He had his seat turned from the entrance so Harriet couldn’t see anything more than his legs and the side of one well-muscled arm, the sleeves lazily tugged passed his elbows.

“Come have a seat, girl. Stop loitering in the doorway.”

Harriet considered leaving, then judged it better to be polite for the moment—if wary. She climbed the steps after the first wizard while the second turned his head to see her, dark brown eyes following her progression to the platform. He didn’t much resemble the Sangforts; if anything, Harriet thought he looked somewhat like Silas Goldhorn, in that he had a more physical build than most wizards she’d met. He also had a large white scar marring the left side of his face, the rope-like tissue pulling slightly on his jaw and upper lip.

“Who’s this, then?” the second wizard asked, a subtle lisp tinging his words. The first bloke waved Harriet toward a third chair, and she sank into it, perched on the edge like an anxious bird about to fly.

“Another one of Slytherin’s,” the Sangfort wizard said, grunting as he fell back into his cushioned chair. “Ah, we had better switch to tea, Cicero. I doubt this one’s old enough to drink anything more than pumpkin juice.”

Cicero’s eyes raked over Harriet again and he huffed, dismissive. “Merlin, he’s dragging children along with him now? She’ll be another Selket before the week’s out.”

Harriet didn’t know what a Selket was but assumed she didn’t want to be one. The house-elf she saw the night prior appeared from thin air and used magic to lay out a tea service, Charming the steaming pot to pour rich breakfast blend into the sturdy cups, adding biscuits to the saucer. Harriet thanked them, and the silent elf’s mouth gaped before they promptly vanished.

The two wizards eyed her speculatively. The first looked away to take up his cup, sighing. “I suppose introductions are in order if you’re to be a guest in my son’s house. Claudius Sangfort, at your service.”

“Harriet Potter, sir.”

“Potter, eh?” said the one named Cicero. He showed little interest in his tea and instead chose to nurse the dregs of scotch in his glass tumbler. “Thought that family died out with the last son. James, or something.”

“He had a daughter,” Harriet informed him, her tone cool but passable. As the scarred wizard went to set his glass down again, he extended his left arm—and the light fell across the red mark emblazoned there in all its horrific glory, a skull with a writhing serpent falling past its mandible.

Harriet stiffened. Death Eaters. They were Death Eaters. She should have realized—.

Don ’t be a coward. You can do this. Don’t—.

Mr. Sangfort noticed her reaction and a small smile played at the corner of his mouth, twisting like a thorned bramble. He had watchful eyes—eyes that followed every twitch of her hands and the set of her shoulders, a predator determining if she was friend or food. “You must forgive him his manners. This is Cicero Aeter. Cicero, you shouldn’t be so dismissive of our Lord’s recruits. It’s quite rude.”

Cicero laughed—a burst of uninhibited noise that rose the hair on the nape of Harriet’s neck. “I’ll bother with niceties if this one lasts more than a week.”

“I’m not a recruit,” Harriet objected, picking up her tea. She judged whether or not it was safe to drink, and without caring what the blokes at the table thought, she tugged on the leather strap under her collar under the necklace tumbled out, and she dunked the Erkling spoon into the cup. It stayed the same color; nothing was present but a cuppa tea. “I’m his apprentice.”

Claudius blinked and his lips parted, a soft inhalation belying his surprise. Mr. Aeter whistled low, then tossed back the rest of his drink. “Malcolm’s not going to like that one bit,” he said, clear glee in his voice. He gave the impression that he very much looked forward to witnessing Malcolm’s displeasure.

“Forget Malcolm, Myles will be undone. Oh, and Iris will be dreadfully disappointed.” Mr. Sangfort threaded his long fingers together and rested his chin upon them, contemplating. “This should be entertaining. Tell me, Apprentice Potter; has your Master made mention of why he chose to bring you to the Tor?”

“If he had, I’m sure I couldn’t tell you.” Harriet sipped her tea, wishing it had cream and sugar but not wanting to ask. She noticed how Mr. Sangfort’s gaze slipped passed her to the workroom for a moment, and she wondered if he had similar thoughts as she did.

One finger rose to tap against his lips, his brows furrowed.

“As expected. Naturally, if you ever require resource material, or perhaps references, you may come speak with me, Apprentice Potter. I live to serve our Lord—and you, by extension.”

Harriet swallowed, then bit her tongue. Mr. Sangfort was clever, if unsubtle. Perhaps he took one look at her and decided subtly wouldn’t get him anywhere. Either way, they’d known each other for mere moments, and he already worked to ingratiate himself with her. All the better to earn Slytherin’s favor.

Cicero, on the other hand, still had a shadow of suspicion hanging about him. “Are you really his apprentice?” he asked. When Harriet nodded, he continued. “You’re not the first to aim for it, you see. Far from it. Our Lord entertains new students every season, but I’ve never heard of him accepting an apprentice before. Especially not one so…untried. What are you, a fourth year?”

Bristling, Harriet muttered, “A fifth,” and Cicero cracked a wide, mocking grin.

“Oh, well, that makes a world of difference, doesn’t it?” He laughed again, that same loud, brusque noise that wouldn’t be amiss among a wolf pack. “You’re about to make several older lads and lasses very unhappy. You’d best be prepared for that.”

Harriet’s fingers tightened on her cup. He had a point. She hadn’t given it much thought to who else beyond Hogwarts might want to be Slytherin’s apprentice. Sometimes it was easy to forget the world didn’t cease to exist beyond the school’s gate; there were others who’d graduated from Hogwarts or different schools who wanted Slytherin’s attention, who were earnest in their desire to serve him and obey in a way Harriet was not.

What happened if Slytherin grew tired of her wary obstinance? What happened if he decided to cut her loose and take on one of those waiting pupils? What of her task? Would she fail Professor Dumbledore? Her friends, her family?

“There’s no need to frighten the girl,” Mr. Sangfort reprimanded Mr. Aeter. “Surely a bit of friendly competition wouldn’t faze someone our Lord has decided worthy of his tutelage?”

Harriet knew there’d be nothing friendly about it, and on some level, the idea of faceless witches and wizards having it out for her because of her ties to Slytherin did frighten her. The uncertainty of it lingered unwelcome like tacky, persistent jam under her fingertips.

“I am not frightened,” she decided, setting her cup aside, the taste gone sour in her mouth. “I have nothing to fear.”

Mr. Aeter lifted a brow to Mr. Sangfort, chuckling. “Like I said, I’ll bother with the niceties if the fool lasts the week.”

Beneath the table, Harriet clenched her hands into fists. This was going to be a very long holiday.

 


A/N: I got a new young pet in the home so updates may be a bit slow while he settles in and stops chewing absolutely everything in sight.

Chapter 244: an answer

Chapter Text

ccxliv. an answer

 

Hermione flipped through the Daily Prophet, scrutinizing the pages.

“‘Speculation continues on the exact nature of Potter’s defense,’” she mumbled under her breath as she skimmed the paragraphs. “‘Reports from the courtroom have been censored by the Office of the Minister, and further information is deemed privileged.’ Damn.”

She couldn’t say it was an entirely unexpected development. Even Harriet had anticipated Gaunt would enforce a quick, ruthless moratorium on her testimony, but she’d hoped more people would carry the information out of the courtroom. Even so, though there were no blaring headlines about the Dark Lord’s return, Hermione found other traces smattered among the articles and op-eds. Whispers about Dark wizards being among them had touched a few ears, and people were turning their heads.

Sighing, Hermione folded the Prophet up—using more force than was strictly necessary—and set it aside, reaching for her morning tea. She sipped it, glaring daggers at the fabricated topic printed in the top fold, obviously boosted at the last minute when Gaunt issued his silencing order. ‘New strain of Dragon Pox? St. Mungo’s weighs in.

A letter from Harriet, sent in the early hours of the morning, rested by her saucer. Hugh had woken her from unsettled dreams by screeching her name, and Hermione had felt her heart drop to her toes when she spotted the dark-feather bird. She’d assumed the worst—that Professor Slytherin had done something nefarious, that he’d hurt her, that she needed help—but no. By all accounts, Harriet’s first evening with Slytherin had been rather banal. She’d written to let them know where she was to the best of her ability, and had told them again about Gaunt’s threats against their lives.

Hermione found herself unsurprised. Everything she knew about the wizard pointed to him being a person who thrived on control, and Harriet had thoroughly challenged that control when she walked into his courtroom and contradicted his expectations. He was cruel, selfish, and vindictive; he was bound to lash out, and when Harriet proved impervious to attacks against her person, he aimed for her weaknesses. Now, whether or not he’d follow through with the threat was yet to be seen, and Hermione wasn’t convinced he’d extend the effort. The uncertainty plaguing them all could be torturous enough while Gaunt handled the newest hurdles to hit his office, but just how angry would he be?

What Hermione had found surprising in Harriet’s letter had only been included as an afterthought, her friend mentioning Snape hadn’t been sent back to Hogwarts or wherever else he brooded during his holidays. How curious. Surely Slytherin would have no further need of him, and yet he’d allowed the Potions Master to stay. Hermione wasn’t sure what it meant yet, but it meant something, and that something felt…dangerous. She hardly ever relied on anything as wishy-washy as intuition, but in this instance, her hunch seemed right.

Hermione reached for another paper, a less circulated issue out of Bantiaumyrddin called the Gazing Gazette.

Dark Wizards return? Experts recommend caution.

Brow raised, Hermione’s keen eyes skated over the words in front of her, another piece speculating on the outcome of Harriet’s trial, though with much less oversight from the Ministry.

‘“It’s nothing good,” says one anonymous source from the courtroom. “If you and your readers know what’s good for you, you’ll start preparing for the worse.”

The Boy Who Lived provided us with his own insight into this matter. “Whatever else Potter is, she’s not a liar,” Mr. Longbottom, 15, writes. “Beyond that, Professor Dumbledore believes her story, and I believe Professor Dumbledore. If he has no reason to doubt her, than neither do you.”’

“Hmm,” Hermione commented, lifting her gaze to look across the dining table. It was still quite early in Grimmauld Place, most of the residents nicely tucked in their beds—aside from Hermione and the other occupant of the room. Longbottom sat picking at a plate of dry toast, leaning heavily on one arm with his fingers loosely cupping his forehead. Hermione suspected the twins had smuggled firewhiskey past their mother for Neville’s birthday.

“Longbottom,” she said, earning a wince. He grunted. “You gave the Gazette a statement?”

“Is that who it was?” he mumbled, tearing his toast into pieces. “Dunno. Dad has a solicitor who looks things over and approves comments for the paper.”

“You said Harriet isn’t a liar.”

“No, I said people should believe Professor Dumbledore.” He chewed a bit of toast and grimaced. “I don’t know what happened to Terry, but if Potter was guilty, Dumbledore would throw her in Azkaban. Doesn’t matter if she’s his favorite or not.”

Hermione raised a brow but didn’t disagree. In the impossible hypothetical situation where Harriet had indeed killed Terry, she knew Professor Dumbledore would not have hesitated to see justice carried out, no matter if he cared for Harriet or not—but would others believe the same? Would people doubt the Headmaster?

She folded the Gazette and set it with the Prophet, reaching for her tea.

“…why did he go for Potter?”

Hermione’s hand paused, cup hovering by her mouth. “I beg your pardon?”

Longbottom didn’t respond for a long moment. He didn’t look at her either, finding something in the kitchen more worthy of his annoyed glare. “Voldemort wanted her blood,” he said at length. “Specifically Potter’s. He sent Crouch, who apparently went through a great deal of effort to get her off the grounds. I don’t…get it, I guess. And Dumbledore spends a lot of time with her, like he’s preparing Potter. I’ve spent my entire life surrounded by Aurors and training and—well. Voldemort’s come back, and when he did, he didn’t look twice at me. I don’t understand.”

Hermione could only stare. Of course Neville didn’t understand; he’d been raised under the title Boy Who Lived since infancy, and as far as he and the world knew, he was the Boy Who Lived. It wasn’t true, though, and while the subterfuge had worked for a while, the Dark Lord hadn’t been fooled forever. He knew Harriet was truly the one who defeated him fourteen years ago. Not Neville.

“Does it matter?” Hermione finally settled on saying. “In the end, does it make a difference who the Dark Lord decided to target? He’s still your enemy. He’s the enemy of any forward thinking person—and even those who fancy themselves his followers. What he decides to do doesn’t matter so much as how you respond.”

“That doesn’t really answer the question though, does it?”

“No, I suppose not.” Hermione gathered her tea and papers and headed out of the room without further comment to Neville. She simply didn’t know what else to tell him. He’d built much of his identity off the idea of being the Boy Who Lived, but he had no concept of what that meant. Oh, he knew what others told him, what others believed, but Neville struggled to know what that meant for himself, what he thought the Boy Who Lived should be. It wasn’t Hermione’s responsibility to help him. Not when the rest of the world was falling to pieces around them.

Hermione spent the rest of the morning in her room, alternating between reading the papers or attempting to draft a letter to Harriet, a letter she couldn’t be certain the other girl would receive. Should she write to Snape and hope he delivered the message? Or would it be clever to write directly to Slytherin? A sleight of hand to show they were thinking of Harriet and thus watching him?

No, Hermione sighed. That has the greatest potential to backfire on Harriet.

Lunch was almost upon them when she finally decided to put away her thoughts and head down to eat with the others. Elara’s mood is particularly morose as she picks over her sandwich. “It’s Harriet’s birthday,” was all she would say, and Hermione’s own appetite suffered. It’s Harriet’s birthday. And she couldn’t spend it with them, with family.

It was as they gathered their dishes together and helped Molly Weasley clean up after the meal that they heard a commotion coming from the foyer. Sirius and Remus climbed the stairs first to see who had come—and Elara followed after when Sirius’ shout echoed down to them. Mrs. Wealsey kept her own children in the kitchen, but Hermione quickly darted away from them, rushing up the stairwell.

“What do you think you’re doing coming here—?!”

“Get out of the way, Sirius—!”

Hermione pulled up short, almost colliding with Elara’s back. There, standing at their door, stood three people Hermione had never thought to see visiting Grimmauld Place. The three Malfoys looked worse for wear, with Mr. Malfoy only managing to stay upright with his arm around his wife’s shoulders, his face nearly unrecognizable under the injuries.

His head turned in Hermione’s direction. He saw her there and grit his teeth.

“You have my answer,” he said.

Hermione gaped.

 

xXx

 

“He’s utterly mad,” the Head of House Malfoy ranted as his wife dabbed at his bloodied face, staining her pristine handkerchief. The bruises made an ugly pattern on his porcelain skin—older, yellowing ones on his cheeks as if he’d been backhanded, green blotches bleeding into new, swollen marks around his eyes and mouth. He seemed more annoyed than pained by Narcissa’s efforts and kept angling his head away from her as he addressed Professor Dumbledore. Dark stains ruined his robes.

The Headmaster had been summoned only minutes after the Malfoys descended on Grimmauld Place, Mr. Malfoy nearly being thrown right out the door by Sirius if Hermione hadn’t intervened. Professor Dumbledore had taken in the scene with his usual alacrity, and then invited the Malfoys into the kitchen. Mr. Malfoy had wasted no time in lambasting the Minister.

“Potter’s actions at her trial infuriated him, naturally—but it’s his failure to contain the gossip that has truly sent him over the edge.” Mr. Malfoy flicked his long, pale hair over his shoulder. “He and the Dark Lord spent much of the evening terrorizing my family.”

“So Tom has taken residence at Malfoy Manor?” Dumbledore asked, and when Mr. Malfoy inclined his head with a single, grim nod, he hummed. “It’s as we thought, then.”

“Not that it matters,” Malfoy returned. “The Manor is much like Black’s hovel here, wherein the uninvited will find it all but impossible to enter.”

“Oh, I’ve no interest in following Tom to his den, so to speak,” the Headmaster said. “But it serves us well to know where he’s decided to quarter himself.”

At the hob, Hermione moved the small cauldron to the counter, using the metal rod to gently spill the hot bruise paste into a ceramic dish. It chilled quickly in the Charmed container, and Narcissa picked it up, moving back to her son and husband. Sirius and Remus leaned against the outer wall, their heads inclined toward one another as they shared a hushed conversation. Mrs. Weasley had removed her children and Neville, just in case, and Elara had gone with them.

“The Order is prepared to offer you and your family sanctuary,” Professor Dumbledore said. “If you mean to forsake Tom, you must know it will be at considerable risk to both yourself and your family—.”

“Your precious Order can hardly protect itself,” Malfoy spat. “Do you truly think we made the decision to show up here without knowing what catastrophe we’re unleashing upon ourselves?” He swallowed and closed his eyes for a moment, Narcissa smearing the Bruise Paste over his cheekbone. Her hands shook, the skin mottled from curse damage that spilled from under her sleeves.

“He threatened my son,” she said, her voice low with anger, shaking at the edges in a way Hermione had never heard before. “When Lucius informed Gaunt rumor of Potter’s testimony had made it out of the courtroom, the Minister demanded he find the leak. When unable to do so, Gaunt saw fit to curse my son, to make allusions of him taking his father’s place—.”

Hermione glanced toward Draco. He sat with his hands folded on the table, a dazed expression on his face, Dipthy and Delby standing at his side exchanging uneasy looks. Hermione’s hands moved from the cauldron to the kettle, and she started prepping a new cup of tea. As his parents and the Headmaster argued, she brought the drink to Draco and sat next to him. Draco blinked, then peered through his pale lashes at her.

“You must think me a coward,” he muttered, accepting the cup with a shaking hand. Hermione noted his fingernails looked rather blue.

“Why on earth would I think you a coward?”

“Because I was too frightened to stay. Too frightened of my own home.” He swallowed, the muscles of his throat moving convulsively. “I begged father to come here. I begged him to—.” Draco took a breath. “I said I would not serve the Dark Lord. That I would rather die.”

“Idiot,” Hermione said, though she had to stop herself from reaching out and clasping his wrist. “That doesn’t make you a coward.”

“Isn’t it cowardly to abandon my home to that nutter? You and Black and Potter wouldn’t have done it.”

“We would have. We would. If the choice was between—well, between living and dying? A house is just stone and wood. Your lives are much more important than that.”

Draco’s mouth twitched, struggling into a strained half-smile. “Liar,” he said. “You wouldn’t have given up.”

“Do shut up, Draco. You’re ruining your shining Gryffindor moment.”

“Bloody hell….”

Mr. Malfoy’s voice rose, catching Hermione’s attention. “I don’t agree with your Order,” he said. “It is my belief playing nice with the Muggles will see us robbed of our magic when all is said and done, but Minister Gaunt and the—.” He stopped as if physically incapable of saying more, and it took more effort than Hermione could conceive for him to continue. “And the Dark Lord will lead us to ruin. That said, my assistance does not come with its price.”

Dumbledore idly stroked his beard, seeming for all the world as if he were having a lovely afternoon chat. “Your assistance, Lucius? Forgive me, but I’m uncertain of what you mean by that.”

Mr. Malfoy glowered. “Certain assurances, then,” he clarified. “That I shan’t be voting for Gaunt in the upcoming election.”

“A most prudent idea. But I must inquire what it is you want in return for your civil service?”

“My family.” Malfoy rolls his injured lower lip through his teeth, and he doesn’t stop Narcissa from pointing her wand at his neck to heal an abrasion there. “I expect the Order to live up to their embarrassingly Gryffindor standards and protect my wife and my son from the Dark Lord’s displeasure.”

“I see. You don’t include yourself in that demand?”

“Myself? No. Save your bleeding heart for those who need it; I find it leaves too much blood on my robes.”

Narcissa said his name, sharp and quiet. Lucius’ gaze flicked to her, and his jaw tightened.

“I have to question if you’ve truly considered what it is you mean to do.” Malfoy’s attention had moved from Dumbledore to Hermione, and she froze, staring back at him. “You wish to remove Gaunt from his office. A noble aspiration, but for a moment, suppose you are successful. Do you believe that will be the end of it? What do you think will happened next?”

All eyes including those of the Headmaster had come to rest on Hermione, and she forced herself to find her voice. “He’ll fight the outcome,” she said. “He’ll attempt to have the election overturned, demand a recount, etcetera. Inevitably though he’ll have to wait three years for the next election and run again.”

Malfoy scoffed. “I told you how terribly naive you are. For Merlin’s sake, girl.” He rubbed his open palm over his injured face. “He will not accept defeat. You cannot win without expecting him to scorch the earth in his wake. Consider everything and everyone you love. If you aren’t prepared to see them taken from you, you are not comprehending what it is Gaunt will take from you.”

Hermione’s hands balled into fists. “And what would you suggest, Mr. Malfoy? Doing nothing?”

“I would suggest deciding which situation is more palatable: Gaunt in a known environment, seemingly happy with his prize, or Gaunt denied. The Dark Lord unhappy.” Malfoy studied her for a minute longer, allowing the silence to spread like a heavy, weighted blanket before he looked to the Headmaster again. “I share this information in a show of good faith, Dumbledore. It may be worth considering leaving his rule unchecked, but it should be known your group might never have a better opportunity than now. He’s…preoccupied. Distracted. In the past, he’s been far more meticulous in planning the election season, but of late, his obsession with something within the Department of Mysteries has made him…sloppy.”

Hermione’s brow furrowed. Department of Mysteries? How curious.

She had just enough knowledge of the department to know it was rather erroneous to label it as such; the D.O.M only nominally fell under the blanket of the Ministry’s authority and thus didn’t operate as a typical department. It had existed in one form or another long before the British Ministry built its headquarters in London, and the Unspeakables were notorious for governing themselves. Gaunt’s authority as Minister ended at the threshold where the department began.

What does Gaunt want from there?

“We are aware of where his interests lay, Lucius,” the Headmaster told him, smiling. “And you’re correct; he is distracted.”

Professor Dumbledore made as if to rise, undoubtedly with many things to do now in face of these new circumstances, but Mr. Malfoy had one last comment before he could depart.

“It’s been worse. He’s been worse. Ever since the Dark Lord returned and the…girl escaped the graveyard. There’s little else that sways His mind.” The bruises around his eyes had lessened, but the harsh color still offset the terror that lurked therein, the hopelessness. Hermione knew if things had been different, if his family hadn’t of been threatened, Lucius wouldn’t be here. He didn’t believe they would win, but he would do what he must for his wife and son. “It won’t end until she’s dead.”

“Fortunately for you, Mr. Malfoy, Harriet’s safety isn’t your concern.” The Headmaster stood. “I will arrange accommodations for your family. For the time being, your best option for your safety is to remain here at Grimmauld Place. It will protect you from reprisal—at least, for a time.”

None of the Malfoys argued. Mr. Malfoy exhaled and covered his face with his hand, defeated, while Mrs. Malfoy sat next to him. She reached for his arm, her delicate, injured fingers encircling his wrist, and Lucius covered her hand with his. Draco looked off into space, his eyes heavy with exhaustion. They made for a haunting image of Gaunt’s idealized society: witch, wizard, and child, beaten and chased from their own home by the monster they had supported.

Hermione had no words of comfort to spare for them, so she stood from her chair and followed Professor Dumbledore from the kitchen. “Headmaster?” she called, and he stopped at the head of the basement stairs to peer down at her. “Are we doing the right thing?” she asked. “Will this be worth it in the end?”

“We can only hope, Miss Granger,” he replied. “And hope is a powerful gift.”

Chapter 245: the spy

Chapter Text

ccxlv. the spy

 

Breakfast at the Tor was one of the strangest meals Harriet had ever attended.

Everyone ate like they had a hedgehog wedged under their rear, sitting with their backs as straight as cauldron stirring rods, their faces stricken and stiff. It was a miracle they could get anything off their forks into their mouths.

The Sangforts sat at one end of the long dining table, grouped together with their fancy French coffee and the smell of cigarette smoke, their shoulders raised toward their ears. With them was a girl named Elinor, who was near enough to Harriet’s age, blonde and sharp like her mother and father, and wholly disinterested in the scene. She apparently attended Durmstrang. The only dark-haired Sangfort slumped by Cladius, snatching up her cup to indolently glare at the contents. Her hair fell to her shoulders in thick waves, and she was pretty, maybe somewhere close to Snape’s age if Harriet had to guess. She had circles under her dark, bloodshot eyes and little raised scars on her right cheek, as if she’d turned away from a Blasting Curse at the last moment and had been caught by its edges, leaving behind a fine array of marks only visible in direct sunlight. Her name—given by Cladius—was Iris, Gauthar’s sister.

Mr. Aeter sat with Slytherin—who was the only person present that didn’t appear as if something prickly was lodged under his rump. He drank tea and listened while Cicero spoke avidly at his side. It would have made for a companionable scene if Harriet hadn’t noted Slytherin’s snide amusement and the tense set of Mr. Aeter’s hands when he didn’t realize someone was watching. It rattled around Harriet’s head until she decided Aeter looked distinctly annoyed—Slytherin giving him nominal attention and bemused platitudes that didn’t serve Cicero’s purpose. Whatever that was.

More people dotted the table, but Harriet paid particular attention to those Cladius had mentioned earlier. “Malcolm” and “Myles” were a son and father respectively, branch members of the Mirthcut family. Neither received Slytherin’s rather casual announcement of Harriet’s status with grace; they openly gawked, outraged, and Malcolm sputtered in protest until Myles nudged his side. Claudius had also said Iris would be “dreadfully disappointed,” but her eyes only flickered in Harriet’s direction before dismissing her entirely.

Her, my Lord? Your apprentice?” burst out a younger woman with spectacles, tidy robes, and a severe part in her brown hair. Harriet vaguely remembered her being a seventh year when she’d just begun Hogwarts, and she thought her name might be Bonnie. Slytherin’s eyes fell upon the woman and she blanched. “N-not that I’m questioning your judgment, simply—.”

“It’s not such a curious choice when you know my apprentice better, Miss Bonespell,” he said, steepling his fingers. He hadn’t touched the food in front of him, and Harriet fully believed he only showed up to make everyone else uncomfortable. “She is exactly what I wish for in a student.”

Bonespell looked as if she’d swallowed a lemon.

When breakfast hobbled to its drawn-out conclusion, Slytherin tossed his napkin on the table and excused himself and Harriet to one of the nicer studies, where he assessed how well she’d truly studied the material over the summer. He was much less effusive in private than in the dining room, and expressed annoyance each time Harriet made a mistake or confused a rune.

“I guess I can’t expect perfection,” he sighed as he looked over the parchment Harriet had completed for him in the hour, leaning his hands against the table’s edge. He summoned one of the Sangfort’s Self-Inking quills and started marking off her mistakes with sharp flicks of his wrist. “I was by far more proficient at your age, and perhaps it’s my hubris to expect similar results from you. Maybe it’s the wont of a master to hope their apprentice exhibits similar alacrity.” He drummed his fingers, and Harriet fidgeted. “Well. I am exceptional. Nevertheless, I expect better effort on your part in the future, Miss Potter.”

“Okay.”

He raised a brow.

“Erm—yes, Master.”

Harriet tried to imagine Slytherin—or rather Tom Riddle—as a teenager. He probably wouldn’t look much different than he did now, but she had difficulty picturing him at Hogwarts as a student. Did he listen to his professors? Did they like him? Did he have friends?

Harriet wrinkled her nose as she bent her neck over the book again, Slytherin opening it to the interpretation of runes chapter. Even the stodgiest of Slytherin students had juvenile moments at school, but Harriet couldn’t believe Riddle ever had a laugh with his mates, pulled a prank, passed notes, and ran from the caretaker.

He probably came out of the womb stuffy and sullen.

She smirked—and Slytherin’s finger drummed on the table again.

“Something to share, apprentice?”

“No, Master.”

“I expect your next recitation to be perfect, then.”

They kept at it for more than an hour, the environment particularly unforgiving for Harriet’s concentration. Slytherin’s presence distracted her, as did thoughts of the unhappy glowers at breakfast, and what those displeased people might be considering. She’d gotten enough backlash from Lestrange at Hogwarts over the apprenticeship and wasn’t looking forward to handling more sour prats here.

Slytherin lectured her on the proper grouping of runes respective to their elemental grouping, spelling a new book open to float before him. When he paused, Harriet dared speak. “Pr—Master?”

“Yes?”

“Can I—what’s the point of all this?” Harriet backtracked almost as soon as she spoke. “What I mean is, what am I meant to know by learning all this stuff about runes and spell-making?”

He contemplated her for a moment, gesturing the dusty book aside. “I had wondered when you would think to ask.”

“I…I didn’t know if I should.”

“If you’re afraid to ask questions, you’re a fool.” He leaned on one hand, tipping his head. Sunlight shimmered through the sheer, patterned curtains that fell like a waterfall over the towering window at his side, and the light bathed Slytherin’s profile. Harriet always thought he looked odd in strong illumination—a bit blurred at the edges as if his silhouette never came fully into focus. The red of his eyes looked more amber, and he appeared altogether too human when seen outside of his dark classroom. “I can hardly hex you for stupid questions.”

He laughed—and Harriet forced a close-lipped smile. She disagreed and thought it likely he’d hex her silly if she voiced something “stupid.”

“As you might have considered in your years under Babbling’s tutelage, runes are an early, primitive form of magic; our first attempts to harness our wild birthright outside the purview of the fae. Rendered as they are, they represent the most basic building blocks of witchcraft. In simple terms, Potter, I am ensuring you have the foundation required to build you into the witch I deem worthy as my apprentice.” He swept out a hand, forming it into a fist. “What need will you have of the redundant, vapid incantations scribbled in Hogwarts’ syllabi if you understand magic on a more fundamental level? How do you think I’ve ascended past the mundane? I sought to know more. You, too, will know more one day, Miss Potter. You’ll never be my level, but you’ll pass your peers if you continue to do as I say.”

The lesson continued well past noon, dragging on until a barn owl arrived, fluttering in through the transom and going into a panic when Slytherin snatched its missive away.

Wretched thing,” he hissed as he shooed the bird, already reading the parchment unfurled in his hand. Harriet pretended she wasn’t watching his eyes dart over the page. “Ah, well…that is interesting,” he muttered to himself. “Continue with your studies. I expect a critical review of the next four chapters in the book to be ready by this evening. And you have best be thorough.”

Slytherin left after that, leaving Harriet to slump over the table and grumble about ridiculous expectations. Luckily, having Hermione as a best friend meant Harriet had become well-versed in skimming and annotating, so she completed the assignment with plenty of time to spare. She explored the vast study, poking through the Sangforts’ things until she slouched onto the velvet settee hidden by the raised hearth and took a nap.

Though Harriet didn’t sleep deeply, her dreams flickered red-tinged and uneasy, anger licking at her bones like flames trying to catch onto kindling. Her heart raced in her chest, and she snarled at the house-elf who came to wake her for supper. The poor thing squeaked and popped away, Harriet staring at the spot they’d been with befuddlement.

What in the world?

Dinner proved much the same as breakfast—namely awkward, no matter that Slytherin hadn’t shown up, leaving the head of the table empty. Harriet was annoyed, her completed assignment tucked away in her robes, and she stabbed at her roast as she ate. She avoided eye contact and conversation.

When does he want me to turn this in? The middle of the night? Where did the bastard go?

She didn’t receive an answer to that, and any conversation at the table stayed muted and stilted as if Slytherin’s presence lingered without his physical body there. Harriet ate half of her meal and decided she’d had enough, excusing herself to her room with a napkin loaded with meat slipped into her robe pocket. Once there, she discovered a group of packages left atop her trunk, and a quick peek through the wrappings showed it to be the rest of her purchases from Mr. Jestergrass.

“At least I won’t have to wear the same outfit for a second day,” she muttered as she flipped through the buttoned shirts, her thumb testing the soft, sturdy fabric. Magic tingled against her skin.

Harriet fed her stolen dinner to her familiar and golems, suffering Livi’s bored complaints while the smaller snakes wriggled about their bedding, pleased with the offering. She stayed shut away long after night had fallen, and no one came to bother her, much to Harriet’s relief. She finally decided to have herself a bath, and so gathered up her new pajamas and dressing gown, sneaking down the corridor to the washroom. She spelled the door shut, refusing to let anyone sneak up on her, and ran the water. Steam quickly filled the room and smudged the gilded mirror.

Slytherin seemed in a rush, Harriet thought as she submerged herself, hunkering down until the bubbles rose to her nose and her hair floated atop the surface. The soap smelled strongly of green apples. It’s not as if I’d expect the bloke to say where he’s off to, but it does seem curious. I wonder if Snape knows what happened.

She stayed there until her skin pruned, and then convinced herself to leave the tub and dry off. Harriet plaited her damp hair and dressed in her silk pajamas, huffing when she tied the sash on the emerald green dressing gown. It had moving snake motifs stitched into the fabric.

Can’t get more Slytherin than this, she snarked, though she couldn’t help but run a fond hand over the sleeve, watching as what looked like the approximation of an adder gently squirmed under her touch. It is rather cute, though. Elara would roll her eyes.

She grabbed her used clothes and headed back to her room—and it was only after she’d stepped past the threshold that Harriet realized the wards she’d set had vanished. Someone stood in the shadows by her desk.

The door snapped shut and locked.

“Who—?!” She dropped her things and fumbled for her wand, the slender bit of wood slipping to the floor still tucked inside its brace. She hadn’t put it back on. Stupid! Harriet told herself, already panicking. Stupid, stupid—!

The intruder muttered an incantation, and the candles in the wall sconce ignited themselves. Harriet froze and stared at Iris Sangfort, the older witch still in her day robes—and holding one of Harriet’s books, leaning against the desk. Harriet’s trunk was wide open.

“How—? What—?” she stuttered, but by then, she finally had her wand in hand, and she was ready to hex the woman first and ask questions later. “This is my room!”

“Relax,” Sangfort commented as if Harriet were being unreasonable. She tossed Harriet’s book aside and lifted another. “Quite a collection you’ve got in that trunk of yours, Potter. Several of these are banned at Hogwarts, aren’t they?”

Harriet snapped out a Summoning spell, and the book blinked from Sangfort’s hand to her own. “Get out,” she said, tossing the book aside before another thought occurred to her. “Where—? Livius!

The sleepy Horned Serpent answered her hiss, poking his head out from under the bed.

What in the blazes are you doing?! You let this woman in here?!

Livi looked at Sangfort, and his tongue flickered. “Ssshe sssmellss of the wissse one.

What are you talking about?

Sangfort’s eyes narrowed at Harriet’s usage of Parseltongue, and she stepped away from the desk, crossing her arms. “He said you’d need looking after.”

“W-Who—?”

“But I’m not convinced you haven’t pulled one over on the old man. His heart’s too tender for his own good.” Sangfort wrinkled her nose. “I think you’ll fall all too comfortable into Slytherin’s den.”

“What are you talking about—?”

The door at Harriet’s back flew open, and she didn’t have time to recoil before she was yanked back by her robe. Snape stepped between her and Sangfort, kicking aside the dropped laundry.

“Out,” he ordered Sangfort. He had his wand levied toward her, his knuckles white with the force of his grip. Sangfort didn’t move.

“The company you keep speaks volumes about your intentions,” she said to Harriet, who remained entirely baffled by the entire exchange. “And your integrity.”

The end of Snape’s wand rose in warning. “Out,” he repeated with a final, lingering menace. Sangfort curled her lip but accepted Snape really would hex her in the face, slipping past the two of them in the doorway to reach the corridor. She gave Harriet one last inscrutable look before departing, sparing Snape no further attention. Snape didn’t lower his wand until she was out of sight.

“I—what was that about?” Harriet demanded, feeling disheveled and wrong-footed in her night things next to Snape in his enveloping robes. She had little spots of water on her shoulders, and the plait left her scar much too exposed. “How did she even get in here? I warded the door!”

Snape glowered into the hall as he tucked his wand away into his sleeve. “Iris Sangfort is one of Dumbledore’s spies,” he delivered with a crisp, low bite of irritation, surprising Harriet. “She is unaware of my true loyalties and does not trust me, which suits the Headmaster’s purposes for both of us. It also appears she does not trust you, and has taken it upon herself to inspect your possessions and probably report back to Dumbledore. As for how she got in here—Miss Sangfort is a regrettably gifted Cursebreaker.”

“Regrettably?”

“Regrettable in that she is incredibly shortsighted.” Snape turned his gaze to Harriet’s room, brow lowered. He muttered a spell, and a sweeping yellow glow scanned the floor, the walls, and the desk, finding nothing. He grunted. “What did she say?”

“Something about ‘him saying you’d need looking after.’ And Livi—oh.”

“Oh?”

“Livi told me she smelled like Dumbledore, I guess.”

“You guess?”

Harriet flushed. “Well, it’s not like he gives names, and he changes what he calls people when it suits.”

Snape scoffed as he looked the room over again, then turned to Harriet. “How convenient. Your familiar makes for a worthless watch—.” He stopped mid-sentence and stared at her. His eyes widened. Harriet opened her mouth to ask what was the matter, and he abruptly reached out, startling her when his fingertips grazed her neck.

“What are you—?” Her own hand rose to touch the same spot his had, then she flinched, realizing what Snape had seen. She averted her eyes. “It’s nothing.”

“It is not.” He jerked his hand back from the brand as if stung, and his fingers curled into a fist. Her bath had washed the concealer away. “Why did you not say anything?”

Harriet shrugged, the tops of her ears burning red.

“Who was it?”

She tried to answer him, to say something, but the words lodged themselves somewhere in her chest. All that came out of her mouth was an odd click of her throat closing, her breath huffing. She tried again to similar effect and looked at Snape with confusion.

He understood before Harriet did. “You gave the secret to Jestergrass.” Harriet nodded. “Fool. There’s a gaes now. You can’t speak of it, not of it or information related to what happened. He owns the truth and it is his to give.”

“I don’t want to talk about it anyway, so it doesn’t matter.”

“Fool,” he said again as if she hadn’t heard him the first time. “Forget about Sangfort. She won’t be an issue. Come with me.” Snape gestured her into the hall, and Harriet went, watching as he warded her door with something stronger and nastier than she had. He stowed his wand again and ushered her along. “Quickly. Don’t linger out in the open.”

Remembering the unfriendly looks at the dining table, Harriet followed him into the room he’d taken up residence in, the door snapping closed behind them. The space looked untouched, the bed perfectly made and everything put together aside for a black valise and a few scraps of parchment on the desk.

Without a word, Snape pointed to the floor before the vanity, and Harriet went to stand there, tugging on the side of her dressing gown. The latches on the valise sounded loud when Snape popped them open and rummaged through his things. He remained silent as he did so, searching by candlelight, and Harriet watched the muscle in his clenched jaw jump with the effort to keep his thoughts to himself.

He’s upset, she realized, not entirely sure what to make of the sudden warmth in her chest. He’s upset about this.

Snape found whatever it was he sought, and he returned to Harriet clutching a squat, white jar.

“Tip your head back.”

She did so, staring up at the ceiling, and tried not to tense when she heard the jar’s lid rattle. Snape smeared a cold, gritty cream over the brand with his index finger, then rubbed it in with his thumb, his touch featherlight but persistent. Red tinged Harriet’s cheeks as she held very still, not letting her gaze wander away from the ceiling overhead, even if she could see the top of Snape’s head in her periphery vision.

“Erm—so, what is this stuff?”

Snape finished rubbing the gunk in, then stepped back, jerking his head toward the mirror. Taking that as a direction, Harriet lowered her chin and turned, inspecting her neck in the mirror above the vanity. She expected to find something like Elara’s concealer, something that left a thin but perceptible shift in skin tone—but whatever Snape had put on her vanished the brand completely.

“Oh,” Harriet said, reaching to touch the spot. The cream was gone, though the skin tingled with magic. Snape took her wrist and shoved the jar into her hand. “Thanks. I haven’t been able to find anything else that works.”

“You won’t. I’m the creator.”

She turned the jar over in her hand, finding no label or the residue of one. Harriet looked up into his face, wondering, and Snape scowled at the wordless question he must have seen in her expression. He tucked his hair behind his ear on the right side, then swiped at his neck with brusque, rough swipes of his sleeve. It reddened the skin, but more importantly, it scrubbed away the potion hiding the faded brand emblazoned into his flesh.

“But you weren’t found guilty,” Harriet said, staring at the line of symbols and numbers. “When they took you to Azkaban. I saw—. You weren’t found guilty.”

“Neither were you.”

Harriet didn’t have a response for that. She gripped the jar so tight, the glass threatened to break.

It wasn’t fair. It wasn’t right. Whether it was the Minister or the Aurors, they shouldn’t be able to treat people so callously, not without consequences. What was even the point in fighting if arseholes who branded witches and wizards out of spite continued to be in power? It wasn’t bloody fair.

Suddenly, a cursory knock hit the door, and the knob turned without the person waiting for an answer. Harriet had an uncharacteristic moment of clarity wherein she realized what an inappropriate tableau the scene presented: her in her pajamas, standing close to Snape in his bedroom late at night, alone. She didn’t have time to be embarrassed. From one breath to the next, she transformed into her Animagus form and jumped to Snape’s shoulder. He cursed and fumbled to grab the jar before it hit the floor.

When Slytherin walked in, he found Professor Snape standing on his own, holding a potion jar with a ruffled crow perched upon his shoulder.

“I need you to go to Dumbledore tonight. Pyrites has been less than informed, and you must go get more information on Malfoy’s defection,” Slytherin ordered, his tone cold and impatient. What? Malfoy did what? He paused when he saw Harriet and lifted a speculative brow.

Snape, taking this as permission to speak, replied—. “My familiar, my Lord. I was in the middle of sending a tincture to one of our arthritic colleagues.”

Disinterested, Slytherin said, “Yes, well.” He held out a folded letter, the contents of which Harriet could only speculate. “Don’t let me stop you.”

Left with little other recourse, Snape brought Harriet to the desk, and he Transfigured one of the balled-up parchments into a small box. He set the jar inside, then used a bit of conjured twine to tie it to Harriet’s leg. He stepped to the window and pushed it open. Slytherin said something else, something bored and drawling, but Harriet didn’t hear it. She was too preoccupied with the weight tied to her leg—and the open window Snape nudged her toward.

Shite, she thought, eying the drop. I’ve been practicing, but this is a little much—.

A sudden shove had Harriet outside, and she beat her wings, panicking. Luckily, she only needed to glide a few meters to reach a tree, and she made a sloppy landing on one of the thicker branches. She heard the window snap shut somewhere behind her.

That was close, she sighed, clacking her beak. The package on her leg dangled, and Harriet struggled to lift it up, flapping and hopping until the twine stopped digging into her skin and Snape’s stupid box settled in a divot between the trunk and a patch of leaves. As she worked, she considered what Slytherin had said, and it made a suspicious amount of sense why the wizard had vanished earlier in the afternoon.

Did Malfoy really defect? Merlin, does that mean he ’s gonna vote against Gaunt?

Getting one or two people to change their minds about the Minister was one thing; getting Lucius Malfoy with his majority votes to openly challenge Gaunt was another. That would change things. Harriet could hardly imagine what a wizarding world without Tom Riddle at its helm would look like, but it felt nice to hope. It felt nice to believe that he and the bastards like him, the people who would brand her or Snape or others, would get what was coming to them.

I have to write Hermione! Harriet thought. But that means I have to get back inside.

She gazed up at the indomitable wall of the Tor and the many shut windows. Harriet squawked.

…Bloody hell.

Chapter 246: points of weakness

Chapter Text

ccxlvi. points of weakness

 

An aggravated sound of disgust met Harriet’s ears as she stepped through the open door to the library beyond.

A few days of living at the Tor had passed. Harriet had spent a nerve-racking amount of time on her first evening searching for a way back into the house, and had ended up squeezing through an open loo window, scaring a yelp out of a cleaning house-elf. She managed to sneak back to her room without incident, though she did curse Snape’s name until blue in the face.

Otherwise, her time there had been rather unremarkable. Dreading her apprenticeship had built terrifying scenarios in Harriet’s head, leading her to think every moment spent alone in Slytherin’s presence would be one of intrigue or spine-chilling fear. Instead, the typical day consisted of those tepid, uncomfortable meals, then lessons in the study. Slytherin kept drilling her on new rune combinations, having Harriet mark them on the chalkboard, then correcting her. Truly, it was all rather…dull. And repetitive.

I eat breakfast with Death Eaters and find it boring, Harriet thought to herself, face twitching with the urge to laugh. What is my life becoming?

Slytherin’s mood could be as capricious as she’d ever experienced it, though she often caught him being almost playful. Of course, playful for Slytherin was something akin to playful for a cat and a mouse, but Harriet couldn’t puzzle out another way to think of it. She saw glimpses—instances where his smile charmed instead of revolted, where he teased and his followers basked in his camaraderie. Sometimes, when he spoke, going on in his winding monologues, he would make a comment or observation Harriet would nod along with, horrifying herself.

“You will find yourself agreeing with him on occasion,” Snape imparted when Harriet told him. “Slytherin is not so entirely unique or unholy that he does not understand being personable. He does. It is part of the danger, Miss Potter.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Seeing him as human makes it harder to do what must be done.”

Harriet still didn’t fully comprehend what Snape meant until she realized those times when Slytherin seemed less like a monster, when he delivered a sparse kindness or genuine compliment, he became a person to her, however nasty, cruel, or bigoted—and she was meant to learn his weaknesses, learn how to exploit them. By nature, Harriet didn’t think herself very calculating or conniving. She never wanted to imagine how best to hurt someone, and when she stopped thinking of Slytherin as a monster—even if only in passing phases—she had to recognize that was exactly her intent.

She would have to hurt people one day.

Today, however, Slytherin had resumed his role as demanding taskmaster, setting Harriet to memorize and study combinations of runes while he dryly lectured on how the druids defined and established the first magical zeitgeist in England. He’d sent her out of the room to find a set of ceramic practice runes the Sangfort’s kept, and her search had brought Harriet to the library. Gauthar was inside.

He leaned over a table laden with shadow boxes, each one holding a preserved butterfly, observing them with a brass magnifying glass. Harriet had peeked at the boxes before and didn’t have any interest in doing so again; the butterflies twitched and thrashed, preserved by Dark magic and stuck in place by cursed pins. It was sad and unsettling.

Gauthar straightened, and his left eye twitched as he folded the magnifying glass with a damning click. He said nothing, so Harriet averted her attention to the shelves, darting over to grab the proper box. It rattled as she dragged it down from over her head.

“Do mind what you grab so enthusiastically,” Gauthar said, derision clear in his voice. Harriet held the runes close to her chest, staring at the man. “Did your parents teach you no manners?”

“No,” Harriet said, not missing a step. She wondered if he knew the Potters had died and was saying this to dig at her. Either way, she didn’t let it bother her. “They’re dead. I was raised by Muggles.”

She admitted to herself seeing pure-bloods curl their lips and wrinkle their noses like she was a dog who’d messed the carpet each time she mentioned Muggles gave Harriet a perverse delight. On one hand, it infuriated her they could think any less of a witch or wizard simply because they’d been born or raised outside the community. On another, she thought it bloody hilarious they could be provoked by something so ridiculous.

“Surely the Muggles told you not to take with so little decorum? As I understand it, even their pets are instilled with a level of…obedience.”

“I wouldn’t know, sir.” Harriet gave the box a deliberate shake, jarring the pieces inside so they clacked together. Gauthar’s nostrils flared. “I gotta get back to Professor Slytherin.”

“Yes…be sure to do that.”

Harriet took the runes and returned to the lounge where Slytherin had decided to camp for the day. He was in one of his more garrulous moods and had wrangled Snape, Iris, and Myles Mirthcut into listening to his pointless droning, though Harriet guessed “wrangled” was the wrong word. He merely had to allude to a desire for having a discussion and the others leapt to his convenience.

Harriet took her pilfered box and chose a spot far enough from the others to discourage notice without being deliberately rude. She hunkered on the sofa with her back to the high, scrolled arm, not caring a whit about having her shoes on the cushions as she propped up her legs and used her thighs to support the rune-board. The box got left on the floor.

At first, she tried to listen to the conversation happening, but they were discussing some foreign policy affecting Durmstrang that Slytherin found distasteful, and it was as dull as anything Harriet had ever heard. Their voices droned in the background, replaced by the click-clack of ceramic tiles lining up on the board’s lip. It felt like a game as Harriet studied the runes engraved on the tiles and tried to identify the hundreds of choices, then lined them together to make new meanings. The tiles would click into place, then a flush of magic would go through them—light flickering, telling Harriet what she’d made.

More often than not, the light flashed red, meaning she’d made a hash of it, but Harriet enjoyed experimenting. She liked the noise of the tiles moving. She liked—the domesticity of it. A little less than a week ago, she’d been in a courtroom, preparing herself to spend the rest of her life confined in a stone cell, and now she sat in new clothes on a comfortable settee, almost…relaxed. True, she’d rather be at Grimmauld, and she already desperately missed her friends, but Harriet contented herself with her current situation.

A Death Eater’s house beat being in prison.

She paid less and less attention to her surroundings as the hour ticked on, instead concentrating on crafting longer strings of runes to see what magic they made possible. It involved more and more complicated configurations and delicate stacking, so much so the magic began to read positive and negative at once, and Harriet wasn’t sure why. She set in on dissecting the strings, attempting to find where things went wrong.

The sudden winnow of wordless magic caught her ear, but Harriet didn’t have a chance to look up before it snagged her by the waist and dragged her over on the sofa, rattling the tiles. Slytherin slid into the space she’d previously occupied, lounging with his arms across the sofa’s back. Harriet nearly leaned into him when the magic released her, and she jerked to stay upright, knocking the tiles out of place.

What is he doing? she wondered, nervous, turning so she sat cross-legged with her back to the sofa’s cushion. She sought out the others in the room, finding Snape in an armchair reading the Prophet nearby, Myles and Iris involved in a quiet discussion.

Slytherin’s fingertips lightly brushed Harriet’s shoulder, and she braced herself.

What is it you want, Harriet?” The soft hiss of Parseltongue stirred the room, though no one dared to look at Slytherin. Only Harriet mustered her nerve to turn to him, blinking. “I must admit, I’ve given it thought, and though I’ve come to my own conclusions, I must asssk…what is it you want?

“I…I don’t know what you mean, Master.

Everybody wants something,” Slytherin said with ease, lifting a hand to gesture at the others. “People who come to me have a desire they wish fulfilled. I wish to know yours.

I just want to learn.

Slytherin canted his head to the side, almost resting it on his shoulder with how his posture raised it toward his ear. He didn’t speak for a long minute, and Harriet pretended to read her runes again. She began re-sorting the mussed arrangement and startled when he spoke.

Gaunt threatened your friends, yes?” he said, not pausing for an answer. “I know he did. He’s grown…uncreative in his success. He strove for a goal too easily met, and the details beyond it have proved…ah, how doesss that saying go? He is herding Nifflers?” His fingertips swiped against her shoulder again, a lazy, idle brush. He touched her as someone might touch their pet. “Perhaps this is a fault he and I share; we expect people to behave in patterns, but he has taken on an entirely different beast. He expects an organization to bend as a person will, and it is not the same. But I digress, where was I? We were discussing your happiness, Harriet. I strive to make my followers happy, dear girl. No need for…threats.”

Harriet couldn’t help how her eyes darted across the seating arrangement to the dark form in the armchair, and Slytherin saw.

I hurt Ssseverus for his own good, you know.” He caught the very end to one of Harriet’s curls and ran his thumb against the edge like testing a knife. “He’s been very naughty. That he still breathes is a privilege all its own.

Harriet swallowed.

Slytherin continued to toy with her hair, his gaze going distant, thoughtful. He didn’t stir again until Nefaria came into the room to have a word with Iris, at which point Slytherin beckoned her over.

“Harriet requires tea,” he told her—which Harriet most certainly did not. “Retrieve her some, would you?”

Voicing the request as a question was pointless, as anyone with half a brain in their skull knew Slytherin did not make requests. He did nothing without a second design.

So Nefaria departed—more than likely summoning a house-elf once out of sight so she needn’t make the full trek to the kitchens. When she returned, she all but thrust the cup and saucer into Harriet’s hands, scalding droplets stinging her fingers. The witch stepped back to leave, and Slytherin grabbed her by the wrist.

“Thank her,” he said. At first, Harriet opened her mouth to do just that—and then she realized the wizard was staring up into Nefaria’s rapidly paling face, and his fingers dug into her wrist without restraint. His nails blanched white with the strength of his grip.

“Th-thank you,” the older witch stuttered.

“For what?”

“For—for allowing me to serve, my Lord.”

Slytherin raised his chin, bearing straight, white teeth.

“And—and thank you, Miss Potter.”

“Tell her she’s welcome to use your home as she sees fit.”

“You—you may use the Tor as ever you like.”

His fingers uncurled like a trap pulling back its spikes one by one. Nefaria sketched out a nervous, shaking curtsy, then rushed away. Harriet didn’t know what to make of Slytherin’s behavior and looked down at her dark, swirling tea, not daring to drink it.

The cup and saucer vanished. Slytherin’s hand moved from her shoulder to the top of her head, again reminding Harriet of a master and his dog.

Don’t you enjoy it, Harriet?” he hissed in Parseltongue, his fingers once more resuming their idle movement over her hair. “Ssseeing them bow and scrape when they’re so quick to disparage your blood? No matter their wishes, they will give me whatever I wish…whatever YOU wish. Is that not wonderful?

Harriet swallowed. “I don’t like taking things from other people, Master.

You don’t?” He trapped one curl around his forefinger again, stroking the strands with his thumb before letting it go. “You’ll come to enjoy it. I promise.” A fingertip grazed the shell of her ear. Harriet wondered why he kept touching her. Slytherin never struck her as an affectionate bloke. “After all, they deserve it. You can sense their contempt. They would take everything from you if they could, dear Harriet. Do not be afraid to return the favor. Be happy. You’re my apprenticcce, after all.

A sudden streak of boldness hit Harriet, and her mouth opened before she could think better of it. “That didn’t matter before,” she said in English, Slytherin’s hand stilling on her person. She wanted to duck away from him, but she had enough sense to remain still, clutching the rune board. “When they arrested me. You didn’t say anything against it. It didn’t matter.”

Sharp nails skated against her scalp, and Harriet winced. His arm came off the sofa to prop itself on her shoulders, and she was sure to the rest of the room the gesture appeared companionable—but Harriet felt like nothing more than a rat in a python’s tightening coils. His arm curled around her, and his hand fell to her jaw to force her face to turn to his.

Do you think I leave anything to chance?” he whispered, his lips unfurling in a devilish smile. An unsettling smell clung to him, to the dangerous fingers lingering so close to Harriet’s face. Sweet and unnatural, a headiness indicative of Dark magic. “How naive. Tell me, Harriet. Do you know of prophecies? Do you believe in them?

She stiffened, holding herself so tensely, her body cramped like a bow about to snap.

I don’t,” Slytherin confessed, his eyes narrowing. “Perhaps I would have at a different time in my life, but I’ve come to a higher realization. Prophecies are traps. The first prophecy given was whispered by a snake into Eve’s ear, and so sealed the fate of mankind.” His thumb brushed Harriet’s own ear, and she grimaced, then corrected herself. “Would Eve have taken the bait if it had not been pointed out to her? No. The foolish allow themselves to be instruments of Fate, but I am not so easssily led. I intend to live for a very, very long time, dear girl, and I make the reality I wish to live. I do not need to kill and maim to do so; the bird fights the cage, longing for the sky, but if you tell its children they cannot fly, they content themselves with the cage.

His teeth gleamed—sharp, terrifying. Tears prickled in Harriet’s eyes, and her scar burned like a fresh brand against her neck, Slytherin’s arm resting too close to it.

Knowing this, do you truly believe you would escape to Azkaban when you’ve bound yourself to me? Oh, Harriet.” He laughed then, a cold and high noise that sent shivers down the spine of every person in that room, and his hand returned to her jaw, turning Harriet’s head. The angle he held it at forced her to look directly at Snape, and she felt Slytherin watching her—watching them both—over her shoulder. “People are predictable. Soft. If you know how they will behave, you needn’t do anything at all to have your will enacted.

Snape still held the paper—but he hadn’t turned a page in several minutes. His grip on the edges wrinkled the material, and his knuckles shone white. His gaze flickered and met Harriet’s—filled with a harsh, inky anger, tension radiating through him as if the Potions Master meant to stand at any moment.

And you think I don’t make Severus happy.

All at once, the cryptic nature of Slytherin’s message became clear, and terror blasted through Harriet like wind through the desert—scalding, sharp, blinding. Her lips parted on a silent breath, and she trembled. Slytherin chuckled.

He claimed to make his followers happy, but Harriet knew better. What Slytherin called “happiness” could be better defined as “pressure points,” areas of weakness he could exploit whenever he wished. For Harriet, he apparently understood threatening her friends would earn her ire, not her obedience…but Harriet wasn’t the only person in the room. She was not the person Slytherin meant to test.

The hand at her face stroked Harriet’s cheek, and Snape’s hands tightened on the paper. Slytherin huffed.

He’d allowed Snape to stay. He’d sent her studying materials with him, had Snape follow them through Deorc Wendan, let him trail them like a dark, silent shadow. Harriet recalled an unopened letter burning to ash, fury in Snape’s face, ash raining on their feet.

Somethings are more important.

No,he spat. “They’re not.

Then, Crouch was dead.

You will not go back to Azkaban.

Snape had promised that. He’d promised it, and Crouch was dead, and Slytherin hadn’t needed to do a thing.

Because he knew Snape would.

And you think I don’t make Severus happy.

He wasn’t looking for happiness. He was looking for weakness.

The runes clattered to the floor when Harriet lurched to her feet, the board sliding from her lap. All eyes turned to her, but Harriet refused to raise her head. She fled the room, not needing to look back to know Slytherin’s smug, amused grin followed her the entire way.


A/N:

Slytherin: *pets Harriet*

Snape: *whips out the No-Touch spray*

Chapter 247: it takes your mind again

Chapter Text

ccxlvii. it takes your mind again

 

Hospitals had an unbearable smell to them.

Elara lacked much experience outside of St. Giles’ or Hogwarts’ infirmary, but even she knew one could expect a certain odor to waft about the places. Magical hospitals were no exception, permeated by that particular antiseptic funk. Elara sat in St. Mungo’s waiting room, her nose wrinkled and her arms crossed, breathing the smell in.

“The woman I know can help. But I won’t take you to her unless you agree to see a mind healer.”

Initially, Elara had hoped Andromeda’s little caveat to introducing her to a witch knowledgeable about her condition would be forgotten or delayed, but Andromeda had been unflinching. She would not take Elara to the person she knew unless Elara saw the mind healer, and Elara would not see the mind healer unless Sirius went as well.

Pursing her lips, she peered next to her from the corner of her eye.

Sirius looked as peeved as Elara did, her father sitting with his feet firmly on the floor and his arms crossed over his chest, their faces set in matching grimaces.

“They’re taking forever,” he grumbled, glowering at the portrait of a washerwoman on the opposing wall. By the door was a brass sign emblazoned with the words JANUS THICKEY WARD. The ward took up the whole of the fourth floor, divided into sections by long, sterile hallways and the hum of magical barriers controlling possible contaminates. Compared to the larger blocks set up for the long-term or seriously injured patients, the Menslumency area took up a few offices and a partial waiting area near the stairs. The smell of coffee and tea from the lounge upstairs wended down to them, blending with that ugly, lingering hospital odor.

Elara picked at her gloves and jostled her leg, looking toward the Charmed window.

“Bloody waste of time,” Sirius muttered.

“Then go,” Elara told him, growing irritated by the waiting and his clear desire to leave. Her stomach churned like an anxious nest of worms. “I’ll find my own way home.”

Sirius answered by huffing and slouching further into his chair.

At first, the pair sat alone in the waiting area, distracted by the smell of breakfast above and the jumbled noise of the wireless, then a man came into the waiting area and chose a seat on the other side of the room below the washerwoman. He had a thick trench coat on despite the miserable heat outside and settled a sizable black briefcase onto the chair next to him.

The jangle of the door opening turned Elara’s head, and she held herself still as a short Asian man in casual robes with heavy lines on his sun-spotted face stepped over the threshold.

“Miss Black? Mr. Black?”

Elara and Sirius got to their feet, the latter grumbling.

“Hello, I’m Healer Lane. Won’t you come in?”

In short order, Elara and Sirius found themselves seated again, this time on a navy blue sofa with wooden buttons sewn into the cushions, Healer Lane seated in a winged chair across from them. His office didn’t much appear as if it should be in a hospital; muted paint covered the walls, the stone floor softened by thick carpet. The shelves lining one wall had to be Muggle in origin, though the books they held were not.

“It’s nice to meet you both.” Healer Lane smiled, reaching out to touch something on the coffee table between them. He settled his hand on a large crystal ball, the glass frosted rather than clear. “Can you tell me what brings you here today?”

Neither Sirius nor Elara jumped to answer. They looked at one another, and Elara’s mouth twitched, pulling from a grimace into a snarl and back again. “You were recommended,” she finally said. “By my aunt.”

“Is there a reason you felt you should take her up on that recommendation?” The Healer lifted his hand. “And if you would, please touch the receiver for a moment.”

Sirius’ brow furrowed as he leaned forward to inspect the instrument. “What exactly is it?”

“An Intuiall. In the same family as the Rememberall, if you’ve heard of it. We use the Intuiall in Menslumency to register emotions by color. We’re trained to identify and interpret these colors to better assist our patients in understanding their own feelings.”

Curious, Sirius touched the Intuiall just as the Healer had, but Elara hesitated.

“It’s perfectly safe, Miss Black.”

She didn’t snap at the wizard, though it was a near thing. The pressure of their eyes on her finally forced Elara to strip off a glove, and she carefully placed her palm on the glass surface. She didn’t feel anything particular, nothing aside from a slight warming beneath her skin that could have been attributed to her own body heat seeping into the object.

“Great! You can sit back now.”

Elara snatched her hand away and pulled her glove on.

Healer Lane peered into the Intuiall, nodding to himself as dints of color rose against the frosted texture like blush, or blood to a bruise. “Thank you. Now, as I understand it, you are father and daughter?” They nodded, and he continued. “And this appointment is primarily for Miss Black here?”

Again, they nodded. Elara’s neck hurt from how stiffly she held her head.

“Miss Black—may I call you Elara?”

“If you must.”

“Elara, I can understand you’re anxious. Most people are when they begin sessions with a mind healer. For today, we’re just trying to get to know one another and understand our expectations. In the future—.”

“Future?” Sirius blurted out. “D’you mean she’ll have to come back?”

Healer Lane adjusted himself so he could face Sirius more directly. “Menslumency is not an instantaneous skill, Sirius—.”

“Black.”

“As you prefer. The mind is complicated and must be guided into healing itself. Potions, Charms, enchantments—all these only go so far, and relieve deeper issues only temporarily.” Healer Lane glanced at the Intuiall. “I understand most of those from pure-blood families are skeptical about Menslumency and see it as a relatively new, Muggle-influenced art. However, I can assure you, Mr. Black, whether Muggle or magical, mental health is a crucial aspect of our lives.”

Sirius grunted, leaning back into the sofa. Spots of red, brown, and orange stained part of the Intuiall, then disappeared.

“Don’t let me get in your way, then,” he snarked.

“Not at all, Mr. Black. I understand you’re concerned for your daughter, which is why we often have parents sit in on first appointments. It helps them comprehend what is being done.” To Elara, he added. “Now, Elara. Could you tell me about yourself?”

She picked at her gloves again, worrying at the seam over the thumb. “I’m a Hogwarts student. I’m in Slytherin. I’m going into my fifth year.”

“Do you like Hogwarts?”

“Well enough.”

“Do you get along with your classmates?”

“Basically.”

“Fifth year is an important year. Are you anxious about your O.W.L examinations?”

Was she? Elara didn’t rightly know. Honestly, she hadn’t given it much thought, and she imagined Hermione would have a fit when she told her. Bubbles of pale orange popped among broader strokes of lavender.

“No,” Healer Lane said, nodding as he inspected the colors. “No particular nervousness in that area, I see. You must be a capable student.”

“…Mostly.”

“With the O.W.L examinations come a time in most young people’s lives where they consider their future careers. Have you given thought to what you might want to do?”

Flickers of pink, dashes of red, thicker bands of orange. “Not…not really.”

“Oh?”

“She doesn’t have to decide now,” Sirius interjected, crossing his arms over his chest once more. “She doesn’t have to do anything if she doesn’t want to.”

Healer Lane nodded, his expression open but placid, showing no judgment. Elara didn’t know if that was better or worse. Wasn’t he meant to tell her what she should be thinking? Correct something?

“Understandable. Could you tell me what you think your biggest challenge is?”

“I beg your pardon?”

“I apologize. By challenge, I mean what you find most difficult to handle in your life. It could be something physical, or something less tangible.”

Elara stared at the wizard—then at Sirius, then the Intuiall, trying to decipher what the new, swirling hues meant. What was her biggest challenge? What did he mean by that? Living in a world under the rule of a Dark Lord? Being taught by a psychopath? Regularly fearing for her god-sister’s life?

Elara’s attention finally came to rest on her hands. They clutched to one another, her fingers digging in until her bones ached.

“My anger,” she finally admitted, voice quiet. “My resentment. It…when my temper gets the better of me, my magic…reacts poorly.”

Flashes of a shattered lamp, glass raining upon a dark head. A desire curling in her chest, a hatred, a need, a shameful indulgence thinking of how the fire spilled from her wand and destroyed—.

“Our emotions are often reflected in our spell casting. Do you know what causes you to feel angry? What precedes these moments?”

“She gets frustrated,” Sirius said before Elara could formulate an answer. “Often with me and the decisions I make for the house.”

“Could either of you elaborate on that more?”

Elara said nothing, her tongue like lead behind her teeth. Sirius scratched at his beard, shades of amber and plum blooming like poppies on the Intuiall.

“You have to know who I am. You have to know where I was for the last decade.”

“I am familiar with the papers, Mr. Black.”

“Elara wasn’t raised—properly. No, that’s not what I mean. I—damn. There was—a mistake. An attack back in the bad days. Her mother sent her to a group home, and well, they were Muggles. That’s the crux of it, innit?”

“It’s not because they were Muggles,” Elara muttered. “It was because they were religious.”

She knew that wasn’t the precise truth. Some of the sisters had been nice enough, and the values they instilled in the religion weren’t inherently bad. Being an off-shoot of Vatican cast-offs in a vastly Anglican country that had closed secular orphanages and turned their nose up at ecclesiastical group homes had poisoned the well, so to speak. Father Phillips was a monster, but that had less to do with his faith and more to do with his integrity as a person.

Threads of red went through the Intuiall, stringy and thick like clinging cobwebs.

“I take it you had a difficult upbringing. I’m sorry for that, Elara. Would you like to discuss it more?”

She shook her head—a hard, jerking motion that forbade more to be said on the subject.

“That all right. We can revisit the subject when you’re more comfortable with it. Would you say your upbringing has affected the relationship you have with your father?”

Elara snorted.

“Ah.” Mr. Lane only nodded, a slight, reassuring smile turning his mouth before it disappeared again. “It isn’t uncommon for people raised in situations of neglect or abuse to cling to control in their environment. It’s perfectly natural, and when that control is challenged, it inspires different emotions in different people. Anger and frustration in and of themselves are not negative things to feel. What we can address is your response to these situations that inspire your anger, frustration, or resentment.”

Elara listened to the Healer, and though she hadn’t come to this appointment with an open mind, she couldn’t help but take his words and think them over. She could see Sirius considering them as well, though with a stubborn set to his chin.

“Is there someone you particularly care for or respect?”

“My god-sister and best friend,” she said, the answer immediate. “And Perenelle, and Mr. Flamel.”

She couldn’t tell if Healer Lane recognized the name, simply continuing with his line of thought. “When you begin to feel the emotions we’re addressing—the anger, frustration, or resentment that can affect your magic—I want you to think of those people. Think of how they may react in a similar situation, how they would feel to see you struggling. Often such consideration will disrupt your emotions from spiraling. The people in our lives help keep us grounded and out of our own heads.”

Could it really be so simple? More than anything, Elara wanted to feel in control of herself—in control of the strange magic that stained her hands, the compulsion to use the darkest of spells, the hostility that stole her mouth from time to time. She’d expected the mind healer to tell her she was overreacting—that she was hysteric or ungrateful and should bow to Sirius’ authority, but he hadn’t said anything of the kind.

“I’m going to give you a series of exercises I would like you to practice that will help you identify and navigate what you’re feeling at any given moment, and a Charm you can use if you need to feel calm and interrupt a negative spiral. Our receptionist will owl you in the morning to set up reoccurring appointments, and we can see about arranging sessions for your time at Hogwarts.”

He retrieved his wand from his pocket and gave it a swish, summoning a quill and a piece of parchment. As he wrote out his list, he addressed Sirius. “I can recommend you to a colleague of mine, Mr. Black, who could see you privately and assist with your transition back into society. They are very discreet.” He finished writing, folded the parchment, and held it out to the Elara for her to take. He looked at Sirius. “If you would like.”

Elara could tell he would not like, but her father glanced once in her direction, his expression inscrutable, and he nodded at Healer Lane. The wizard wrote up another name on a second sheet of parchment, and it was time for them to leave.

“So, what did you think?” Sirius asked as they reentered the waiting room, the door clicking shut at their heels. “Bloke asks a lot of questions.”

Elara shrugged, not sure what to say. Reoccurring appointments, Healer Lane had told her. What would that mean? He’d mentioned her childhood and wanting to discuss it more at a later date. She didn’t want that—didn’t think she could. Just thinking of the stone bunker where she’d bound made her chest burn as if freshly branded, and her hands tingled with magic. Sweat built on the nape of her neck. He wanted her to relive that?

What am I meant to do again? Think of my friends. Of Harriet and Hermione.

She tried, though she wasn’t certain of her success when her anxiety turned toward worrying over their safety instead.

Maybe that only works for anger.

“Little moon?”

Elara blinked, caught off-guard by the nickname. “Yes?”

“All right?” Sirius looked Elara over, a crease forming between his brows. “You went a bit peaky.”

“Yes, of course. I’m fine.” Clearing her throat, she straightened her shoulders. “Shall we get going?”

Sirius nodded, reaching out to give her shoulder an affectionate squeeze, and they turned to leave.

By happenstance, Elara looked at the wall where the washerwoman’s portrait hung above the row of extra seats. The wizard who’d been there before was gone—presumably called into his appointment with a different Menslumancer—but he’d left his briefcase behind. Elara paused, her arm bumping into Sirius’, drawing him to a stop as well.

“What’s wrong?”

“Someone left their case,” she pointed out. “I don’t know if it’d be better to bring to leave it at the front desk where it’d be safer or leave it be.”

Sirius looked at the case as well, frowning. “Man’s probably in the loo. We should—.”

He hadn’t finished his sentence when the brass latches on top of the briefcase snapped open of their own accord, the sound startling in the otherwise quiet space. The case jostled where it’d been propped against the arm’s chair—and the lid came falling open. An immense hissing rose, startling Elara—then snakes started swarming like ooze bubbling out of a swamp.

Elara!

She jerked back, gasping, too stunned to look away as serpents as big as her arm writhed, their bodies wetly gleaming as vivid green coils fell to the floor. Three, four, five—more and more emerged from the deteriorating case, some smaller than the others, and one in particular as large as a fully grown man. It arched, curled, and a head rose. The creature reared back, its hood flaring wide, and focused its glowing red eyes on Elara.

What in God ’s name is that?!

The snake attacked.

Her father’s hand on her forearm yanked Elara back with enough strength to rattle the teeth in her head. Sirius had his wand out, sweeping it outward—.

Vipera Evanesca!

Nothing happened.

Shit!” Sirius stepped in front of her, physically blocking Elara. “Protego Serpens!”

The large snake approached the shield—and passed right through it.

What is it? Elara wondered, mind racing. Not a snake. Not a snake, it went through the shield. She needed her wand. She needed to do something. Why weren’t her hands moving?

The lights in the ward shifted to a blaring, inky red. “Magical leak detected,” a disembodied voice spoke, bouncing off the wall. “Magical leak detected. Guests and visitors, please move toward the exit in a calm, efficient manner.”

Footsteps came running, doors slamming and sealing shut to protect the vulnerable patients. Wards activated with humming pops and scintillating flashes. The door to the Menslumency offices popped open, one of the confused mind healers sticking their head out—.

“Close it!” Elara blurted, and a spell sparked from her, slamming the door in the Healer’s face before one of the snakes could sneak in.

The largest serpent—a glowing, red-eyed beast, formed of magic, of malice—lunged again, spat, and to Elara’s shame, she shut her eyes.

Ruinam Faciunt!”

Heat glazed Elara’s face, and she jerked, eyes snapping open once more as Sirius nearly collided with her. Purple fog burst from his wand, but it was as thick and dense as smoke or exhaust from an ailing Muggle lorry. It sank as if too heavy to float—and where the snakes touched it, they dissolved into dust. The creature locked eyes with Elara one final time before it, too, was devoured by the malignant spell.

“Wh-what was that?” Elara stuttered as the fog dissipated, revealing leftover snake bits and a large, pitted swathe in the stone floor. The lights still blared an angry, urgent red.

“Gaunt,” Sirius seethed through clenched teeth. He jammed his wand back into his pocket, then grabbed Elara’s hand. Even through the gloves, she could feel how wet and clammy his skin had become. “He’s making good on his threat. We need to leave.”

“Shouldn’t we wait for Aurors—?”

“Since that spell was as black as they come and I don’t much fancy going back to Azkaban, we’re getting the fuck out of here.”

Sirius’ hand tightened, and he tugged her into motion. Elara followed, her mind spinning, the stink of hospitals replaced by the pungent aroma of Dark magic. It burned in her nostrils.

She looked down at her robes as she ran, and where the spat venom had touched the hem, the fabric had dissolved.

Someone had tried to kill her. Someone had tried to kill her, and it was most likely the Minister for Magic.


A/N: Ultimately, I have no clinical experience with therapy and hope I did a reasonable job in simulating the scenario here. I decided mind healers would be a part of the Janus Thickey ward because mental health is a long-term, lasting struggle and didn ’t really fit for any of the other floors imo.

In the bit at the end, I wanted to highlight another reason why Harriet ’s considered “exceptional” at defense. Here, in the heat of the moment, we see Elara freezes up, whereas Harriet wouldn’t.

Elara: “It was terrifying.”

Remus: “The snakes?”

Elara: “The therapy.”

Chapter 248: mark of the world serpent

Chapter Text

ccxlviii. mark of the world serpent

 

Harriet stared at the letter in her hand, fighting the urge to crumple it in an angry fist.

Gaunt made an attempt on my life,” Elara wrote. “And before you ask, of course there’s no proof, but he clearly wanted me to know who it was. In retrospect, I don’t know whether or not I believe his attempt was in earnest. At the time it certainly felt so, but in retrospect, there was a terrible amount of effort put into the theatrics of the attack rather than the efficiency. Either he’s as lazy as we’ve assumed or intent on the message.

She read the letter twice more, her heart beating heavy and uncomfortable in her chest. It must have arrived in the night; she’d woken to find Cygnus glaring at her from her desk, his talons digging holes into the Sangforts’ chair. It had been hours. Was Elara all right? Was Hermione? Sirius? Remus?

She cursed—then cursed again, louder, and rushed to finish plaiting her wet hair. It dripped on her robes as she dragged them on, and a moment later, Harriet tripped out the door and ran for the next room.

She knocked on the door until it was answered, Slytherin standing on the other side looking at her like she’d lost her bloody mind.

“I need to go back home,” she rushed to say. “Gaunt—I mean, someone tried to kill my god-sister.”

Slytherin stared at her, then blinked, thoroughly unimpressed. “And? Is she dead?”

“Well, no—.”

“Then I strongly suggest you reevaluate what you mean by need, Miss Potter.” Slytherin sniffed and brushed her off, his hand already on the door again to close it. “I have already made allowances for you, considering your…legal difficulties. Do not expect such generosity each time you desire a quick jaunt home. You will see your friends when term is due to start and not a moment sooner. Do I make myself clear?”

“But–.”

“I said do I make myself clear?”

The harsh, needling sibilance of Parseltongue knocked a moment of clarity into Harriet’s head, and she bit her tongue hard enough to taste blood. “Yes, sir.”

“Good.” Slytherin stepped back enough to consult the grandfather clock in his room, narrowing his crimson eyes. “We have an excursion to make today and will set out in an hour. Use that time to make yourself presentable, Potter.”

The door snapped shut, leaving Harriet fuming and frustrated in the hall. She would have to settle for writing to Elara, and Hermione, Sirius, Remus and whomever else she could think Gaunt might consider offing on a whim. She would remind them to be on their guard.

Harriet turned, intent on returning to her own room--and startled when she saw Snape waiting in the corridor, watching her. Harriet opened her mouth to tell him what had happened–.

Cold fingers moved against her jaw. “People are predictable. Soft. If you know how they will behave, you needn’t do anything at all to have your will enacted.”

Her teeth clicked with the force she used in closing her jaw. Harriet forced a passive expression onto her face, and when Snape raised a questioning brow, Harriet scowled. She stuck her nose in the air, stomped to her room, slung open her door, and slammed it shut behind her.

The noise reverberated against the stone walls, shaking as Harriet’s face crumpled, her glare fixed on the floor.

Mean, cold laughter. “And you think I don’t make Severus happy.

Clenching her fists, she squared her shoulders, then got ready for the day.

 

 

x X x

 

 

“I don’t see why he has to come.”

Harriet crossed her arms, cloak fluttering against her knees, the summer breeze flicking at her fringe. She refused to look at Snape, instead addressing Slytherin where he stood at the head of the steps. Her Master had brought them to the grounds of the Tor, to a staircase that descended the mountainside and delved into the forest below. What they were doing there, Harriet didn’t know, but she knew she didn’t want Snape tagging along.

For the second time that day, Slytherin looked at Harriet as if she’d lost her mind, and maybe she had. Questioning the wizard was not the cleverest thing she’d ever done.

“Because I said so, Miss Potter,” Slytherin said as if it should be obvious. The breeze stirred his attire but didn’t displace a single hair on his head. He looked at Snape, questioning, but Snape merely gazed back at him. Slytherin threw his hands in the air and started walking. “Surrounded by idiots.”

Harriet followed him, forcing herself to pretend Snape didn’t exist. Given that he didn’t say anything and walked behind them with all the grace of a cat, it wasn’t difficult. She concentrated on the steps instead, on the uneven stone and thick grass creeping through the cracks. As they climbed lower, the forest’s shadows grew thicker, and the heat settled on the top of her head.

They walked for a long while. Normally, Harriet enjoyed walking, but having spent the summer trapped in various enclosed spaces, her legs ached after a few kilometers and she was soon sticky with sweat. Naturally, Slytherin appeared unfazed, and if Snape was bothered, he kept it to himself.

If she could forget her company and location, it was a lovely hike. They went through several glades and clearings and over a river, Slytherin occasionally stopping to take a bit of bark or plant, inspecting the area. Harriet didn’t know what he was doing and didn’t really care. Her mind remained hundreds of miles away with her friends in London.

She didn’t notice the first signs of a settlement. She didn’t notice the barricade until the tops of the canvas encampment were in sight, and Snape hit her with a spell that yanked her cloak’s hood over her head. She whipped around to tell him off, and she realized they’d crossed a ward. Snape had put up his own hood, his face cast into shadow.

Harriet stayed quiet and hung back with Snape as Slytherin continued into the camp. Two shabby wizards dressed in black came out to greet him, and they engaged in conversation.

Dark wizards, she realized, stomach twisting with nerves. She guessed she looked like a Dark wizard too, traveling with Snape and Slytherin, dressed in the same tailored cloak and robes. The idea made her uncomfortable.

It’s not true, though, she reminded herself. It doesn’t matter what they think.

She inched closer, curious to hear what Slytherin was saying, but he and the other wizards were too far away. One of the blokes extended a book of some kind, and Slytherin produced a little gold satchel. The wizard held up his hands, and judging by his body language, Harriet guessed he was refusing payment. Smart on his behalf, she decided. He obviously understood the kind of person Slytherin was.

Their afternoon continued, and they visited two more sites where Dark wizards and poachers lived on the outskirts of the Forbidden Forest. They passed one section of the trees where a wizard’s head had been mounted on a spike—probably by centaurs. Harriet was bloody terrified and disgusted, but Slytherin continued without batting an eye. He ordered Harriet to point out magical symbols or foliage as they passed it, and he iterated how important he found it for her to know where these encampments were located.

“Scum of the earth, truly. Scavengers and criminals who can’t eke out a living among proper sorcerers. However, they do have their…uses.”

They came out of the forest at one point to a grassy lowland, and Harriet could smell the brine of the Black Lake lurking nearby. Far, far in the distance, rising against the blue sky amid a cluster of summer thunderheads and craggy mountaintops, Hogwarts waited, awash in the warm, welcoming glow of the sun.

The wind pushed the clouds, and it disappeared from view.

As they walked, Harriet noted odd structures in the largest clearings. She tripped on a brick buried in the weeds and stumbled, feeling a solid surface under the loose topsoil. She looked again, and the scattered, irregular rocks suddenly made sense; houses used to reside there. A village.

Black soot scorched the bones, and nature had hidden the rest.

“The Dark Lord’s doing,” Snape muttered, having come to stand near Harriet as she paused, staring at the crooked line of a chimney wilting like a dying flower. “Or Slytherin’s. Or Gaunt’s.”

Harriet didn’t answer, looking away. Slytherin had gone ahead, almost in the forest again.

“He can make you believe in anything he says, but this is the reality. Entire villages or communities fed to the fire because they did not bow to His whims, and they were too far from the Ministry for them to do a thing.” Snape passed her, robes brushing her arm. “Do not forget he would do the same to you in a heartbeat, Potter.”

Confused by his bitter tone, Harriet watched the Potions Master leave. Does he think I don’t know that? she wondered. Does he think I don’t understand?

Because she knew full well what Tom Riddle was doing to their world. He was destroying it. For all that he preached about the betterment and supremacy of their society, Voldemort had told Harriet the truth that night in the graveyard. If people did not fall in line, he was perfectly content with being the last wizard alive.

Harriet looked for Hogwarts again but couldn’t find it. She closed her eyes and followed the Dark wizards into the trees.

 

x X x

 

In the quietest corner of the library, Harriet hid while the rest of the Tor descended to the dining hall for another awkward dinner with the Sangforts.

She fiddled with the corner to the page she’d been pretending to read for the last hour. Harriet would have given anything to have that dry, dubious tome on old runes turn into a novel, a magazine, or anything remotely interesting. Her day had been exhausting, both mentally and physically, what with Slytherin forcing her to carry his finds like a pack mule while she continually reminded herself to ignore Snape.

The page tore.

Harriet wanted to go home. Anxiety nettled her like ants under her skin, and it was all she could do to keep herself still and somewhat composed. She’d hoped to find a letter from Elara waiting for her when Slytherin finally let them return to the Tor, but her desk had been empty.

She slouched into the chair and removed her glasses, rubbing at her eyes. I’m here to learn, she reminded herself. I have a goal, and I can’t disappoint everyone. No matter how many times the thought spun in her head, Harriet couldn’t help but wish to be anywhere but here, and the guilt crushed her.

A madman was threatening her friends, and all she had to do was sit comfortable and learn.

Harriet replaced her glasses and peered with longing at the window, the dying sunlight dripping glutinous as fresh, ruby blood, vivid and eerie as the evening approached. She watched the color deepen and pondered whether or not she could fly all the way to London in her Animagus form.

No, she decided, frowning. I’d end up getting lost or breaking my ruddy neck.

She heard someone coming into the library, so she returned to her work, keeping her head bowed over the book as if enthralled by the content. Whoever it was moved with near silence, and she had a sneaking suspicion who it was.

Professor Slytherin remained quiet for over a minute, and Harriet forced herself to remain casual until he stopped watching her and sniffed, saying, “I see you’ve neglected dinner this evening.

Harriet lifted her head. “Sorry, Pro—Master. I just wanted to get a start on tomorrow’s assignment.”

Slytherin looked ghoulish in the fading daylight, standing with his hands folded before himself as he studied her. His contemplative, unblinking attention scorched Harriet, and she regretted skipping dinner. Slytherin tilted his head, seeming to come to a decision.

“Come here, apprentice.”

“…sir?”

“Come here.”

Harriet slid the book off her lap and stood, hesitating for a moment before she came to stand in front of Slytherin. Again, he stared at her, their eyes nearly level, before he told her, “Turn around.”

“Erm, can—can I ask why—?”

Turn!

Harriet flinched at the volume of his voice, then did as told. She faced the window, holding herself as still as she could, so still she almost yelped when Slytherin suddenly gripped her shoulders without warning. He swept her plait over the left one, baring the nape of her neck, and Harriet wordlessly stuttered when she felt the tip of his wand against her skin.

What is he doing? Her frantic mind turned over the day’s events, not daring to turn her head. Is he going to hurt me? What did I do wrong?

“A gift for you,” Slytherin murmured. “For your dedication.”

He began incanting a long string of spells, and the only warning Harriet received was a flash of heat stinging her flesh. Then, pain lanced through her neck like an icepick being driven into her spine, and she shrieked. Her knees went out from under her, and next Harriet knew, she was hunched on the floor, dazed, her skin burning.

Slytherin put his wand away, gazing down his nose at her.

“Get up.”

Harriet didn’t move. Her fingers twitched, seeming to struggle to stretch and hold her weight. She blinked and shook her head.

UP!

Struggling upright, Harriet gripped the back of her neck and ground her teeth, not bothering to hide the glare she directed at Slytherin through her mussed fringe.

His lips parted in a snide smile. “Get out of my sight. Come when you are called.

She left the library, not bothering to bring her book, colliding with the wall in the corridor. She rubbed at her skin, frantic, but whatever Slytherin had done left nothing to feel, no whisper of magic or raised wound.

He cursed me. He cursed me! Her nails dug into her neck, raking over her spine. I have to do something! What did he—?!

Harriet slammed into a solid body, skittering back.

“Potter,” Snape grunted, rubbing the spot on his chest where her shoulder had struck him. “You stupid girl, what—?”

He lunged to grab her arm before Harriet could dart away.

“Let go!” she yelled.

“No,” Snape retorted, pulling her closer. “What is the matter with you? What has happened?”

Her eyes burned, and Harriet knew her face must be red. “Gerroff!”

Snape didn’t listen to her. He threw open the nearest door and dragged Harriet inside, snapping a spell for the lamps to flare. It was a storage room of some sort, the air thick with dust, the furniture covered in off-white drop cloths. Snape curled his fingers into her arm and forced Harriet to turn toward him.

“What has he done?”

Harriet glowered at the floor.

Potter.”

“I don’t know,” she relented, unsure what else to do. Tears beaded her lashes, and she wiped them away, refusing to let them fall. “He—I don’t know. He did something to my neck.”

“Let me see.”

“It’s not—.”

“Let me see, you little fool.”

Snape reached out to move her hand, then lifted her hair. He sighed.

“It will be fine.”

“But what did he—?”

She fell silent when the Potions Master released her and turned his back to her. He knelt, his robes pooling like spilled ink, and roughly grabbed his own hair at the nape to pull it aside, baring his pale, ghostly skin.

“There. Look. He’s done the same.”

Harriet didn’t know what she was meant to be looking at, so she stepped closer, moving so her body didn’t block the light. She leaned in, and when her face was a few inches from him, she realized what she’d thought was a stray bit of hair was actually a mark. No bigger than her fingertip, a black rune—Ior—had been pressed into his skin, and she realized what Slytherin must have done.

“He—he marked me?” Harriet reared back, her mouth dry, hands shaking. Snape rose again and faced her. “Is it like—?”

“The Dark Mark? No. The Headmaster and I have theorized it’s an earlier, simpler concept the Dark Lord developed before he formulated the Mark. It will…burn when he requires your presence, but it does not carry the same drawbacks as this.” He flicked a dismissive gesture at his left forearm.

Harriet scrubbed at her skin until it hurt. “Can—can it be removed?”

“Eventually. I will remove it from you when I can.”

She forced her hand away from her neck, her fingers curling into a fist at her side. Snape watched her, a deep line forming between his brows. Panic fluttered in Harriet’s middle, and she backed up, colliding with a covered suit of armor. The pieces clanked together.

“You should go back to Hogwarts,” she told him, not meeting his gaze. She stared instead at the top button of his shirt, closed over his cravat. “Or—go home, or go wherever. Just—you should leave.”

“What in the blazes are you on about?”

“You need to leave, Snape!”

“Potter.” The confusion didn’t clear from his expression, but he spoke with authority in his voice. “You don’t get to tell me where I need to go. It is my choice. Remaining at the Tor is my choice.”

“That’s the problem—!”

“My well-being is not your concern.” He spoke over Harriet’s objection, apparently divining the heart of the issue. “Whatever consequences my choices entail are mine, not yours.”

“But what if…?”

“Speak up, girl.”

“What if he hurts you? Because of—because of me?”

Frowning, Snape crossed his arms. “Slytherin behaves in whatever manner he chooses. Whether or not he vents his aggression on my person is not something for you to worry about. Do not believe I have not considered how my actions appear to him. I have made my decisions. You need only concern yourself with studying or protecting your own person.”

“But if—if he does something, I won’t be able to forgive myself. I can’t stop myself from worrying.”

The look Snape gave her could have frozen a first-year solid. “Try,” he ordered.

He threw open the door, allowing it to bang into the wall, and stormed off. Harriet remained in the storage room long after he’d gone, her head in her hands, and the back of her neck burned with phantom awareness.

Chapter 249: a weak little girl

Chapter Text

ccxlix. a weak little girl

 

Time spent at the Tor had an intolerable, sticky feel to it.

It slipped by in thick, dragging increments, an ailing sensation like ichor inching its way from a toppled bottle. The more attention one devoted to it, the slower it moved. It became a form of gross, idle torture.

Severus leaned his weight into the wall at his back, allowing the heat to sink inexorable into his bones. The mezzanine sat exposed to the sun's unerring eye, but the conservatory and cultivated plants below were eclipsed and partly shaded, tempered below an expensive ward. If he cared to lean on the wrought iron railing and look down, he could catch glimpses of Potter in another lesson with Slytherin.

It was obvious to him and to Albus what Slytherin intended with his actions. He clearly fancied he would be Headmaster within the next five years, and he was grooming Potter to take his place as Defense instructor—or, rather, the Dark Arts professor. He was exposing her slowly to the ideology of spell-creation and innate magics, schools that often opened Pandora's box of Dark magic so to speak. Albus thought it a fool's errand on Slytherin’s part; Potter was staunchly opposed to the practice and near allergic to the Arts. Slytherin would have to struggle against the girl's morals and thick skull.

Severus wasn't as certain of Potter’s resilience as the Headmaster. If Slytherin applied just the right amount of pressure, Potter would bend. She would do anything to protect her foolish friends and that cur Sirius Black, and if Slytherin could convince her Dark magic would protect them, well–.

Severus listened to the muddled droning under his boots, biting his lip.

“What if he hurts you? Because of—because of me?”

He knew he'd been making…mistakes lately. Failing tests Slytherin set forth to observe him like a rat in his sick fucking maze. The only other option available to him was untenable. Was he meant to leave Potter to Slytherin’s devices alone? Leave her sheltered among Knights and Death Eaters with only wretched Iris Sangfort as her point of contact?

Ridiculous.

He carded a slow hand through his hair, thumb grazing the scarring by his left eye. When he lifted his arm and held it out toward the light, the thin line ensnaring his wrist glowed pearlescent. Such a beautiful shine for a curse so terrible.

Slytherin did not and would never know of the Vow. He could play his little games and set the pieces how he desired, but Tom Riddle in any incarnation had never truly understood Severus. He could not comprehend what drove a man like him, and so it made the Dark Lord lesser. For all his power, he was weak.

Merlin's arse, I'm going to start sounding like bloody Dumbledore soon.

Footsteps approached, and Severus curled his lip at Iris as she came to stand next to him. The woman appeared properly sauced, as if she'd only just managed to drag herself from the bottle, tie back her hair, and shuffle out of her room into the light of day. She’d spent most of the holiday as far from Slytherin and Potter as she could afford to be, exerting considerable effort to keep Elinor quiet and out of sight.

"How's your little Death Eater in training doing?" she asked, not bothering to hide her clear derision.

"Adequate," Severus drawled. "At the very least she keeps our Lord entertained."

Iris scoffed and picked at her nails. "You’re such a dull bugger. Don't you aspire to be more, Snape?"

"More?"

"Something other than a passable lapdog."

Severus smirked. "Oh, no. I aspire only to serve our Lord to the best of my ability."

A noise of disgust escaped Iris. "For Circe's sake."

Severus allowed the conversation to lapse, his gaze flitting over the pair in the conservatory once more. Slytherin had Potter attempting to inscribe runes on living material—an object lesson in the inherent difficulty of impressing foreign magic into something that had wild, innate magic of its own without a medium between them.

Severus ’ pale fingers pulled through wild black hair, grazing the warmth of her skin as he revealed the fresh, livid mark scorched into her flesh. It bore evidence of her nervous, anxious scratching

His hand twitched as if to rise, but Severus remained mindful of his audience and kept himself still. The brand's shape was incidental; runes were maladapted to living bodies, but Dark magic clung well enough to ink injected under flesh.

He hadn't lied to Potter when he said the brand was not the same as the Dark Mark. Neither he nor Dumbledore knew for certain why Slytherin had adopted a more facile calling card for his followers, but Severus—with his deeper understanding of Dark magic—theorized the brand issued by Voldemort contained more drawbacks than the Dark Lord had initially expected. After all, the Dark Mark allowed for greater control and communication, but Dark magic was often inconvenient, and cyclical. Greater influence over his followers opened greater chances of influence in turn. It was a motorway traveling in both directions.

Severus almost scoffed at the idea of the Dark Lord being influenced, but if such a thing were possible even in the theoretical, Slytherin would learn from his other self's failings and close that door before others saw it.

"What do you and Dumbledore hope to gain from all this?" Iris asked, breaking Severus from his musings. "It seems to me you've done nothing but feed another impressionable child to the wolf."

"I would think of him as a snake rather than a wolf," he corrected. "Wolves tear their prey to pieces and are pack animals by nature: they protect, feed, provide. Snakes either poison or choke the life out of their food. They then swallow it whole."

"Ugh, Merlin," she replied, wrinkling her nose. "Can you not be serious for a moment, Snape?"

"Do I strike you as a glib man, Sangfort?"

"No, but you have a certain tragic clown allure." Her smile reminded Severus of a shark, white teeth bright in the sunlight, ready to bite. "The girl's doomed. She’s a weak little thing. Breakable. Anyone can see it. Dumbledore needs to get her out."

"You should be pleased. If Slytherin’s preoccupied by such a weak target, he's not interested in Elinor instead."

Iris' smile vanished.

Below, Slytherin had meandered off on whatever new lark he chose to chase, and Potter had moved on. Severus turned, the edge of his robes catching the breeze and flaring outward like a bat's opening wing, and went to leave. Iris followed.

"Muggles are dying," she commented as if speaking on the weather. "In greater numbers than usual. Their Ministry has issued warnings against traveling alone and have set up task forces to search for the missing."

"How terrible," he drawled. The iron steps creaked as he descended into the conservatory proper, his ears popping as they passed through the temperature ward. He headed for the door through the foliage, and Iris kept pace.

"I've heard whispers at the bank," she continued. "Secretive as the goblins are, they lack circumspection when they forget humans can learn Gobbledygook. Our Minister has been inquiring about privately hiring a talented Curse Breaker. A discreet Curse Breaker."

That gave Severus pause. "Am I to assume you've stumbled upon a new job?"

Iris snorted. "Don't be daft. The goblins have so far refused his request. As they put it, the kind of work he wishes performed would be 'suicidal,' and the goblins hate wasting their trained resources."

Severus' shoulders relaxed half a centimeter. Doubtless, Gaunt would not cease his attempts to breach the Department of Mysteries, but there would be endless stumbling blocks, and it would give them time. In Severus' opinion, the Minister would inevitably get in, and he would inevitably hear the prophecy so long as his interest remained keen. He recommended to Dumbledore they seek the means of distracting him, but the Headmaster disagreed. He believed Gaunt would not be dissuaded, no matter what they threw in his path.

“And if he discovers the entirety of the prophecy? Including the parts I am not privy to?"

"He will share it with Voldemort, and I believe disseminate it to Slytherin. Whether or not he believes in prophecies, the revelation will put Harriet in terrible danger. We must keep any of them from hearing the prophecy.

They departed the conservatory, Severus barely taking note of where he was headed, so caught up in his own thoughts. "You should take the opportunity," he told Iris. "Better to lose your life in service of our Lord than to forsake duty."

It was risky, but Iris could potentially lead interference against Gaunt, perhaps obfuscate leads or encourage the Unspeakables to remain vigilante. She could be useful if she agreed.

As expected, however, the witch glowered. "Fuck you, Snape."

"No, not interested."

She said something in Icelandic, something uncomplimentary she undoubtedly picked up at Durmstrang that Severus chose to ignore. He kept walking.

“How do they put up with you at Hogwarts?” Iris demanded. “Do they hand out special service awards for surviving the Potions Master? Do students receive Acceptables in your class right alongside an Order of Merlin?”

“If they receive an Acceptable in my class, they are that much more likely to earn an Order of Merlin.” He shot her a derisive look over his shoulder. “I don’t give handouts to the unexceptional.”

“Spoken like a true arsehole. Your students must simply adore you—just as much as they adore cauldron scrubbing, or being strung up by their thumbs to serve detention—.”

Severus came to a sudden stop.

“What? Did something I say touch a nerve—?”

He hardly heard the witch, his attention fully on his right wrist—the wrist and the scarring prickling to life.

What has she done? His brow furrowed as he lifted his head, straining his ears for any noise that was out of place. Is she with Slytherin again? Or has something else happened?

“Snape—?”

He said nothing to Iris as he took off, increasing his stride, doubling back to the secondary corridor that came off of the conservatory on the other side. Many of the passages in the Tor’s outer buildings sprawled like a spiderweb, and Severus didn’t have any clue which way Potter had gone. He followed his instincts.

The stinging increased, and he sucked air through his teeth.

Severus rounded the corner at the corridor’s end, and Iris collided with his back when he halted. Potter was in the hall, joined by Bonespell. If he was interpreting the scene correctly, Bonespell had stepped out from behind a tapestry of Grendel and had attacked Potter’s back. Whatever the spell was had grazed the girl when she jerked around, leaving a livid burn across her cheek and brow on the her left side. Potter snarled, her green eyes flashing, and retaliated.

Declinatio!

Though young, Bonespell was older than Potter, and she had earned her place at the Tor and among Slytherin’s retinue. The spell swerved mid-cast and would have taken out a lesser duelist, but Bonespell dodged and shielded, keeping her feet under her. She rallied.

Diffindo Mallum!

Potter’s wand twirled between her fingers, blocking the spell. The girl did not lack for grace in her day to day life, but seeing her in a duel truly exemplified why Slytherin had taken such an interest  in Potter even at an early age. She moved as if she knew the steps already, as if the entire confrontation had been choreographed beforehand. Were Severus inclined to be cliche, he would called it dancing.

Contero!

As she spoke, her wand rose and twitched to match the rune for water to the most relevant chakra in her body—svadhisthana. It took a spell that should have eroded a scant foot of rock and enhanced it, melting several meters of solid stone into liquid scree under Bonespell’s feet. Bonespell struggled to get out of it and could not move before Potter’s lightning-quick reflexes hexed her again.

Flipendo!

Severus stepped to the side to avoid being struck by Bonespell when the older witch flew through the air, slamming hard to the ground and skidding several meters. Sangfort looked down at her, and then at Potter, her mouth open and slack in apparent shock.

A weak little girl indeed, Severus thought, mouth twitching.

“Hmm.”

He couldn’t say where Slytherin had come from. Too many corridors adjoined that central passage, many hidden by portraits or tapestries, allowing the shorter wizard to simply appear as if from midair, taking in the scene with a manic gleam in his crimson eyes. Oh, he had definitely be waiting for and anticipating an event such as this since their arrival.

“Very well done, apprentice,” he said to Potter as she hurried to tuck her wand inside its brace. Her cheeks flushed, and she looked away, nodding at nothing in particular. A simple wave of the hand from Slytherin fixed the ruined floor. “Very well done indeed. But I’m not convinced Bonnie’s learned her lesson yet.”

“P—Master?”

Bonespell struggled to her feet, having nearly been knocked senseless by the sheer force of Potter’s spellwork. “Pro—professor,” she stuttered past a split lip. “I didn’t—I didn’t mean to—.”

“How about it, Miss Potter?” he asked without listening to a word of Bonespell’s meager fumbling. He bore most of his teeth in a smile that made Sangfort’s look timid and friendly in comparison. “What curse will you use on her?”

Clearly Potter had no intention of using anything on Bonespell, and she choked in her rush to dissemble.

“I, erm, I don’t think that’s necessary? Sir! We were just—practicing, y’know? That’s all, Master. I asked her to help me practice, and—and she was really helpful. Really.”

Slytherin’s smile slid from his face like slime, and he hissed—a low, threatening sibilance that Potter responded to in kind. Whatever she said didn’t appease the foul wizard, and his upper lip curled over too-sharp teeth. Bonespell tried corroborating Potter’s lie, and she found herself at the end of Slytherin’s wand.

Oscausi.”

Bonespell’s hair-raising shriek cutoff like a door slamming shut, her fingers scrambling over the blank stretch of flesh where her mouth should be.

“Remove yourself from my presence and I might reverse the damage later. Might.

Distressed though she may be, Bonespell had enough wits about her to disappear, clutching her wand to her chest as she wobbled out of the passage. Slytherin glared at Harriet like a child who’d been denied his fun, and Potter met his glower with stoicism. Her shoulders relaxed in relief.

He slapped her.

The blow connected with the injured side of her face and Potter recoiled, though she remained silent. Electricity shot down Severus’ spine, curling through his bones, revolving like a blade through his scarred flesh. Behind him, Sangfort yanked hard on his robes—and he realized he’d very nearly stepped forward.

Stupid, he told himself. Stupid, stupid—.

“Lie to me again at your peril,” Slytherin coldly said, looming over Potter as she hunched. “The next time you do so, I will not be so lenient.”

“Yes, Master.”

Slytherin departed again, and Potter was not far behind him. She lingered only long enough for her glassy eyes to meet Severus’, and he couldn’t rightly decipher the emotion behind that glancing look. She left, and he knew she would not seek him out for assistance. She would rather suffer.

The fool.

Iris released Severus and stepped back, clearing her throat. “What in the Hells was that?” she intoned.

He didn’t answer immediately. He walked forward and brushed his hand against the wall, feeling the gritty, greasy texture of Dark magic that had only grazed Potter’s face. He should have been more vigilant. Several people at the Tor would delight in her death, if only to free the position she so unwillingly held at Slytherin’s side. He needed to do more. Do better.

“Would a budding Death Eater spare her attacker punishment?” he asked.

Iris took a breath, but what words she had remained her own. Time slipped, slow. Dragging. Irrefutable. Severus closed his dirtied hand into a fist and departed, going in search of Potter.


A/N:

Iris: “Haha, weak kid.”

*ten minutes later*

Iris: “…”

Iris: “I may have misspoken.”

Chapter 250: what we leave behind

Chapter Text

ccl. what we leave behind

 

When Hermione was young, her father taught her how to complete jigsaw puzzles.

You start from the corners,Robert Granger told her, holding a prospective piece up for Hermione to see. Little Hermione studied it with large, serious eyes. “They’re the threads. They hold the whole picture together, and if you find them, they’ll lead you to find the other pieces.

Hermione had applied her father’s philosophy to everything in her life. She considered every problem or issue a puzzle: people, events, attitudes, behaviors. They had their own corner pieces, little threads that could be unraveled to see the whole. When she didn’t understand something, Hermione used to envision their coffee table and the boxes of jigsaw puzzles stacked underneath it.

Look how these colors match,” her father said as he threaded two pieces together. “When the colors match, you’re on the right path.

But what if they don’t match?” she asked, frustrated by the mismatched confetti in front of her. “What then, dad?”

“Patterns, Hermione. You have to find the patterns.

Hermione had searched for patterns her whole life, and sometimes they made for images she didn’t much like.

Her reality was an image that received its first piece in 1991, in the form of a woman sitting on the Grangers’ couch saying, “You’re a witch, Miss Granger.” It was Professor McGonagall reciting magical laws while telling her there was no such thing as being too much of a witch. It was Hermione outlining ten weeks home in five years and finding it acceptable.

What she’d originally thought to be a piece filled with color, the image of a young girl learning her identity and setting off on an adventure, was actually a picture of an eleven-year-old child realizing she’d only have a cumulative two months with her parents for the rest of her childhood and accepting it. Anticipating it.

Every year was another piece. Another day. A Defense professor with scarlet eyes, a dark-haired girl with lightning under her skin, an eight-lettered word thrown at her in school corridors. Mudblood. Mudblood.

In hindsight, Hermione thought she might have always been able to see the thread; how could she not, when it’s been tied around her throat this entire time, leading her forward? It was a sharp tug, a missed step. Every day, a new piece.

A Minister lying to his country.

Newspapers on a dining table, limned with faces—.

Standing outside a shop that sold tellies, watching the news report on the mysterious disappearance of yet another ten people, adding to the countless other cases plaguing the nation—.

Maybe the final piece was Elara Black sitting in her own home, pale and sickly from fright, with a blanket over her shoulders. She’d looked at Hermione and said, “Gaunt’s going to kill us. He’s going to destroy us to get to Harriet.

Maybe it was standing at the parlor door, seeing Lucius Malfoy sit before the fire and stare blankly into its depths.

“They assigned my family another ward. A blond boy, not entirely unlike Draco in appearance. Quite like him, in fact. Barely eleven years old.”

“Oh?”

“The house-elves can’t get the blood out of the carpet. He forced Narcissa to watch, and I had to bury what was left of the body.”

Maybe there was no final piece. “Apophenia,” the doctors had said when Hermione told her parents how she envisioned connections between random events. “Seeing patterns in meaningless data.

Terry Boot died at the end of a Death Eater’s wand. Harriet Potter came home from being falsely imprisoned with no light in her green eyes. Hermione counted the names of dead and missing Muggles from papers she smuggled under her bed. Elara Black came back from the hospital having nearly been killed for no damn good reason.

“You are naive, Miss Granger. So terribly naive to what He is capable of.”

In her bedroom, Hermione closed the book before her and gripped the handle of her wand. Welcoming magic hummed beneath her skin.

“It won’t end until she’s dead.”

Maybe the final piece was yet to come.

 

xXx

 

The crickets sang beneath the tidy, trimmed hedges lining the street, and only they bore witness to the sight of a purple bus barreling over the pavement. Two young women dressed in hooded robes stepped off the bus, the latter of the pair weak in the knees, but with help from the other, they both managed to disembark.

“We’ll circle back and pick chu up in two hours then, yeah?” Stan Shunpike said, leaning out over the steps. “That’s what chu said, innit?”

“Yes,” Hermione retorted, more than fed up with Shunpike and the driver’s antics. Night lay over the sleepy Muggle neighborhood like a thick pelt, hot and sticky with the heaviness of late August’s humidity. “Yes, that’s right. You can leave now.”

“Right you are, love. Won’t be a tic.”

The Knight Bus rattled and rolled, nearly slamming into a post box that managed to leap to the side before meeting a grisly fate. A moment later, the towering vehicle vanished with a lurching bang.

“He is unbearable,” Elara grumbled as she got her bearings and took a swig from a potion secreted away in her pocket. Hermione didn’t answer; she had her eyes fixed on one of the houses, staring up where it sat situated at the end of its pathway.

Elara stood next to her in silence for a time, then said. “We’d best not linger outside overlong. We’re in robes, and we will be missed at Grimmauld if we don’t hurry. My father’s an idiot, but not that big of an idiot.”

“Right, of course,” Hermione muttered, shaking herself out of her stupor. “Let’s go inside.”

Though it had grown late, it was not so late that the house was silent. Light from a telly flickered in the bay window, and the front sconce made it cozy for the moths to flutter about its glow. Hermione thought they must have made for a strange pair in that aggressively prim and well-manicured stretch of garden, their cloaks gliding over the level bricks, their heads ducking away from the sconce’s glow. What would the neighbors think if they could see them now?

Hermione stood outside her childhood home and took one last fortifying breath. Then, she knocked on the door.

A shadow shifted in the den, then moved against the window, fluttering the curtains as someone rose and crossed the room. Every second that passed resonated in Hermione’s chest like a drip of water in an empty cavern, echoing farther and farther into the dark unknown. Her heart was lodged somewhere in her throat, a worthless, pulsating thing, choking her breath. The lock opened, the knob rattled—.

Robert Granger appeared much the same as he did in Hermione’s memory, if a tad more gray, and a tad more rounded about the middle. He squinted against the light when the door eased open, and Hermione didn’t hesitate to throw off her hood. Her heart almost broke when it took her father more than a moment to recognize his own daughter.

Hermione?!

He didn’t hesitate to grab her up into an embrace, and Hermione leaned into it, letting her eyes close for just a moment. She didn’t let herself have more than that.

“Jean! Jean, come quickly! It’s Hermione!”

Her reunion with her mother went much the same—a gasp, a loud exclamation, and a hug, both her parents grasping at their daughter, touching her shoulders, her arms, her hair. They didn’t even notice Elara, tall and dark and looming as she was, until she quietly entered the house and shut the door. They fell silent.

“Mum, dad—this is my very good friend, Elara Black.”

Hermione recognized their hesitation when they realized Elara was a witch—and not a tame, friendly-looking witch, but rather one with a thousand-meter stare, unsmiling and unmoved by their clear suspicion. Hermione cleared her throat.

“I don’t have long to visit,” she said, watching their expressions change. “Could we sit down in the den?”

“Hermione, what is this all about?” her mother demanded. “What do you mean you can’t visit long? How are you even here? Didn’t those—those people say you couldn’t come home during the summer holidays?”

Her cheeks ached with the force of her smile, how tight and uncomfortable the muscles were. “I’ll explain everything, I promise.”

Robert and Jean looked to one another, deciding what they would say without needing to speak. “Darling,” her mum said. “You must tell us what is happening. There’s no need to hide anything from us. Where have you been? Your father and I have been so worried, and no one we spoke to would look at us as anything but complete nutters when we told them about this magic cult—.”

Hermione’s stomach nearly dropped out of place when she heard that her parents had spoken about magic to other Muggles. The Ministry would find out. They would know.

“Please,” Hermione said, her voice breaking before she cleared her throat again. “I’ll tell you more, but can we sit down, please?”

Eventually, they acquiesced, and her mum held Hermione’s hand as if afraid she might bolt for the door and disappear. They moved into the den, and her dad turned off the telly so they could talk, the three Grangers sitting together on the main sofa. Elara lingered in the doorway behind them.

“It’s all very complicated to explain,” Hermione told them, pulling her hand free of her mother’s. “I’m not supposed to be here. My guardian doesn’t know, certainly—and if people found out that I’d broken the rule against visiting Muggle relatives, there would be consequences.”

“Bugger all of their consequences,” Robert asserted, his voice rough with emotion. “Bugger all of it. The sheer nonsense—.”

“Robert,” Jean interjected.

“No, Jean. It is nonsense. Any government that cannot operate above the board is nothing more than a cult, no matter what parlor tricks they pull to convince us otherwise!” He took a forceful breath, the air sounding rough and forced as it entered his chest. “God damn it, Hermione. We tried telling you last you were here—.”

“What your father means,” Jean interrupted, laying a hand on his thigh. “Is that we planned to spend time out of the country, and we think it’d be good for you to gain…perspective on this issue.”

Hermione didn’t snarl, but it was a near thing. Her mother always had a particular way of dismissing her problems by belittling them, turning years of systematic bullying by other children into silly misunderstandings, gaslighting Hermione’s worries and troubles until she didn’t comprehend her own feelings anymore.

“Mum,” she said through her teeth. “I’m unsure how much you understand, so let me be plain. Please don’t interrupt. This isn’t the same as me not wishing to attend my third-form recital or wanting out of a dinner with Nana. I am not making excuses or prevaricating. I’m a witch. Nothing you or I ever do will change that. I could no more remove magic from myself than I could take out my lungs, or my heart. And because I can’t do that, I can’t abandon the magical world, no matter the danger it presents.”

“Danger?” her dad echoed. “What do you mean danger? Hermione—.”

“I came here today to convince you to leave.” She spoke over him, her voice close to breaking again, her will flagging. “To leave the country. It’s dangerous for Muggle-borns and their families now. Especially my family.”

Her mum had always been clever, and her eyes narrowed. “Does this have anything to do with the people who’ve been going missing all over the country?”

“Yes.” Hermione clenched her hands together. “There’s a wizard who’s intent on hurting Muggles—.”

“Normal people,” Robert said. “Normal people, Hermione. This—this terminology they’ve been teaching you is another layer of their control—.”

Hermione raised her voice again, refusing to be silenced. “And he’s intent on killing my best friend! He will not stop until she is dead, and I will not abandon her. He will go after anyone close to her, which includes you. You’re in danger. He will—he would torture you. He would make me watch. Please, you need to leave the country.”

Jean and Robert exchanged looks again—and Hermione knew she hadn’t reached them. Her parents hadn’t heard a word she’d said. “I don’t know what they’ve been telling you, darling, but we are not leaving England without you. If you want us to leave, you’re coming with us.”

“I can’t. I can’t leave Harriet.”

“Then we aren’t going, dear. We’re staying until we help you see the light.”

Hermione stared straight ahead and nodded, her burning eyes settling on the mantel. “I know,” she muttered, standing. She passed the coffee table with all the boxes of jigsaw puzzles stacked beneath it, and she remembered sitting on the carpet making pictures with her father. She couldn’t see it, but she felt the thread around her throat tighten.

Hermione selected one of the silver frames resting by her mother’s favorite keepsake box. She looked at her younger self posing in a frozen picture and didn’t know what to feel.

“I created a thousand different scenarios. I considered them all. Even did Arithmancy matrices compositing the most likely outcome, so I knew you wouldn’t go.” Hermione choked, fingers squeezing the frame, the material creaking under the pressure. She swallowed and tried again. “I won’t ask you to forgive me,” she whispered to the hearth’s bricks. “It wouldn’t matter if you did.”

From the doorway, Elara stirred. Hermione didn’t turn to see her or her parents; she heard her best friend step forward, and then the damning winnow of magic cutting through the air. “Somnus.”

Silence filled the den.

When Hermione mustered the courage to face the room again, she found Robert and Jean Granger asleep on the sofa, her mum’s head leaning onto her father’s shoulder, Elara standing at their backs with her wand still out.

She almost looked like a Death Eater. Hermione wondered if she did as well.

“We don’t have to do this,” Elara said, speaking softly as if afraid of setting Hermione off—as if Hermione weren’t already breaking into pieces. “We can go back to Grimmauld, spend more time considering our options—.”

My options,” Hermione told her. “Mine. There’s no other way.” She pressed her eyes shut. “I’ve considered it. Over, and over, and over. From every angle, and this is the only way to keep them safe. Gaunt is eminently posed to access my information and find where my parents live. They can’t stay here—can’t stay under their names anywhere, and they will never leave me behind. He’ll have the Guardians hunt them down, and I can’t—please, I can’t live with that. I can’t, I won’t. I can’t see them die when they’ve always hated this part of me, the magic, or I will start to hate it too.”

Elara’s pale eyes shone with sadness, but empathy tinged it, as did determination. Acceptance. “I won’t try to dissuade you again,” she said. “If this is your decision, let us be done with it. We don’t have much time.”

Hermione’s hand dipped into the pocket of her robe, and she held her wand. After a moment, she reached the other hand in and held the Atlas, clutching to its warmth, squeezing until the brass rim cut into her palm, and Hermione almost wished it would bleed.

“Don’t tell Harriet,” she managed to say, raising her wand. She pointed it at her mother. “Don’t ever tell her. Obliviate.”

 

x X x

 

The door to the quiet Muggle house swung shut behind the two witches as they departed, neither pausing to consider the tidy path, or the prim hedges or well-kept garden. They did not think about what they had done, or about the two sleeping Muggles who would wake in the morning with different names and the intense desire to move abroad. They did not think about the picture albums and documents found and secreted away in the extended pockets of their robes. They stepped onto the pavement and let the garden gate swing closed.

When the Knight Bus thundered into view a minute later, both young women boarded and paid their fare without speaking a word. Hermione sat next to Elara—and she cried the whole way home.


A/N: I went back and forth a lot on the idea of what Hermione would do with her parents. I always found canon a bit …stupidly idyllic and convenient in that Hermione was able to recover their memories and everything was perfectly happy. I spent quite a bit of time considering what CDT!Hermione would do…or what might be done to her parents. For awhile there, I considered it entirely possible Gaunt would get to them first, but I decided in his narcissism and self-absorption, he would really want to terrify Elara and Hermione first before going in for such a devastating blow. I decided Hermione was clever enough to realize Gaunt would not leave her family alone simply because they ’re Muggles, and knew she had to do something, especially after what happened with the Malfoys. Make no mistake, I think part of her desire to erase herself from her parents’ memories is a symptom of internalized hatred toward her own origins, the kind of internalized hatred Gaunt / Slytherin / Voldemort have been trying to spark and foster in children with their agendas, and I don’t believe Hermione realizes it. Another part of it is her desire to forget a very painful chapter of her life: her parents were not cruel, but they were neglectful, in their own way, fostering Hermione’s self-doubts and insecurities, belittling her intelligence and making her feel guilty for things she could not control, such as being a witch. Overall, she acted mainly to protect her family, but there is a definite element of teenage selfishness and anger there.

Hermione: “Knock-knock.”

Her parents: “Who’s there?”

Hermione: “No one.”

Her parents: “No one who?”

Hermione: “Exactly.”

Chapter 251: summer's end

Chapter Text

ccli. summer’s end

 

Summer waned with predictability, though every day crept by like a Thestral with a broken leg for Harriet.

Slytherin allowed for minimal downtime at the Tor. What time she did get to herself, Harriet spent trapped in her room, having had one too many close calls with the other resentful residents. Mirthcut and Bonespell had formed an alliance or come to an agreement, and both were keen to either make her look like a fool, discredit her in front of her Master, or see her fall into a very deep ditch. When not in her room, Harriet was with Slytherin studying or listening to him drone on like a particularly dull documentary—a documentary that wouldn’t hesitate to cuff her about the ears if he thought she needed the reminder to listen. He taught her about runes and the fundamentals of magic, taking full advantage of the Tor and the equipment of its master runecrafter. The Sangforts hovered in the background all the while, strangers in their own home.

Every minute in the house sank into Harriet like teeth biting harder and harder, fangs grating against her spine, piercing her neck. She couldn’t relax. Hugh struggled with breaching the wards, so letters between her and her friends were sparse. Livi and the golems provided a measure of company, but she worried Slytherin would overhear her speaking Parseltongue and investigate. Harriet refused to talk with Snape or appear friendly, conscious of the eyes that followed her wherever she went. She tried concentrating on her work, and it left her stressed and annoyed more often than not.

Slytherin didn’t allow Harrie to see him casting very often. He pushed her into a mock duel two or three times, always without warning and always in the dead of night. The duels never lasted long, only long enough for Slytherin to see if Harriet had grasped the material—though Harriet did everything she could remember every second spent at the end of his wand. That was why she was there, after all. She would learn Slytherin’s weaknesses, and she was determined to figure out something before summer ended.

Unfortunately, Harriet didn’t find anything of value. She did, however, have a great deal of information about runes shoved into her skull, and she applied them in her everyday spellcraft, suddenly conscious of how different strokes of the wand invoked different symbols, how incorrect motions damaged the intent or slowed how the magic flowed. She’d sit at her desk in her borrowed room when she couldn’t sleep and start experimenting with new ways to cast spells and how matching the wand’s motion to a certain rune changed it. Once or twice, a fire resulted from her midnight experimentation, but nothing else of note went wrong.

She hated when Slytherin taught her something useful or clever. It made her feel bad for using it.

Her Master said nothing about Hogwarts the closer September crept, ignoring her tentative inquiries about school supplies or going bloody home. Harriet’s nerves twisted with every brush off until she felt like an absolute wreck, worried he’d keep her there indefinitely and she’d die buried under a mountain of dusty, dry books on bloody runes. However, on the morning before September first, Snape woke Harriet at dawn and told her to pack. Slytherin had finally released her and hadn’t had the patience or good manners to come tell her himself.

Harriet didn’t care. She could have jumped for joy as they set off from the Tor, and its eerie, menacing silhouette fell at their backs, Snape sweeping along the path at her side. It vanished into the morning mist, and they continued alone through the forest, Harriet’s shoulders loosening for the first time in a month as she dragged her floating trunk behind her.

“I’ll be returning you to your merry band of misfits in Diagon Alley,” Snape told her, breaking the quiet. “I assume Slytherin will inform you of your intended schedule after the Welcoming Feast, but don’t put it past him to do so that evening. His hours are unpredictable.”

“Yeah, I know.” She’d spent more than one night trapped at a desk while Slytherin lectured by moonlight, the night hours ticking by.

“Don’t forget the apprenticeship cords with your uniform tomorrow. He will take it as an insult if you do.”

Harriet grunted in acknowledgment.

“Have you so thoroughly regressed you’ve resorted to speaking like a Neanderthal? One would think you more capable than that.”

Color filled Harriet’s cheeks as she huffed, glaring up at Snape’s pale profile. He glanced at her from the corner of his eye and smirked. It struck Harriet that he’d been trapped in the same limbo she’d been in, and though trying to imagine Snape relaxing was like trying to imagine what a troll does on holiday, she knew he must relax sometimes. He must be pleased to be leaving.

“Are you coming too? Er, shopping, that is. In Diagon?”

He gave her a look Harriet translated to mean, “Are you daft?

“Slytherin has requested my immediate return.”

“What—again?” she sputtered, heart sinking. “You’ve only just left.”

“Yes, well. We can’t all go galivanting off with our nitwitted friends.”

They reached the Apparition point, and Snape extended his arm, staring off into the trees. Harriet paused before gripping his wrist, feeling warm, thick wool under her fingertips, thumb curling into the extra fabric. He jerked—and they twisted in Apparition, squeezed by the pressure until they reappeared in a burst of hazy, early morning sunshine and London smog.

Harriet sighed in relief as she took in the sight of Diagon Alley. It was already busy with Hogwarts students and their families rushing to get their supplies last minute, and being in the presence of normal witches and wizards filled her with a gentle, familiar comfort. It was odd to describe them as such, especially when she could see a bloke strolling by with a goose in a backpack, but after an interminable month at the Tor, Harriet reveled in the company of people not constantly at one another’s throats.

Snape lowered his arm, and Harriet realized she hadn’t let him go. She quickly did so, murmuring an apology.

“Harriet!”

She turned her head in time to see Hermione—hair Charmed a lighter color, bound in a plait—sprinting through the crowd, followed by Elara with her long hair released from its usual bun, colored a mousy brown. Harriet stepped off the Apparition pad to greet them, grinning when Hermione squished her in a tight embrace. Elara looped an arm around them both.

A man came over as well, smiling, a bloke with a mustache Harriet didn’t recognize. She opened her mouth to question why he was encroaching on their space—when he reached out to tug the hood of Harriet’s summer cloak into place, winking.

“Good morning, petit oiseau.”

She blinked—then grinned, allowing Mr. Flamel to tuck her fringe behind her ear.

“It is good to see you well. You are well, oui?”

“I’m good. Better, now. Thanks.”

“Come. The others are waiting. We ‘ave much to do, and not enough time to do it in. Let us go, girls.”

Hermione and Elara loosened their grip enough to let Harriet breathe and step back, bumping into her trunk.

“Oh, do not worry, we shall have that sent to your home….” Mr. Flamel wiggled his fingers, and the trunk transferred to his care, floating toward him.

“Are you ready?” Hermione asked. Harriet started to nod, then stopped.

“Wait, I need to—.”

She turned her head back to the Apparition pad, intending to tell Snape—something. She didn’t know what she wanted to say, maybe a thank you, maybe a wish for him to get back to Hogwarts soon, but the Apparition pad was empty, leaving a blank bit of stone in an otherwise unremarkable alley. The lingering smell of pine remained, if only in Harriet’s imagination.

Snape had disappeared.

“Are you all right?”

“Yeah,” Harriet answered, distracted. She let Elara take her hand and tug her toward the alley’s entrance. “Yeah, I’m fine.”

 

xXx

 

It was perhaps inevitable Harriet would get lost.

To be fair, much of the day passed without incident, and Harriet kept close to the adults in their large group—which included all of the Weasleys, the Longbottoms, Sirius, Remus, and the Flamels. She had no intention of getting separated and avoided even the slightest hint of a maroon robe or cloak by sticking close to Mrs. Flamel or Sirius. Keeping tabs on the group proved easy with the Weasleys, following the sea of flame-red hair.

After lunch, everyone started to splinter off on their own. The twins wanted to go to Zonko’s and Longbottom went with them, his parents trailing behind. The Weasley parents went to the apothecary to pick up their large order, and Remus went to the cobbler for a new pair of school shoes commissioned for Harriet and a pair of Elara’s in for repair. Though they didn’t say as much, an afternoon chasing older teenagers up and down the crowded district had worn the Flamels out, and so they found a table outside a trendy new cafe serving drinks popular abroad and bid the others to finish their shopping.

“One hour,” Mr. Flamel told Harriet and her friends, holding up one finger. “Une heure. We will meet you at the bookshop, oui?”

The slow fracturing of the party left Sirius alone in charge of Ronald, Ginny, Hermione, Elara, and Harriet, and uptown in Diagon Alley fairly exploded with people cramming themselves into the streets and lanes, mothers wrangling in excited children, vendors eager to sell to the harried crowd. Harriet tried not to wander—but she only prolonged the inevitable.

“Fuck,” she hissed to herself, standing at the threshold of Flourish and Blotts, having lost sight of Elara’s long, expensive cloak and Ginny’s red hair. She assumed they’d gone inside, but the store was overflowing with parents getting textbooks, and they could have gone back out to wait. “Fuck! What is this, an annual tradition?”

Rather than letting herself be pushed back, Harriet grasped the door frame and remained rooted in place.

“Oi!” a wizard behind her complained, shoving at her shoulder. “Yer blockin’ the way, there!”

“Bugger off,” Harriet snapped in reply. She whipped her hood down, the heat too much to suffer in the crush of bodies, and she hoped to see better and reveal where her family had gone. Fine hairs stuck to her cheeks with sweat, and she impatiently swept them back.

The whispering started.

That’s the one from the paper, innit?”

The nutter—.

“Can you believe what she said—?

Why did the Ministry let her out—?

Killed that boy, mark my words—.”

People turned, judgmental stares scouring Harriet’s skin as she stood, frozen, a wider and wider space opening around her.

“Wild tales about He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named—.”

“Who does she think she is? She’s no Longbottom—.”

“Should keep her in Azkaban for our safety—.”

“I don’t want Oliver going to a school with children like that—.

The whispering increased to a haze of vicious buzzing like wasps descending on her head. Logically, Harriet knew people would form their own opinions regardless of her trial’s resolution, but she had hoped such a negative assessment would be the minority. However, it seemed her absence from the Wizarding world for the last month had only exacerbated rumors.

“—arriet!”

Her hands bunched into fists at her side, and she couldn’t bring herself to lift her head. She needed to move. She needed to get out of such a busy spot, away from the center of attention—but why weren’t her feet moving? What was wrong with her legs?

She killed that boy—.”

A flash of green light, ugly as pond scum, Ravenclaw blue fluttering in the evening air as a body fell—.

“Harriet!”

A hand touched her arm, and Harriet jerked, looking up. At first, all she saw was red hair, but it wasn’t a Weasley. The Slytherin third-year Gabriel Flourish stood in front of her, wearing a tentative smile and a dark green apron around his waist.

“You—you can come this way,” he told her, gesturing into the shop. “Over here.”

Harriet forced herself into motion, and the crowd grumbled as she was led past them. Gabriel walked over to the long counter, opening the thin, golden chain hanging across the entrance bearing a sign reading “Absolutely no customers.” He paid no mind to that and insisted Harriet step through into the quiet, cluttered backroom. The tiny space was stuffed to the rafters with crates and boxes and books in the middle of being unwrapped and processed, and Harriet didn’t have a clue if actual furniture lurked somewhere underneath the mess. Gabriel insisted she could have a seat on a stack of mummy encyclopedias.

“Are you okay?” he asked once she was seated with her elbows leaning on her knees. She hadn’t realized how loud it’d become until the noise dimmed behind the warded door. “You, um, were looking a bit lost?”

Harriet wiped at her dry mouth and looked at Flourish, a red blush rising behind his freckles. “I’m all right,” she told him. “I lost my godfather out there.”

“Mr. Black?”

She nodded, and Gabriel turned to the room behind him. Only then did Harriet see a younger boy with the same shock of red hair peeking at them from behind a teetering stack of flora magazines. He definitely wasn’t old enough for Hogwarts, and if she had to guess, Harriet would say he was six or seven.

“Everett,” Flourish said. “Can you go find Mr. Black out on the floor?”

“Who’s that?”

“You know who I mean. Mr. Black, Sirius Black. You’ve seen his picture in the newspaper and on mum’s telly.”

“You mean the murderer?”

Coming from someone else, Harriet would have taken that question as a snide remark, but Everett Flourish sounded bloody excited. Gabriel just looked embarrassed, scratching at his cheek.

“You know we told you he didn’t do anything, twit. Go find him, please.”

Everett needed no more convincing, and he shot off out the door, green apron strings trailing behind him.

“Sorry about that,” Gabriel said, the red color creeping from his face down his neck. “He doesn’t mean anything by it. He just, well, he remembers all the papers about Mr. Black a few summers back, and he thinks it’s interesting.”

“It’s fine,” Harriet assured him. “Sirius will probably get a kick out of it, honestly.”

They shared a laugh, and when Harriet coughed, Gabriel rushed to the tea service set off to the side by the sooty hearth, tripping over a rug. Harriet accepted a cup of lukewarm Earl Grey and thanked him, and he blushed pure scarlet.

Is he well? Harriet wondered with a furrowed brow as she sipped her tea. He’s awful red.

“So, you work here? I’m guessing from the name you’re related to the owner?”

“Yeah, that’s my Da. He lets us pitch in and help in the summer rush for extra pocket money. The Flourishes have owned the store for a long time. I’m—well, my Da wants me to take over when I’m older, I guess. But I dunno….”

In the silence that followed, sounds from the main part of the shop loomed larger, reminding them of the crowd still waiting out there and the cruel, slithering whispers that would come out like snakes from the shadows when Harriet went back out that door.

“You don’t deserve them saying that stuff,” Gabriel told her, his tone miffed. “That’s not on.”

“People are going to have their opinions no matter what,” she responded. “I shouldn’t let it get to me.”

“It’s still not fair. People are—daft. We knew you didn’t hurt Terry. We never doubted you.”

Harriet’s lips twitched in a half-hearted smile. “Thanks, Flourish.”

He nodded and shuffled his feet, fussing with his apron. He opened his mouth twice as if to say something, but only a short, choked noise came out.

“All right?” Harriet asked.

“Erm.” Flourish tensed and played with his fingers. “Can—can I get your books?”

She blinked. “My books?”

“While you wait. Your books. For—for school. For fifth-year, with Ancient Runes and Care of Magical Creatures?”

“Oh. Sure?”

Like his brother, Gabriel darted out of the room, leaving Harriet more than a little baffled as to how he’d known about her schedule and electives. She thought little Everett would come back with her family before he did, but barely a minute passed before Gabriel returned to the backroom, followed by an older, graying wizard carrying Harriet’s texts.

“Free of charge,” Mr. Flourish said as he pressed the books into her hands. She stuttered a refusal, but he insisted. “For saving my son’s life. Please, you’ve given me a gift worth much more than any book is worth. It’s a crime what the Ministry has dragged you through. An absolute crime.”

Harriet flushed but accepted the texts with a weak thanks. She had saved Flourish’s life, hadn’t she? He and his mate Walt Murton. She’d tugged them away from the Hungarian Horntail—before Slytherin blasted it into mincemeat with Dark magic.

“It was—.” Not nothing. Grabbing Gabriel and Walt had been instinctual, and it wasn’t nothing. It was something, but she didn’t have the words to say what. “You’re welcome. I’m—I’m glad Gabriel wasn’t hurt.”

Mr. Flourish smiled. “Thank you, Miss Potter.”

He bagged her books, and Harriet bid goodbye to the Flourish family when Everett returned. Outside the room, Sirius looked irritated but too relieved to chastise her. Elara and Hermione glanced at one another, and Hermione let out a peeved huff, handing over a Galleon. Ginny glared as she forked over two Sickles.

“We had a bet,” Elara explained with a smug smirk as she pocketed the coin. “I said you would get lost at least once in the afternoon. Weasley said you’d get lost in the morning, and Hermione said you’d not get lost at all.”

“Honestly, Harriet, we need to get you a bell….”

They exited the shop, Harriet saved from the continuing commentary by sandwiching herself between her friends, arms weighed down by the paper sack loaded with books. It was only once they were outside and on their way to find the Flamels and the Weasleys again that Harriet thought upon what Gabriel Flourish had said. Her memory caught on one word in particular.

“We knew you didn’t hurt Terry. We never doubted you.”

What had he meant by we?


A/N:

Gabriel: *trying to confess undying love and hero-worship.*

Harriet: *wondering why Gabriel looks like he might be ill*

Chapter 252: progress for progress' sake

Chapter Text

cclii. progress for progress’ sake

 

It was ten-thirty in the morning, the sky brilliantly blue, the sun bright, and Harriet Potter was running through the streets of London.

This was not how she thought her day would begin.

Remus was the one who noticed the problem first. The house had been in a state of controlled chaos since dawn, far too many trunks crammed into the kitchen by the large hearth, familiars squished into cages, brooms gathered and cauldrons stacked. The Weasleys in particular were in a rush to get all their things together, and the twins drove their mother spare with pranks and Apparating every few steps.

The Malfoys were thoroughly unimpressed, and tempers were short between the two pure-blood families with Mr. and Mrs. Malfoy going on about poorly bred children from their seats in the parlor. The latter had hesitated to send Draco back to Hogwarts but had extracted a promise from Professor Snape to ensure his safety. She and Lucius would continue to stay at Grimmauld until their safe house could be secured.

Perhaps thirty minutes before they were due to step through the Floo and enter Platform Nine and Three-Quarters, Remus tried to use the Floo…and found it wouldn’t work. He made several attempts, as did Sirius. Then, the adults gathered around the hearth, scattering silver powder over the iron grate, puzzled and confused—until Lucius, sipping tea in the doorway like he owned the bloody property, pointed out, “Gaunt owns the Floo Network, you understand? He may not be able to access this port or discover the password, but he can rescind accessibility.”

“You could take this all a bit more seriously, Lucius,” Mr. Weasley said, his voice short, cutting.

“That I’m sitting in this hovel at all proves how seriously I’m taking matters, Arthur.”

That prompted Sirius to dash out of the house and Disapparate, returning several minutes later with a furious expression and damp shoes. “What the fuck is that arsehole thinking?” he raged. “I tried Andy’s Floo, and it’s not opening to the Platform either. Tried Apparating there—and then Apparating to Hogsmeade, not a wanking thing. What in blazes is he thinking? This is affecting everyone!”

“He’s proving a point.” Malfoy lounged at the dining table in his morning robe, snapping his fingers at one of his house-elves to get him toast. “Both to you and to the public. He is everywhere, omniscient, etcetera, etcetera. How could there possibly be a Dark Lord on the prowl when he’s in control of every movement within our world?”

Sirius had looked at him, then at Harriet—and the room full of teenagers behind her. He cursed again.

This was how Harriet found herself on London’s streets, rushing with her trunk flying behind her, hidden from the Muggles. The others ran as well, Elara keeping pace with Harriet as a dog, Hermione wheezing directions for the benefit of the witches and wizards who’d never ventured into the Muggle world before. Molly Weasley sounded as if she might have a gasping fit, and Sirius was spitting mad.

The people at the station weren’t much better. Magical folk flooded Kings Cross from the direction of Diagon Alley and other close, secluded warrens. Insults and demands for accountability flew with a fervor, and Ministry Obliviators had their hands full trying to wrangle the Muggles goggled by the students in summer cloaks and styled uniforms with their clearly magical parents who hadn’t expected needing to leg it through Muggle London. Harriet thought she saw the police, under orders of a harried Ministry employee, setting up yellow tape to block off the station.

“This is an absolute disaster,” Mr. Weasley muttered as he hurried his sons and daughter along. “The Department of Magical Law Enforcement will be swamped trying to sort out the legal and illegal usage of magic today. It makes me ill to think of the backlog.”

Harriet wondered if that was the point, or perhaps a bonus in Gaunt’s eyes. After all, Voldemort was out there bloody killing people, and if Gaunt was helping him, or at least facilitating it, keeping the Ministry busy with other trivial matters would benefit him.

Wards shimmered like opalescent curtains around Platforms Eight, Nine, Ten, and Eleven—all down the row, misdirecting those Muggles still bobbing about the station like missing bits of flotsam, while those getting off the arriving trains stumbled through the doors as dazed as Mooncalfs. They were hurried along by annoyed Ministry workers who hadn’t expected their day would include Muggle-sheparding.

The congestion and confusion worked in Harriet’s favor for once; no one took the time to give her a second glance as her group pushed through toward the wall between Platforms Nine and Ten. Elara transformed back into a witch, and she held Harriet’s wrist like a vice.

“Merlin, steady on.”

“Not until your backside is on the train.”

Harriet grumbled, but she didn’t protest as Elara and Hermione rushed her onto the Hogwarts Express, nearly slamming her ankles into the metal steps in her hurry. Only once inside did she look back toward the platform—and her insides twisted to see the Aurors prowling its length.

“I don’t think he’s considered how this looks,” Hermione insisted as they wrangled their familiars and luggage and went off in search of a compartment. “From one side of his mouth, he insists the Dark Lord was defeated years ago and there’s nothing to worry about. From the other side, he’s ordering more Aurors to patrol public areas. People see this.”

“People are stupid,” Elara said, blithe as could be. They found an empty compartment and she slung the door open, freely glowering at a pack of second-year Hufflepuffs who’d made moves in that direction. They scampered. “They’ll believe anything written in the Prophet, no matter what’s happening around them.”

They sat down, joined soon enough by Ginny and Luna. Most everyone who came down the train’s passage complained about the mess on the platform—though a few paused to peer into their space, and Harriet heard the whispers.

They let her back in?

Didn’t she go to Azkaban?

Didn’t she kill—?”

Hermione snapped the curtains closed.

Eventually, the train lurched into motion, and they started on their way. Harriet looked out the window to watch London disappear, wishing she could have taken more time to say goodbye to Sirius, that the Flamels could have come to see them off, but that wasn’t how things were.

Things can never be that way, Harriet reminded herself. Voldemort ruins everything.

“So, who ended up being prefect for your year?” Ginny asked as she picked apart the sandwich her mum had shoved into her hands. Harriet had one as well, tucked into her trunk. Livi had probably stolen it. “Is it Harriet? What with her being Slytherin’s apprentice and all?”

Harriet frowned, having not heard anything about it.

“Hermione is the prefect,” Elara said as she crossed one leg over the other and leaned back, opening the day’s Prophet.

“Well.” Hermione cleared her throat, her cheeks darkening. “Technically, Elara is prefect.”

Harriet, Luna, and Ginny looked between the pair, confused. Hermione sighed and elbowed Elara.

“Slytherin sent me the badge,” Elara explained without looking up from the paper. “He pointedly stated in his letter he hadn’t selected you because your duties as apprentice would not allow for the trivialities allotted to a prefect. He wanted to make sure I had no allusions about any favoritism on his part.” She turned a page. “I passed the badge on to Hermione.”

“That’s a great idea,” Luna commented, nodding.

Ginny, on the other hand, just looked more confused. “That’s, uh, not how that works, is it?”

“Not…really,” Hermione admitted. “But, ah, Elara pointed out a specific bylaw—a very old bylaw—which details how a prefect can, in suspension of their duties, select a person to act in their name and accept the title and chores of their office.”

Ginny snorted. “Slytherin will never go for that. He’ll pick a different prefect. Slytherin doesn’t have Muggble-born prefects. No offense, Hermione.”

Hermione seemed to take some offense, but she kept her tone light. “None taken.”

“The more important section of the bylaw about prefects and their selection—,” Elara interjected. “Is the part that explicitly states that while the Heads of House are responsible for prefect selection, only the Headmaster may dismiss a prefect. Not the Head of House.”

“Oh, that’s wicked isn’t it?” Ginny clapped her hands once and laughed. “Slytherin will be right brassed off.”

“He can be brassed off all he wants. It’s the bylaw.”

Conversation turned to the newspaper in Elara’s hands and the trite put out by the writers. “Even Rita’s scared of Gaunt,” Hermione commented. “And she’s the most audacious reporter they have there. Even if she wanted to write more Ministry-critical articles, they’re getting turned down by her editor.”

Harriet rolled her eyes. “But if she writes homophobic slander about a fourteen-year-old, that’s on?”

Hermione sighed and shrugged as if to say, “They’re idiots.

Elara pursed her lips, one of her elegant brows twitching. “Never mind Rita. Gaunt commented in an interview on the ‘security and sanctity of Hogwarts.’”

“And?”

“He’s saying he desires for the Ministry to become more involved in Hogwarts, which has largely existed as a secular entity beyond the Ministry’s control. He believes it’s time the school fell under government control.”

“He won’t be the first Minister to try,” Hermione harshly commented.

“He might be the first to succeed.”

Elara flipped to another page, the paper sliding through her gloved fingers. “More disappearances. Naturally. But, there’s one here distinct enough for the editor to allow a piece on. Seraphina Steele; she’s suspected to be an Unspeakable.”

“Suspected?”

“It’s not as if the Department of Mysteries is handing out their payroll list. Suspected is as close as they can get to knowing.”

“Huh.”

They speculated more Seraphina Steele and who might be a secret Unspeakable. This went on until Luna found a Chocolate Frog in her pocket and started to munch on it—not caring a whit for the stray lint on the sticky surface. “Hermione?” she said.

“Yes, Luna?”

“It must be hard to attend the prefect meetings.”

Hermione blinked, her brow furrowed. Harriet often got the impression Luna annoyed Hermione with her flights of fancy and sometimes puzzling diction, but she kept herself polite and friendly. “I don’t understand.”

“Well, since the prefects are all up in their cabin and are meant to be patrolling, I thought it must be difficult to be doing that while sitting here with us. But, maybe I’m being silly. Maybe you can astrally project!”

“Oh, bugger—!

Pale as a ghost, Hermione rushed out the door, her shiny badge pinned to her lapel, and they didn’t see her again for the rest of the ride. She rejoined when the train began to slow, and they brought their trunks down from the overhead compartments. Harriet leaned onto her feet, rubbing at her sore shoulder. An otherwise quiet, simple trip had made her forget what waited for her outside their comfortable escape, and when she opened the compartment door, she was bluntly reminded. Students stopped in the middle of the corridor to stare at her, and those wearing blue and bronze crowded closer, buzzing with noise.

Before they could say anything—before Harriet could say anything—a group of Slytherins pushed to the fore.

“Stop blocking the way,” Erin Mason, a tall blonde girl who was entering her fourth year, told the Ravenclaws. Aidan Shafiq was with her, as were Galen Lament, a morose boy in Erin’s year with banshee-blood, and Theodric Barrow, a normally witty, laid-back boy who was in the Quidditch reserves.

The four Slytherins stared down the Ravenclaws until they looked away and shuffled off.

“Hi, Harriet,” Mason told her. “Have a nice holiday?”

“Err—,” was Harriet’s clever response, because nice wasn’t really the word she’d use to describe it.

The Slytherins didn’t have much time to linger as they were clogging the path just the same as the Ravenclaws. “See you later!”

Harriet watched them leave as the others in her compartment got the rest of their things together. What was that about?

Fog filled the station and descended upon Hogsmeade in a thick, obscuring curtain. They could hardly see the carriages waiting for them as they followed Professor Grubbly-Plank’s voice toward their destination, and a nervous cluster of first-years stumbled by.

“Was I ever that short?” Ginny wondered aloud as she watched them go.

“You’re still that short,” Ronald said as he appeared from the gloom, followed by Finnegan and Thomas. Ginny stepped on his foot.

Their journey to the castle hadn’t yet come to an end, as Harriet and her friends learned there was congestion on the path toward Hogwarts caused by extra carriages coming up from a settlement in the lower valley. When parents failed to reach London through the usual means in the morning, several of them elected to wait until evening to see if they could Floo or Apparate into Hogsmeade. Apparently, Gaunt still hadn’t seen fit to lift the blockade, and those parents had sent their children to the nearest magical village, Keenbridge, and Dumbledore had extra carriages and staff shuttling lost students up to the castle.

All in all, those who greeted them at the entrance hall doors appeared particularly unhappy, and when they entered the Great Hall, Harriet didn’t see Professor Dumbledore or Professor McGonagall. Snape sat in his usual seat with his usual grimace, as did Slytherin. Luckily, Harriet remembered at the last second to duck out of the way and yank her apprenticeship chords from her robe pocket, slinging them around her neck. Slytherin narrowed his eyes as she rushed toward her seat at Slytherin table.

“Merlin,” she murmured, sinking into Hermione’s side, hiding behind the girl’s unbound hair. Harriet didn’t notice the numerous eyes that had turned from their conversation to stare at her. “I don’t know who would’ve killed me first if I hadn’t grabbed these—Snape or Slytherin.”

“Snape,” Hermione told her, primly folding her hands together on the empty table. “Slytherin needs you alive.”

“Bloody marvelous.”

Professor Dumbledore slipped in through the staff entrance only a scant few seconds before McGonagall brought the new first-years through the main doors. Harriet watched the Headmaster, noticing the short, squat witch who walked behind him, almost hidden by Dumbledore’s spangled robes. She looked…familiar.

As the witch took a seat next to the Headmaster’s golden chair, she reached for the goblet placed by her plate, and in doing so turned her face toward the hall.

“Oh fuck me,” Harriet hissed, hunching lower in her seat.

“What? What is it? Are you all right?” Hermione asked, looking away from the High Table.

“She was at my hearing.”

“Who?”

“That witch.” She jerked her chin toward the woman. “Umbridge, I think. She’s from the Office of the—the Inspector or something.”

“Inspectorate?”

“That.”

Hermione looked troubled. “That’s a small department founded by Gaunt, and it exists under the authority of the Minister’s cabinet. It deals with inspections and inquiries above the level of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement.”

“She tried to say I was doing Dark magic and get me thrown in bloody Azkaban. What is she doing here?”

Across the table, Elara sighed and rubbed at her temple. “It can’t be for anything good.”

The Sorting commenced with a song from the Hat—a rather grim and ominous ditty about new dangers encroaching upon the school.

“Bloody rag,” Malfoy muttered, leaning on his arm. Harriet hadn’t noticed where he’d gone once they’d reached the station, but she had noticed he was careful about where he sat. Crabbe and Goyle were on the other side of the table, Malfoy choosing the place between Hermione and third-year Emile Elderberry instead. He looked unhappy.

The feast commenced, and Harriet sighed as she dished herself food, trying to ignore the unrelenting press of eyes coming to rest on her bowed head.

“Anthony Goldstein’s staring at you,” said Reed Winickus, a third-year. Harriet had never liked Winickus; slim and beady-eyed, he was always sneering and crude, and he once made a comment about the length of her skirt that had Harriet barring him from her study table in the library. “D’you wonder if he’s thinking about doin’ you in, Potter?”

Harriet breathed in to respond—and Walt Murton, sitting across from him, kicked Winickus somewhere sensitive. The boy yelped, attracting eyes from the High Table.

“Stuff it,” Walt muttered, a scarlet blush on his pale cheeks. He ducked forward so his dark hair fell in his face.

“Just because you’re in love with the bint—.”

Another kick, another yelp, and Professor Snape swept from the table to chastise the pair. Harriet just hunkered down in her seat and concentrated on the food.

When the last of dessert had been had, the final smudges of treacle scooped from the dishes, Professor Dumbledore rose from his seat and spread his arm as if to encompass the room. The silver stars on his long, trailing sleeve glinted in the candlelight.

“Welcome, welcome!” he greeted. “It brightens my heart to see you here once again—or for the first time! On behalf of my staff, I am happy to greet you and open Hogwarts’ doors for yet another year of excellent learning!”

People clapped a polite, tired applause, most students already eager to find their beds.

“Now, Mr. Filch would like me to remind you of his extensive list of banned contraband not allowed in the school’s corridors. Most notably, that includes all products from Zonko’s Joke Shop, and those from Messrs. Gambol and Japes’ establishment. I would also like to add a note about the Forbidden Forest being, as the name might suggest, forbidden to students—.”

Hem, hem.

Dumbledore startled, and the whole of the Great Hall brought their attention to the squat witch rising from her seat at the Headmaster’s side.

“Ah,” the Professor said. Harriet flattered herself in thinking she knew him just well enough to recognize his irritation, no matter how hidden. It sparked behind his friendly eyes. “Lest I forget, allow me to detour into an introduction for the esteemed Madam Dolores Umbridge, who is at Hogwarts on the request of our Minister to perform new, mandatory inspections of our classes.”

“Circe’s curse,” Harriet whispered, the oath leaving in a soft breath. Had it only been hours ago that Elara mentioned Gaunt’s article in the Prophet? “He’s proving a point,” Mr. Malfoy had said. Harriet had never heard of Ministry inspections happening at the school, and given the sudden muttering rising from the spectators, neither had anyone else.

“This won’t go over well,” Elara said.

Harriet glanced toward the far end of the High Table. Professor Slytherin had his hands laced together, his chin balanced on his steepled fingertips. He wasn’t looking at Umbridge, but rather straight ahead, into the middle distance, as idle as a predator waiting for its prey to cross its path.

“Now, where was I? Ah, yes. The Forbidden Forest—.”

Hem, hem.”

The cloying sound of Umbridge clearing her throat for a second time earned a round of mean titters from the student body. She pretended she didn’t hear them, and the witch smiled at Professor Dumbledore, her lips spreading like the wide, gaping maw of a hungry toad.

“Did you have something to add, Madam Umbridge?”

“Yes, yes I did. Thank you for the introduction, Headmaster. I must say I am honored to be selected as the Ministry’s representative here at Hogwarts. I am authorized to act as the Minister’s agent in our hallowed school—.”

Harriet leaned on her bench, folding her arms on the table. “Have you ever heard someone interrupt the Headmaster before?” she asked Cengor Pendarves, now a seventh-year and head prefect for their House. He tucked a strand of his tidy brown hair behind his ear and considered Harriet’s question.

“No,” he finally settled on. “Not at the feast, at any rate. But, today seems to be a day for firsts.”

“And none of them good.”

Umbridge was still speaking. “Every Headmaster and Headmistress of Hogwarts has brought something new to the weighty task of governing this historic school, and that is as it should be, for without progress there will be stagnation and decay. There again, progress for progress’ sake must be discouraged, for our tried and tested traditions often require no tinkering. A balance, then, between old and new, between permanence and change, between tradition and innovation….”

Harriet slouched in her seat, exhaling through her nose. “What is she even banging on about?”

“—Because some changes will be for the better, while others will come, in the fullness of time, to be recognized as errors of judgment. Meanwhile, some old habits will be retained, and rightly so, whereas others, outmoded and outworn, must be abandoned—.”

“It’s as I said earlier,” Elara replied without bothering to lower or modulate her voice. Indeed, several people in the Great Hall had started speaking at volume, and none of their Heads of House moved a finger to do something about it. “Gaunt means to interfere at Hogwarts, and I imagine Umbridge is his first stepping stone. Through her, he’ll be able to justify further decisions to lambaste and ‘correct’ the administration here. She’ll find fault with every class—just wait and see.”

Harriet didn’t want to wait and see. She didn’t understand everything the witch said—but she knew she’d been at her trial, and she’d been all too happy to see Harriet, a bloody teenager, get thrown to the Dementors. That type of person had no business at Hogwarts.

When Umbridge’s long-winded speech drew to a close, a few people clapped—notably Accipto Lestrange, seated at the far end of the table with the rest of his irritating arseholes. Umbridge finally sat, and Dumbledore got to finish his yearly warnings, though he kept his musings short. He dismissed them with a wave, and Harriet stood with her friends, ready to find her bed.

“So, do you think she’s going to be sitting in on classes?” she asked around a yawn. “Does that include Defense?”

Hermione’s face did a funny thing where it froze halfway between a grimace and a rather wicked grin. “Oh, I would pay to see that.”

“You might have your chance,” Elara commented as they waited their turn to pass into the Entrance Hall. “I would imagine her secondary goal is to make Harriet’s life miserable, and what better way to make her miserable than to trail her into her classes? That seems to be Gaunt’s dream at the moment.”

“You’d think I’d spat in his pumpkin juice.”

“You might as well have with what you said at your trial.”

Harriet didn’t have a response for that.

They passed through the torch-lit entrance hall, surrounded by chatty Slytherins eager to find their dormitories. They were almost to the top of the steps that plunged into the earth and the dungeons below, when a shadow pulled itself away from the alcove, and a familiar figure stepped forward.

Terror ratcheted through Harriet’s heart and crept into her veins like frozen sludge. Her feet stuck to the floor, and the rich dinner she’d just consumed threatened to make a reappearance.

It’s not him, she told herself, on the verge of panic. It’s not him, it’s not him. He died. He’s dead. Snape killed—.

“Harriet.”

The flames of the nearest brazier shifted. The light wavered and fell upon the figure, and Viktor Krum stood waiting, staring at Harriet.


A/N: I borrowed some of Umbridge ’s lines from OotP. Her position is different here, but in many ways, she’s doing just as she was meant to do in canon: undermine Dumbledore. Now…how that will go with Slytherin, we’ll have to see.

Harriet ’s fan-club: “Here’s a pamphlet.”

Harriet: “…”

Harriet: “Why does this say ‘ Vote for Potter, The Better Dark Lady ’?”

Fan-club, stuffing pamphlets into their pockets: “No reason, no reason.”

Chapter 253: the bulgarian

Chapter Text

ccliii. the bulgarian

 

For several seconds, neither Harriet nor Krum said a thing.

The Slytherins who’d passed through the entrance hall with her paused to give the former Triwizard Champion a curious look, but they kept moving down the stairs when he refused to acknowledge them. Hermione and Elara remained with Harriet, the latter reaching out to touch her arm. It was grounding, that touch. It assured her this wasn’t a nightmare.

He’s dead. Crouch is dead. He’s dead—.

Krum shuffled his overlarge feet. The noise was startling through the haze clouding her ears. “Harriet…Potter? Yes? You are her?”

It was the accent that thawed Harriet’s panic. It came out thick, hesitant, his English ungainly and uncomfortable in his mouth. The voice was the same, but the timbre was deeper, the accent like the practiced flick of a quill in someone’s signature. Natural, easy. He did not sound like Crouch.

“What are you doing here?” Harriet managed to force out of her dry throat.

Krum shuffled his feet again, fidgeting with his robes. They weren’t Durmstrang’s uniform; they were plain black but in the Hogwarts style. It had the seventh-year hood and three stripes upon the sleeves, though the pin in his tie bore the Hogwarts crest, not a House. “I…” He paused, taking a deep breath. He seemed at a loss for words. “I am sorry,” he settled on. “I am very sorry for vat happened to you vit that…that kopele who vore my face. I wrote letters, but I am told you vere difficult to reach in the summer.”

Harriet didn’t say anything. Krum looked away, nodding to Elara and Hermione.

Zdrasti,” he told them. “Elara, and…Hermy-own?”

“Hermione,” she corrected. “Hello.”

“A pleasure,” Elara added, eyes narrowed.

Krum cleared his throat and addressed Harriet again. “I tried to speak vit…vit your Ministry. They said you vould have a trial, and I—they vould not hear my vords. I came to them and told them all I had seen and vat I remembered. I could do nothing.”

“It’s not your fault,” Harriet told him, breathless. It wasn’t his fault Crouch chose him as a victim, and it wasn’t his fault Gaunt’s Ministry hadn’t wanted his testimony. She remembered her barrister telling her Krum had tried to testify on her behalf. Still, seeing him standing there made Harriet’s stomach flip with terror. “It’s—I’m surprised to see you here.”

Again, Krum nodded, scowling at the floor. “I did not finish my school. He—I vas not con—? Conscious? For much of the year. Your Headmaster offered to let me complete mine education here.”

Hermione and Elara shared a look over Harriet’s head. “But why Hogwarts?” the former asked. “Surely Durmstrang would allow you to repeat your final year after what happened. I’ve heard they have a new Headmaster now.”

Krum didn’t answer immediately. His dark eyes studied the flagstones, and his large hands formed fists against his sides. His next words came out of him with a grunt of effort. “He killed my parents.”

Harriet’s throat tightened, her teeth clacking together.

“I have no home there. It has been taken. Durmstrang is a good school. There are…good people there. But I could not go back.”

“Why?”

“It is…too difficult. To sit, to learn the magics there.”

Harriet frowned, not understanding, and Hermione exhaled in a short, sharp burst. “Dark magic. Durmstrang teaches Dark magic.”

The apple of Krum’s throat bobbed, and he nodded. “Da.”

“Crouch kept you under Dark magic for months. That must have affected you. I can’t imagine how awful it must have been. Did you develop an allergy or—?”

Harriet stepped on her foot, and Hermione clammed up.

“It’s not as if you require your qualifications,” Elara commented, her tone frigidly cold and polite. It was the kind of wretched politeness Harriet knew pure-bloods used when addressing one another. It was civil—but not actually civil in the slightest. “As I’m aware, being an international Quidditch star is quite lucrative. You have no need for further careers.”

“I cannot fly this season,” Krum replied. “And Quidditch does not last forever, da? I chose to come back to school, and to stay in England.” He lifted his chin, and his dark eyes met Harriet’s. “I believe vat you have said. About the Dark Lord. To stand aside and let those kuchi sinove hurt others is cowardly, and I am not coward. I vill stay in England and do vat I can.” He straightened, broad shoulders rolling, holding himself stiff. “I only vanted to tell you I am here so I vould not surprise you. I vould say mine is not a velcome face.”

He said this with a shrug and downcast eyes, hand reaching up to awkwardly pat his windswept hair. Though Harriet knew nothing that had happened was Krum’s fault—that this was, in fact, the very first time they’d met—she still felt uncomfortable and afraid. The fear in particular annoyed her, and Harriet pushed it back, forcing herself to speak.

“How d’you win your game against Liechenstein in August of ninety-three?”

He blinked, obviously confused by the segue, then tipped his head, thinking. “There vas a storm in Vaduz, I am remembering. Ve used the lightning—the flash? To score past their Keeper. The score vas six-hundred and twenty to one-hundred and fifty. Their Seeker, Thierry Thill, caught the Snitch.”

Harriet’s shoulders eased, and the itch against her spine stopped as Krum spoke. Barty Crouch Junior knew nothing about Quidditch. He knew nothing about Krum’s victories. He was dead. The person in front of her was just another one of his victims.

“I hope you like Hogwarts, Krum,” she said. “And I’m sorry for what happened to you. I’m sorry I didn’t…didn’t realize that he wasn’t you.”

“It is not your fault.” His voice came out soft, a bit gruff around the edges. “It is maybe mine, for keeping to myself too much. For not having friends who vould know me better. This…experience has shown me there is more to life than…fans. Fame.”

Movement in the far corridor turned their heads, and Harriet knew Krum saw how she flinched at Slytherin’s sudden appearance from the staff entrance. He was as silent as ever, a specter drifting through darkening halls. “I do believe the Headmaster has given you your rooms, Mr. Krum.”

“Yes, Professor?”

“Then go to them. Lest you run afoul anymore Dark wizards during your stay.”

Krum surprised Harriet with his lack of reaction to Slytherin’s needling, but then she guessed he’d learned to keep composed through years in the public spotlight. “Of course, Professor,” he said in all sincerity, though he didn’t immediately stalk off. He turned to Harriet and her friends and bowed his head. “It has been good to meet you and your sestri.”

“You too, Krum. Good night.”

The Bulgarian departed, heading into the section of the dungeons inhabited by Hufflepuffs, which unfortunately left the trio of witches with Professor Slytherin. The tromp of feet had died into the quiet, ominous crackling rising from the banked braziers.

“Need I remind you of our conversation last term, Miss Potter?” Slytherin’s voice slithered out of the dark in a hiss.

She swallowed. “No, Professor. Not at all.”

“Good.” He snapped his fingers at Hermione and Elara. “Be on your way before I deduct points.”

Her friends begrudgingly shifted into motion, and Harriet tried to sneak off with them—but Slytherin’s hand snapped out, and she felt his cold, smooth fingers clamp on the back of her neck.

“Not you,” he said. His hand tightened, then slid away. “With me, Potter. I require a word.”

Biting back the urge to curse, Harriet picked up her feet and reluctantly followed, sensing now wasn’t the moment to be difficult. Slytherin led her upstairs toward his office, and Harriet shuffled inside after him, wincing when the door slammed closed on its own.

Slytherin swept to his desk and sat, not bothering to light the torches. Only the candle on the desk remained lit, casting its paltry glow upon his strange, uncanny face, his red eyes glimmering.

Unimpressed and tired, Harriet plopped onto the visitor’s chair without waiting for an invitation.

“Umbridge is here to expel you,” Slytherin baldly stated, causing Harriet to choke on her own saliva. “She’ll hassle the staff for Gaunt, try to enforce the Ministry’s will and undermine my authority, but she will ultimately aim to see you expelled and forced from the campus. Your status as my apprentice won’t shield you.”

Harriet experienced a swift barrage of different emotions—fear, anger, disbelief. She knew Gaunt was petty in the extreme, but to put so much effort into making her life miserable? What could Umbridge do, really? How far was Gaunt willing to go in order to destabilize Hogwarts? That wouldn’t help him in the long run.

He’s not exactly sane, Harriet reminded herself. Rational people don’t do what he’s done.

“Keep your nose exceedingly clean,” Slytherin told her, leaning forward ever so slightly in emphasis. “I do not have the time to waste on that insignificant woman, and I’ve no interest in playing Gaunt’s pointless games. You will be a model student, and we will proceed as planned.”

“Yes, sir.”

He blinked—a slow, drawn-out gesture, his gaze pointed.

“Err, yes, Master.”

Slytherin continued to stare at Harriet, and she felt the echo of his hand colliding with her injured cheek, the stinging slap that sent prickles searing through her flesh. It made her nervous, waiting, on the one hand hoping she hadn’t overstepped, on the other, wanting to lash out first and prove herself invulnerable. She did not want to give him a reason to hit her again.

A full minute of awful, twitchy silence passed, the sheer weight of the quiet almost tangible as it settled on Harriet’s shoulders. At last, he blinked, and moved on. “I have your schedule here.”

He removed a sheet of parchment from his desk, one that much resembled the usual page Snape passed out in the beginning of the year at their first breakfast. Harriet squinted in the poor lighting, and found her schedule looked quite similar to the one she had last term, but without her free period. That had been given over to “capstone.”

“Wh—what’s a capstone?”

“I have generously set aside time for your apprenticeship, including your training and beginning work on your qualifications. You will report to my office at that time.” Slytherin sat back in his chair, and his fingers traced idle, thoughtless patterns over the padded arms. Her eyes followed the motion. Runes, Harriet realized. He makes runes when he’s thinking. “You will stay away from Krum and his like.”

“His like?”

“Boys, Miss Potter. Young men. You’re too naive to twist them in a befitting manner, and ultimately, they would be a distraction. It is no small feat, attaining mastery in the time allotted to you, and I will not waste my time with your failure.” His hands stilled, and his brow raised. “Should you require companionship once your apprenticeship is finished, arrangements can be made.”

Harriet hadn’t thought the conversation could get more horrifying after hearing that Umbridge meant to expel her, but she’d been wrong. Her face turned beet red, and she hunched her shoulders, hoping the floor swallowed her whole.

“Can I go now?”

“No.” He smirked, allowing his fingers to play over the candle’s flame. “I wish to go over more of my expectations for this year. To begin with, your revision of the Futhark language and its application in northwestern Germanic druidism….”

As Slytherin continued to speak, Harriet sunk lower and lower in her chair, and the mist tightened around the castle’s unyielding walls. Only the candle remained, and it felt as if there was no one else in the world aside from the pair of them. Harriet wished to be in the dorms, to be with her friends, to be normal, but she’d never been afforded normality, and wishing rarely got anyone anywhere. So, she folded her arms against her middle and fixed her gaze upon Slytherin’s desk. She braced herself, and receded into the lecture.

She already knew this year was going to be difficult.


A/N: Basically, Krum ’s joined the Order. I imagine his motivation to do so is great after what Crouch put him through. I think Dumbledore bringing him to Hogwarts in many-faceted choice on his behalf: he’s giving Krum a chance to heal in a new place, he’s wanting Krum to see the evidence of the Dark Lord’s hold on their society, he’s wanting to give Harriet the chance to reconcile her fear, and he’s bringing in another Order member (no matter how new) into the school. Krum’s as much a victim of the Dark Lord’s plans as Harriet is. He should be given a chance to prove himself and not be simply known as the mask that Crouch wore.

Slytherin: “Don’t get it trouble.”

Harriet, sweating: “No problem.”

Chapter 254: a lonely elf

Chapter Text

ccliv. a lonely elf

 

Hermione noticed two things as soon as Professor Snape distributed the schedules the following Monday morning: firstly, Harriet did not receive one, and secondly, Elara hid hers.

Normally, she wouldn’t begrudge her friend her privacy—thoughts of her own third year pinging in her brain—but it seemed such an odd thing to do, and even odder that Harriet hadn’t received one at all, and yet she seemed unmoved. It was curious.

“Where’s your schedule?” Hermione asked the shorter witch, who had her head ducked over a bowl of porridge, shoveling spoonfuls into her mouth.

“Slytherin gave it to me already,” she replied.

“Really? When? Friday evening? You never did mention what he wished to speak about.”

For some reason, Harriet’s face burned with color, and she appeared vaguely ill. Her spoon fell into her bowl with a splatter. “It was nothing important.”

Hermione highly doubted that, but she stopped questioning her. Without prompting, Elara sighed, folded her schedule in half, and idly handed it to Hermione, who took care not to flash it toward anyone as she read it. Elara’s free period had been replaced with a slot simply labeled “Dr. Lane.”

That ’s the Menslumancer, isn’t it? She had said he planned on continuing her therapy.

“That’s—good,” Hermione said, passing the folded schedule back. “It should be helpful, shouldn’t it? You enjoyed it before the—well, before the snake appeared.”

Elara hummed.

“Are you—? Will it be held here? Or—?”

“Here,” she explained. “It was initially proposed I would go off-campus, but Professor Dumbledore feels it best at this time for students to stay at Hogwarts.”

Hermione thought that decision was made for Elara’s benefit, as Gaunt’s motives against them were plainly devious, though she couldn’t deny the Minister and his Guardians posed a danger to the rest of the student body as well. He’d already bucked tradition when he’d hindered the yearly migration back to the school, and Hermione imagined he’d do much more through his poorly dressed minion posing as an inspector.

She wondered what Terry would have thought about all this.

He would probably tell me to keep my nose out of it. Or, he simply wouldn’t understand my obsession in tracking Gaunt’s decisions. Terry existed on the other extreme of magical society’s spectrum, and though his family hadn’t been radicalized, they still lived outside the reality of Gaunt’s empire. Those at the top of the social pyramid didn’t often give thought to what it must be like to struggle at the bottom, and even if they did, they couldn’t fully grasp their situation.

Thinking of Terry made Hermione miserable, anxious sweat warming her palms. She glanced toward the Ravenclaw table and found most of them perfectly unbothered, enjoying their breakfasts. Hermione guessed the death of one of their own wouldn’t be devastating, considering most of them hadn’t been familiar with Terry. If, for instance, Liam Godfrid, a Slytherin second-year, were to be murdered tomorrow, Hermione would be aggrieved, but life would continue as normal for the most part.

How terrible to consider what little impact they had upon one another.

Studying what should have been Terry’s year showed a different story. The fifth-year Ravenclaws appeared more subdued, and Anthony Goldstein wasn’t eating anything. He stared off into space.

At the High Table, several seats remained empty, almost as if the staff had declined to join the meal. Umbridge was there, stirring sugar into her tea, a superior sort of smile upon her wide face, secretive and knowing.

The flutter of wings turned heads as the morning post arrived, owls swooping down through the rafters. Harriet barely looked around as letters for her dropped to the table—and Hermione suffered a sudden, staggering burst of terror when she thought of what the general public might send her, but then she remembered the house-elves screened Harriet’s post. She recognized the crisp, floral smell of Narcissa Malfoy’s scented missive, and the aged, sharply folded envelope from the Flamels. She wasn’t sure of the others.

The usual litany of patronizing replies from voting families arrived for Hermione. She gave them a glance, then sighed.

“Granger.”

She hadn’t noticed Draco coming up to stand behind her until he was actually there, most likely because he lacked his stocky bookends. Goyle and Crabbe didn’t walk particularly loudly, but they took up space.

“Yes?” she said.

“You’re prefect, aren’t you? We’re supposed to show the first-years to their classes.”

“Oh,” Hermione replied. It had entirely slipped her mind. Perhaps she should give Elara her badge back because, so far, she’d proven less than satisfactory as a prefect. It’d been a secret hope of hers for years—ever since she’d come to Hogwarts, with the greater dream being her matriculation into Head Girl. Of course, that was before she recognized the reality of being a student under a watered-down version of the Dark Lord.

Exhaling, she pushed back from her seat and followed Draco to the far end of the table, where the nervous first-years sat clustered like a mushroom colony growing on a log.

Draco pointed a lazy finger at the closest one, and the dark-skinned girl froze like a deer in headlights, her hair a halo of inky curls. “All right, you lot. What’s your name, then?”

“K-Karis Warren.”

It wasn’t a pure-blood name—probably not even a half-blood name, but to Draco’s credit, he didn’t blink or pause to comment. Hermione relaxed a fraction, her fingers unfurling from her fists.

They went down the lines quickly from there—Clay Conifer and Eden Prince, Aura Plums, Gerard Umdir, Elbres Weld, Tamira al-Rais, Hyr Elbridge, and Aeden Wildgarden. Hermione correctly assumed Draco forgot their names almost as soon as they uttered them, but her memory was considerably keener, and she took a moment to study each face turned toward her with their big, lamp-like eyes so she could remember who they were.

“We’ll be showing you to your classrooms,” she explained. “First-years have a set schedule of Defense Against the Dark Arts, Charms, Transfiguration, Herbology, History of Magic, Astronomy, and Potions. We’ll have to get a leg on if we’re to show you everything before first period, so follow me this way.”

Hermione started with the dungeons, expecting the new students would be most used to the area after settling in over the weekend. Draco heaved a low, bored sigh, one that sounded far too reminiscent of his father, following next to Hermione.

“Do you really intend for us to go all the way to the Astronomy Tower?”’

“Of course! The path getting there is terribly confusing, and they’ll get lost if we don’t show them the way!”

“Merlin forbid,” he mocked, and when Hermione glared, he smirked, hands raised in supplication. “What? You know our prefects were awful in our first year. Getting lost did us some good.”

“Well, perhaps,” Hermione allowed with a begrudging shrug. She glanced over her shoulder to ensure the younger students were still with them. “But things aren’t the same anymore, are they? I don’t think it’s…safe for them to be lost and wandering on their own. Not after—.”

“You have a point,” he interrupted, stopping Hermione before she had to utter Terry’s name. She convulsively swallowed once, twice, then cleared her throat, blinking away the sting in her eyes. Draco carefully watched her. “You should watch out for yourself more this year.”

“How so?”

“Umbridge won’t be the only one Gaunt’s influenced in the castle. I simply think it’d be smart to keep your wits about you.” He paused. “And I guess Potter as well. The poor Azkaban inmates don’t deserve having that cursed upon them again.”

“Oh, har har.” Hermione elbowed him in the ribs with enough strength to wind him. Draco wheezed.

“Only joking….”

They led their peers through the dungeons, showing them where they’d have Potions, and where they could find Professor Snape during his office hours. It wasn’t until they started climbing back up toward the Charms passage that Hermione noted a few of the younger students kept glancing at her expectantly, looking painfully like Hermione herself when she was their age, eager to ask questions she didn’t know how to phrase.

The first one to muster up the courage and approach her was Hyr Elbridge, a tall boy with a brilliant shock of blond hair atop his head. He blurted out what the others wanted to say after Hermione finished explaining the best bridge to take between Charms and Transfiguration.

“Are you really friends with Harriet Potter? The girl from the papers?” he inquired.

Hermione stiffened and stopped walking.

Not again. Not more people demeaning Harriet. They’ve only just arrived here—.

The tension Draco’s easy chatter and a nice walk around Hogwarts had leached from her spine returned, causing Hermione to lift her nose into the air and stare down it toward the boy.

“Yes? What of it?” she demanded.

He and a thinner, fine-boned boy—Aeden Wildgarden—shared an anticipative look. A rosy-cheeked girl—Aura Plums—clasped her hands together and leaned forward to whisper, “Did she really fight You-Know-Who? That’s what they’ve been saying!”

Wildgarden said, “My cousin said she dueled all the seventh-years and won!”

Hermione blinked. What?

Umdir, black-haired with eyes like the backs of shiny beetles, peered out from under the fringe of his bowl cut. “Can she really talk to snakes?”

“Flourish says she fought a dragon! That can’t be real, can it?”

Hermione blinked again. What?!

“You’re an idiot, Conifer. He said she saved him from a dragon!”

“How else you gonna save someone from a dragon if you’re not fighting it? That’s the truth, innit?”

“Can she truly cast a Patronus?”

“What’s that, then?”

“It’s really difficult magic!”

“My uncle in the Wizengamot says she defeated a whole lot of Death Eaters—.”

“—that she dueled You-Know-Who—.”

“—youngest apprentice Hogwarts has ever seen—.”

“—used to be the best Seeker the House has seen—.”

“—outran a werewolf—.”

“—fought a basilisk—.”

A gentle tug on her sleeve turned Hermione’s attention downward toward her side. The Muggle-born, Karis Warren, who’d so far had no comment on Harriet, asked, “Is it true she’ll help with any class?” she inquired. “That she’ll help anyone?”

That was a question Hermione had an easy answer for. “Yes,” she replied. “She’ll give help to anyone, so long as you ask.”

 

xXx

 

It had never occurred to Hermione that, while she unsubtly plotted the downfall of their Minister for Magic and he picked away at Harriet’s peace of mind, others would inevitably start championing Harriet’s cause.

She wasn’t like Hermione or Elara, the former too brusque and socially inept, the latter cold and unapproachable. Harriet touched people’s lives like a summer breeze: warm, brief, missed. Yes, she could be loud and brash and sometimes uncouth, but she was always very thoughtful, always reaching out to congratulate people on their successes or to encourage them after a loss. She remembered birthdays or seemingly tiny, unnecessary facts Hermione couldn’t be bothered with, but remembering these things helped Harriet make people feel seen. People liked her, and what Hermione hadn’t counted on was these people hearing the slander against Harriet and not only rejecting the rubbish, but actively working against it.

Coming face-to-face with evidence of Harriet’s mystifying popularity fairly boggled the mind.

She spent much of her afternoon considering this, barely taking in the words of her professors as they extolled the importance of passing their O.W.Ls at the year’s end. Naturally, Hermione had already started on the material and had her notes bound in a color-coded binder—but the urgency failed to grip her in the same manner it would have only months prior. O.W.Ls did not seem important in the grander scheme of things.

She still wished to be the best she could be, to reach impossible milestones and prove there was no such thing as too much of a witch, and yet, Terry’s death, Harriet’s brief imprisonment, and the general lack of apathy in their country’s voting body tarnished Hermione’s enthusiasm. It made sinking into nihilism more appealing. What was the point in all she did—in being prefect, in passing O.W.Ls, in writing pleading letters—if she would only ever amount to being a Mudblood in the eyes of her peers? What was the point in trying?

Of course, that was silly nonsense. Rome was not built in a day, as the Muggles said, and though Hermione’s efforts hadn’t reaped much so far, she knew they would. The world was yet full of surprises—surprises like a gaggle of incumbent first-years brimming with stories about her best friend, told to them by cousins and uncles, brothers and sisters, dormmates and neighbors, all of whom had nothing but good things to say about Harriet Potter. There was still hope, no matter Hermione’s own difficulties persuading members of the Wizengamot to see it.

In a strange twist of fate, an unexpected windfall fell into her lap that very night.

Curfew had only just passed, and as such, it was time for the fifth-year prefects of their respective Houses to do their rounds before the sixth-years could take over. The seventh-years would finish out the evening, and only professors or the Head Boy or Girl were allowed beyond their common room after a certain hour.

Hogwarts had a sprawling—and frankly confusing—system of dungeons and sub-basements delving beneath the earth. The Hufflepuffs covered a third of it, the Slytherins a second third, and the final third was too dangerous or remote for anyone but Professors Snape or Slytherin to bother with. Hermione and Draco divvied their part of the area between them, not expecting to find anyone wandering on their own, especially not so early in the year and not when Slytherin’s spell over the common room’s entrance. He caught more errant students that way than any prefect ever would, but there was always the chance of a new Hufflepuff getting lost. Hermione wanted to ensure everyone found their way to their beds, especially with the likes of Umbridge on the prowl.

She paced a tad farther into the dungeons than she should have, muddled by her own tangled thoughts about the troublesome Wizengamot and Gaunt’s aggravating interference. Her mind continued an inexorable loop wherein it kept cycling back to Lucius Malfoy and everything he’d said about the Ministry. He’d continued to scoff at her attempts to contact and convince members of the Wizengamot to vote against Gaunt in the coming election. He spent much of his time at Grimmauld deriding her choices and nitpicking her decisions.

You have no leverage,” he’d told her. “You’re appealing to morals no one has the luxury of entertaining. Only children act in the name of what is good, because they do not comprehend all it is they stand to lose. You will need something else.

You mean blackmail.

“That is exactly what I mean.”

Hermione understood that. She did. But, even in trying to point out simple logical fallacies in their continued support of their asinine Minister, Hermione had been rebuffed, ignored, and ridiculed for doing nothing more than trying to highlight their misconceptions. These people thought giving in to Gaunt kept their families safe, and it did not.

You have no leverage.

And no means of getting it.

She sighed aloud as she walked, footsteps scuffing in the almost pitch-black corridor. At this point, Hermione realized she’d gone too far, and she stopped at the next brazier to use the light offered to find her Atlas. A negligent flick of her wand opened it, blue light painting her face as she followed the map back toward familiar passages.

She’d nearly reached Hufflepuff territory when movement encroaching on her little dot piqued her attention. Hermione squinted, adjusting her grip—and almost dropped her Atlas when she recognized the names Accipto Lestrange and Mallory Vuharith headed in her direction.

They’re not meant to be out! Hermione thought, nearly colliding with the wall in her rush to turn and rush in the other direction. Vuharith was their seventh-year prefect—and a terrible one at that, while Accipto had no excuse at all to be outside the common room when Cengor Pendarves was meant to be Vuharith’s patrolling partner. Both should have been sequestered by the hearth in the Slytherin dorms.

Hermione had no desire to run into Lestrange alone.

Unfortunately, the final passage through the Hufflepuff side of the dungeons that Hermione and the two seventh-years needed to pass through was exceptionally long, and Lestrange would definitely see her. Hermione bit her lip as she drew short, inspecting the corridor for somewhere she could slip through or hide until they went past. Portraits covered the wall—almost all of them food-related. A familiar image of a fruit bowl with a ticklish pear caught her attention, and Hermione dashed for it.

A dozen house-elf heads swiveled toward the entrance. Hermione stopped and grasped for the back of the portrait to ensure it closed, not willing to risk getting into a confrontation with Lestrange in front of the elves. He would not hesitate to hurt them. He might do it for fun.

Breathless, Hermione leaned against the portrait’s back and stared at the Atlas. Slowly, those two dots labeled Accipto and Mallory meandered closer.

What are they even doing? Hermione wondered. Then, she added for herself: No, I don’t want to know.

“Miss Herme-ninny!”

Her heart made a valiant attempt to escape her throat when a tiny body collided with her knees, bulbous green eyes peering up at her.

“Dobby!” Hermione breathed. “Be quiet for a moment, please!”

“Of course, Miss Herme-ninny!”

Bracing herself, Hermione pushed her weight a little more firmly into the portrait, and it edged open an inch or so, letting in a gasp of colder, wetter air from the dungeon corridor beyond. Lestrange and Vuharith appeared as little more than shadowy smudges at first, but at the last moment, they crossed into the light outside the kitchen portrait, revealing Vuharith’s mussed clothes and Lestrange’s distant, closed expression. Even from a distance, their faces looked strange.

Potions, Hermione recalled, her eyes narrowing. Lestrange and his friends use illegal potions in the dungeons.

Gold glinted on his lapel, an eye encircled by a serpent pinned in place and polished to a shine.

Umbridge won’t be the only one Gaunt’s influenced in the castle.”

The top of a hat tickled under Hermione’s chin as Dobby joined her at the portrait’s opening, peeking into the corridor. She nudged him back, and shut it. She reverted the Atlas and slipped it into a pocket.

“Mr. Lestrange is a bad boy,” Dobby imparted with a disappointed shake of his head. He had on several hats, and the topmost one jostled, threatening to fall. “He is doing things Headmaster Dumbly-dore would not approve of, no no.”

Hermione thought that was putting it lightly. “Hm. You know, elves could make incredible spies. You can get into a room unseen, unheard. Can’t you follow him around?” she asked. It occurred to her the house-elves moved through Hogwarts invisible, unnoticed, and could serve as an unrivaled surveillance system. “You could catch him when he’s, ah, misbehaving? You could report him to the Headmaster.”

“Oh, no, Miss!” Dobby squeaked. “House-elves is not to be telling stories on students, no, no! Students be needing their privacy. The things we knowing about them is not for us to go tattling.”

“I guess that’s true, and probably for the best,” she acknowledged. After all, what would then stop Lestrange from having an elf follow her around? Or Harriet, or Elara? Not that Hermione believed he would consider the poor creatures. He suffered from the obnoxious pure-blood behavior of regarding the house-elves as moving furniture.

Dobby ushered Hermione into the kitchens, and elves plied her with cakes, sweets, and evening tea, promising her it was no bother or extra work. Hermione didn’t fully believe them but dutifully thanked them for everything they placed before her. Dobby hummed a ditty as he helped fold snacks into napkins and placed them in a basket to be shared in the common room.

As she tucked in and sipped her chamomile tea, Hermione looked over the kitchen—lips pursed, forcing herself not to comment on the livelihood of the elves. In her inspection, she studied the main hearth, a massive structure equipped with ancient racks meant for bubbling pots or huge spits, leaving enough room for a grown man to pass through the Floo if needed. There, Hermione saw an elf huddled upon a tiny stool, surrounded by empty amber bottles.

“Dobby?” she asked.

“Yes, Miss Herme-ninny?”

“Who is that there?”

Dobby paused in his preparations to see who Hermione meant, and when he spotted the elf in question, his ears drooped.

“That’s Winky, Miss. This is being her first year at Hogwarts.”

“Oh? I didn’t know a new elf had moved in. She looks…sad. Is she all right?”

He nodded as his long, skinny fingers fidgeted with a napkin. “Winky is being employed here after she is losing her family.” He leaned in closer and lowered his voice. “The Crouches weren’t being good wizards, Miss Herme-ninny. Dobby is thinking she is better off here!”

It hadn’t occurred to Hermione to think about what happened to the Crouch family’s assets after their extinction, no matter how it sickened her to acknowledge that house-elves were legally considered assets. She knew from her research that Hogwarts often opened itself to elves who’d lost their homes for one reason or another—even elves who’d once served a Death Eater and a corrupt government official.

“She is being sad because her Mr. Barty is gone, but Dobby is glad he’s not here.” Dobby slipped another sandwich into the basket, frowning. “Mr. Barty is being a bad wizard who hurt Miss Herme-ninny’s friend Harry Potter. Dobby is liking Harry Potter very much. She is being a very brave witch.”

“He was a very bad man,” Hermione agreed, grimacing. “And Harriet is brave, yes. But, I imagine that doesn’t matter much to Winky.”

“Winky is missing having a family. She is feeling sad without a task.” Dobby peered up into Hermione’s face. “Not many elves is being like Dobby, wanting work, wanting to be free. Winky is lost without her family and drinks too much Butterbeer.”

“Butterbeer?” Hermione peered at the elf again, realizing she was swaying ever so slightly. “But Butterbeer barely has more than a drop of alcohol in it.”

“It is being enough for elves, Miss Herme-ninny.”

He hopped off the bench and away from the table, nattering about finding a thermos for some hot chocolate Hermione could bring to her friends. As he went, Hermione finished her tea, and she studied the miserable little elf sitting by the fire.

Her thoughts continued to spiral and thump in her head like a boggart in a locked trunk.

I told you how terribly naive you are. For Merlin’s sake, girl.”

Hermione gazed at the tea dregs spotting the bottom of her cup.

“Consider everything and everyone you love. If you aren’t prepared to see them taken from you, you are not comprehending what it is Gaunt will take from you.”

“I don’t know what they’ve been telling you, darling, but we are not leaving England without you. If you want us to leave, you’re coming with us.”

She set the tea aside. Lucius Malfoy had no idea what Hermione was willing to give, what she was willing to lose. She was not naive.

“You have no leverage.”

Swallowing her nerves, Hermione stood and carefully stepped from behind the bench, skirting the table. She left the basket for the moment to instead approach the hearth, the heat of the banked fire falling over her as she knelt at Winky’s side. Bulbous, teary eyes turned in Hermione’s direction.

You know, elves could make incredible spies.

Lucius Malfoy’s gray eyes glittered in the light of Grimmauld’s grim parlor. “You have no leverage.

Hermione glowered in response. “You mean blackmail.”

“That is exactly what I mean.”

“Hello, Winky,” Hermione said. “May I speak with you for a moment?”

She blinked, rubbed at her runny nose, and nodded. “Yes, Missy.”

“I was hoping you’d be open to doing me a series of favors. I would pay you, if you’d like—.” Winky’s face scrunched, her breath hitching on a sob, and Hermione rushed to continue. “But if you…you don’t want that, I promise—no, I swear—I will help you find a new family. I will do everything in my power to see you get what you want and need. I really will. Are you willing to help me?”

Gazing at her, Winky’s eyes widened with hope.


A/N: Random note, September 1st in 1995 was a Friday, so I ’m head-canoning they had a weekend of doing nothing but puttering about the common room or attending seminars.

Hermione: *has close encounter with the Potter fan club*

Hermione: “….”

Hermione: “Harriet, when did you become the next incarnation of Merlin and why didn’t I notice?”

Chapter 255: the inspectorate

Chapter Text

cclv. the inspectorate

 

Elara would have found the current situation hilarious if the magical world weren’t on the brink of civil war and being swallowed by darkness.

It was the first Wednesday of term, which meant the fifth-year Slytherins had their first Defense Against the Dark Arts class for the term. They arrived with the Gryffindors and had filtered in seconds before the bell rang, as was custom. They’d taken their seats, and Slytherin had slunk out from behind his desk, preparing to give his traditional deriding speech—when a knock had sounded upon the door.

Elara couldn’t recall a single time she’d ever seen someone interrupt Slytherin, and judging by the sudden flash of surprise cutting through his expression, the professor hadn’t experienced the phenomenon either. His face regained composure in an instant, and he crossed his arms, giving his head an imperious tilt so his nose rose in the air.

“Come in,” he ordered.

The door opened, and heels tapped upon the flagstones as the pink-clad Ministry witch came strutting inside.

Students on the Gryffindor side of the room leaned toward one another, and whispers ran rampant. Elara couldn’t properly hear what was said, but she could guess the general gist. As far as she knew, Madam Umbridge hadn’t made a nuisance of herself yet, and others had wagered on when she’d begin doing so. Elara thought that was about to change.

“Good afternoon, Professor Slytherin,” Madam Umbridge greeted, holding a clipboard with her arm folded beneath it, a quill pinned to its top.

If Umbridge expected a greeting in return, she’d be left wanting. Slytherin stared at the woman as if she were a particularly dense first-year who’d wandered across his path.

When he failed to say anything for a long, awkward moment, Umbridge’s greasy smile slid off her face, and she cleared her throat. “Hem-hem.”

Slytherin stirred, and the ugliness in his eyes intensified. Elara noticed how Harriet shifted in her seat so she slid down several inches. “What is your purpose here?”

“Why, surely Headmaster Dumbledore has informed you of my task? You see, I’ve been selected by our esteemed Minister to inspect—.”

“Yes, I’ve heard the party line,” Slytherin retorted, taking a step forward so he was closer to the front row. Harriet scrunched lower. “I am asking why are you in my classroom?”

Most of the room had twisted in their seats to see Umbridge in the back, and their eyes bounced between their professor and the witch like a Quaffle between Chasers. Umbridge surprised Elara with her gumption because she neither flinched nor faltered under Slytherin’s chilling regard.

“Then you must understand I’m here to inspect your class,” she said with an obnoxious titter capping her statement. “No professor or member of staff at this institute is exempt from the Ministry’s exhaustive investigation. Surely you understand.”

Slytherin appeared at a loss for words. “Very well,” he finally settled on in a soft, dangerous whisper. ‘As you were, Madam Umbridge.” All of a sudden, his hand lashed out, slamming palm-down on Harriet’s desk. The noise startled everyone, but earned a particularly frightened yelp out of Harriet. “Sit up.”

Harriet dragged herself upright, the tops of her ears bright red.

Slytherin resumed his position at the head of the room, ignoring Umbridge as he regained control over the students. They fell silent in a wave, the only noise left their anxious breathing and the tap of Umbridge’s heels as she slowly started her rounds.

“You’ve matriculated to yet another year under my instruction,” Slytherin began, steepling his fingers. The torchlight touched only his back, creating a sharp, orange outline on his slim form. His eyes gleamed crimson from a darkened face. “For most of you, this will be your last year in this classroom. If you intend to continue your studies in the Dark Arts and the defenses against them, you must attain an Outstanding on your Ordinary Wizarding Levels. For some, I anticipate it won’t be a challenge to meet the Ministry’s standards. For most….”

He trailed off in a meaningful way, leaving the class to interpret the implication. Elara considered her textbook as the silence stretched, her gloved finger following the edge. Would she be here next year? Did she want to even take the Defense O.W.L? She hadn’t given her future beyond Hogwarts much consideration. Really, Elara knew she had the privilege to do whatever held her fancy; she could live off the Black fortune or take a stipend as a member of Wizengamot. Or, she could find something she wanted to do with her life.

Eyes narrowed, Elara leaned her elbow on her desk. It’s difficult to imagine any optimistic scenario in a world controlled by Voldemort.

Slytherin continued his diatribe, falling into his usual rhythm, almost as if Umbridge hadn’t come into the class at all. The witch kept circling, however, and the sound of her heavy feet and scratching quill served as a constant reminder of her presence.

“Our curriculum for your fifth year consists mainly of curses and their counters. Dark curses differ from those you may have studied theoretically under Professor Flitwick in their nature and execution. If you have retained anything from my instruction, it is the understanding that Dark magic is an influence outside of your routine incantations. It is an art only the most talented of wizards and witches can comprehend, let alone master.” Slytherin sounded as if he were crooning when he spoke, clearly enjoying the subject matter. “Today, we will be concentrating on the Scalding Curse, the standard incantation being flagrante—.”

Hem-hem.”

Slytherin came to a halt, then turned to look at Umbridge. “Yes?”

“The Scalding Curse is Dark magic, is it not?”

“That would be the point of this lesson, yes, Madam Umbridge. Brilliant deduction.”

The witch made a soft tutting noise. “Oh dear. Did you have a chance to examine the approved compendium released by the Office of the Inspectorate?”

“You mean your office. It would appear not.” Slytherin’s lip curled.

“Well, you really must find the time. You see, the Minister has ratified an official catalog of spells that are allowed to be taught at Hogwarts, and the Scalding Curse is most definitely not on it.”

For an instant, Elara thought Slytherin might hex the woman. She could almost see the idea flicker through him at lightning speed before he reasoned himself out of the action—no doubt realizing even he might have difficulty explaining why he mangled a Ministry official in front of an entire class.

“My lesson plan has been approved by the Hogwarts Board of Governors.” Slytherin said each word with deliberate weight. “The Board has the final say in what gets taught at this school.”

“Oh, not anymore.” Umbridge smiled. “Not according to Educational Decree Number One.”

Pardon?

“Educational Decree Number One.” She said it louder, as if Slytherin hadn’t actually heard. “Passed by our dear Minister with the full authority of the Wizengamot. It reads that all curricula taught at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry are subject to review and revision by the British Ministry of Magic and its selected agents.” Umbridge laid a pudgy hand on her chest, over her heart. “That means me, if you’re confused.”

The class held their breath. They had never seen someone challenge Professor Slytherin like this before. Certainly he and Professor Dumbledore had their disagreements in the public eye, but the Headmaster always demurred, not wanting to create a scene where others could witness it. Umbridge had no such tact.

Slytherin’s eyes narrowed, and his tongue briefly worked over the edge of his teeth. Elara found it a telling gesture, given how the wizard almost never showed his teeth in such a manner. They were perfectly white and straight, but also strange, too sharp.

Elara couldn’t say what she expected. She wouldn’t describe Professor Slytherin as a predictable person on a good day, and today was decidedly not a good day. Next to her, Harriet wore an expression suggesting she might be ill.

However, Slytherin surprised them all when he simply lifted a hand and shrugged a shoulder. “Very well,” he said, eyes on Umbridge. “Class, retrieve your books and turn to page one.”

People exchanged confused looks. “But Professor,” Hermione ventured, her voice faltering. “Um. That’s the…preface.”

“And you will spend the rest of the period reading it, Granger.” Slytherin smiled at Umbridge. “Since that is the subject matter our illustrious Ministry finds agreeable.”

He returned to his desk with a bored gesture, sinking into the comfortable chair behind it. Umbridge kept taking notes on her clipboard, her squat face wrinkled with consternation, and the class filled with puzzled murmurs and whispers.

“Merlin’s bollocks,” Harriet breathed, earning a half-hearted huff from Hermione. “I can’t believe he didn’t use her for target practice, honestly.”

“Is it really such an odd choice?” Elara said. “Even Umbridge understands the power of her position. What can Slytherin do or say while she has the full weight of the Ministry behind her?”

“I dunno. That’s the point, innit? He figures out how to do stuff all the time right in Dumbledore’s face. I mean, he slapped me in front of Snape and another woman without issue.”

What?!

From his desk, Slytherin hissed a warning for Hermione to keep her voice down. Hermione glared at him but acquiesced.

What are you talking about?”

“Nothing. Leave it alone.”

“What do you mean he slapped you?”

Nothing, Merlin.”

“Harriet—.”

Hem-hem.”

The annoying throat clearing sounded nearby, and the trio of witches turned to see Umbridge looking down at them.

“Miss Potter,” she said. “It’s a shame to see you not taking your second chance at your education more seriously.”

“Bit of a challenge when all we can read is the book’s preface,” Harriet muttered.

“What was that, dear?”

“I said I’ve already finished the assignment, Madam Umbridge.”

The witch’s beady eyes flicked to the closed book on Harriet’s desk. “Well, I think it would be in your best interest to read it again. Surely one such as yourself will need multiple readings to ensure the information sinks in.”

Elara’s palms began to sweat inside her gloves when she feared Harriet might argue—but she didn’t, opting to open her textbook and lower her head. Not a single complaint escaped her. Umbridge frowned, having expected more of a fight, then adjusted her clipboard and went off toward the Gryffindor side of the room.

“Minging cow,” Harriet whispered. “And no, I’m not going to discuss it, Hermione. Leave it.”

A minute of stiff silence passed between the trio. Their professor had apparently moved on to writing a letter, his quill slashing across the parchment with a silent, fuming fury. Umbridge spoke with Lavender Brown and Parvati Patil.

“What does Gaunt expect to happen by refusing to let Slytherin teach?” Hermione pondered as she, too, went through the performance of opening her book to the beginning page. “We’ll flunk our O.W.Ls, for Merlin’s sake! That’ll reflect poorly on the Ministry.”

“It might be part of his plan,” Elara commented. She didn’t bother reading the preface like the others. In fact, she considered taking out a Dark book Andromeda had lent her that she’d smuggled into the school, but Elara wasn’t quite so bold—or foolish. “He’ll integrate it as part of his re-election platform. The results of the readiness tests we take before the end of term will be out by then, and he could push for changes in Hogwarts’ staff to better our mark retention.”

“I don’t believe that’s it. There’s too many variables to bank upon the results. I think it’s more about asserting control.”

Elara considered this. “He already has control. Would he really cut off his nose to spite his face?”

Harriet choked, brushing away Hermione’s concern. Assured her friend wasn’t about to asphyxiate in the middle of Defense, the other witch returned to the conversation.

“I should clarify it’s about a lack of control, specifically.”

“Now that makes no sense at all.”

Hermione breathed in a small breath through her nose. “It makes perfect sense. Mr. Malfoy told us he’s been seeking something in the Department of Mysteries. Something he can’t get. Add to that Harriet’s defiance and his general intuition telling him something is amiss about her, and he can’t figure it out. He’s a megalomaniac; even a perceived lack of control on his part might spiral him into obsession.”

“That is entirely supposition,” Elara argued. “Not that I disagree with the concept, but we’re talking about Gaunt here. Would he allow so much of himself to be ruled by emotion if it could hurt his platform?”

Harriet answered before Hermione could. “Yes,” she muttered. “Yes, he’s not as…there as Slytherin is. He’s fucking unhinged.” Her hand came up to scratch at the right side of her neck, clawing briefly at the skin before she forced the arm down. “I think he’s got plans and he’s not bloody stupid, but he’s not above doing questionable things when he’s slighted.”

The scene from the hospital flashed into Elara’s mind—the case bursting open, spilling over with snakes. She recalled the scene in Hermione’s living room, her Muggle parents asleep on the sofa, about to wake up to an entirely different life.

Gaunt was unhinged. So perhaps Elara shouldn’t question the psychology behind it. Maybe he would simply ruin Slytherin’s lesson plan for the sheer pleasure of it.

She rested her chin on her hand, lost in thought.

Hermione’s mention of the O.W.L. exams and their inability to complete them without proper instruction did bring another question to Elara’s mind. What if this meddling extended to their other classes? Surely the fifth-years wouldn’t be content to stay idle as their life-defining tests loomed nearer. Gaunt or no Gaunt, Slytherin or no Slytherin. Dark Lords and the end of the world be damned, no one would accept failing just to please the Ministry.

Class drew to a close eventually, and people began to shuffle their books back into their bags and shift about in their seats, eager to leave. Elara did the same, sighing, and waited for the bell to ring. It did so—and another grating cough held the students in their place.

“I will need you all to empty your bags for inspection,” Umbridge said, standing at the head of the room. Slytherin directed an annoyed glance at her back but otherwise remained unmoved. Elara wondered how long that would last.

“You can’t do that,” Malfoy said. “That’s not allowed—.”

“I’m sure you’ll find, Mr. Malfoy, that I am very much in the right here. All attendees of this school tacitly agree with Hogwarts’ charter, which includes certain cessations of privacy and right of search.” She tittered slightly, a pleased little hum rounding out her words. “So. Empty your bags.”

Harriet’s eye-roll was almost audible, but she nonetheless gripped the bottom of her satchel and upended it, letting her tomes and untidy parchment sheaves spill across the desk. Hermione did the same, as did the Gryffindors, many of whom delighted in how their inkwells smashed upon the floor, splattering Umbridge’s noisome pink heels.

Elara moved to lift her bag—and froze.

Oh, God help me.

The book. She had that blasted book in her bag! Andromeda had lent it to her with the strict understanding she would show it to no one and keep it to herself, and Elara had eagerly accepted. It was a dissertation from a Nordic Dark wizard discussing the theoretical merits of blood magic—nothing evil or overly macabre, but certainly enough to see Elara expelled!

Umbridge stepped closer to Hermione’s desk, sniffing, as Elara swayed in place. What could she do? What could she do? Grab the book and hurl it into the nearest fireplace? Blast it to pieces with her wand? She didn’t know the spell to Vanish objects and doubted it’d work on the book anyway. Magical possessions such as that often resisted Vanishment.

Harriet glanced at her from the corner of her eye and raised her brow in question. She was much too close to Umbridge to ask a question, and Elara couldn’t answer. Her panicked gaze darted to her bag—still yet unpacked, her arm frozen in motion to pick it up—and Harriet’s attention followed it. She stared for a moment, confused, then clarity sparked in her green eyes.

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” Harriet groaned.

Umbridge’s concentration jerked from Hermione to the shorter girl. “Something to say, Miss Potter?” she demanded.

Harriet briefly shut her eyes, her face turned from Umbridge. She straightened, stiffening her shoulders, and faced forward.

“Yeah, I got something to say,” she told Umbridge, raising her voice. The others peered at her, their conversations quietening. “I think Gaunt’s a cock-eyed nonce, and he’s in league with Lord Voldemort.”

The words seemed to ring in the dead silence that encumbered the room—or perhaps it was only Elara’s ears.

“Holy shit,” Longbottom whispered. Someone coughed to hide their laugh.

Umbridge’s face underwent a gamut of emotions—befuddlement, disbelief, rage, and then sheer, twisted joy. Her smile radiated smug malice, and her interest in the impromptu search disappeared.

She had exactly what she wanted, after all.

“I think you’ve earned yourself a detention, Miss Potter,” she said, her voice never losing its saccharin sweetness.

“You can give out detentions too, then?” Harriet snarked. “Seems you can do anything you want.”

“Eventually you will discover just how right you are, Miss Potter.” She selected one of Harriet’s binders, studied it, then dropped it on the floor without care. “You must realize I am here to assist you and your classmates, dear. It’s not your fault you’ve been lied to, but you will learn better. I think a month of detentions will adjust your attitude. Let’s see if that helps.” She selected another item—a wooden quill box, a hand-carved gift from Hagrid—and dropped it. Elara heard it crack. “Your first detention will begin tonight. Arrive at my office on the fifth floor this evening promptly at seven o’clock.”

Harriet sneered. “Yes, ma’am.”

Umbridge smiled again, and the class was dismissed, the miserable pink toad fairly skipping as she departed the room before the students.

Elara couldn’t help how her shoulders slumped with relief—and nor could she help the sudden, overwhelming guilt that twisted her gut. She knelt to help Harriet gather her things, muttering an apologetic reparo over the split quill box.

“I’m sorry—.”

“Just leave it,” Harriet retorted, sounding tired. “You couldn’t have known she’d start searching our things. We didn’t have any idea she’d be here.”

“I should have been more careful.”

“Doesn’t matter now, loathsome bint. Slytherin’s going to have my head later.” Harriet stood, wrinkling parchment as she stuffed it into her satchel without care. “C’mon, we’re going to be late for History.”

They gathered their things, readying to follow the others—and Slytherin finally chose to rise from his desk, snapping Elara’s name with particular venom.

“Black, remain behind.”

Dread slunk over her anew at the wizard’s command, and she was left with no choice but to stand by her desk, her hand forming a fist where she gripped her bag’s strap. Harriet hesitated as if she meant to wait as well, but a single quelling look from Slytherin sent her and Hermione darting through the door. One by one, the others left until it was only Elara and Slytherin. The professor came to stand in front of her, not unlike what Umbridge had done minutes prior.

“I don’t know what stupidity Potter chose to cover for you,” he said, cold. His red eyes didn’t blink, didn’t shift from her face. “Frankly, I don’t care. It won’t happen again.”

“No, sir—.”

“I am not finished!”

He didn’t shout, but it was a near thing, and Elara’s heart lurched in her chest, her lungs tightening.

“It won’t happen again. I have shown incredible benevolence towards you and Granger, especially in light of the asinine little stunt you pulled in handing off your prefect badge to the Mudblood.” He drew an agitated hand over his jaw, then through his hair. “You will prevent Miss Potter from making a fool of herself again. Do you understand?”

Elara swallowed, then uttered, “Yes, sir.”

Slytherin studied her, a long, lingering look, unknown thoughts roving beneath his facade like living corpses beneath soil. The longer Elara stared, the uglier it looked.

He removed his timepiece from his pocket and consulted it. He nodded to himself as he clicked the face closed once more and returned the watch to its home. He looked at Elara.

She didn’t see the hand coming until it was around her throat, squeezing, and when she grappled at his arm, he knocked her hands away. She scrambled for purchase, choking, as Slytherin jerked her closer with impossible strength.

“I would kill you sooner than look at you,” he said, the fury he’d lacked with Umbridge bursting to the surface. He fairly shook with it. “You and the Mudblood. You and every worthless, dirty, traitorous, inbred child that comes traipsing into my classroom to waste my time and befoul my air. If I didn’t need Potter, if I didn’t need her happy and compliant, you and Granger would die in agony, and no one would be any the wiser. I know spells that would have you ripping your own insolent eyes out, or have you never wondered why Snape looks the way he does?” His fingers dug in, tighter and tighter. Somewhere in the back of Elara’s terrified mind, she recognized this as being misplaced anger. She made a convenient stand-in for a certain pink-loving witch. “You fancy yourself a Dark witch. You think you understand, but how could you? You’re weak, a footnote in the story of a greater witch, and not worth the effort to corrupt.”

He released Elara, but not before throwing her to the floor, and she coughed, banging her legs against the stone floor. Her knees in particular stung and ached as the rough surface scraped them through her long skirt. She tried to lurch upright—to shout, to run, she didn’t know. A wand pointed itself at her face, and Elara didn’t have a chance to hear the incantation spoken before white light burned across her vision. It overcame her, and she knew nothing more.

 

xXx

 

A headache pulsed beneath her temple.

Elara breathed in, blinking, and rubbed at the spot. Remus’ lecture continued as he read a passage from their textbook, balancing it in one of his scarred hands as he paced the long, quiet hall. A sleepy lassitude wended through the room, late summer sunshine lounging idle at the windows.

She looked at her friends, Harriet’s head down on her desk, Hermione taking notes. The latter glanced at her when she noticed Elara moving.

“Are you all right?” she asked.

“I…must have fallen asleep,” Elara replied. Her brows furrowed, the line deepening between them as she shook off the fugue. The last she recalled, Professor Slytherin had checked his pocket watch.

He must have dismissed me, she thought. But why didn’t she remember?

And why did her knees hurt?

 


A/N: In canon Educational Decree Number One punished students found in possession of a spell check quill. So it ’s diff here. Not a big deal.

Slytherin: *hangs danger sign around neck*

Umbridge: “….”

Umbridge: “That sign can’t stop me because I can’t read.”

Chapter 256: i must not tell lies

Chapter Text

cclvi. i must not tell lies

 

Her footsteps echoed into the quiet corridor as Harriet headed to her destination.

Sunset curdled the sky outside the windows, shades of blue and purple and violet peeling away at the golden horizon until it leached into the clouds, limning the roving thunderheads in bronze gilt. The light danced on the lake, and if Harriet looked long enough, she could see the silhouette of Merpeople playing in the shallows.

Unfortunately, she didn’t have much time to linger. She figured Madam Umbridge probably wouldn’t appreciate her being late to detention.

School had only been in session for a few days, so Harriet hadn’t heard much about the new inspector, but she had heard some. Briar Thorn and Izumi Takagi from second year had told her last night when they cornered Harriet in the common room that Umbridge had visited their Charms class. That visit had entailed nothing but a long, superior look from Umbridge toward Flitwick, a swipe of her quill, and a swift exit from the classroom. Otherwise, the witch had tromped about the castle, simpering and sniping, telling off students in that obnoxious, passive-aggressive way of hers. She’d given detention to Madri Misra in third year for throwing a Fanged Frisbee inside, but that detention had been handed off to Filch.

Apparently, Harriet was the first to get a personal touch from Umbridge herself.

The memory of Slytherin’s warning haunted her as she climbed the stairs, footsteps bouncing in the enclosed space. “She will ultimately aim to see you expelled and forced from the campus,” he’d said. “Keep your nose exceedingly clean.”

“Calling the Minister a nonce and claiming he’s in league with the Dark Lord probably wasn’t the best way to keep my nose clean,” Harriet muttered to herself.

“Yar, probably best not to repeat tha’,” replied the nosy portrait of a whaler on break. Harriet told him to sod off.

On the third floor, a rustling noise turned her head, and a gummy feeling gripping the bottom of her shoes slowed her steps.

“What do you want?” Harriet asked Set, directing a sharp glance downward at the distortion pulling at her shadow. Her patience had been decidedly less abundant with the creature since his behavior at the Riddle House, where his grasping fingers had knocked her wands to the floor and grabbed the attention of Lord Voldemort. Harriet still believed she could have gotten away unnoticed—or at least with a head start—if not for Set, and his absence in Azkaban had left Harriet questioning his very nature.

Of course, she’d poked around a bit over the years, searching for information on Set and what he might really be, but Harriet had been met with more dead-ends than not, and his recent less-than-helpful actions made her wonder if he was some form of poltergeist, like Peeves. The general consensus she’d unearthed agreed seeing something not quantifiable by magical standards was bad news—the kind of news that got a witch sent to St. Mungo’s…permanently.

A stint in Azkaban was enough incarceration for Harriet.

Set shifted, and one long, misshapen arm pointed toward a branching passage. Harriet approached it to humor him, but once she looked down the darkened way, she wished she hadn’t. “Oh, bugger it,” she hissed as she saw Accipto Lestrange walking closer. He didn’t notice her at first, seemingly preoccupied with his own thoughts, but his head rose before she had a chance to slip away, and he sneered.

“Don’t you have a master to be serving?” he asked her, the particular emphasis leading Harriet to believe he meant his words as a nasty innuendo. “Or did he finally let you off your knees for a breather?”

Harriet glared, her stomach turning. “Nice. Shouldn’t I be asking you that?” She jerked her chin toward his chest, specifically the Guardian of the Magical Right pin glittering on his lapel. “Slytherin didn’t want you, so what? You crawled to the next available lowlife?”

A few feet separated them by the time Accipto stopped walking. Harriet pulled out her wand without hesitation. “Put that away,” he snapped. “Apprentice or not, I’m still a prefect, Potter, and you’ll address me with respect.”

“I don’t give a Niffler’s arse if you’re a prefect. You touch me, and I’ll hex your legs backward.”

“Just wait, you stunted half-breed,” Lestrange replied, his eyes narrowed into thin, hateful slits. “You’ll get yours before too long.”

“Wouldn’t hold your breath for that.”

Lestrange continued on—going where, Harriet could only guess. Hermione had told her she’d seen him lurking in all manner of dark and desolate parts of the castle the last few days. They both wagered he was indulging in those nasty, forbidden potions you could either brew yourself or buy off shady blokes in Knockturn Alley. They cost a mint to make or purchase, so Harriet wondered if Gaunt was lining Lestrange’s pockets. Rumor had it he’d been raised by far-flung Lestrange relatives, but she doubted they had the gold to keep him in supply.

The distant tolling of bells echoed in the hall. Harriet directed an irritated glance at the floor and the shadow swirling underfoot. “Great,” she mumbled. “I’m late.”

She retraced her steps and followed the stairs up the final two floors, finding the abandoned office Umbridge had taken over. Harriet knocked, and after being admitted, she opened the door, revealing a room with the walls painted an obnoxious shade of magenta, the windows covered in lacy curtains and heavy valances. Little china plates sat on the shelves instead of books, and each one had a picture of a kitten surrounded by tiny flowers.

What in the world? Harriet puzzled. Why were the walls pink? Had they always been pink? Had Umbridge chosen pink?

There were two desks in the office, the Ministry witch herself seated behind the bigger one, while the smaller student version waited in the room’s middle, stocked with parchment and a quill. Umbridge sipped tea from a frilly cup, everything on her desk perfectly in its place, the fire warm in the hearth at her back. If Harriet didn’t know she’d tried to throw her into Azkaban, she would’ve thought it a welcoming—if a bit odd—scene.

“Good evening, Miss Potter,” Umbridge greeted in a bright, cheery voice. It hardened as she added, “You’re late.”

“Er, yeah. Sorry, ma’am. Peeves flooded the closest stairwell.”

A blatant lie, but Umbridge seemed uninterested in discovering the truth and moved on. “Have a seat.”

Harriet shuffled toward the smaller desk, tired after a long day of studying and fielding uncomfortable looks from suspicious students. Seeing the parchment and quill, she imagined Umbridge would have her writing lines, and though she was in for several tedious hours, it would pass quickly enough. She was relieved the woman wasn’t more imaginative.

Umbridge stood, and the chair creaked as her sizable backside lifted from it. “Do you know why you’re here, dear?”

Harriet didn’t roll her eyes, though it was a near thing. Dear. Harriet was not anyone’s dear. “Because you assigned me a detention.”

“And why is that?”

“Because I called the Minister a nonce.”

Umbridge’s eyes narrowed as she came out from behind her desk, her heels clacking little snippy notes against the flagstone. “You’re a terribly troubled child, Miss Potter. That is why you’re here—so I can help you. I have been sent by the Ministry to give aid to students such as yourself, and I understand that’s why you said those nasty lies in class today. You need help.”

Harriet didn’t open her mouth to argue. She just waited for the woman to get on with her point. Bit like listening to Aunt Petunia go on a tear, she mused. I bet they’d get along swimmingly.

Umbridge folded her hands together and held them under her chin, continuing. “You’ve been lied to, Miss Potter, but that is not an excuse to further spread misinformation. Being confused does not pardon you from causing undue panic—.”

“I’m not confused,” Harriet rebutted.

“But you are.” Umbridge stood in front of her, beady eyes set on her face. “Of course you are. That’s why the Ministry feels it best to look into what kind of environment Hogwarts’ staff is fostering here. Why else would a young girl attack a fellow student and claim it was He Who Must Not Be Named?”

“His name’s Voldemort, since you sound confused yourself,” Harriet informed the witch, savoring Umbridge’s sour expression. “And I was cleared of any crimes by your Ministry, ma’am. I didn’t hurt Terry Boot, and I never claimed Voldemort did, either. I said it was Barty Crouch Junior. Your lot found him dead in the Atrium, right?”

Umbridge’s temper slipped in visible degrees as she lost control of the situation. “You’re a liar, Miss Potter, but it isn’t your fault. You simply need a firmer hand, and correction.”

Harriet didn’t like the sound of that one bit. “I’m not a liar,” she reiterated, though she knew it’d be better to keep her thoughts to herself. Irritation simmered just beneath her skin, and it caused her neck to itch something fierce, the words tumbling out against her will. “The Dark Lord’s back, and that’s not something anyone should ignore, especially not the Ministry. Aren’t you meant to be protecting people—.”

“Quiet!” Umbridge barked like a kicked Diricawl. “That is enough of that. No more talking, Miss Potter. I believe lines will suit for your punishment in these detentions. You will write, ‘I must not tell lies.’”

Harriet grunted, turning her attention to the stack of parchment in front of her. She pulled the first sheet forward on the desk and picked up the quill. “How many times, Madam Umbridge?’

“Oh, until the message sinks in.” She laughed—the sound childish and abrasive, not at all suited to an adult. Harriet stifled her anger and annoyance down to tolerable levels, resolving to complain to Hermione and Elara later. As Umbridge continued to stand in place as if waiting for something else, Harriet noted a mistake in her setup.

“I’ve no ink, ma’am.”

“You’ll find it unnecessary once you begin.”

Harriet studied the quill, twisting it between her fingers so she could see all sides. It didn’t look like a Self-Inking Quill; those had a dark line of pigment through the shaft and into what Hermione called the “rachis.” This feather didn’t have that, and indeed, Harriet thought the quill rather strange. It had a small, golden ornament under the barbs where her fingers rested, and the black vane warbled with a glutinous red sheen.

Shrugging, she put the nib on the parchment surface and started to write. The dark, scarlet ink flowed without issue.

By her third repetition of ‘I must not tell lies,’ the back of Harriet’s hand began to itch. On her fifth copy, the itch devolved into a burn, and Harriet stopped writing to scratch at it. She squinted at the reddening skin, watching as it peeled like a blister after a terrible sunburn, and it was then she noticed the letters.

In her own lazy scrawl were the words I must not tell lies. The ink was her blood.

Umbridge smiled.

“You—you can’t do this,” Harriet said, stumbling over the words as the pain caught up to her, every subsequent stroke of the quill’s nib scratching deeper into her flesh. Hogwarts didn’t allow for corporeal punishment. It’d been that way ever since Dumbledore became Headmaster decades ago. “You can’t force a student to do this.”

“You’ll find that I’m perfectly within my rights.” Pleased with the results, Umbridge turned and went back to her seat. “Keep going, Miss Potter. We’ll see how well you learn this lesson.”

“I’ll tell Dumbledore.”

“Oh, please do. Open communication with your Headmaster is vital for your education, after all.” The witch sank into her chair like a smarmy, full toad. “You poor, poor thing. I really do think Minister Gaunt is right about you.”

Harriet glared, but she couldn’t resist rising to her bait. “Right about what?”

“Right in stating you’re not fit for staying at Hogwarts, of course.” Umbridge tutted under her breath. “You can’t even complete a simple detention without throwing a fit, after all. My goodness, what ever shall we do with you?”

Harriet said nothing as Umbridge returned to her tea. What does that mean? What—? Is the Ministry going to commit me? Like a loon? Like…Azkaban?

Her aching hand curled into a fist around that nasty quill, her blood drying on the parchment. She should snap the quill into pieces, tear the parchment apart, and storm out of there. She should grab her wand and show that miserable bint exactly what she deserved—.

An echo of Slytherin’s voice imposed itself upon her yet again. “I do not have the time to waste on that insignificant woman, and I’ve no interest in playing Gaunt’s pointless games.”

Harriet grit her teeth.

“ You will be a model student, and we will proceed as planned.”

She put the nib back into place. Breath held, she continued to write.

 

xXx

 

The intermittent patter of blood hitting the stone floor underfoot echoed in the dead silence of Hogwarts’ midnight corridors.

Harriet’s breath escaped her in pained bursts as she walked, clutching her hand tight in its soiled sleeve. It didn’t matter how she held or tried to cover it, as the blood simply seeped through the fabric and oozed between her shaking fingers. Her head swam, black spots eating at the edges of her vision, but Harriet didn’t let that stop her. She kept walking.

The gargoyle guarding the Headmaster’s passage presented an obstacle. Harriet had to retrieve her Atlas, wincing and gasping as her hand moved, to figure out the password. Crimson fingerprints painted the glass by the time she returned it to her pocket and started up the spiral steps.

Darkness fully covered the Headmaster’s empty office when Harriet eased inside without invitation, allowing the door to shut behind her with a muffled thump. A few of the old portraits stirred when she passed in front of them, her lit wand throwing light into their painted faces. She asked one of the more modernly dressed Headmistresses to get Professor Dumbledore for her, and the woman did as bid—if with a bit of huffiness.

Harriet waited in the dark office, shivering, her gaze fixed on the world outside of the mullioned windows as the seconds passed into minutes, and all the warmth of her being seemed to slip between her fingers and hit the carpet.

They can’t commit me, she told herself again. They can’t. They can’t—but then again, they can’t just send teenagers to Azkaban, and yet—.

The door to the upper level opened, and the torches blazed of their own accord as the Headmaster entered his office wrapped in his dressing gown. “Harriet?” he asked, his voice befuddled and raspy with sleep. “Is something the matter? What are you doing here at this hour?”

Harriet didn’t hesitate to unwrap her bloodied limb and hold it in front of herself for Dumbledore’s inspection. The Headmaster focused on the injury as he came down from the mezzanine, the little crease between his brow growing deeper the closer he drew.

“Umbridge gave me detention,” she said. For the entire duration of her stint in that horrid, pink office, she hadn’t shed a single tear, but now the sob built in her chest, struggling to break free. Professor Dumbledore gently turned her hand in his own, and his eyes widened when he inspected the damage. “She said—she told me they’d take me away if I—if I could do a simple detention, and Professor Slytherin—he won’t—he won’t accept me doing anything—.”

Professor Dumbledore urged Harriet over to one of the cushioned winged chairs by the hearth, and she all but fell into it as he continued to inspect her hand. Nodding to himself, he retrieved his wand from his robe, holding it over the weeping incisions. “Episkey.”

Nothing happened.

“As expected,” Dumbledore muttered to himself, conjuring a cloth before the wand once more returned to its pocket. He folded the cloth and pressed it to the injury. “Hold that there. Wait here just a moment, Harriet—.”

Two swift strides brought him to the hearth, and after sprinkling a quick dash of Floo powder over the grate, he vanished in a whorl of green fire. With the Headmaster gone, Harriet concentrated on keeping pressure on her hand, swallowing the hiccups crawling out of her lungs in harsh, jagged bursts. She wouldn’t cry. She wouldn’t. She wasn’t a child. She wouldn’t—.

Green sparks sputtered before the flames writhed in the fireplace, admitting the Headmaster once more. Before the fire could die down, another person stepped from the hearth.

“How unsurprising,” Snape griped as he materialized, still dressed for the day in his indomitable black robes. He brought with him the smells of the dungeon, the thickness of an unknown potion bubbling in an iron cauldron. He had been brewing, she could tell. “Potter finds mischief when she’s meant to be asleep in her dorm—.”

His voice cut off with all the abruptness of a slamming door when he saw the stained cloth swaddling Harriet’s hand.

“I had detention with Umbridge,” she explained, looking down to her lap as she unwrapped the fabric Dumbledore had conjured. The words she’d scratched into her own skin over the long, dragging hours had formed grooves in the flesh, and they hadn’t congealed. Harriet wondered if some kind of wicked magic kept the blood flowing freely. “And she had this quill that—.”

A shadow fell across her, and Harriet sucked in a breath as Snape swept over her, robes pooling on the floor as he knelt. He took her hand between his own and squeezed too tightly, Harriet yelping. “Steady on!”

His touch softened, his black eyes searching her face before he reached for the bloodied cloth. “Give me that.”

Harriet gave it to him, and Snape used a clean corner to dab away the fresh blood. The words could be clearly seen. Snape’s fingertip shook as he traced the jagged letters.

“Why did you not stop?” he demanded. “When you realized what it was doing—?”

“Not like I had much of a choice,” Harriet snarked, wincing. His skin felt warm where hers was cold and clammy, his long fingers gently depressing her knuckles and bones to survey the extent of the damage. “If I didn’t finish to her satisfaction, she was going to tell the Ministry I’m a fragile nutter and they would take me away—.”

“She’ll tell them that anyway after you carved into yourself!” Snape snarled. “You little fool—!”

“I didn’t know what else to do!” Harriet cried. Her eyes burned, and she used the hand not held by Snape to wipe at them. “I didn’t know what to do!”

A lull fell upon the trio, the Potions Master ignoring the tears glittering in Harriet’s lashes as he cleaned her injury and the Headmaster stood over them. At length, Professor Dumbledore said, “I believe I will go have words with Madam Umbridge.”

Snape said nothing.

Professor Dumbledore left, leaving them both in the dimly lit office, Harriet letting out a tired, shuddering breath. Snape retrieved his wand and spelled cool water to pour over her wound, heedless of the sodden mess he left on the fancy carpet below them. The few spectating portraits whispered to one another, but the rest continued to slumber, rumbling snores lightening the heavy silence.

“D’you think talking to Umbridge will do anything?” Harriet asked, already knowing the answer in her heart. “She can’t—she won’t do this to other students, will she?”

Snape’s lips formed a thin line as he searched through his pockets, removing various little vials and bottles for him to inspect. “Worry about yourself for once, girl.”

“I don’t care about myself.”

His fingers spasmed where they held her, sliding up to grip Harriet by her wrist. Her eyes rose to meet his, finding Snape had leaned closer, barely leashed fury glinting in his gaze. “You must. It isn’t your job to protect the students.”

“It has to be someone’s!” She gave a half-hearted attempt to shake him off, but Snape held firm. He opened one of the vials and dripped a measure of ripe, sticky potion onto the back of her palm. It tingled when he rubbed it into the wounds. “If Umbridge is gonna tie Dumbledore’s hands, and Gaunt’s forcing everyone to look away, then why not me?”

Don’t antagonize the bitch, Potter.”

“I’ve already landed a month of detentions with her.” Harriet shut her eyes, dread settling over her shoulders, crawling around her neck like a noose. She would have to go back. She would have to do it again, have to sit there and feel the slow, agonizing drag of the quill’s invisible nib biting into her flesh—.

Snape conjured gauze and a long roll of bandages, proceeding to wrap the injury. “Detention,” he said as if repeating the word without any meaning attached to it. Then, firmer. “Detention. You have detention with me for the rest of the year.”

Harriet choked, sputtered. “What!”

“I’ll ensure Madam Umbridge thinks your punishment is suitably gruesome and demoralizing.” He tied off the bandage with a final, firm tug. “You won’t be subjected to her again. I swear it.”

Oh, Harriet realized, her stomach flopping as the unexpected thought occurred to her. Relief overcame the dread, and she could have cried again. Oh. If I’ve got detention with Snape, I can’t get it with Umbridge, and it’s not actually detention. That’s…smart. Thoughtful. I’ll…I’ll be safe with Snape. I always am.

Snape stood. “Let’s return you to the dungeons. I will speak to the Headmaster later.”

He held out his hand, his fingers spotted and stained with her blood. It had gotten under his nails, into the creases of his palm, but Snape didn’t seem to notice. Harriet placed her hand in his, and he helped her to her feet. He released, but only after she was steady on her own.

For a long moment, they looked at one another and said nothing. Then, Snape headed for the door, and Harriet followed. If she had reached out, she could have touched the fluttering black wool of his cloak—but she didn’t. She didn’t. Harriet kept her good hand folded over the bad one and clasped them to her chest, where she could feel her heart beating too fast for its own good.

Chapter 257: dwindling youth

Chapter Text

cclvii. dwindling youth

 

No matter how many times he washed his hands, Severus couldn’t get the blood off.

Visibly, the remnants had long since dwindled down the drain, leaving his hands as pale and clammy as a dead fish under the faucet’s icy deluge. The red had disappeared from his nails, from his palm’s lifelines, he’d even gotten it out of his cuff. That particular stain had left a vague discoloration against the white fabric in the distinct shape of a fingerprint.

But the blood was still there. It lingered.

Tears gathered and clumped black eyelashes, green eyes downcast, the whites tinged red—.

“I don’t care about myself.”

He could feel the impression of words under his fingertips, ragged valleys and hills, slashes bearing down into the bones like the careless carving of a child ’s hand using a penknife to leave their initials on a tree’s side—.

Severus twisted the handle until the faucet shut off, and the last of the water gurgled in the sink. He lifted his gaze to the mirror and studied the hard, exhausted face reflected there.

He might be in Azkaban by morning.

A shuddering breath escaped him, and Severus ground his teeth, counting the seconds he inhaled and held the air in his chest. His head swam. His hands shook and curled into wet, cold fists.

Slytherin ’s fingers slid against the girl’s neck, his mouth to her ear, the obscene hissing of an animal escaping his curled lips. Crimson eyes flicked to Severus, glittering with sadistic humor. Potter leaned away but couldn’t move, couldn’t escape—.

Severus shut his eyes, leaning forward until his forehead met the mirror’s cold surface.

Be logical, he sneered in his own mind. My emotions don’t control me. They’re nothing. Disconnected, floating. Nothing there—.

Behind his closed eyelids, he saw the girl’s tired face again. He could feel her hand shaking in his own, cold and as substantial as dust.

I don’t care about myself.

He’d looked into the face of a young woman only a shadow of her former self, a wizened replica of the girl who’d arrived at Hogwarts bursting with enthusiasm and snark. She’d grown gray, the color leached from her, warmth dwindling. Wet eyelashes haloing quiet eyes. Cold, weightless hands. Scars peeling back bloodless skin, encircling her like a shackle—.

Tom Riddle was killing her. The Ministry was. Dumbledore. Him.

He leaned off the mirror, pressing his hand there instead to lever himself farther away, leaving streaks of water on the glass. His Occlumency shields writhed.

A grating, high-pitched cough, the tap-tap of nails on a clipboard. “Progress for progress’ sake—.”

Slytherin ’s hand colliding with the girl’s burnt cheek, Sangfort’s grip on Severus’ robes, keeping him in place, keeping him from taking that final step forward—.

Albus Dumbledore looked at Severus from across his desk, something like sadness in his blue eyes—.

“Harriet will not always be fourteen, Severus.”

“Yes, thank you, Headmaster. I am aware of how time operates.”

“Then you understand we cannot simply discount her role in proceedings because of her youth—.”

A youth spent like coins on dead eyelids, paying passage for past guilt from the moment she came into this world—.

He traced untidy letters scrawled in the margins of a Muggle book. “No one is beyond redemption but for those too cowardly to seek it—.”

Familiar letters under his fingertips, etched into flesh one agonizing stroke at a time. “I must not tell lies—.”

Severus looked into his own face, black eyes narrowed, his chest rising and falling on hard, angry breaths—.

It’d be easy. Just two words, and he’d remove the Umbridge problem completely. Who cared if he ended up in Azkaban for it? Who cared what happened to Severus Snape—?

His fingers on the girl ’s nape. Lightning captured under her skin, white veins crawling up the right side of her neck. A scar from a murderer. On the left, the brand of a prisoner. Under Severus’ thumb, the mark of a servant. A slave.

“What if he hurts you? Because of—because of me?”

“I have made my decisions. You need only concern yourself with studying or protecting your own person.”

“But if—if he does something, I won’t be able to forgive myself. I can’t stop myself from worrying.”

Severus swallowed, turning away. There was blood on his hands. What would a little more matter? He muttered an incantation and blew out the lights.

 

xXx

 

He spent longer than he’d expected secluded in his rooms. He didn’t leave until his shields ceased to be porous and unstable, and his own memories stopped leaking through his mind like a pervasive and irritating fog. When he returned to the Headmaster’s office, Dumbledore was not alone. Severus stood back from the gathering and leaned his weight against the wall.

“—to wit, all detentions are to be reassigned to a member of Hogwarts’ staff, under your authority as Heads of House,” he said to the assembled witches and wizards. Dawn hadn’t yet touched the horizon; both Flitwick and Minerva still wore their evening attire, Slytherin and Sprout both dressed for the day, with the latter already spotted with dirt from tending to the gardens. “Madam Umbridge or any official sent by the Ministry is not to be left in charge of the students.”

How entirely predictable, Severus thought, silently furious. His attempts to thwart the Ministry in this matter did nothing at all.

Of the four Heads, Slytherin naturally had to be the one who complained. “I don’t object to Umbridge’s particular form of punishment,” he said, earning scandalized looks from the others. He rolled his eyes. “Oh, do stop with the false outrage. It’s no more barbaric than what Dippet allowed under his headship.”

Dumbledore glared at him—actually glared, his robes less garish than his usual choice of clothing, the trailing sleeve smudged with black soot. He’d been in and out of the Floo, apparently. It wasn’t often Dumbledore appeared physically annoyed or angry.

“No teacher of this institution has ever left a mark upon a student, no matter their antiquated stance on corporeal punishment.”

“Naive,” Slytherin drawled in reply. “But, have your illusions, Headmaster. It doesn’t change my stance on the matter.”

“Your personal beliefs have no bearing upon my order in this situation, Tom.”

The air could have rippled from the tension drawing it taut as piano strings. “If Miss Potter had simply done as she was told,” Slytherin spoke, his voice trailing into a cold, sinister hiss. “She would not have been punished. I instructed her not to antagonize Madam Umbridge, and she went out of her way to do so. Action, consequence. I heard what she said to the woman. My apprentice is lucky she was not expelled and will be happy to accept a few meaningless scratches in recompense.”

“Did you not hear the Headmaster?” Sprout asked him, a frown pulling her mouth down. “The poor girl is going to be scarred from this.”

“As I said, Professor—,” Slytherin reiterated. “Action…consequence.” To Dumbledore, he added, “Is this matter settled, Dumbledore? I have lesson plans to revise.”

“Your word, Tom. You will protect the students. Your word?”

He answered as he ever did, a laconic wave of the hand as if brushing off a bothersome gnat, departing the office with a practiced flick of his robes. It didn’t take long for the other Heads to follow, though Minerva delayed longest of all, both to harangue Dumbledore and to stare at Severus. She was the only one who’d noticed him there, and she opened her mouth as if to say something, then closed it, shaking her head. She left through the door.

Only Severus and Dumbledore remained.

“He’s capitulating too quickly to the Ministry’s demands,” Severus said, his voice deeper and raspier than usual, strained by fatigue and darker emotions. “Slytherin allowed her to disrespect him in the classroom, and now he’s rearranging lesson plans to suit? Worse, he hasn’t ordered me to do it.”

The Headmaster turned in his seat—not toward Severus, but rather toward the window, resting his only elbow on the chair’s scrolled arm, propping his chin on his open hand. The position caused his sleeve to slip and bare his wrist. Severus couldn’t help but think how very fragile it looked. How weak.

“Headmaster, are you listening?”

“Mmm,” Dumbledore answered. “Have I ever told you what Tom was like in school?”

Severus hesitated, having expected the conversation to go in a different direction. “I can’t say you have, no.”

“By all appearances, he was a good lad,” Dumbledore continued, his gaze distant as it looked toward the grounds outside and the soft, warbling rays of dawn finally threading the sky. It had been a long, difficult night for more than just Severus. “But the first time I met him, I walked into his bedroom at the orphanage and knew he’d been stealing from the other children. I admit I could have handled the situation better, but I attempted to intimidate him. Or perhaps impress, I’m not sure. Ah, I guess it doesn’t matter now.”

“…the orphanage?”

“Yes. He resided at an orphanage. The Muggles of this country might have abandoned the practice for the most part, but group homes still exist, and religious organizations don’t abide by the same rules as the secular community.”

An image of Elara Black flickered in Severus’ mind.

“Tom is part of the reason I petitioned so heavily for the Ministry to form the Department of Welfare and Muggle-born Placement. It was one of my first forays into politics after I fought Gellert and gained a measure of influence. You see, most everyone else at the school looked at Tom and thought him a brilliant, good-mannered boy. A moral man. They expected great things of him.”

“And you didn’t, Headmaster?”

“I couldn’t say for certain, could never put my finger on any evidence to the contrary, and yet…I knew. At the time, I blamed it upon the environment of his upbringing, and though Tom had all but disappeared in those intervening years, I knew Wizarding Britain had not seen the last of him. I had hoped to prevent a similar situation in the future by pushing for the creation of the Department.” Dumbledore sighed. “Were you aware Gaunt later used the existence of the Department and my own words encouraging its establishment to pass the Muggle-born Protection Act? As our dear Professor Slytherin said: action, consequence.”

“I…I confess I don’t know where you’re going with this conversation, Albus.”

The Headmaster straightened in his seat so he could see Severus again, the Potions Master still leaning against the wall, a large stretch of the office between them. “My apologies, Severus. I simply mean to draw parallels between how Tom was as a boy and how he is as a man. He fooled others into believing he was a compliant little boy, an upstanding student, and now, a pliable professor. You pointed out that he appears to be capitulating too easily, and I say Tom is not compliant, or upstanding, or pliable. What he is, is clever. He understands Madam Umbridge is making a lot of noise and a lot of enemies. He understands when he needn’t do anything at all for a problem to work itself out.”

Severus scoffed under his breath, and his fists shook inside his cloak’s long, covering sleeves. “He expects to sit on his hands and for you to deal with her, then?”

“Should I hazard a guess, I would say Tom expects Gaunt to remove Umbridge.” Severus’ expression must have appeared more confused than he liked because Albus continued explaining. “I believe Madam Umbridge was told to treat Harriet harshly in hopes of pushing her into lashing out in a manner that would see her arrested or expelled. Now, if Madam Umbridge takes it upon herself to extend that treatment to other students—students of influential parents and potential allies for Gaunt—it will reflect poorly upon the Ministry, and he will be forced to retract his own agent.”

“That will take too long.” Severus pushed himself from the wall. “It will take far too long, and your belief is nothing but supposition. That seething cow will continue to attack the girl in whatever manner she can, and Potter is already permanently scarred. How much torture do you expect her to accept? How long do you believe she’ll survive?”

Albus held up his hand, sighing. “Severus—.”

“She’s fucking dying, you fool!” The portraits gasped at Severus’ thundering reply, and he stomped toward the Headmaster’s desk until he had both his hands pressed to the surface, leaning closer to the man. “Every guess you make is another stone we’re laying on that girl’s chest, and it is crushing her. Do you know how long she must have sat there using the Blood Quill for it to reach bone? What punishment do you want her to undergo next? Perhaps another round with a werewolf? Another cup of poisoned tea? Another week in Azkaban, allowing that monster too—.”

Severus’ fingers fumbled at his own neck as if to scratch and claw at the skin, and he forced the limb away.

“You’re out of line, Severus,” Albus told him, silencing the outraged portraits. “I know you are worried. We all are. You are not the only one who cares about Harriet.”

Severus snarled. “I do not.”

The look Dumbledore gave him was nothing short of annoyed. “Don’t allow your outrage to overshadow Harriet’s strength.”

“And how long will that strength last? How long until you have another Tom Riddle on your hands?”

A flicker of fear went through Dumbledore’s face—as sudden as a glint of light across water, and entirely unexpected. What is he frightened of? Severus was missing something.

“You’re dismissed, Severus. Do you need to cancel your morning classes to get some rest?”

Severus didn’t answer him. He stormed out of the office, taking particular delight in how hard he slammed the door in his passage. His entire body fairly thrummed with fury, his magic high and pressing tight beneath his skin. A familiar itch trailed like nails down his spine, a voice crooning at his ear, reminding him of a needless recitation of the spells Severus knew could solve his problem in a heady blend of hungry, burning Dark magic—.

He headed to the stairwell, his mind centered on a certain witch who’d taken up residence on the fifth floor.

“Severus.”

It was a testament to how riled his own thoughts were that he didn’t notice Minerva waiting in the corridor for him, still wearing her tartan dressing gown. Her severe spectacles glinted in the shafts of sunlight starting to peer through the windows.

Severus kept walking.

“Don’t you dare ignore me, young man.”

He kept going, only to startle and nearly stumble when a tabby cat shot under his feet. “Damn you, Minerva—!”

The Animagus resumed her usual form in front of him, blocking Severus from continuing through the passage. “You’re going back to the dungeons and will stay there for the rest of the day.”

Her presumption lit his temper like a spark hitting dry kindling. “What?! Who are you to order me anywhere—?!

“Severus Snape! You’re going to leave that woman alone before you do something you regret!”

He stopped, realizing he’d been advancing on Minerva, and though the witch had held her ground, she’d also stiffened as if expecting to be shoved aside. That froze Severus in his tracks, and he forced himself to breathe. His hands shook.

“Why?” he asked—demanded, though he kept his volume modulated. “Regret and I are old friends, Minerva, and I would not regret taking that sows life one bit.”

“It would devastate Miss Potter.”

He stared at her. Minerva stared back, her expression serious and unfaltering.

“Don’t be ridiculous.”

“Do I appear to be in a joking mood? Miss Potter is no idiot. After what that, that—.” She mustered herself, struggling to find the right word and failing. “Beast of a woman forced her to endure, Harriet would know exactly why Umbridge was removed and why you were sent to prison.”

“Maybe it would be for the best.”

No. The poor girl needs our support, Severus—your support, not your misguided, selfish sense of vengeance. For Morgana’s sake, man. We’re speaking of murder here. You cannot do this!”

Severus listened to her, holding himself still. Hesitant, Minerva stepped closer until she could reach out, and she gently lifted his arms by his wrists. She studied his raw, stinging hands in the new day’s weak light.

“Potter would be fine without me,” he said, but it was weak, as Severus didn’t believe it himself. He could kill Umbridge, but Gaunt would send another in her stead. He could go to Azkaban, but Potter would still be here, still beholden to the monster that haunted Hogwarts’ halls. Severus could disappear, but there would be more cuts, more scars, more fear.

—selfish sense of vengeance.

It was selfish, wasn’t it? He wanted to kill her because it outraged him, because he couldn’t do anything about the blank look behind Potter’s darkening eyes. He could kill someone, but what comfort was that? What use was he?

He shut his eyes. Minerva gave his wrists a slight, tempering squeeze. In a quiet whisper, she asked, “Did it not tell you something was amiss?” Her grip upon his right hand shifted ever so slightly. His sleeve hid the thin, pearly scar wrapping about his hand and wrist, but Severus always remained aware of it.

He opened his eyes. “There’s not much known about the Vow, Minerva. It often behaves in unpredictable ways, and the girl herself unknowingly sets its conditions. It does not burn because she is hurt or is being threatened. It hurts when she perceives herself to be in imminent danger.”

“Ah. And I’m guessing this means it did not hurt last evening?”

Severus laughed, and were he a lesser man, he might have called it a sob. “No, you misunderstand. It didn’t start to hurt because it never stopped. The Vow never stops hurting now.”


A/N: I had several readers who were shocked Slytherin just sat back and let Umbridge do as she wants and boss him around. You just have to remember how he dealt with Karkaroff. Slytherin strikes when someone is at their lowest, and if he doesn ’t have to move to topple the dominoes, he won’t.

Severus: “Just a little bit of murder.”

Albus: “No, Severus.”

Severus: “Just a little murder.

Minerva: “No, Severus.”

Severus: “You guys are literally no fun.”

Chapter 258: on a sinking ship

Chapter Text

cclviii. on a sinking ship

 

Harriet threw herself backward to avoid the curse flying toward her face.

The second curse came faster, and she had just enough time to dodge, shoes scraping against the flagstones, her left hand flying out to catch her balance. Her fingers brushed the wall.

Shite!

Harriet tried to dodge the final curse, but she was already at the wall, and all she could do was throw herself against it and duck. She could feel the wall’s rough grading scratch her skin through her uniform as she slid against its surface, and the spell’s heat grazed her face. She turned away, eyes shut—and the curse hit the wall next to her with a sizzling sound.

“I instructed you to block, Miss Potter. Not to dodge.”

Professor Slytherin’s appearance wavered in the Underneath’s oily torchlight. It slipped over his skin like paint—orange, yellow, red, veined in green where it reflected off the frigid standing water. Strange magic veiled the so-called Chamber of Secrets, blurring where Slytherin’s magic had chipped the rock or scorched the floor, the damage peeling and flaking away into nothingness, revealing unmarked stone.

It’d been a surprise for Harriet when Slytherin informed her their sessions would be taking place in the Chamber—or the Underneath, as she called it. She’d pretended to be suitably awed and impressed when he’d shown her the entrance in the girl’s loo—and she’d pointedly not thought about the Moon Mirror in Salazar Slytherin’s office that provided a much simpler ingress, one her master discounted because of his own arrogance. It was funny, thinking about Slytherin having to sneak into his ancestor’s chamber through a loo.

Unfortunately, her situation didn’t stay funny. Harriet’s acting must have been less than stellar, as Slytherin was visibly annoyed with her, and after a terrible night of sleep with her hand aching, Harriet could barely string two sentences together without stumbling over her own thoughts. That frustration leaked into her tone now as she snapped—.

“I don’t know how!”

Slytherin bore his teeth. “Then figure it out!”

He makes it sound simple, Harriet grumped as she struggled upright, using the wall for leverage. She brushed off her skirt, for what little good it did her. Water filled her shoes, and her socks had been irrevocably scorched by spellfire. They must have been at this for thirty minutes by now. But I can’t summon knowledge I don’t have out of my arse!

Slytherin had limited his magic to one spell this afternoon, with the instruction for Harriet to block it with magic. The problem was, that spell consisted of a singular unspoken curse Harriet knew couldn’t be blocked because of what Snape had taught her years ago.

Purple, she seethed in her own thoughts. Purple is at the bloody top of Birch’s ruddy Law! Anything green and above gets progressively harder to block, especially if you don’t know the other nonsense like the viscosity or density. Ah—.

Harriet forced herself to the side, straining her back as she bent back to avoid the crackling spell aimed at her face. Her arm sunk shoulder-deep into one of the reflection pools, and she nearly followed it.

Slytherin sighed as he watched her scramble upright again. “Our sessions are shorter than I’d prefer, Potter, and you’re wasting my time.

“I don’t know a Shield Charm strong enough,” Harriet retorted, keeping her temper in check. “It’s in nothing I’ve been taught before.”

“You do,” Slytherin asserted. “You have the tools for this assignment. Use them.” He resumed his casting position, lazily pointing his wand at her. “Again.”

Harriet spread her feet and bent her knees, bracing herself to dodge once more. No matter what Slytherin said, until she figured out his ridiculous riddle, she didn’t know how to block the spell, and she didn’t much fancy spending the evening in the hospital wing. Not after last night with Umbridge.

The spell came again—slower, a warm-up—and Harriet stepped to the side, away from the reflection pool.

A shield, a shield, I need—.

Again, the curse sailed toward her, glowing a blazing, inky violet, and Harriet jerked back, moving faster. She jabbed her wand downward.

Bombarda!”

The small blast cracked the flagstones, scattering negligible shrapnel hunks. Slytherin arched a brow but said nothing, simply spinning his wand around for another go. Harriet nearly flubbed her next incantation in her rush, biting her own tongue as she felt the air heat with Slytherin’s curse. It came blasting toward her—.

Aes Clupeus!

A bronze shield formed, and she snatched it off the ground, ducking behind its rim.

Harriet had never used this particular incarnation of the spell. She always used it to conjure a sword in her practices with Snape—and, in fact, he’d told her not to bother using a physical shield in fights, that they hampered more than they helped. Harriet didn’t care at the moment, clinging to the barrier by its ugly, roughly hewn handles. The curse hit the shield, the vibration rippling through her hands, and Harriet exhaled, expecting that to be it—.

Violet light glowed through her eyelids, and Harriet yelped as the curse sunk into the shield’s metal and poured over her arm, seeping across her skin like a blanket of furious hornets. Harriet threw the shield from herself and swatted at her stinging limb.

“Clever, but crude, Miss Potter,” Slytherin told her, watching as Harriet wriggled on the ground, trying to put out a fire that wasn’t there. He yawned. “Did you think it would be that simple? No, not quite. Get up and prepare yourself for another bout.”

“My arm—.”

“It will cease burning in a moment. Do get up, girl.”

True to his word, a few seconds passed, and the curse quit hurting, though it left an uncomfortable, prickly tightness like a bad sunburn over her forearm. Her writing hand throbbed in time with her heartbeat, and Harriet tried shaking it out, but the healing cuts on the back of it stung mercilessly under the bandages.

Sodding Umbridge.

What was she meant to do? The curse couldn’t be blocked by magic; Harriet had never heard of a shield strong enough to block a bloody violet spell with such ridiculous density. If it could eat right through bronze, there was a good chance it’d eat through any substance Harriet could Transfigure, and even if she managed to find something thick enough to block the spell, it’d be far too heavy for her to lift.

What to do?

She stood facing Slytherin again, her mind racing, ready to dodge. A conversation with Snape suddenly filtered through her ears—.

I don ’t understand how anyone could think about all this during a duel.”

The key is memorization, Potter—and, should that fail you, knowledge of stance and color theory.

Color theory? Then, what in the blazes is opposite purple? Orange? Yellow?

A lot of red and orange shields guarded against water spells, which typically had a very high VERD. It was best to dodge them rather than fussing about with a conjured shield, which—in an ideal situation—would be what Harriet would do when encountering a violet curse flying at her sodding head. However, she’d learned duelists could get a leg up if they understood the spell’s ENT—or the Elemental Negation Transformation. That was a fancy way of saying they knew the major element trying to splat in their face.

The ENT didn’t always work. Magic was, by its very nature, twisty and confounding, and though there were only four official elements—water, fire, earth, air—each element broke into a complicated web of branching elements—ice, lightning, wood, etcetera. Some spells didn’t conform to the elemental wheel at all, such as curses that attacked the mind or enervated a target. Suffice it to say, though Harriet could guess Slytherin’s spell was somehow water-based from how it’d felt flowing against her skin, that didn’t necessarily mean it was.

Can ’t use something solid, and a shield doesn’t have the strength to negate it. But what if—.

The curse launched toward her, and Harriet jerked aside, her eyes narrowed in concentration, her arm aching.

Bugger it.

As if in slow motion, she saw Slytherin’s arm moving—overhand, because most curses were overhand, the wand’s motion starting from the crown of his head, flicking to trace an invisible rune. In answer, Harriet’s hand moved as if on its own, starting from the base of her spine, sketching a rune opposite of her master’s.

The violet curse burst from his wand the moment Harriet snarled, “Bombarda Terracus!

The two spells met midair—and Harriet’s hex, purposefully incanted to take on a thicker element with a denser, more yellow light than the standard version—cut through Slytherin’s, dispersing it into nothing. It fired toward him, and he blocked it with a negligible flick of his wand.

“Excellent,” he said, a pleased smile tipping the corner of his mouth. “Though, for future reference, an opponent won’t dally for an hour while you try to counter his spellcraft.”

Harriet took a deep breath and replied, “Yes, Master.” Though what she wished to do was hex him again. Both Dumbledore and Snape had warned her never to have a go at Slytherin with her full intent. She had to mask her ability, keep him ignorant of her competency.

Come here, Apprentice.”

He used Parseltongue to address her, never a good sign in Harriet’s opinion. Nevertheless, she scuffed her shoes and approached Slytherin, ignoring how his red eyes followed her every movement until she stopped in front of him, schooling her expression into something passably polite.

Your arm.

She presented it—stopping herself from flinching when he tugged her sleeve back to reveal the tender red skin. He tutted like a concerned parent, though Harriet wasn’t fooled. His smile remained steadfast as he surveyed the injury, becoming bolder when he noticed one spot had blistered.

A good lesson to learn, my Apprentice. If you are not certain you can block a spell, it is better to dodge.

You told me to block it.

And? Do you not know your limits better than I? Are you so foolish as to do everything you are told, even when you know it impossible? What is that Muggle expression? Would you jump off a bridge because I said to do so?

Harriet didn’t point out he’d gotten the expression wrong. She suspected he’d done so on purpose. He brought up his wand and dragged the tip down her forearm, the stinging worsening as the color lessened, disappearing when her arm looked normal once more.

I would do whatever you told me, Master.”

Slytherin paused and looked at her, frowning. Harriet wondered if he’d sensed the sarcasm under those words—but then he laughed, releasing her so she could step back and adjust her sleeve.

Very well. Come, Apprentice. Our session is at an end; allow me to escort you back to the common room.

Harriet didn’t have much choice in the matter, but she guessed a courteous Slytherin was better than one trying to hex her into paste. She fell into step behind him, careful not to tug on his robes as he walked ahead of her, his posture stiff and his gait nothing short of arrogant. Harriet felt a bit like a large bug scuttling in his shadow.

Or like Renfield. Bloody hell. If I get a strong craving for flies, I ’ll be in trouble.

Harriet guffawed—and quickly stifled the noise when Slytherin glanced over his shoulder.

They returned to the castle proper, stepping out of the loo without worrying about who might see them lingering about. Naturally, Myrtle stayed away, the ghosts always quick to flee when they felt Harriet approaching. Slytherin remarked her absence was a nice change from the norm, and Harriet didn’t comment.

They crossed from the main stairs into the entrance hall, passing the doors to the Great Hall. Madam Umbridge stood there with her clipboard in her hands, and her beady eyes followed the pair of Slytherins as they walked. Harriet refused to meet the woman’s gaze—though she noticed Slytherin did so without issue, dismissing her with a bored flick of his eerie stare. Harriet feared she’d stop them, but she didn’t, and they kept on into the castle’s depths.

You have detention with Ssseverus tonight, do you not?

Yes. Every night.

“I expect your marks to reflect the increased tutelage. I’m being generous in allowing my servant the free time to mind you.

Yes, sir.” Harriet paused. “Master Slytherin, can I ask a question?

Of course.

They entered the dungeons, taking the steps down one at a time, the torches blazing on the walls. “Are you not worried about Madam Umbridge? You don’t think she’s going to be bothersome?

I worry about nothing, Potter.” He scoffed, and Harriet could tell he’d rolled his eyes, though she didn’t see it. “Especially not over insignificant rats like Dolores Umbridge. Great sorcerers need not swat at every pest that nips at their heels. They get what they deserve eventually.” He glanced over his shoulder again, face taking on a contemplative expression. “Though, since you’re interested, I could show you how best to deal with her.

“Oh, er—.”

Harriet was spared answering by their arrival at the common room entrance. She expected Slytherin to leave her there, but to her chagrin, he preceded her inside, leaving Harriet with no choice but to follow. Her face blazed scarlet as everyone present turned to look at them.

Slytherin folded his hands behind his back as he stood surveying the large room. “As you were,” he instructed the students, and they begrudgingly returned to their homework or conversations. Harriet spotted her friends in the very back, seated at their favored table by the window, and she tried to dart in that direction, but Slytherin extended a casual hand to grip her by the shoulder, keeping her in place.

Do not be so quick to walk away. It does them all well to be reminded of their place,” he said to her after a minute of them standing there doing nothing.

Their place, Master?

Beneath you, Apprentice. And mostly definitely beneath me.” He released her. Harriet didn’t heave a sigh of relief, but it was a near thing. “I expect you will remember what I’ve told you about keeping your nose clean. I will be very displeased should you have another encounter with Madam Umbridge.

Yes, Master.

Before she could scuttle away like an undignified hermit crab making a break for it, one of the first-years approached. The hair on Harriet’s nape stood on end as the short girl came closer.

They don’t know better yet, she told herself, wincing at Slytherin’s sudden interest. They don’t know not to come to him with questions—.

“Miss Potter?”

Eden Prince blinked dark, nervous eyes up at Harriet, and Harriet blinked back.

“Miss Potter, can I ask something?”

Wait. Is she talking to me?

“Er—yeah? What is it?”

“Could you help me with my Charms assignment? Professor Flitwick said we could finish the extra credit, but I’m having trouble understanding it.”

“Oh, um. Sure? In a few minutes.”

“Thank you!”

The girl returned in the direction she’d come from, and Slytherin tilted his head, curious, having expected her to ask him a question, not his apprentice. His eyes swiveled to Harriet. “Explain.

Harriet scratched her warm cheek, not meeting his inquisitive look. “The, uh—the younger students sometimes ask for tutoring. I help sometimes. A bit.

Slytherin tilted his head again, and Harriet worried he’d tell her to stop—and she wondered why that bothered her so much, wondered when giving others little tips and pointers had started to mean anything to her. She expected Slytherin to take it away from her now, because he always seemed intent to take away any form of happiness—.

Good,” he said instead. “Very good. I am pleased.

…Sir?

She flinched when Slytherin patted her head, thumb brushing her fringe. “I said I am pleased. Go on, then. I can see you’re desperate to escape.

Confused, Harriet stuttered her thanks and ducked from under his gentle hand, uncomfortable with his easy touch in front of her classmates. She darted around the couches and winged chairs until she reached Hermione and Elara, the former going over their Transfiguration assignment with Malfoy, the latter listening with a bemused air as Gabriel Flourish spoke with her. The red-headed boy blushed to his roots when Harriet slipped by him to sink into her favorite chair, and he stuttered an excuse to Elara before running off.

“What’s his deal?” she mumbled.

“Oh, you know teenage boys,” Elara answered, her lips twitching as she reached for the reading she must have set aside when Flourish approached her.

“Can’t say I do,” Harriet sighed in reply. She passed her hand over her tired eyes, pinching at the bridge of her nose—which proved to be a mistake. It brought the thick bandages to Hermione’s attention.

“Are you still hurt?” she demanded. “I thought you said you were going to see Madam Pomfrey after Charms?”

“Didn’t have time.”

Elara stared at the hand as well, and Harriet slipped it under the table, clearing her throat.

“What exactly happened again?” Elara asked, her suspicions clear.

Sweat warmed the skin beneath her collar, and Harriet shifted, trying to shake the feeling. She hadn’t told them about Umbridge. She knew Elara would blame herself, and Hermione would wage a war against the woman, putting herself in danger. Harriet loved them too much to let them take the weight of this on, and so she kept the truth of her injuries to herself, even if she hated lying to them.

“Just had a little accident while training,” she fibbed, forcing a smile. It felt strange, like her face didn’t quite remember how to make the expression. “Don’t worry about it. It’s all right.”

“If you’re sure….”

“I am. I’m—.” She swallowed, throat dry. Across the room, Slytherin watched them. “I’m fine.”

 

xXx

 

A heavy silence cradled the dormitory, encompassing its sleeping inhabitants like a spell-warmed blanket with Charms threaded into its fabric. Everyone had gone off to Morpheus—all except for Harriet, who remained awake in the stuffy enclosure of her curtained bed, a dim magelight hovering by her ear.

She spread a towel across her lap. Her right hand rested on her knee, the bandages unraveled and strewn across the counterpane like shed snake skin.

Harriet considered the letters splayed on her flesh, the cramped kerning, the harsh slash she put across her t’s. She thought of Umbridge then, remembered how she’d gotten up from her desk every thirty minutes to ensure Harriet’s pace hadn’t slowed. She remembered how the woman had lingered at the edge of her awareness, fairly quivering with excitement as the invisible strokes lashed at Harriet’s flesh, and the blood had pattered on the parchment, sticky between her shaking fingers.

He’s going to enjoy this,” Umbridge had said.

Harriet hadn’t told Dumbledore and Snape about that. He’s going to enjoy this. She knew whom Umbridge meant. She all too clearly recalled how Gaunt had gripped her by the hair in Azkaban and peered into her mind, into her memories, and though he hadn’t seemed to have much success, she imagined he’d have an easier time of it with a willing target.

He ’s going to enjoy this.

Harriet hadn’t reacted when Umbridge said those words. When the witch had reached out to run her stubby fingertips against the livid, weeping incisions, Harriet had stared at the ruined parchment, her face blank, the taste of copper on her bitten tongue. She could barely see the staggered lines through blood seeping into the page.

I must not tell lies.

But she kept lying. To Hermione and Elara, Snape and Dumbledore, Mr. and Mrs. Flamel, Sirius and Remus. She kept telling them she was fine when she wasn’t fine at all. Not in the slightest.

In her mind’s eye, Umbridge’s wide mouth spread in a mocking grin. It felt as if a shadow stood behind her—a tall, wide shadow, peering with the red eyes of a maniac waiting to relive and eat Harriet’s agony one breathless moment at a time.

There was nothing she could do about that. He had what he wanted, and Harriet would have to live with it—but she wouldn’t live with the constant reminder emblazoned on her body, ripe for everyone to see and question and gawk at.

She placed her wand’s tip just below her knuckles, lining it up.

“Pests get what they deserve,” she mumbled, picturing Gaunt’s face, her grip shaking. Then, Harriet exhaled, the air hissing through her teeth. “Sectumsempra!

Chapter 259: a little birdie

Chapter Text

cclix. a little birdie

 

The incessant prodding of a snake’s cold nose woke Hermione from her fitful sleep.

She had never been fond of snakes, but she found it particularly jarring to wake and find a large, hissing serpent looming over her, unsure if it was one of Harriet’s or an errant, wild beast about to bite her.

She blinked and finally recognized the silhouette of Livius’ horned head.

“Livius,” she croaked, clearing her throat. It was quiet in the dormitory aside from her own voice and the snores of the other witches. “I don’t know if you can understand me, but I’d appreciate it if you would find another bed to nest in.”

The Horned Serpent hissed again, insistently bumping his nose against her shoulder before turning his head. Befuddled and still more than a tad sleepy, Hermione squinted in the dark, following his attention back toward Harriet’s covered bed. He turned to nudge Hermione again.

A cold spike of adrenaline hit, and she sat up, heart pounding, head almost dizzy from the speed she used to lurch out of bed.

“Harriet,” she said, breathless. The cold floor stung her feet as she stumbled from her blankets, and the hangings screeched when she jerked them aside. “Harriet, are you—?”

The younger witch snored into her sheets, twisted in such a way she couldn’t possibly be comfortable, but somehow managed to snooze on. She had her face pressed to the pillow, body partly on its side, and her right arm crossed against her middle so the hand itself flopped against her shoulder. In the soft, dim glow of the closest silver lantern, Hermione could see a dark spot spreading through the bandage wrapped about the hand’s knuckles.

“Oh, Harriet…” she murmured, taking the hand in her own to tip it closer to the light. Harriet’s skin felt sticky and too warm, and she grumbled when Hermione touched her. Livius returned, using his size to slither back onto the bed and coil on Harriet’s covered feet. He peered at Hermione.

“Yes, yes,” she told the creature, adjusting the hangings so she could flare one of the candles on Harriet’s nightstand without waking anyone else. Harriet groaned and buried her face further into the blankets, grunting what sounded like “Go away.

“I don’t much fancy Livius giving me a nip if I go away, so I think I’ll decline, thank you,” Hermione replied, distracted as she unwrapped Harriet’s bandages. She kept her movements careful and slow as she peeled back the final layer of gauze, revealing the injury to the air.

“Did you really go see Madam Pomfrey for this?” Hermione asked, dubious, as she inspected the large slash marring the back of Harriet’s hand. It was partially healed, or at the very least not bleeding, but the skin appeared quite red and irritated. Hermione prodded at the edges of the cut, then brought it to her nose, sniffing. She cringed at the strange, sudden sweetness. “Is this Dark magic?”

Harriet mumbled incoherent nonsense.

The hangings on the other side of the bed flew to the side, revealing a rumpled and irritated Elara. “You’re not nearly as quiet as you think you are,” she snapped, her anger losing its potency when she yawned.

“Sorry,” Hermione told her, though she had her mind set on the trunk at the foot of the bed. She opened the top compartment and poked through Harriet’s monogrammed valise. “It should be in here. I helped pack her emergency kit earlier in the summer….”

As she searched, Elara sat on the bed. She rubbed her face for a moment, trying to wake up, and took Harriet’s injured hand. She inspected it much as Hermione had. “Did she get this from Slytherin?”

“She must have. Though, I would imagine leaving such a lasting mark should go against their contract—ah, here it is.”

Hermione found the bottled Dittany and the little jar of pungent Equill-Emollient, gathering those and another roll of gauze. She dropped the items on the comforter as Elara reclined next to Harriet, the latter protesting the mattress’ dipping motion, wriggling under her blankets.

What caused this? Hermione pondered, using the dropper to apply Dittany along the wound’s edges. Seriously, Slytherin should have tended to this, or sent her to Snape. She’s definitely bluffing about seeing Madam Pomfrey. She would have kept Harriet in the ward overnight.

Harriet snorted, blinking, glaring at her hand as it stung under the Dittany. “Wuzzit?”

“Oh, go back to sleep. For Merlin’s sake….”

Harriet did just that, and Hermione finished fussing over her injury, smearing on a healthy dollop of Equill-Emollient. It stunk to high heaven and caused Hermione’s eyes to tear up. Once done, she capped both the bottle and the jar, then wrapped the gauze into place. She returned the Dittany and cream to Harriet’s trunk.

“Did you finish your Charms essay?” Elara asked. Yawning, Hermione tucked into the blankets next to Harriet and slumped her head onto the pillow. She rubbed at her eyes, feeling the grit of sleep clinging to her lashes, her fingers smelling of Pleomele and Lyre-flower.

“Of course,” she replied. “Did you believe I wouldn’t?”

“You’ve been quite busy lately. I wondered if you had time.”

Hermione had been busy, both reading and writing correspondences, furtively going through her notes on pure-blood families and those who sat on the Wizengamot. She’d made…inroads, though they were less roads and more like paths, winding little foot trails bullying their way through the undergrowth. They weren’t pretty, they weren’t smooth, but they were steps in the right direction.

Harriet huffed between them and wriggled again, turning so she could squint and scrutinize her hand again.

“You didn’t have to do that,” she muttered.

“I beg to differ. Your familiar was insistent and that wound looks terrible. What did you do? Why didn’t you see Madam Pomfrey?”

“Mmph,” was the only answer Hermione received.

They stayed quiet for several minutes, almost long enough for Hermione to drop off to sleep again. She stirred herself, knowing they all needed to get up and get ready for the day soon.

Harriet touched her bandages with her uninjured hand, her thumb idly picking at a stray corner of gauze. “D’you know what Professor Slytherin said to me yesterday?”

“No. What did he say?”

“That one girl, Eden Prince? She came up to me when Slytherin was standing there like a dunce, and she asked for help with some extra credit.”

“Yes, we know that. We saw you go help her.”

“Yeah, but you didn’t hear what Slytherin said.” Harriet chewed her lip, her brow furrowed. “I expected he’d get in a snit about it, right? But instead, he said he’s pleased. Slytherin! Pleased! Without anyone having to die! What are the chances of that?”

Elara snorted, covering her nose with her hand.

Hermione smiled, finding it humorous—but it was curious. Slytherin demanded attention, especially from those he had an interest in, and didn’t suffer distraction well. Hermione had noticed this term, in particular, he didn’t like when Harriet appeared inattentive.

He needs an audience, Hermione thought, rolling her eyes to herself. He wants the respect, even if it’s a begrudging, unwilling kind. Perhaps especially so.

How strange of Slytherin to react positively when a first year deferred to his apprentice rather than to him. She’d seen that exact scenario play out between Slytherin and Snape when a new student mistook the latter for their Head of House, and Snape suffered for it. Why hadn’t Harriet?

“That’s what he wants of you, though, so it’s not entirely surprising,” Elara said.

“How d’you mean?”

“He wants Harriet to be the Defense professor when she graduates. He sees himself as Headmaster soon.”

That was a troubling thought, but not something Hermione had the ability to undertake. Though Headmaster Dumbledore was well over a hundred years old, he could be expected to live many more years. Many more decades. In fact, his predecessor, Headmaster Dippet, had lived to be well over three hundred with no particular aid or elixir-providing stone, and Hermione had to trust Professor Dumbledore could keep himself in good health. She couldn’t worry about the safety of a wizard infinitely more capable than herself.

“He’ll want me to teach Dark magic,” Harriet corrected Elara. “Fat lot of good it’ll do him.”

“But that’s such a good idea,” Hermione blurted out before she had a moment to think things through.

“What? Teaching Dark magic? You keep saying I need Madam Pomfrey, but you’re the one talking gibberish.”

“Honestly,” Hermione retorted, crossing her arms. “What I meant was it’s quite clever to start teaching those younger than us—and not what Professor Slytherin has in mind, of course. Rather, it’d be a good idea to teach them defense, to teach them in a manner more structured than you do now.”

“Like—like a class, or something?”

“Exactly like a class.”

Harriet snored in disbelief. “Now I know you’ve gone barmy.”

Despite her protests, Hermione still thought the idea worth considering. Umbridge was apparently determined to ruin their Defense education just to paint Slytherin in a negative light. Were that all, Hermione wouldn’t care much—but the O.W.L and N.E.W.T students would needlessly suffer permanent detriment. Beyond that, the Ministry’s petty feud could have lasting consequences beyond a few iffy grades if—when—the war escalated and people couldn’t protect themselves.

The hangings pulled open again as Parkinson stepped through, her shoulders drawn taut in indignation.

“Are you incapable of being quiet at half four in the bloody morning?” she demanded. “I should report you to a prefect.”

“I am a prefect,” Hermione pointed out, much to Pansy’s annoyance. “Your other choice would be telling Lestrange or Vuharith.”

Pansy grimaced. “The nutter or the slag. No thanks.” She sat on the foot of the bed with a huff, all too close to Livius, who’d gone invisible to avoid notice.

Her reply surprised Hermione, though perhaps it shouldn’t have. Lestrange’s popularity in the House had taken a nosedive after he’d been defeated and outfoxed by a witch almost three years his junior. Had he been gallant about the whole thing, no one would have batted an eye, but being an incessant braggart without the means to back it up had done him no favors.

As for Vuharith, well. Hermione cringed. She didn’t agree with how others had decided to view her and found it incredibly misogynistic, but the witch’s behavior had begun to color her reputation. She spent too much time hanging off the arms of Lestrange or his cronies, and Hermione knew from the other seventh-years her marks were slipping.

Pansy responded as if she could hear her thoughts. “Vuharith’s parents should have gotten her married,” she said. “Married and out of Hogwarts.”

Unbidden, her gaze turned to the bed on the far side of the room, the bed that should have contained Katherine Runcorn but remained empty as it had since the start of term. Katherine had been married over the summer. Her parents were employed in the Ministry, and Hermione guessed the situation there had grown fraught with dangers from Gaunt’s tantrums, to the point where the Runcorns felt it necessary to marry their daughter off so she’d be far from potential conflicts. The Runcorns had not been the only family to think so.

“Barbaric,” Hermione said aloud.

“Stupid,” Harriet chimed in.

“Foolish,” Elara finished.

Pansy glared at them and stood, putting her nose in the air. “I swear, the three of you idiots share the same brain cell!”

The trio of witches looked at her, then at one another. Suddenly, Elara reached over Harriet to pat Hermione on the head—one solid thump. Hermione blinked at her, and Elara said—.

“It’s my turn to use the brain cell.”

Harriet cackled, and Hermione couldn’t help her own laughter at the absurdity. Pansy rolled her eyes and stomped away.

Soon enough, Tracey, Millicent, and Daphne all stirred and woke, meaning Hermione and the others could get out of bed and make noise. Elara went to shower, and Harriet sprawled beneath her blankets again. Meanwhile, Hermione wrapped her dressing gown around herself and went to her carrel, eying the new stack of letters that had appeared overnight.

More news from Lucius. She shuffled to the uglier, rumpled parchments underneath the rest. And from Winky.

Winky had been a tremendous help so far in Hermione’s quest to find blackmail material. House-elves often passed unseen in Wizarding homes, even by other house-elves, who were so indoctrinated to ignore what they considered their masters’ private business, they didn’t question if a new elf came to their manors on the pretext of being on loan from another family for the day. Hermione never asked Winky to risk her safety, and the elf brought back interesting tidbits of information.

Today, however, Hermione was to be disappointed. “No enter,” Winky had written. “House is no place for elves. Master keeps them out.

Hermione tossed the missive to the side, sighing. Of course, it wouldn’t be simple. The particular place and family Hermione had wished for Winky to investigate didn’t command many votes in the Wizengamot, but she’d found that numerous other small Houses liked to follow their lead and respected the Lord’s advice. It was an old House, not original to England, but naturalized over a century ago—and paranoid of house-elves.

She let out another annoyed grunt and slumped back in her chair, using the hard back to stretch her spine. According to Mr. Malfoy, she really needed this family to cooperate, and not just for those they personally swayed. He explained them as being a sort of turnkey, a stone she had to step on if she wanted to reach the next, no matter how they weren’t connected.

Ugh, I probably shouldn’t be using stepping on someone in an analogy, Hermione told herself. Crooks sauntered over on his bandy legs, and she let him jump into her lap. She rubbed her fingers under his chin, lost in thought.

Elara returned from the bathroom, her dried hair falling loose past her shoulders, her laundry gathered in her hands. She deposited that in her hamper for the elves to take care of, then proceeded to wake Harriet. The shorter witch pretended to be deep asleep until Elara lost patience, changed into her Animagus form, and pounced. Harriet yelped.

Hermione smiled at the scene.

 

xXx

 

Forty-five minutes later, the students of Hogwarts sat in the Great Hall, enjoying their morning meal. Elara read the Prophet over a cup of tea, and Harriet had gone off across the room to the Gryffindor table to hear about a new invention made by the Weasley twins. Meanwhile, Hermione stirred fruit into her porridge, mulling over her latest problem.

It’s the only place Winky hasn’t been able to enter. She turned the spoon in her hand, studying the school’s crest pressed into the silver. That doesn’t bode well. They’re cleverer than the average wizard. Hermione scrutinized one of the candles, scowling at it. If only….

Harriet came scuttling down the aisle from the other end of the table, slipping onto the bench between Hermione and Emile Elderberry. She barely gave them the chance to move.

“What are you up to?” Elara asked from across the table, her eyes narrowed in suspicion.

“Nothin’,” she replied, convincing no one of her innocence.

“Why does nothing have you looking so nervous?”

“I dunno what you mean.” She took Elara’s tea, and before the other witch could say a word, doctored it to her preference. “Needs more sugar.”

“You’re a menace,” Elara complained, already reaching for a new cup.

“Well, how did things go with the twins?” Hermione asked. “What did they show you? They’re developing something new, aren’t they?”

“They got these new snackbox things,” Harriet explained even as she continued to peek down the table, her feet tapping an anxious rhythm on the floor. “They’re supposed to make you sick.”

Sick? Whatever for?”

“So you can, y’know, skip class.”

Hermione gaped at her. “That’s horrendous!”

“Might come in bloody handy if Umbridge is going to be hovering around like a giant—anyway. So they made all these different treats, and they do different things. Right now, they’ve got a beta group that runs through your system right quick, though they’re looking into something that’ll last until you take the antidote. Different boxes for different scenarios, yeah?”

“Okay….”

“Well, they wanted to test their beta batch on first-years—.”

Hermione’s hair puffed with righteous indignation. “They can’t do that! They’re too young—!”

She fell silent when Harriet hushed her, glancing around again. “Course I told them that. I also told them I had a ah, better sample group available.”

“What do you—?”

As if on cue, Accipto Lestrange—seated roughly ten places away—choked, and then projectile-vomited over his breakfast. Those seated nearest him shrieked and struggled to get away before he could do another bout.

Elara slapped a gloved hand over her nose and mouth. “For God’s sake, Harriet.”

“That’s disgusting,” Hermione commented, idly watching as Lestrange tried to stand and splattered sick over Graham Montague. Vuharith, who’d backed away into the wall, suddenly wailed when her face broke out in aggressive boils. Cassius Warrington fainted into his eggs, plopping face-first on the plate. “How long did you say it’d last?”

“Eh, a minute or so?”

Pity, Hermione thought, the rest of the Great Hall echoing with laughter and squeamish squeals. Lestrange vomited a final time, this time on the floor, as Slytherin and Snape came down from the High Table to investigate. “How did you manage that?”

“What?”

Hermione nodded toward the sick-speckled place settings, indicating the spiked food.

“Oh. Bird,” Harriet replied, mindful of listening ears. She pointed out the familiars that had swept down to deliver the post and lingered, munching on toast or offered bits of bacon. Though the majority were owls, a few other birds mingled in the bunch, including ravens and crows. No one would notice if an extra one slipped through.

If only….

Hermione tipped her head to the side, a sudden idea occurring to her. “Huh. That might be just what we need.”

Slytherin swore aloud when Lestrange managed one final expulsion of puke—right on the Defense Professor’s shoes.

“Harriet,” Hermione asked, interrupting her laughter. Her glasses flashed with mirth.

“Yeah?”

“I have a favor to ask you….”


A/N: In b4 someone cries “you can only heal sectumsempra with vulnera sanentur!!1!11!! ” I’m interpreting the vulnera spell as being the best and most immediate way to close wounds caused by Snape ’s curse, but it’s not the only way. Also to note, it’s been established in CDT that the amount of force, momentum, and power you put behind a spell impacts its performance. So Harriet whispering the curse, sitting in bed, isn’t going to have the kind of inertia needed to lop off an arm or cleave through bones.

Hermione: “This is my villain arc.”

Chapter 260: brierstone

Chapter Text

cclx. brierstone

 

There were times when Harriet had to question Hermione’s sanity.

Most people saw her friend group and probably assumed Hermione was the grounded one, the logical person rounding out their motley bunch, and while Harriet wouldn’t say she was illogical, Hermione certainly had strange…ideas sometimes. Ideas that led to very poor decisions.

Two weeks after Harriet’s awful detention with Umbridge, Hogwarts had their first Hogsmeade weekend—the first Harriet could attend, feeling more than a mite smug when she could wave the permission slip signed by Mr. Flamel under Filch’s nose. Elara rolled her eyes as Harriet sauntered past him.

“You do know it would be best if we didn’t go to the village at all, yes?”

“Well,” Hermione muttered into her scarf. “Technically, we won’t be staying long….”

She directed their group to the Three Broomsticks. Madam Rosmerta barely had a chance to unlock the doors before Hermione pushed them through to the loo, where they changed out of their uniforms into street clothes. They ducked under Harriet’s Invisibility Cloak—Elara grumbling about having to duck—and crept out of the village like a limping Quintaped.

Once out of sight from Hogsmeade, they whipped off the Cloak with a breath of relief. The valley spilled in front of them, a long, wind-swept series of knolls, hills, and winding creeks, the mountains bold in the distance, the Forbidden Forest looming to the west. Harriet enjoyed the walk along the cobbled lane, the morning air brisk and bracing where it blew in from the eastern foothills. They chatted about nothing in particular, commenting on their classmates or their last dreadfully dull Defense period. It felt nice in the moment—relaxing—what with everything hanging over their heads.

They entered Lower Hogsfield, a borough mostly comprised of farms and orchards, the tops of greenhouses peeking above healthy, thriving shrubs, homes dug into the rolling hills like smials. They neared the village center where the roads were thickest and called the Knight Bus. The bus nearly took out an iron lamp as it swung into view.

The trio climbed aboard, and Hermione gave the conductor, Marvin Maplebach, an address for somewhere between Westmorland and Lancashire. “Verwerry Village, please.”

“Right you are,” Maplebach answered, repeating the name to the driver. He eyed the three of them and frowned. “Why aren’t you lot in school?”

Hermione didn’t hesitate. “Don’t be ridiculous,” she said with her nose in the air. “We’re not in school. We’re alumni.”

“Ah….”

Harriet pulled on the brim of her witch-hat, keeping her face from view.

Verwerry didn’t much resemble anything in the northern valley, and Harriet would call it more of a warren than a village. It consisted of one skinny road and a town square that might have belonged to a castle bailey long ago. The road cut through a portion of dense, colorless woodlands, and footpaths branched off toward different estates and properties. More than a few people lingered outside a seedy pub.

The Knight Bus dropped them off at a corner near a nondescript building. Hermione brought out her Atlas and shielded it from view with her robes, the blue light glittering over her face.

“It’s this way,” she said, directing them toward the north road.

“How d’you know?” Harriet asked, adjusting her hat again. “The Atlas doesn’t tell us information for somewhere we haven’t been.”

“The Atlas tells us exactly what it’s fed,” Hermione corrected. “And I added a map of the area to the Aerie. Of course, it’s not as accurate or as informative as when we’ve been through a place, but it will at least show us where Brierstone Estate is….”

It was the first time Harriet had heard the name of their destination, though the information meant nothing to her. She’d never heard of Brierstone and had no clue who lived there, though Elara’s brow furrowed and her lips pinched in recognition.

The wood continued with them as they walked, the occasional house peeking through the sharp, ungroomed foliage, the trees thick and old and more than a bit spooky. Harriet kept one hand on her Cloak tucked into her satchel, the strap over her shoulder tugging toward the ground.

“Are you sure this is a good idea?” Harriet asked. “Not that I’m not game for your plan, but I don’t much fancy another trip to Azkaban.”

“It’ll be fine,” Hermione asserted, though her fingers tightened where they held the Atlas. “They’re not—statistically, the family is quite secular and not prone to involving the Ministry in disputes. Not that anything will go wrong, of course.”

“If I end up cursed and stuck in a jar, I’m going to haunt you.”

They walked for another mile before Hermione urged them off the road and through an arborvitae hedge, muttering censored oaths as she pulled spiderwebs from her hair and something rustled in the dead leaves. They pressed forward until an iron fence appeared on the other side, twice as tall as Harriet and so blatantly formed by magic, it hummed with energy like a struck tuning fork.

“Don’t touch it,” Elara said, wrinkling her nose as she inspected one of the metal bars. “It’s definitely cursed.”

“Cursed?” Hermione squawked. She stepped back and almost toppled into one of the arborvitae. “Not just hexed?”

“No. Cursed with something Dark, although—.” Elara neared the gate and sniffed it. Her gloved hand hovered along its surface as if palpitating a forcefield. “Do you smell the spice to it? Under the sweetness?”

Hermione overcame her initial trepidation and stood by Elara, her nose to the gate. She inhaled. “Oh. That’s curious. Is it cinnamon?”

“Mhm. It’s particular to blood magic. It’s tied to the family somehow, perhaps a ward forbidding entrée to those who’d seek to harm them, or a means of discouraging unwelcome visitors.”

“Fascinating….”

Harriet rolled her eyes as she tugged the Invisibility Cloak free again. A glance into the satchel showed Rick had somehow snuck in and was enjoying a leftover Sugarplum Faerie, nestled in the bottom with her crumpled uniform. She ignored him and tied the satchel closed.

“Can you two get under this Cloak before whoever lives here looks out a window and sees three loons out sniffing his fence?”

Blushing, Hermione and Elara did as told, and Harriet morphed into her Animagus form.

The property beyond the kept grounds looked much like a typical Victorian manor house, though the bricks had a dark wash, and the black shingles on the pitched roof had faded to a silvery gray with age. It was larger than a single-family house but more modest than an estate like the Malfoy’s abandoned residence. Hermione had been insistent on not telling them who lived here, stating it made Harriet and Elara less culpable if they were caught.

Considering Harriet was doing the actual breaking and entering, she doubted it would matter if she knew the name of the person she was stealing blackmail material from or not.

“We’ll give you an hour,” Hermione said, invisible, though Harriet cocked her head toward the empty place she would be in. “That should be plenty to have a quick peek around his desk, grab anything you need, and then leave. Noble families have the open rafters where owls can dip in and out as they please.”

“What if it’s Charmed against strange birds like Grimmauld?” Elara’s voice challenged.

“It won’t be. I’m sure some parts of the house are warded against it, but the study will not. He’s a member of the Wizengamot; he needs to accept public post.” Hermione paused. “This is a theory, of course. If it’s too dangerous, come back and we’ll leave.” Another paused. “Oh, what am I thinking? Maybe we should just—.”

Harriet clacked her beak. Barmy! She fluttered her wings and took flight.

She made a casual, indirect circuit around the looming house, and as she did so, Harriet considered why she’d agreed to this madness in the first place. Everything in her gut urged her to keep her head down, but it was Hermione, of course. Like in their second year when she’d been so terrified of what the professors had been keeping from them, she’d created the Polyjuice Potion and Harriet had drank it. She’d do a lot of stupid things if it meant Hermione got to keep her peace of mind. Even sneak into a stranger’s house.

She turned herself, dipping lower to glide toward the lip of an upper-story window. She’d been practicing, but her grasp on the finer movements of her crow form remained shaky, so she nearly crashed into the window. Harriet kept her feet under her with a bit of ungainly wing flapping.

Peering through the mullioned glass, she saw the foot of a bed and the side of a dark armoire, so she moved on. Twice more, she peeked into the house before she discovered a promising room. Mustering herself, Harriet puffed her feathers, then sprang upward, propelling her little body with two flaps so she could reach the opening in the rafters protected by the overhang. There were a few owl feathers caught in the old wood up there, nipped off larger birds as they squeezed through.

Harriet peered down into the empty study. The bowed outer wall varied tall windows and cramped bookshelves between its sharp, flat angles, the desk positioned at the center of the broad alcove. The owner kept several plants on low tables and climbable shelves, and there was a huge iron bottle rack on one wall that reached the arched ceiling, each cradle filled with a carafe or scroll or a stack of vials. The room’s colors were muted, the furniture and its accents lending a more practical air than one might expect from pure-bloods. There were several antique cupboards with ivy vines lazing across the scrolled tops, and at the far end, a set of double doors partly opened to the dim corridor beyond.

Most importantly, there was no one inside and no watching portraits.

Holding her breath, Harriet fluttered to the floor, landing on a plush, if faded, Persian carpet. She hopped along until she reached the door, transforming out of sight behind it so she could gently nudge first one, and then other, closed without letting the latch catch.

Not wanting to press her luck and linger, Harriet hurried back toward the desk. She grimaced when she found it obnoxiously tidy, nothing left on the blotter but a stack of empty parchment, a cleaned wax stamp, and an impersonal appointment diary. She opened the last item. “Couldn’t pencil in a date with your mistress, could you?” Harriet complained as she flipped through the pages. “No ‘very illegal meeting, must tell no one’ either? Bollocks.” She tried the desk drawers and found them locked. “Bollocks!

Footsteps entered the outer corridor—slow and unrushed but undoubtedly headed toward the study. Forcing herself not to panic, Harriet took a calming breath and changed forms. She hopped and flapped, scrabbling her talons over the lip of an antique cabinet as she crawled onto it. The top was flat behind the decorative crown and thick with dust, ivy wending over the high, scrolled edge. Harriet settled herself there out of sight and tipped her eye under one of the leaves.

A long shadow filled the small gap of light left between the shut doors, and a man passed inside, not noticing the doors weren’t how he’d left them. He had his attention centered on a journal in his hand, studying it with one long finger inching down the page. He abruptly paused on his way toward one of the side tables and looked up.

Bloody hell, Harriet thought, a thrill ruffling her feathers. He looks like Snape!

The man standing in the halo of brighter candlelight left flared in the corridor did indeed look much like Professor Snape, though when he turned his head toward the desk, Harriet noted a few differences. He was older, silver streaking the temples of the black hair he kept restrained with a plain, gray ribbon, and his skin had more of an olive complexion than Snape’s. His clothes were more expensive, and the cravat he wore could be considered Gryffindor red—a bold color Snape wouldn’t be caught dead in. He had the same hawkishness to him, though, and as his narrowed black eyes swept the study, Harriet almost lost her Animagus form out of sheer nerves.

A minute passed. The wizard surveyed the room, but Harriet had left the desk just as she found it, only closing the doors to ensure no one would sneak up on her. Eventually, he dipped his head toward the journal again, and he continued to the table. Harriet had neglected to notice it at first, but now that she saw it, she realized the table was a brewing station. It wasn’t one necessarily meant for cauldrons, but rather for vials and trays where a potioneer could test and review samples and ingredients. At the moment, the wizard had it mostly clear aside from a scroll of parchment he was adding notes to.

When the wizard finished, he set the quill aside and departed, though not before returning the journal to a shelf and taking another selection with him. Harriet didn’t dare move until the wizard’s footsteps faded in the corridor, the doors once more left open. She couldn’t close them, knowing the wizard would notice in an instant, so she jumped down from the cabinet as a crow and stayed that way as she hovered to the table.

Her talons gripped the wooden edge as her little head tilted this way and that. Hmm, Harriet considered as she read the parchment. Looks like a recipe. This part here…oh, he’s in the process of testing it. So, he created the potion. Hmm. Harriet clacked her beak. Looks important. Blackmail important? Let’s find out.

She fussed about rolling the thick sheaf, then snapped it up in her tiny, scaled feet. Harriet wriggled her back feathers in victory, then took flight.

 

xXx

 

“This is brilliant,” Hermione said, breathless, as she read the stolen recipe. All three of the witches panted for breath as they hustled along the country lane from Hogsfield to Hogsmeade. In theory, they didn’t need to rush, as they had time to idle in the village if they wished, but it would best to return to the castle as soon as possible. Harriet regretted not being able to peruse Honeydukes. “It must have been sheer luck he left this out just at the right moment for you to take. He’s compiling the recipe to meet Guild standards for publication.”

“I couldn’t find anything incriminating. That’s what you really wanted, innit?” Harriet replied over her shoulder.

“Not necessarily. I wish for him to listen, and the key to getting the ear of any House Lord is to have something he or she wants in exchange.” Hermione rolled the parchment up again, beaming from ear to ear. “Mr. Prince will definitely want this returned. He’ll listen now.”

So his surname is Prince, huh? Harriet turned to face forward as they entered the village’s outer reaches. Eden Prince has to be a relative, but where else have I heard that before? Has Snape said it?

Elara sighed. “He only holds three votes in the Wizengamot. That’s if he’s willing to be swayed.”

“Yes, but—.” Hermione stuck a knowing finger in the air. “He has direct influence over the new Proxy for the House of Selwyn and its rights. They’re young and not looking to strike out with their own opinion, so they’ll vote the way of House Prince. They hold fifteen votes.”

That gave Elara pause. “Clever,” she conceded.

They used the Invisibility Cloak to enter the back door of the Three Broomsticks, tripping a poor drunk sod as he came outside and face-planted on the muddy cobblestones. The trio quickly changed in the loo, then ducked into the tavern, mingling among the other students having a late lunch. Madam Rosmerta may have looked at them funny as they passed through, but Harriet and her friends didn’t wait around for her to comment.

Other students dotted the road back to Hogwarts. “Blimey, I’m starved,” Harriet sighed as she saw the castle gleaming ahead. “D’you think I could kip down to the kitchens for a snack before supper?”

“You know full well Rikkety loves to dote on you,” Elara said.

“Don’t make more work for the poor elves right before dinner,” Hermione scolded.

“How could you say that, as if they haven’t got half a tonne of scones waiting at any given moment—?”

Hem-hem.”

Harriet froze, and her skin crawled as if assailed by an army of ants. It required an obscene effort for her to lift her chin and look toward the school’s open gates and find who waited for them there. Madam Umbridge stood in her pink robes, smiling wide like a toothy, unfed shark who’d happened upon an injured seal.

“Miss Potter,” she said, folding her hands together. “If you would come with me.”

Harriet gulped. Uh-oh.


A/N: I think I mentioned it before, but I just don ’t believe Hogsmeade was the “only” totally wizarding village. That’s just silly. I really liked the map in Hogwarts Legacy , so I use it sometimes to envision places in the valley and hills surrounding the school. (I think the game came out when we were still in Y4, lol. Would have been awesome to have from the story ’s beginning).

Hermione: “We’re going to sneak off campus.”

Harriet: “For something fun?”

Hermione: “For breaking and entering.”

Harriet: “….”

Chapter 261: deserved

Chapter Text

cclxi. deserved

 

Harriet stayed silent as she followed Madam Umbridge toward the school.

The older witch had no qualms about taking her time, a smug smile stretched over her wide mouth as she picked her way along the path and then up the stairs. Of course, she wasn’t silent. She stopped every student they passed to nag on some perceived fault: their shoes weren’t polished, their robes weren’t straight, their ties weren’t tightened. She tutted at couples until they stepped away from one another and nicked a Fanged Frisbee from a pair of first years on the lawn. All the while, her smile grew more pleased, as if she couldn’t imagine a better time than making children miserable.

Anxious sweat built on the back of Harriet’s neck, and she could feel the dampness under her arms as well. She wouldn’t admit it aloud, but dread squeezed her heart like a fist turning fruit to jam. How much did Umbridge know? Was Harriet going to be expelled?

Hermione and Elara had gone on ahead—to where, Harriet didn’t know. Hopefully to Dumbledore or Snape or—somewhere Umbridge couldn’t find them or subject them to terrible torture.

In the entrance hall, she saw Gabriel Flourish standing at the top of the dungeon steps. His mouth popped open in wordless shock before he turned around and rushed back down the stairs.

Harriet grimaced.

She dragged her feet the whole way to Umbridge’s office on the fifth floor. Seeing the door, and then the single desk where she’d been forced to carve open her own hand almost brought Harriet’s breakfast back up. She swallowed the saliva in her mouth, certain she’d be sick, and numbly staggered to the chair by the main desk Madam Umbridge indicated. She sat down.

The other witch took a seat as well, folding her hands together in front of herself. “Well, Miss Potter,” Umbridge said. “It’s not a surprise to find you in my office once again.”

“You did invite me here, ma’am,” Harriet told her, keeping her voice calm and polite. It didn’t quiver, which bolstered her courage. “So maybe it’s not so surprising.”

Umbridge’s smile tightened, and her eyes narrowed.

“Do you understand why you’re here, girl?”

Harriet shook her head. “No, Madam Umbridge.”

“I think you do.” A tea service sat on the edge of the desk, an ugly thing Aunt Petunia probably would have liked, with fat cabbage roses and ungainly scrolled handles. Umbridge made herself a nice cuppa and didn’t offer one to Harriet, not that Harriet would have taken it. She’d rather guzzle Bubotuber Pus.

“I really don’t, ma’am.”

“Where were you today, Miss Potter?”

Harriet’s heart lurched, but she otherwise remained unshaken. She couldn’t know. She couldn’t. No one knew they’d been in Verwerry aside from Harriet and her friends, unless Umbridge had thought to interrogate the Knight Bus driver in the minutes between them debarking and walking toward the school. “Hogsmeade?”

“I have been informed by reliable sources that you were not.”

Sources? What does she—? Harriet’s mouth twitched. Guardians. There had to be Guardians of the Magical Right in the village. Damn, we didn’t think of that.

“I dunno what to tell you. We went to the village. We went to Honeyduke’s, Tomes and Scrolls, then stopped at the Three Broomsticks.”

Umbridge’s eyes narrowed again, sharp needles aimed for Harriet’s throat. “I thought our lesson the other evening had sunken in. It seems not. Here you are, lying again.”

Harriet didn’t reach for her bandaged hand, but it was a near thing. “I was in the village,” she reasserted. “Isn’t it more likely whoever was meant to be watching Hogsmeade for you made a mistake?”

Umbridge’s nostrils flared. “I think another detention might be in order—.”

The office door came open without the intruder knocking, revealing Professor Slytherin—and Flourish, who stood back in the corridor, out of breath and flushed.

“On your way, Mr. Flourish,” Slytherin said as he stepped into the office, shutting the door behind him. “Once again, Madam Umbridge, it appears you are inconveniencing my apprentice, and by extension, myself.

“Hardly inconveniencing,” Umbridge retorted, put out by Slytherin’s intrusion. She tapped her lacquered nails on her desk. “You weren’t summoned, Professor, and she has been found once more flouting the rules of this institution—.”

“I was in the village,” she told Slytherin, putting as much conviction as she could into the lie. He didn’t turn his head, but his cold, displeased gaze slanted in her direction. “Just because whatever stu—person she sent to watch it didn’t see me, she thinks I wasn’t there.”

“Be quiet,” Slytherin told her. Harriet snapped her jaws shut.

Him rebuffing her seemed to appease Umbridge, and her irritated expression flattened. “Well,” she sniffed. “It’s no matter. Miss Potter’s punishment will fall into the purview of the Ministry. I understand she’s serving detentions with Professor Snape for the foreseeable future, but perhaps a compromise could be made—.”

Slytherin sighed, interrupting Umbridge’s dastardly planning. He turned in a lazy swivel, putting his back to the woman, and from where she was seated, Harriet knew Umbridge didn’t see him draw his wand. He held it in his hand, running a single appreciative finger along its tip.

Her stomach swooped, and new sweat slicked her shaking palms.

“Gaunt and I have always had our…differences,” he said, speaking softly as he turned the wand, and Harriet felt her ears pop from the air pressure shifting. Magic rippled, a ward as thin as the skin of a bubble swelling to press against the walls. Harriet clutched the arms of her chair. “There’s a mutual respect there, an understanding beyond the comprehension of fools…ah. But his vision has always been flawed; I see the world in color, he sees it in black and white.”

Slytherin turned, and Umbridge saw his wand for the first time. She stiffened.

“What is the meaning of this?”

“I’m not as careless in selecting my tools,” he continued. “Gaunt will accept any witch or wizard who takes a knee, and he thinks blind loyalty is all that is necessary. Loyalty can be…overrated. Swayed. Mind’s change. They can be tempered, taught. Loyalty does not account for skill. Unfortunately, Gaunt sees all problems as nails that need to be hammered. The issue, Madam, is neither myself nor my apprentice is a nail, and you are an incessant hammer that is trying my patience.

His wand slashed the air like a swinging sword, and red light burst into view along the set ward—ugly, leering red light Harriet had only had the misfortune of seeing once before in Slytherin’s own office. It crawled over the stones of the castle, and Hogwarts itself seemed to recoil, bricks and mortar groaning as the walls attempted to pull away from the strange intrusion.

Slytherin bore down upon the startled Ministry witch like a riled cobra, delivering one solid kick to the side of her desk. It shouldn’t have done anything, given the desk was large and built of heavy, dense wood—but it screeched across the floor, sliding more than a meter, leaving Umbridge exposed.

Slytherin’s eyes blazed. He leveled his wand. “Petrificus Totalus.”

Umbridge’s arms and legs snapped straight, and she slid from her chair to the floor with a thump. Her eyes bulged.

Harriet clung to her own seat in disbelief, hardly daring to believe.

“If you were clever, you would have ensured you were never in a room alone with me,” Slytherin said, his tone almost conversational. “You waste of flesh and magic. To think, your mother spread her legs and begat you. She must have wept for the futility of her labor.” He spun his wand, letting it twirl through his fingers once. “But, perhaps you’ll find better use as an object lesson. Pay attention, Apprentice.” The wand stopped twirling, and pointed once more toward Umbridge’s face. He released her petrification, but then—. “Crucio!

Harriet jerked as if she were the one being cursed—but she wasn’t. No, it was Umbridge who suddenly thrashed on the hard, unyielding stones, her high, irritating voice throttled in a strained scream, her face stretched in agonized rictus. Her limbs twisted and curled inward like a dying bug.

Harriet had never seen the curse used on another person. She had always been the unfortunate target, and her memory in the aftermath always remained a foggy, overly saturated snapshot—too blurred and strange to comprehend. Hermione told her it was how the human brain protected itself from pain; it sanded the coarse, ragged edges, made it all…fuzzy, like a bad dream. This wasn’t a dream, bad or otherwise. This was real.

Slytherin tilted his head as he held the curse, his lips parting, the screams rising in pitch. Harriet couldn’t breathe, couldn’t do a thing besides sit dumbfounded and watch. Dust streaked Umbridge’s pink robes from her thrashing. Her hair had come loose from its prissy coiffure, her black bow lopsided and loose where it dragged against the stones. She would have bruises tomorrow—large, painful ones. Harriet knew from experience.

She didn’t know what to feel. Some part of her should feel vindicated. Umbridge had gleefully watched as she carved into her own flesh for hours—had giggled and smiled at every pass of the quill. Nevertheless, Harriet didn’t want to smile as the woman wailed. She didn’t feel vindicated or good about what was happening. Her stomach churned, and her arms shook.

Professor Dumbledore’s voice echoed in her ears, soft as a whisper. “When we begin to see our enemies as lesser, as inhuman beasts unworthy of compassion or decency, we are little better than those we oppose.

“Even Voldemort, Professor? Is he worthy of our compassion?”

“Compassion? No, I couldn’t say so. Voldemort has committed many monstrous acts, and yet, if he were at my mercy, I would not subject him to torture. I am a better man than that.”

Harriet gripped her chair, her breaths tight, shallow. The acrid smell of urine cut across her nose. “Stop,” she said, too soft, her chest too rigid to move and take in air. Harriet grit her teeth and lurched to her feet. “Stop!”

Slytherin eased the curse, allowing his arm to go lax. His mouth curled in a pleased, relaxed smile, all while Umbridge whimpered and coughed, sucking in breath after breath. “Ah, you’re right, I suppose. It’s best not go overboard.”

Harriet swallowed the dryness in her mouth as she watched him sweep toward the barely lucid witch, his robes skirting the pool of vomit Umbridge had sicked up. She’d wet herself. No part of Harriet reveled in seeing this humiliation.

Slytherin bent at the waist, using the tip of his wand to tip Umbridge’s sagging head toward him. Harriet didn’t know what he thought as he stared at the woman, but eventually he was satisfied, giving his wand an errant flick. “Obliviate.

Umbridge went slack as the spell took effect. She looked dead.

Another series of small incantations set the room to rights and cleared the air. The ward dissolved, and the unbearable pressure lessened against Harriet’s ears. Slytherin rose, though Harriet didn’t notice, too set on staring at the woman on the floor as he came to stand next to her.

I did tell you she would get what she deserved, didn’t I?” Harriet startled as cold fingertips brushed against the edge of her fringe. Her green eyes snapped to Slytherin’s watching face, and he hissed in Parseltongue. “She won’t remember what happened come morning. But, I don’t know how she’ll fair if I need to intervene again. You’ll do your best to stay out of trouble.” His hand paused, fingertips pressing closer to her brow. “Won’t you, dear Harriet?”

Tears burned the back of her eyes. “Yes, Master.”

Good girl.” He withdrew his hand. “Get out of my sight.”

Harriet ran from the office like the devil himself was on her tail. She didn’t look back.


A/N: I think there ’s many people who’d not bat an eye at seeing Umbridge tortured, or who were rooting for it to happen. I don’t think that’s in Harriet’s character.

Chapter 262: crux horrificus

Chapter Text

cclxii. crux horrificus

 

Autumn fell across the highlands in a pall of colorful leaves and cold, northern squalls.

Life found a pattern at Hogwarts as it always did despite the hardships its occupants faced. Harriet kept an ear out for rumors, but she heard nothing about any further use of Umbridge’s special quill in detentions. The witch did hand out a few detentions, but those were fulfilled with Filch polishing toilets or with Sprout preparing the greenhouses for winter. Mostly, Umbridge contented herself making sure everyone adhered to her petty rules, and following Harriet like a bad smell.

She didn’t appear the morning after Slytherin’s punishment, though she was there the next, claiming to have suffered a bad fall in her office that required recuperation. Whatever the case, she resumed her usual activity and didn’t pay Harriet—or Slytherin—more mind than typical. Slytherin’s Memory Charm had caused her to forget all recollection of the Hogsmeade trip. Harriet couldn’t meet the woman’s eye, and the tortured screaming added new ambiance to her bad dreams. In her worst nightmares, she enjoyed it.

She had detention with Professor Snape every night, which was less of a punishment and more of a chance to catch up on the obscene amount of homework assigned by the professors. Some evenings, they reviewed Slytherin’s lessons, either by revising the material or practicing in mock-duels, and sometimes Snape strove to teach her new spells. On a few rare occasions, she served an actual detention, either disemboweling toads or sorting beetle eyes—and it never failed that would be an evening when Umbridge came sauntering through. Harriet didn’t know how Snape anticipated her surprise inspections.

More often than not, Snape sat at his desk, neck-deep in work. Slytherin would come by, but rather than looking for Harriet, he would spend the time lounging in a conjured armchair like an indolent gargoyle, and he would complain to Snape. Harriet would sit in the corner, pretending to work on her homework, and she would listen to Slytherin monologue while Snape occasionally added comment and generally agreed with anything he said. Harriet concluded Slytherin needed to hear himself speak more than he needed to breathe, and the Potions Master suffered the brunt of it.

Twice, Snape glimpsed the thin bandage she kept wrapped around her hand, and he made as if to ask about it, but Harriet hid her hand in her robes, and the subject was dropped.

Hermione’s personal project continued apace, or so she told Harriet. Whatever the case, no more burglary was required, and no Auror showed up to send anyone to gaol. Owls continued to pelt Hermione with post in the morning, and she read her letters with a smug expression over her morning tea.

Life wasn’t ideal, but it settled like sand in the bottom of an hourglass, and Harriet stopped looking over her shoulder for emerging dangers at every turn.

She found new enjoyment in tutoring the younger students, immersing herself in their problems rather than her own. They had petty issues with one another that Harriet could solve simply by listening or giving a spot of advice. Once or twice, she needed to flick a bully between the brows and remind them to knock off their rubbish.

She wished everything could be so easy.

 

xXx

 

Harriet smothered yet another yawn into her robe’s sleeve.

Sunlight filtered through the library’s tall windows in reluctant bands of yellow and gold, setting dust motes alight in sleepy puffs and plumes that hung in the air. The wooden chair beneath her rump creaked as she leaned into the back of it, her wand resting against her lap.

It was a Saturday, and the smarter students had gone outside to enjoy one of the final warm days Hogwarts would experience until the new year, but Harriet was in the library among the dusty shelves, seated at the head of the longest table available. The failing heat outside made it stuffy, and Harriet felt like she might be coming down with a bit of a head cold.

“Potter?”

She sighed through her nose, then redirected her attention to the group of eager faces turned toward her. She forced a smile.

“Did you lot finish reading the chapter, then?” she asked. The cluster of Slytherin third-years nodded, joined by their fourth-year counterparts. “Okay. Then let’s start with the proper form.”

Harriet stood up and stepped around her chair so it wouldn’t screech on the floor. “Your hand needs to start in the position like this—and I know the text tells you to arch your wand this way, but that’s rubbish. It brings your arm out of alignment, see? When you’re doing a spell like this, you want it to be in sync with the earth element. So that means you have to use the right rune…like this…so it lights all the proper pathways in the body. You gotta end it, right here, and—orchideous!”

Brilliant flowers sprung into existence—tangles of red columbine and edelweiss, bursts of goldenrod and lavender sprigs. Harriet caught the bouquet in her free hand, wincing at the sharpness of the stems.

“Whoa!”

“You make it look so easy,” another complained.

“I don’t understand why it has to have that flick at the end,” Tasa Char complained, rubbing her cheek. “Professor McGonagall doesn’t do it like that.”

“Well, that’s cos’ Professor McGonagall’s a genius, innit?” Harriet told her. “Insofar as her Transfiguration ability. When you do a certain spell enough times, your magic starts anticipating it. It’s like we’ve all got big reservoirs of water inside of us, and when we practice magic, it starts forming creeks. The longer we practice, the creeks become more like rivers, right? So, for Professor McGonagall, she can make shortcuts, a bit.” Harriet grimaced, wondering if she was explaining it right. It was part of the long, winding explanation Snape had given her about how witches and wizards could perform wordless spells. Part of it was learning how the words helped actuate the magic in your body and learning how it moved. Don’t think this lot would appreciate me poorly reciting that mess.

“But why should we move our wand like this—.” Rowan Mortuary mimicked how Harriet had shifted her hand, though not without hesitation. His arm wobbled. “Instead of how it’s done in the textbook?”

“It’s easier that way. Orchideous is aligned with the earth element, right?”

“Huh?”

She sighed again, setting the bouquet on the table. “Spells are inclined toward certain elements. Sometimes they’re more obvious, and sometimes they’re not. The Flower Conjuring Charm is all about plants, yeah? So it’s safe to assume it’s earth-inclined. That’s why you use Jera in the movement.” Harriet repeated the motion, a quick series of flicks. “Or you can use the alchemical rune instead. Sometimes one or the other works better.”

Quills scratched over parchment, copying Harriet’s words.

“You lot ready to try again?”

“Yes!”

Harriet gave them a moment to ready their wands, counted to three, and repeated the spell. Perhaps she should have reconsidered, especially given where they were—because next she knew, twenty-odd bouquets burst into being, a veritable explosion of greenery that spilled over the tables and chairs as students whooped and laughed. Madam Pince swept down upon them with a vengeance and kicked their lot from the library. Only Harriet’s frazzled, repeated explanation about it being a practice session gone awry kept her from being permanently banned for the rest of the term.

Pince eventually ran out of steam and started clearing the foliage. Ivy had started climbing the table legs. Shouldering her bag, Harriet hurried for the doors. Should have anticipated that happening.

“You are a good teacher.”

Harriet froze upon hearing the familiar voice, but she forced herself not to stiffen, to turn her head and look toward Madam Pince’s receiving desk. Viktor Krum stood there, his shoulders slouched and his stance a tad awkward as he held a stack of tomes. He was waiting for Pince to return.

“I vatched you teaching,” he continued, shuffling his feet. “You are very patient vith them. It is a good trait.”

“I could probably do better,” Harriet admitted. “Sometimes their questions can be irritating and I get a tad short.”

He snorted, a soft huff through his large nose. “Da, but it is their job. All children are irritating, at least a little bit.” Krum shook his head and leaned his elbow on the desk to take more of the weight in his arms. “But your mistake vas doing these lessons in the library. Not a good place.”

Harriet grimaced. She couldn’t disagree with him there. She wanted to say it hadn’t been a lesson—but really, who was she fooling? These small tutoring sessions had turned into full-blown lessons, and she’d started giving serious thought to what Hermione had said before about teaching the younger students important magic. Stuff that could save their life if they ever got cornered by a Dark wizard on a lonely night.

It didn’t save Terry, she thought, a pang going through her chest. But maybe it could help somebody else.

“Have you considered offering help to more than just the Slytherins?” Krum asked.

“I do. Or, well, I have, in the past.” Harriet shrugged. “It gets a bit difficult when everyone’s a different year and wants to work on different stuff.”

“Hmm.” Krum’s brow furrowed as he thought, a slight frown on his mouth. Harriet studied him again, making note of all the differences she saw between him and Barty Crouch Junior. Krum had a certain calmness to him, an assurance Crouch lacked, the Death Eater always still but buzzing with discomfort. Krum scowled more, and he didn’t much appreciate the fans who followed him around the school. Harriet once heard him telling an overzealous sixth-year, “It is very flattering, but I am here to learn. I vill not sign autographs unless I am on the pitch.” Crouch had gotten a kick out of it.

“I could help you vit that.”

“What?” Harriet asked, startled from her inspection.

“Vit the tutoring? If you find a better place than this.” He tipped his head from one side to the other to indicate the library as a whole. “And let the younger ones of other Houses come. I vould assist the teaching.”

Blinking, all Harriet could ask, “But why would you do that? Isn’t that a waste of your time?”

“I am needing the—what is it called? Revisions?” His mouth pulled to one side, and Harriet noticed several of the books he held weren’t meant for a seventh-year. “Hogwarts and Durmstrang have different curricula. Vat might be on my N.E.W.Ts here is not vat is necessarily taught there.”

“Oh,” Harriet said, realizing what he meant. “So you have to revise everything from the beginning of first year? Bloody hell.”

“It is a task.” He nodded. “But in my revising, I could help others who need to learn.”

“That—that’d be great,” Harriet replied, meaning it. She did enjoy assisting others, but sometimes she found herself running short on time, especially this year, what with her O.W.Ls looming and Slytherin’s exacting schedule sucking the life out of her. Having help would be excellent. “I’ll let you know if I find a better place for the lessons.”

“Good. I vill vait.”

Harriet departed the library, eager to leave before Madam Pince came screeching from cleaning up the mess at the long table. As she walked, she considered Krum’s request again, humming in thought under her breath. Hogwarts had no shortage of open classrooms, but none Harriet would feel comfortable using. It’d be silly for her to be at the front, behind a lectern, like a real professor—and so many rooms weren’t the kind that lent themselves to open spellcasting. There wasn’t enough room, and Harriet worried about what might have found a home in those dark, dusty crevices. She didn’t need to terrify children with a rampant Boggart or Bugbear.

She shoved her hands into her pocket, her posture abysmal, and she walked. She was alone in the corridor, but ahead in the main stair vault, she could hear voices echoing and bouncing off the stone walls. She’d nearly made it there when a persistent tugging against her ankles slowed her steps.

Harriet clenched her jaw. “What do you want?” she muttered, glaring toward the floor. Her shadow thickened, and one of Set’s long, bony arms stretched across the floor toward the opposite wall. Harriet looked at it, and her eyes narrowed behind her spectacles.

Her path to the stairwell had brought her past a mirror—a particular mirror made of a particular element, fused to the wall by a particular Founder. Harriet grunted, but she followed Set’s pointing finger, and she walked over to the Moon Mirror. She stood there for a long moment and considered her reflection as she tried to recall the exact password and where this mirror should go. The young woman reflected on the silver surface was like a stranger to Harriet: her robes dark and bespoke, white cord against her chest, her hair carefully managed, purple circles hanging below dull, flat eyes. She felt old—aged.

Despina,” she said, and when she placed her palm against the mirror, it sank through.

The familiar stale air inside the Aerie filled Harriet’s nose when she reappeared, and she twitched it, never quite able to fully shake the unease she’d felt here since her second year, at least not when she first stepped inside. Her disquiet faded as she looked about and found nothing out of the ordinary.

“Well, what do you want me to do?” she said to the floor, hands on her hips, not needing to hide her voice. “Because if I don’t know where I’m going, I’ll end up wandering for an hour and getting nowhere.”

Set swirled for a moment, almost as if uncertain. Then, he pulsed, rising from the floor to stand before her. The hair on Harriet’s nape stood on end as she peered into the black, featureless face, the planes of it too long and too uncanny to belong to anything human. Then, he gestured for Harriet to follow, and she did so despite the chills rolling down her spine like tumbling Nifflers.

Apparently, with Set leading the way, the Aerie followed his will instead of Harriet’s as they passed from the corridor through the arch into a new room. It was filled with books, just like most of the Aerie, though a tangible dread hung above them like a dim, damp veil. Harriet shivered when she realized these were most likely Dark texts.

Set dissipated back into the shadow that had formed him, and he reached past the unfading magelights to one of the shelves. Harriet picked her way closer through the crooked, looming stacks—but when she stood before Set’s selection, she couldn’t bring herself to touch it. The feeling oozing from its surface buzzed in her teeth and burned her neck.

Set slipped beneath the tome’s thick, gray spine and jostled it closer.

“All right, all right,” Harriet grumbled, searching through her robe pockets. Most students her age had learned to carry a simple pair of single-layer dragonhide gloves, given all the nasty things they might encounter in lessons. She hoped they would be enough to protect her.

Gloves on, the magic imbued in the pages still boiled against her skin and turned Harriet’s stomach, but she managed to gingerly take the book in hand. She allowed it to fall open, jostling the hand-stitched signatures until the front section exposed itself.

And of the arte possessing weorth, that which brings man closest to God and His divine nature,” she read, muttering the words as her finger hovered above the old, crumbling page. “We encase upon parchment the noble sanction, the crux horrificus, or as it may be assimilated, the Horcrux—.

Harriet’s breath left her in a sharp, shuddering exhale. Below her, Set sank into the floor, vanishing from view, and the book seemed to grow all the more threatening for his disappearance.

This is about Horcruxes. About how to make them. She eased the tome shut, seized by the sudden desire to throw it as far as she could—to set it ablaze, to curse or just bloody laugh. She did none of those things, standing quiet and stoic with a look of thoughtful disdain on her face as she held a book that would see her locked up in Azkaban if found on her person.

In all her studying and practicing with Snape, Dumbledore, and McGonagall, Harriet had come to understand the necessity of learning things she didn’t necessarily care about simply to know how they could be undone. Snape, in one of his more loquacious moods, had spoken on the intricacies of potion brewing, particularly in identifying how a brew might go wrong.

Potions is nothing but memorization and patience. Instinct comes with time, but knowing the ingredients and learning how they interact will tell you anything you wish to know about a brew.

But what’s the point in that, then?

The point is knowing how to counteract whatever nonsense you and your classmates manage to bungle in my lab, twit.

Harriet chewed on her lip, her heart thumping a bit faster in her chest.

If this tells someone how to make a Horcrux, can I use it to know how to destroy one?

Holding the book in both hands, Harriet strode out of the dusty, eerie room Set had led her to, and she reentered the corridor beyond. Closing her eyes, she concentrated, then stepped back across the threshold. Rather than reentering the room, she found herself in the portrait study she, Elara, and Hermione had taken over as their own, the place where the Atlas stored its ever-expanding pages. Harriet continued through the space, still holding the book, and pointedly didn’t look to see if the Founders were in their frames.

Instead, she pressed on, and when she reached Ravenclaw’s workshop, Harriet fussed around until she found a sturdy, if dated, trunk. She dropped the book inside with little fanfare, then threw the latch shut, layering on the ward she preferred for her own luggage in the dorms. She tucked it under Ravenclaw’s workbench for safekeeping.

“That’ll be a nice, depressing read later,” she said to herself, adjusting her satchel. “Though, I’ll have to figure out an excuse for how I found it. Hermione and Elara will have kittens.”

Whistling, Harriet made her way to the nearest Moon Mirror. As she went, she couldn’t help but remark. “You know, this wouldn’t be a bad space for lessons….”

Chapter 263: educational decree number twenty-four

Chapter Text

cclxiii. educational decree number twenty-four

 

Each blow of Filch’s hammer against the iron spike rang in the entrance hall like the peal of a bell.

“She’s absolutely lost her mind,” Elara remarked as she watched the Squib nail the latest framed flier to the wall.

Educational Decree Number Twenty-Four,” it read. “All Student Organizations, Societies, Teams, Groups, and Clubs are henceforth disbanded. An Organization, Society, Team, Group, or Club is hereby defined as a regular meeting of three or more students. Permission to re-form may be sought from the agent of the Inspectorate (Madam Umbridge). No Student Organization, Society, Team, Group, or Club may exist without the knowledge and approval of the Inspectorate. Any student found to have formed, or to belong to, an Organization, Society, Team, Group, or Club that has not been approved by the High Inquisitor will be expelled.”

“‘Three or more people?’” Harriet sputtered in disbelief where she stood next to Elara. “Umbridge has lost the ruddy plot. What—we’re considered a group here, aren’t we?” She pointed to herself, Elara, and Hermione on Elara’s other side. “Is she going to honestly come around and cite people having a chat with their friends? When’s it stop being considered a group? Do I have’ta stand three feet over there and shout to be out of the group?”

“Calm down,” Elara told her, though the statement lacked conviction. She didn’t expect Harriet to calm down in the slightest but she did want her to lower her voice. She couldn’t see Umbridge, and yet she knew the loathsome woman had to be lingering close by, enjoying the upset her newest Educational Decree had wrought. “It specifies a meeting of three or more people. Should we happen to be in the same place, I would argue it’s hardly a meeting.”

Harriet made a garbled, annoyed noise of dissension, and Elara agreed in her own mind. They could argue semantics, but Umbridge would use any slight infringement against them, valid or not.

“Ridiculous,” Hermione said, barely modulating her voice’s volume. “What is the point behind this? What is she hoping to stymie?”

“D’you think she knows about the tutoring?” Harriet asked.

“If she has eyes she’ll know about the tutoring,” Hermione told her. Harriet’s face scrunched into an expression dangerously close to a pout, and Elara smirked.

“I—no, wait over here.” Harriet nodded for them to move along, and they descended the steps into the dungeon, leaving behind the angry buzzing of the entrance hall. She cracked open a door belonging to one of Snape’s storage cupboards—a room they definitely shouldn’t be in, but Harriet truly didn’t understand her privilege when it came to the Potions Master. If Elara or Hermione had come here on their own, Snape would have all but flayed them alive.

Harriet tapped the base of one candle, then another, and they flared to life. She crossed her arms as she leaned a hip against the narrow, cluttered counter running the length of the room. “Krum spoke to me.”

“Krum?” Hermione commented. “What did he want?”

“He talked to me about—y’know, the tutoring stuff.” A light flush darkened her cheeks. “He saw me helping some younger students with Transfiguration, and he said he wants to be able to help with the lessons—or, well, not lessons, just the little revising thing we do—.”

Hermione rolled her eyes. “The lessons,” she clarified. “He saw you teaching and wants to help with the lessons. Well, that’s very thoughtful of him, but did he mention why? It would be extra work on top of his undoubtedly already busy schedule.”

“He said he needed the revisions.”

Elara’s brow creased as she considered that, her gaze drifting over the shelves packed with dozens of jars all labeled by the same slanted, spidery writing. “Ah. Durmstrang’s lessons aren’t the same as Hogwarts’, and he plans on sitting his N.E.W.Ts in this country. I had thought he might return to Durmstrang’s jurisdiction, but he must truly seek to ostracize himself from there.”

“Mhm. That’s what he said—at least, the bit about taking his N.E.W.Ts here.” Harriet leaned back further, rocking ever so slightly on her heels. Where her hand was braced against her chest, she played with the end of her apprenticeship cord. “I was giving more thought to what Hermione said before. Maybe I could—I dunno, teach a bit more? Especially with Slytherin deciding to skiv off, I think it’d be a good idea for people to be better prepared for what’s out there.”

“For what’s to come,” Elara muttered, though she wasn’t sure if Harriet or Hermione heard her. They didn’t need for her to voice it, regardless. They knew better than most anyone else the horrors Voldemort was capable of and what monstrous deeds he was undoubtedly committing at that very moment. Elara had not forgotten about the missing Muggles being reported in their news. Droves and droves of them, vanishing one person at a time across the country.

“I was thinking—I could be a bit more structured about things, come up with a plan, and maybe we could use the Aerie for lessons,” Harriet continued.

“That’d be careless of us,” Hermione replied. “What with the kind of books that are available there, and how easy it is to get lost. A first or second-year could get hurt, not to mention we’ve located the Argonaut Atlas’ brain there, for lack of a better term.”

“I know, I know,” Harriet placated. “Let me explain. In the past, it was used as a study hall of sorts, or an archive. As I thought about it, I considered how the burnt parts have all but disappeared, and I realized Ravenclaw kept her own workshop and different, private areas there as well, so she must have had a way to—I dunno—change the layout? Or, maybe the mode?” Harriet shrugged. “If we could figure out how to make the structure a bit more static and block off areas that are too dangerous and we don’t want to share with others….”

“You have a point,” Elara told her. “And, with Umbridge’s new edict, it would be more secluded.”

“I mean, it’s just an idea—.”

“It’s brilliant.” Hermione nodded, brown curls bobbing with her. “It really is. I could talk to the Founder’s portrait and see what we could do, but we’d have to be clever about whose coming to the lessons.”

“What d’you mean?”

“Harriet, if Umbridge were to discover you’re teaching students forbidden magic, she’d have a ruddy cow. She’d have you expelled.”

Oh.”

“Did you really not consider that?”

“Hermione, the bint would have me expelled for sneezing too violently, I can’t keep track.”

Elara stifled a laugh with her hand, ignoring Hermione’s unimpressed look. “Give me a bit of time to think of something,” Hermione said to Harriet. “Something that will keep us and everyone who wants to attend safe.”

Harriet scratched at her cheek. “Seems an awful lot of effort for some bloody tutoring.”

But it wasn’t simply tutoring. Elara kept her thoughts to herself, but she realized Harriet truly didn’t understand she’d started an unofficial class, and everything she taught flew in the face of Umbridge and Gaunt’s blind authoritarianism. Gaunt couldn’t keep the Wizarding world weak and stupid if people like Harriet and Dumbledore continued to educate and help others learn.

The latch on the door rattled, and all three witches froze like a trio of startled owls when it opened and admitted a surly Potions Master. For half a moment, Snape looked as startled as they did, and then he scowled, slamming the door as he directed his question toward Harriet. “What do you think you’re doing in here?”

She leaned off the counter. “We needed somewhere to have a chat.”

“My ingredient cupboard is not your personal lounge, Potter. Get out.”

“You have at least four of the bloody things. How many cupboards does a bloke need?”

Out.”

Harriet filed from the room first, quickly followed by Hermione, though Elara lingered behind them. She arched a brow at Snape, who curled his lip in a wordless snarl, glaring as he pointed to the closing door.

“I seem to remember Iola Crowle getting suspended for a week after breaking into your potions cupboard last year,” she commented. “Isn’t it curious Harriet doesn’t get the same punishment?”

Snape stiffened and straightened his spine, his glinting eyes little more than thin, dark slits in his pale face. He bristled with anger, and a distant part of Elara cringed with fear, but her expression remained cold and unimpressed.

He leaned ever so slightly forward, the ends of his long hair falling against his high collar. “Do not overstep,” he said with such menace, whatever puckishness Elara had felt withered in an instant. She hurried to follow her friends, and at the threshold, Snape’s curt voice bit at her heels. “And tell the girl to have her hand check!”

The door slammed shut.

 

xXx

 

The clock against the far wall began to toll the hour, and Elara looked up from the chess game she was playing with Astoria Greengrass.

“Oh,” Astoria commented. “Is it time for you to leave now?”

“Hmm.” Elara glanced about the common room. By the main hearth, Harriet slouched in the best winged chair, her eyes barely open as she worked on an assignment for Professor Slytherin. Hermione had nudged another chair closer so they could both study how the tiles inscribed with runes clicked together and formed various combinations. On the other seats of the main hearth’s arrangement, Elara could see Adrian Pucey and the Carrow twins, along with their oldest Prefect Cengor Pendarves, who idly watched Harriet work as he leaned on his arm.

Elara pondered if Harriet understood how the dynamic had shifted in Slytherin House, how the arrangement had changed as those who supported Harriet shunted aside those who didn’t. The older students had priority, but the younger ones filtered in and out. More than once, they tried to approach her—ostensibly with homework questions, or just wanting her attention, and either Pucey or Pendarves quietly turned them aside.

“Elara?”

She blinked, brought back to herself by Astoria’s tentative question. “Oh. Yes, I have choir practice.”

“We should call it a draw then.”

Snorting, Elara stood, picking up her bag by the strap where it waited by her chair’s legs. “It would have been a checkmate in three moves.”

“What! Where?”

Elara adjusted the pieces accordingly, and Astoria frowned.

“But how did you know I would move that piece?”

“I didn’t.”

She departed, tugging her gloves on as she exited the common room. Elara didn’t follow the typical route up from the dungeons, finding it safer to circumvent the main passage and go the long way through the outer hall. It brought up a steep set of stairs to the upper mezzanine that looked down upon the corridor below.

As she walked, she thought about Hermione’s plans for the Wizengamot and how her plans to coerce and cajole certain families into siding against Gaunt were going. She thought about Harriet’s idea for the Aerie, and though she couldn’t say it pleased her to share the space, she could acknowledge how selfish it was to keep an entire wing meant for learning hidden from the other students.

“…hand-selected for this position, Mr. Lestrange.”

“I understand.”

“You come highly recommended by Minister Gaunt, you understand….”

Elara stopped in her tracks, her bag swaying on her arm from the sudden halt. In the passage below, Madam Umbridge came strutting through with Lestrange, who did nothing to modulate his long stride for the witch’s stubby legs. She had to rush to keep pace.

Quiet as she could be, Elara eased into the shadow of a pillar, leaning into it to disguise her silhouette.

“You’ll be in charge of the entire task force. Should any of your underlings give you any issues, you are to report directly to me.”

“Of course, Madam Umbridge.”

“I give you full authority to act as needed. And I expect the prefects to follow your lead or suffer the same consequences.”

“You will be helping me with my task, yes?” Lestrange suddenly drew short, turning on the woman. “The one assigned to me by the Minister? If I’m expected to patrol the halls and catch out idiots, I will need assistance.”

Umbridge balked, but then smiled—a smarmy, all too smug expression on a person of such ill-composure. Elara rolled her eyes. “Yes, yes, Mr. Lestrange. Whatever our dear Minister requires of you, I’ll be certain to help….”

Their voices began to fade, and though Elara considered following, she knew the click of her heels on the stone floor would give away her presence. The duo disappeared into the western tower, leaving a very puzzled Elara standing alone on the dim mezzanine.

A task? Gaunt had given Lestrange a task? And Umbridge was starting a “task force”? That didn’t bode well. Just what is it that Gaunt expects Lestrange to do?

She ended up being late for choir practice.


A/N:

Pulled the text for the Decree from canon.

Elara: “So I see Harriet’s getting special privileges.”

Snape: “I will murder you in your sleep.”

Chapter 264: tell no tales

Chapter Text

cclxiv. tell no tales

 

A deep sigh escaped Hermione in a hazy white plume as she paused in her work to consider the diagram again.

On occasions such as this, she pondered where things had gone so awry to lead her to the woods in mid-October’s failing autumn, dragging a sword through the shale-riddled soil as she consulted a book older than her great-great-grandparents. Truly, it wasn’t a situation young Hermione could have pictured herself in, though young Hermione would have laughed herself sick if someone told her witches and magic and hidden castles in the highlands were all real.

I was a bit of a hypocrite, wasn’t I? Hermione paused. “Huh,” she said aloud.

Over in the clearing’s middle, seated by the ponderous mushroom ring, Harriet called, “All right, there?”

“Yes,” Hermione returned, adjusting her grip on the sword. “Nearly done now. Don’t move.”

“That’s what you said twenty minutes ago.”

“Maybe I’ll say it again in another twenty minutes.”

Standing next to Harriet, her cloak rippling in the breeze, Elara tipped a testy glance toward Hermione. “They’ll be arriving soon.”

“Yes, yes, I’m going….”

It was the first Hogsmeade weekend the school had enjoyed since the last one where Hermione, Elara, and Harriet had absconded off to Brierstone, and unfortunately the weather had decided to take a turn for the worse. It wouldn’t rain until later, but the damp cold clung to the air, and it made Hermione long for the warm, comfortable heat of the Three Broomsticks.

Hermione stopped, and as shown in the book, twisted the sword so the dull tip carved a shallow divot in the moss. It was a curious little thing, more ritual than magic, a spell she’d come across that Hermione felt certain had to be the inspiration for or the precursor to the Fidelius. It was infinitely less complicated and less powerful, but it would suit perfectly well for their needs.

Harriet nibbled off a piece of fudge from the larger hunk she’d nabbed at Honeyduke’s before they came out here. They weren’t far from the village—not truly outside of it at all, really, though anyone wanting to visit the fairy ring in the woods would have to come there intentionally instead of happening upon it. Hermione and Elara had done two laps through Hogsmeade proper to search for the Guardians under Umbridge’s sway and had found two. A quick but subtle Confundus Charm had taken care of the pair.

Hermione finished off marking the circle with a final twist of the sword, then jammed it into the earth to close the ward. She wiped her brow. “We said noon, didn’t we? We told them to bring who they thought might be interested, but definitely noon?”

“Yes, Hermione,” Elara replied, exasperated.

“I was just making sure!”

“Of course you are. Now, come sit down and relax a moment. Stop fretting.”

Grumbling, Hermione tucked the grimoire away in her robes and rejoined her friends by the fairy ring. Harriet offered up a piece of fudge, but Hermione declined, her stomach too nervous for sweets. She could hear her mother’s voice in her head, chiding her against eating sugar.

It’s terrible for your teeth, dear.

Hermione’s chest ached, and her throat tightened, but she swallowed until the feeling faded. Elara’s hand ghosted over her shoulder in a brief, comforting touch, and Hermione leaned toward it, bumping arms with Harriet.

The first attendees appeared at the head of the dirt path, Gabriel Flourish and Walt Murton waving as they came into sight. Harriet waved back as she stood from the grass, brushing off the seat of her tailored robes.

“Hey, you two,” she greeted.

“Hi, Harriet!” Gabriel said with a brilliant blush, Murton similarly red as he mumbled toward his knees. “Are we the first to arrive?”

Harriet rubbed at the back of her neck. “Yeah. I dunno how many more are expected to come. People liked coming to tutoring in the library, but I dunno if they’d like lessons.”

Flourish blinked. “More are coming,” he said, not quite meeting her eyes. “A few more.”

His evasiveness made more sense when people began to filter in. Their initial estimation had been maybe fifteen or twenty students being interested in joining a rather clandestine and obviously illegal club; they passed twenty within ten minutes, and more kept coming. Harriet grew paler and paler.

Elara leaned down to Hermione’s ear. “How many people did you tell, exactly?” she asked.

“Just a few Slytherins,” she replied, baffled. “I did say they could invite others if they felt they were interested and could keep their mouths shut, but….”

It appeared as if most of Hogwarts’ student body had decided to wander out into Hogsmeade’s woods—Gryffindors, Hufflepuffs, and Ravenclaws included, though fewer of the latter. A thrill of panic went through Hermione because surely her Confundus couldn’t conceal a crowd this large from the Guardians in the village.

Krum approached them, followed by Longbottom and Finnigan.

“What’re you doing here?” Harriet asked the Boy Who Lived, her displeasure clear in her tone.

“He said your tutoring class is open to whoever wants to attend,” Neville said, jerking his chin toward Krum, who appeared a bit abashed, as if he hadn’t expected quite so many people to show up either. “So here I am.”

You want to be tutored by me?”

“Why not?” he shrugged—an aggressive lift and fall of his shoulders. “Voldemort seems to think you’re worth the challenge, so why shouldn’t I?”

Others in the clearing winced or gasped at Longbottom’s words, silence spreading in an uncomfortable blanket. Harriet glared at him, but rather than being sullen or angry, the expression simply cut cold and hateful.

“Is that what the rest of you lot are here for?” she said, raising the volume of her voice so it would extend through the clearing. “To hear me say it? To hear me tell you how Terry died and Voldemort returned?”

The once silent clearing better resembled a tomb now, no one daring to shift or breathe lest they be the one to break the stillness.

“I’m not going to be retelling stories about what happened in June,” Harriet informed the crowd at large. “It was awful, it was horrible, and someone who shouldn’t have been involved lost his life because a nasty criminal got impatient. I’m not here to feed anyone’s gossip fix. If that’s all you want, you can bugger off now. I want us to learn, and that’s all we’ll be doing.”

Nobody moved. It was actually a Gryffindor—a third-year—who lived up to his House stereotype and spoke first.

“I wanted to know—d’you really fight Lestrange and win?”

Harriet crossed her arms over her chest. “I dueled him as part of a competition, and yeah, I won.”

“Could you teach us how to do that?”

“What? Fight him?”

“Yeah!”

Grimacing, Harriet said, “I could try,” she conceded. “But dueling isn’t the same thing as fighting, and I’m not an expert in either.” She drew in a deep breath. “I want people to learn how to defend themselves. I’m not going to teach you how to pick a fight with Lestrange or his Inquisitorial Squad.” Her eye ticked. “Besides, it’s not the same as dueling him. That has rules and professors standing by. If Lestrange gets you alone, he will hurt you.”

People exchanged uneasy looks, and Hermione bit her tongue to keep from saying anything about Lestrange and Umbridge’s bloody Inquisitorial Squad. Seemingly overnight, the horrid woman had assembled a group of “state-minded” students and, through yet another Educational Decree, granted them powers almost equal the Head Boy and Girl. For weeks, they’d been hazing the population with petty point deductions and irritating citations. So far, nothing worse had happened, but it would only be a matter of time before Lestrange, Vuharith, or Warrington tried to test their influence.

Hermione could barely admit to herself how much it hurt to see Anthony Goldstein sporting a tiny silver “I” on his lapel. They used to be friends. Good friends. Now, he wouldn’t look her in the eye.

“Did you really fight You-Know-Who?” Fay Dunbar asked, prompting a snort from Harriet.

“No. I didn’t fight the Dark Lord; I ran for my bloody life.”

Someone tittered. “But I heard there were Death Eaters,” insisted Stephen Cornfoot, one of the few present Ravenclaws. His friend Michael Corner nudged his side. “That’s what’s being said.”

“Yes, there were,” Harriet admitted, though Hermione could hear the impatience in her tone.

“And you fought them? You escaped?”

“Obviously—.”

“She saved me from the Dark Lord in my first year,” Luna piped up from next to Ginny Weasley. “She was only twelve then when she fought him and a Basilisk.”

“That’s not, it was—can I just get to the point here?” Harriet sputtered, her face glowing red. “We’re here to see about setting up proper lessons. Mostly in Defense, but with revisions for other subjects as well. Krum here is willing to help out with tutoring, and so’s Hermione.”

“Didn’t you just say you’re not the best at Defense? Why would we want to learn from you?” The question came from somewhere farther back, and Hermione didn’t see who spoke. They didn’t sound rude, merely curious.

“Because she’s brilliant,” Flourish assured the voice, backed up by nods and murmurs. “All of Slytherin House saw how she duels, and she’s Slytherin’s apprentice.”

“Made Lestrange look like a right cunt when she beat him,” said Rowan Mortuary. People laughed and cheered while the focus of their attention buried her face in her hands, embarrassed.

Hermione just wished Harriet could see herself more clearly. She wished that she could understand how the veneer of youth had cracked open to reveal a sharper, more polished young woman. It wasn’t necessarily a good thing; her eccentricities blunted by bullies and expectation, but Harriet still embodied a wildness like old magic and avian murmurations. She was thin boned and narrow-faced, but her eyes held a steadiness that could settle the panic of a drowning man. People trusted her, trusted in her ability, and she just didn’t understand.

“Speaking of Lestrange,” said a Hufflepuff named Hosea Coulston, a sixth-year with an underbite. “What if he or one of his lot find out about this meeting?”

“He won’t find out,” Hermione simply said, sparing Harriet from answering while she gathered herself.

“How can you be so sure? What’s to stop someone from leaving here and going straight to Umbridge?”

Nervous whispers rivaled the noise of the wind, and Hermione nearly had to shout for them to hear her properly. “Because of this.” She held up a tightly bound roll of parchment and a quill—a quill that made Harriet twitch and cringe for some reason. Hermione frowned at her, but now wasn’t the time to question her reaction. “Anyone interested in joining our lesson group will sign their name on this, and anyone on this list will be given further instruction on when and where we’ll be meeting.” Hermione swallowed, wetting her lips with the tip of her tongue. “I do have to warn you, that should you choose to sign this parchment, you are agreeing to never willfully disclose the nature of the group or the names of those involved to anyone outside of it, excepting the current Headmaster, Albus Dumbledore. Doing so will inflect dire consequences. I can’t stress that enough.”

Eyes widened. “What kind of consequences?”

Dire ones,” Hermione repeated without humor. “The kind you can’t walk away from. Because betraying the group would be trying to ruin the lives of everyone involved. Signing merely ensures a kind of…mutual destruction.”

“Merlin...” someone whispered.

“There’s no pressure to sign,” Hermione assured them, though her smile felt forced. She glanced at Elara, who glanced at her with a single raised brow. She and Hermione had both developed the parchment, and there was no small amount of Dark magic woven into the material. They hadn’t told Harriet exactly what it did. “If you decide you don’t want to, or because you feel you wouldn’t be able to keep the secret, you’ll leave the clearing, step over that line, and by the time you’re back to the castle, you’ll have forgotten all about what happened here.”

Gazes followed Hermione’s finger pointing toward the divot she’d carved in a wide circle all around them, and the iron sword still piercing the earth. “That’s Fae magic,” a fifth-year murmured. “Where did they even learn about that?”

“What about the first and seconds years who want to come?” Flourish asked. “What are we to tell them?”

“Nothing. We’ll approach them separately.” Hermione found a sizable rock in the weeds and unearthed it with a grunt. She Transfigured it into a table so she could roll out the blank parchment and set the black quill down. Harriet stepped to the side, looking away. “I know it this in an inconvenient meeting place, but discussing this in the castle would have been impossible, and it wasn’t safe in the village. I hope you all understand Madam Umbridge would do anything to learn about this group. She will be suspicious. You are risking your enrollment by joining.”

“Why are you telling us this?” a Ravenclaw asked.

“We want to be transparent,” Harriet told her. “None of us are going to lie to you. I mean, that’s a big reason why we wanted to offer this kind of lesson stuff, innit? Because it’s dangerous out there, because you’re not going to learn shite from Professor Slytherin while Umbridge is in the school.” The rising wind blew her fringe across her forehead, and Harriet tucked it back from her eyes. “And you shouldn’t trust what he teaches you, anyway.”

Someone laughed, but when Harriet’s expression didn’t change, it quieted. “Are you allowed to say that? Being his apprentice and all?”

“No,” she told them. “But I’m not going to lie.”

One by one, people came forward to sign the parchment. Some did so without pause—like Flourish, or the Weasley twins, or Krum. Some needed a moment, discussing it over with their friends, and a few shook their heads.

“I can’t,” said a younger Hufflepuff. “Both my mum and dad work in the Ministry. I can’t risk doing something that’ll get them in trouble.”

A few got booed, and Harriet urged those deriding them to shut up. “If they’re deciding to leave, it means they’re not taking this lightly,” she retorted. “Don’t pressure anyone to sign who can’t keep the secret. It puts all of us in danger.”

Harriet looked away from the table whenever someone approached it, and her jaw clenched when they hissed at the Blood Quill’s brief bite. Hermione furrowed her brow and asked in an undertone, “Is everything all right?”

“Yeah,” she replied. “I didn’t know you were going to use that.”

“The Blood Quill?”

“Mhm.”

“It seals the covenant,” Hermione explained. “And it, well to be frank, activates the Tell-No-Tales Curse.”

“I know. Doesn’t mean I have to like it.”

When the last signature had been added and the students waved goodbye, eager to hear about the first meeting soon, Hermione rolled the parchment up and bound it closed with a ribbon. The quill disappeared into Elara’s pocket, and Hermione returned the table to its natural form.

“I vill return to the village,” Krum told them, adjusting his fur-lined cloak. “I vill make sure the Ministry people stay unaware of today’s happenings.”

“Thank you, Viktor,” Hermione replied.

He smiled at her, and with a slight bow of his head said, “Molya,” before he headed off toward Hogsmeade. Hermione, a tad flustered by that smile, shook her head.

Harriet stood nearby, chewing on her lip, staring at the sword still stuck in the ground. It was degrading, bits and pieces rusting away, falling to the dirt, as the spell began to fail.

“It’s nerve wracking,” Harriet said when Hermione approached her. “Doing all this, making it official. Bloody hell, I’m going to have to think of a lesson plan, aren’t I? Hermione….” Harriet turned to peer at her, the first dusting of mist starting to set in her hair’s stray curls. “D’you really think I can do this?”

“I do,” Hermione said without hesitation—and she felt it in every ounce of her being that no one she knew was better suited to this than Harriet. “You’ll be brilliant. You are brilliant, and you’ll have help. I promise. You’re not in this alone.”

Hesitant, Harriet finally beamed, and she nodded. “I’ll do my best.”

“Of course you will.”

A crack filled the air, and the sword splintered into pieces, reverting to its natural state as a fallen tree branch. The air tingled against Hermione’s face like a warm breath, and the magic dispersed with the sound of childish laughter chased on the breeze.

Elara joined them, her hands folded before herself. “So,” she asked. “What’s your plans for your first lesson, Professor Potter?”

Harriet sputtered, her cheeks blazing scarlet. “Don’t tease me!”

“Whatever you say, Professor.”

Hermione linked arms with the bickering pair. “I think the perfect place to begin is at the beginning,” she said, urging them to start toward the path wending its way toward Hogwarts. “The fundamentals—.”

“Are fundamental,” Harriet finished, rolling her eyes. “You sound like Professor McGonagall, y’know….”

The trio kept on towards Hogwarts, blissfully unaware of what the future had in store.

Chapter 265: the master's ring

Chapter Text

cclxv. the master’s ring

 

For the next two weeks, Harriet barely left Ravenclaw’s Aerie.

She attended her classes and meals, always went to detention, and otherwise was a perfect, ordinary student—but her evenings were spent in the Aerie. She started staying the nights, too, when Pendarves agreed to cover her for routine bed checks. With the strange, unchanging nature of the hidden refuge’s light, Harriet stayed awake into the early morning hours, working. It meant she had no time for tutoring, and she knew the prospective lesson attendees grew more anxious as midterms approached.

When the three witches went to the Founders’ portraits to ask for the means to control the Aerie’s layout, Ravenclaw lifted her hand to show the bronze ring painted upon her middle finger. A ring, she told them, that had been lost upon her death and would take considerable effort to recreate—if they chose to do so.

“It is how I gave it proper shape,” she explained to them. “So that mine own students would not stray from the path.”

So started Harriet’s descent into the magical art of metalsmithing, which included the formation and firing of molds, casting the metal, and heating the forge. For a time, it took her mind off her worries, and Harriet lost herself in the study, most interested in how magic came into play with funny runes and long, intricate incantations that shifted the mold or changed the fire’s color. While her friends fretted about the world and Voldemort, Harriet covered herself in soot and small, forgetful burns.

Professor Ravenclaw guided her through the steps, often arguing with Master Slytherin over what was meant to happen, which rune should go where, or if Harriet was getting the movements right with her wandwork. She learned there was an awful lot of suggestibility to it all with plenty of room for personal flair, and though Harriet didn’t have the experience for any particular taste, the lack of rigidity made the work more fun. It was exciting not to know exactly how things would turn out in the end.

Fun aside, recreating Ravenclaw’s master ring required a specific ingredient Harriet didn’t have the faintest idea how to acquire.

Stench of the Dead?” she read from the thick, cumbersome tome propped on the stand in front of her. She rested an elbow on the draft table and leaned on the arm, her brow furrowed. “What is that? It sounds…gross.”

“The Stench of the Dead is a harvested organic material that exudes from the putrescent flesh of a necrotic, carbon-based organism suspended by animus spell-weaving.”

Harriet blinked, then turned to the portrait of Master Slytherin. Professor Ravenclaw’s acumen was as keen in paint as it’d been in person, so she’d picked up modern English quite well—maybe better than Harriet understood it, even. She had to ask Slytherin to translate, and he rubbed two fingers against his temple, sighing through his nose.

An Inferius,” he informed her in Parseltongue. “A corpse-puppet, student.

Harriet made a sound of disgust that prompted Ravenclaw to tut. “The particular mucus they exude is essential in suspending the cast rings. It creates a bond that solidifies the transitional nature of the Aerie to the wearer’s will.”

“But where am I supposed to find an Inferi?”

An Inferius.”

“An Inferius? I doubt Snape has a jar of dead-stink sitting on his shelf I could borrow, and they’re not exactly thick on the ground.”

Professor Ravenclaw exchanged a look with Slytherin, and he sighed again, rougher than before. “There are…places in the highlands where one may find such creatures lurking.”

Harriet sputtered. “Wh—Inferi? In Hogwarts?’

“Not in Hogwarts, nay,” he snapped. She shrugged her shoulders in apology, and he harrumphed. “But nearby, should the valley have any resemblance to what it did in years past. There are crypts where the Inferi may be stirred and hunted.”

“But don’t they have to be created?” Harriet raked her mind for her Defense lessons on Inferi. Professor Slytherin had touched upon them briefly in their third year, bemoaning the school board’s current stance on a more in-depth study on the art being unnecessary for students. “By a Dark Wizard?”

“Indeed,” the Founder said. “And there has never been a dearth of such men who have done so. That magic does not wither or wane, but persists, even if sealed away.” Slytherin paused and stroked his beard in thought. “Tell us, maid, how well do you wield the flame…?”

 

xXx

 

“You wish to serve your evening detention…with Hagrid?”

Professor Snape asked the question, his tone thick with derision as he sorted his parchments together after Harriet’s Potions class. She’d watched him throughout the lesson, waiting for the right opportunity to spring her question on him.

“Mhm,” Harriet replied. “Just for the one night.”

“Of course,” Snape drawled. “This sudden desire to venture into the wood with a half-giant wouldn’t have anything to do with the state of your hands?”

Harriet snatched said hands back into her robes’ sleeves. “No, not at all.”

Snape grunted. “Put them on the desk.”

“Really?”

He arched a brow.

Expelling an irritated breath, Harriet relented, and she placed her hands on the edge of Snape’s desk so he could see her burnt fingers. A few singes and small blisters pockmarked her skin from mistakes in firing Ravenclaw’s ancient forge.

The professor didn’t touch her, but he tilted his head and studied the marks. His gaze lingered on the back of her scarred right hand the longest of all. His jaw ticked. “Did Slytherin do this?” he asked quietly.

“No,” Harriet assured him. “I was just—doing stuff. I was working on a project and had a bit of an accident.”

“An accident.” Snape didn’t believe her, but he didn’t press the issue as class had ended and he had less than fifteen minutes before the next group would pass through the doors. He opened one of the locked drawers on his desk and removed two squat jars, setting them both in front of Harriet. “For the burns,” he said, index finger stabbing the top of one. “And for your scar,” he said of the second. “Be on your way.”

Harriet winced, already able to smell the Lyre flower in the Equill-Emollient despite the jar being sealed, disappointed he hadn’t answered her. She gathered both containers and tucked them into her bag, using old, crumpled parchment to cushion them. On the way out the door, Snape called her back.

“Potter.”

She hesitated, letting the door ease shut again, turning her head to see the Potions Master. His gaze settled on her, heavy and inscrutable.

“You can have your detention with Hagrid. I don’t know what you’re up to and don’t particularly care, so long as you don’t run afoul Umbridge or her dunderhead brigade,” he said. “But don’t ever use one of my spells to hurt yourself again.”

Harriet took a breath to argue, to deny what she’d done, but Snape had seen her hand before she’d inflicted the solid, marring slash below the knuckles. He knew what she’d covered up and how she’d done it. She had no room to argue with him.

“I won’t,” she whispered, apologetic. Snape said nothing more, and Harriet could hear people gathering in the corridor already, so she rushed on her way.

 

xXx

 

The evening curled like cold, careful fingers against the nape of Harriet’s sweaty neck as she struggled to keep up with Hagrid’s larger footsteps.

She reached the top of the hill resting in the tor’s shadow and used the last of the day’s sunlight to peer at the hastily drawn map clenched in her fist. The Founder’s directions had been based on several landmarks long since destroyed or shifted by the centuries, so it took a bit of time and deduction for Harriet and the groundskeeper to figure out where the old crypt lay in the Forbidden Forest’s outskirts. They’d spent the last two hours traipsing along the far edge of the lake, coming around through the wooded edges of the bog until the ground began to ascend once more.

“The centaurs don’t like comin’ this way,” Hagrid said as he paused and swung his oil lantern toward Harriet. Fang kept pace with him, sniffing at the autumn grass. “I don’t blame them. Going up here gives me the willies.” He shuddered. “But that’ll be it there. The entrance caved in a good bit.”

He moved the light again and shone it upon an outcropping of rock where the hill started to roll toward the mountainside. The entrance to the crypt or whatever it used to be had never been grand, but the slow buildup of sediment blown by the wind and rocks displaced from the higher tor had misshapen the way until it better resembled a manhole cover into a sewer.

“Down there, then?” Hagrid asked, frowning as he peered at the stone lid. “I don’t like the look o’ at all, Harry. Are you sure what you be needin’ is down there?”

“Oh, yeah,” Harriet bluffed, scratching her jaw. “It’s a, err, rare mushroom. They’re supposed to be here.”

She hated lying to Hagrid, but she doubted he’d be so game to assist if he knew she meant to go hunting Inferi in a half-collapsed tomb after dark. As it was, he helped lever the entrance open, then tied off a rope to a sturdy trunk, dropping the opposite end inside so Harriet could climb back out. The descent was only a little more than six feet, so Harriet merely crouched and hopped down, landing with a small grunt.

Lumos.”

Light flowed from the end of her wand, illuminating a narrow shaft wending deeper into the hillside. She murmured a couple of spells to detect life and magic and found nothing.

Well …I guess it wouldn’t technically be alive, would it?

Adjusting her cloak so it wouldn’t hamper her hands, Harriet took a deep, centering breath, then looked back up towards Hagrid. “I’ll be right back!”

“I’ll be waitin’….”

She ventured deeper into the old, makeshift crypt, her breathing and footsteps echoing in the cramped confines. She followed Master Slytherin’s directions exactly as she’d been told, wincing against the smell of old, wet things moldering in the dark.

Why was something like that left so close to the school?” Harriet asked the portraits. Neither Founder had a good answer for her.

“Why does a garden have anthills?” Slytherin riposted. “Because the gardener cannot kill all the ants, no matter how they try.”

“And are Inferi like ants? That’s a bloody awful thought.”

“In a manner of speaking, I would say. The highlands were old and steeped in lost magic eons before dear Rowena brought Hogwarts to its climes. We can no more stomp out the undesirable than we can destroy that which is wanted. The barrows of the old druids and fae have existed since time immemorial, and will exist long after Hogwarts is nothing but dust.

Harriet chewed her lip as she considered the conversation again. She found portraits could often be ambivalent toward the idea of death and ruin; they were, after all, quite dead themselves. Still, it unsettled her to think of a time wherein the school didn’t exist—either because it hadn’t been formed, or because it had been abandoned. It tarnished the immutability of it and made Harriet feel vulnerable.

She ducked beneath a curtain of thick, dry lichen, feeling pieces of it break off and snag in her hair as she came into a wider chamber. Harriet raised her wand to increase the light, and it fell across a bent, swaying form. Perhaps it was the movement or the glow that caught the creature’s attention, but the shambling thing twitched, and its bones clicked and clacked as it turned milk-white eyes onto Harriet.

It was a terrible thing to witness and all too reminiscent of the shambling horror she’d seen Voldemort ride into the Pair Dadeni cauldron in June—but Harriet had seen and endured many terrible things, and this didn’t faze her. The Inferius scampered closer on twitching, ungainly limbs, and Harriet’s heart leapt into her throat. Her hand remained steady on her wand.

Incendio Flagello.”

Fire licked out of her wand’s tip, and as Harriet snapped her hand upward, it flailed like a whip. With a resounding crack!, the spell lashed across the Inferius’ face—and its head burst in a hazy cloud of smoke. The body kept moving, but it slowed and staggered as if confused until it crumpled in a heap.

Harriet nudged the leg with her toe. It didn’t move.

“Merlin, I hope I don’t have to do this again,” she muttered as she removed an empty vial from her pocket, already wrinkling her nose at the smell leaking from the broken corpse. “Ruddy paintings can do this themselves next time if they think it’s so easy….”

 

xXx

 

The weight of the slim, silver ring felt heavy where it sat on Harriet’s middle finger.

She fidgeted with it, spinning it round and round with her thumb, her nail catching upon the fresh engravings until she forced her hands flat against her sides. It was October thirtieth, the night before Hallowe’en, and she stood, waiting, with Hermione, Elara, and Viktor Krum.

The three witches all had the same ring on their fingers. Hermione held hers up to the Aerie’s light, inspecting it.

“The craftsmanship is lovely, especially considering it’s your first creation,” she commented.

“I had a few practice goes at it,” Harriet corrected her. “And really, magic makes up for most faults or lack of technical skill.”

Neither Hermione nor Elara had been idle while Harriet worked on Ravenclaw’s rings. They had been collecting, cataloging, and disseminating the passwords and locations of the Moon Mirrors, while also forming a proper schedule.

“We have to be careful,” Hermione had said. “With how people come in and out of the Aerie. If they establish a notable habit, it will tip off Umbridge and the Inquisitorial Squad. That would be trouble.”

“Not that they can get in. Not easily,” Elara had added as she double-checked Hermione’s list. “The parchment they signed ensured they cannot give away the passwords to the Moon Mirrors nor discuss the Aerie. We even added a clause for the group to continue once we’ve graduated Hogwarts.”

Harriet had blinked. “Wait—what?”

“They can elect new officers, and new officers can add new members, so long as the group remains secret.”

In the present, Harriet still marveled at the idea that this silly group could have any kind of permanence, that her friends thought people would want to keep coming after the first or second meeting. They stood now in a wide room they’d found in the Aerie and had centered as the meeting place for their tutoring. Against one wall were three Moon Mirrors they faced now, waiting, Harriet standing at the edge of a dueling platform. There were tables and chairs on the outskirts for studying, and of course, the Aerie could supply most any book on any subject someone needed if they thought to ask.

People started to arrive one by one or in pairs, stumbling through the open mirrors, told to come from different areas in the castle. Harriet felt a sense of pride when their faces lit up with wonder to see the Aerie for the first time, the domed ceiling layered in constellations and bronze gilt, the cheery glow at the windows, books fluttering as they moved in lazy flocks above their heads.

“Brilliant,” Fred and George Weasley said in sync. Longbottom, in contrast, appeared peaky. He hadn’t been back since seeing the Basilisk.

When she thought most everyone who’d signed the parchment was present, Harriet called them to attention. “All right, you lot,” she said, raising her voice to be heard. She swallowed, tongue flopping in her dry mouth, and squashed the trepidation pooling in her gut as dozens of eyes turned to her. “I’m glad you were able to make it without any difficulties. Remember, when we decide to have our next meeting, you’re going to have to come through a different mirror—and always be aware of your surroundings. Don’t let one of those Inquisitorial prats catch you out.”

“How will we know when the next meeting’s going to happen?” a Ravenclaw—Roger Davies—asked. The answer came in the form of a smug Hermione gesturing for one of the helpful walking tables to come tottering over. On its top sat a simple, rather plain burlap sack, and from within it Hermione pulled out a handful of plain silver rings.

They weren’t like the ones Harriet had made for herself and her friends. Those had taken a great deal more effort and magic, and they were larger in size, the bands fatter and engraved with their initials. The rings in the sack had taken far less time to cast, especially with magic, and the spellwork on them had mostly been done by Hermione.

“There’s a date on the inside of the ring,” Hermione explained as she passed them out. “When Harriet decides to host the next sessions, she’ll adjust the date on the inside of her ring, and because I’ve put Protean Charms on this lot, they’ll mimic what hers says.”

Several of the older students looked at each other with wide, confused eyes. Hermione made an anxious gesture with her hands and tucked back a stray curl.

“Well, you don’t have to wear it,” she insisted. “But I would keep it on your person—it grows hot, you see, when the date changes. So long as you can feel it, you’ll know when the numbers have changed.”

“A Protean Charm?” someone repeated, stunned. “That’s—that’s on the N.E.W.Ts. You can do N.E.W.T spells?”

Elara scoffed at the question. “We’d be a poor tutoring group indeed if we couldn’t,” she told them. “Hermione can probably do most of the Charms you’ll find on the exams. I know the Transfigurations, and Harriet knows the Defense.”

The witches in question blushed nearly scarlet. “Er, I—.”

“Does our group have a name?” Luna asked. She had a pair of Dirigible Plums hanging from her ears, and Harriet didn’t know if they were real or not.

“A name?” she parroted, baffled.

“All the best groups have names,” Luna told her as if Harriet should know what she meant. “All the clubs and teams and squads. We’re not very official at all if we’re just a bunch of people who happen to study in the same room.”

Harriet stuttered for a moment because she hadn’t considered them to be anything other than a large bunch of students who just so happened to be learning in the same space. It was Hermione who replied with, “A name! I like that. Does anyone have any suggestions?”

Naturally, those in attendance had plenty of ideas, and they flung them about the room for the next ten minutes as Harriet looked on like a dazed budgie. Among the more popular choices were the “Anti-Umbridge League,” the “Veiled Vanguard of Knowledge,” the “Lumos League,” and the “Defense Association.” Hermione systematically cut each option down for being too silly or candid until the shaky, uncertain voice of a first-year said—.

“How about the Coven?” Elbres Weld said, blushing under the scrutiny of so many people. He endeavored on, however. “It’s simple, but this is what covens used to be about in the past, right? Learning, and keeping secrets.”

And so, with minimal arguing or refinement, it was decided on October thirtieth, at their very first official meeting, that Harriet’s tutoring group would be known as the Coven of Hogwarts, with each covener swearing themselves to secrecy about the group’s existence.

Harriet, standing on the platform looking down, nodded her head and tried to quell her racing heart. “If that’s settled,” she said. “Then let’s start the first lesson.”


A/N: I copied a few of the prospective group names from Chapter 18, OotP. Listen, I ’ve been trying to think of a name for Harriet’s DA that wasn’t the DA for years and I’ve finally given up xD So I hope you like it.

Harriet: “Three Rings for the Elven-kings under the sky—.”

Elara: “Harriet.”

Harriet: “Nine for Mortal men, doomed to die—.”

Hermione: “Don’t do it.”

Harriet: “One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne—.”

Elara: Harriet—!

Harriet: “ONE RING TO RULE THEM ALL!”

Chapter 266: the inquisitorial squad

Chapter Text

cclxvi. the inquisitorial squad

 

November swept over the castle with a speed that took Hermione’s breath away.

It felt as if the weeks had been crawling by with all the speed of a dazed flobberworm, and all of a sudden the month changed, and the days passed too quickly, the equinox and its looming election marked much too close on Hermione’s busy calendar.

She read the papers every morning like a woman possessed, devouring every bit of information she could get on Amelia Bones, Gaunt, and how their platforms were being laid for the public. Gaunt naturally picked at the faults of others and those he said actively worked against his establishment, while Bones struck a surprisingly strong contrast. Though she claimed to have never had aspirations for the Minister’s office, she wasn’t a foolish witch; she knew how to campaign, and she knew what people wanted to hear.

Time in office had worked against Gaunt; those who might have otherwise supported his agenda were growing disillusioned by his leadership, pressuring members of the Wizengamot to vote with their community rather than solely on their family’s own feelings. The unremitting strictness of his anti-Muggle policies had negatively impacted the economy; many wizard craftsmen procured their raw materials through the Muggle markets, and one of Gaunt’s early moves had been to outlaw that practice, assuming wizards would fill the gap for production. It was a sound idea—if the British Wizarding world hadn’t just suffered a debilitating war. There simply weren’t enough people.

Coupled with that was the prevalent extinction of established families who left no one to claim their inheritance. It meant the goblins reclaimed many vaults in Gringotts and any wealth therein—taking thousands and thousands of Galleons out of the market by putting them back into the hands of a foreign nation. The goblins despised Gaunt, and they throttled the dispersion of currency among Wizarding kind. Attitudes were tense, and the public had been demanding Gaunt do something for years.

Bones, in contrast, had tackled the issue from a moderate stance. Magical Britain didn’t react well to radicalism, change, or unfamiliar faces; Bones fed into their desire for tradition, being a recognizable, pure-blood witch while also promising to fix those issues the public thought Gaunt had failed to deliver on. Hermione had doubts how much change she could really affect—but, at the end of the day, a daft goose would be a better choice than Gaunt for Minister. So long as he was out of office, the Wizarding world could start uprooting his insidious influence.

It all seemed to be happening too quickly and not quickly at all. Hermione felt like an owl trapped in tar, frantically beating her wings while getting nowhere at all. All the while, her stress concerning the midterms continued to mount. Horrors and fears of failing every class filled her dreams, waking Hermione in the middle of the night, drenched in sweat.

“You’re going to burn yourself out,” Elara had told her as she handed over a cloudy vial. “And overdose on Calming Draught. This is the third I’ve gotten from Pomfrey, and she’s not an idiot. She must know I’m giving them to you after you reached your limit.”

“I just need the one,” Hermione had lied, because she’d needed another the next morning, and the morning after, just to get through the day without breaking down into tears as she imagined horrid what-ifs and possible futures wherein she didn’t have any accreditation or means of earning a living.

“That’s dumb,” Harriet had said with her typical blunt candor. “There’s no future in which Hermione Granger can’t find a way to make a living. There’s not future in which me or Elara or Sirius or Remus would ever let you be—what? Destitute? Don’t be a twit.”

Gruff reassurances aside, Hermione still worried, and not just about her own fate, but the fate of all Muggle-borns and pure-bloods and anything in between. She worried about her parents and wondered if they were doing well in a reality where magic didn’t steal their child away.

So she took her Calming Draughts and tried to breathe through the anxiety and spiraling apprehension that tightened her chest every morning—but not today. Today was a meeting day.

Twice a week, the Coven of Hogwarts secreted itself away in Ravenclaw’s Aerie, and though not everyone could attend each time, Hermione made it a point to go whenever Harriet hosted a session. Passing through a Moon Mirror into the room they’d set aside for lessons felt like walking under a cool waterfall, and the transition somehow managed to wash away Hermione’s concerns. Inside the Aerie, anything Gaunt was doing outside of it ceased to matter—there was no war, no impending election, no Umbridge or Inquisitorial Squad. Once Hermione passed through her reflection, it was time to learn.

Ironic, considering the origins of the group, but Hermione wasn’t about to scoff at a good thing.

Today was particularly special. Today, Harriet was teaching the Patronus spell.

“All magic responds to emotion, but none more so than the Patronus Charm,” the bespectacled witch explained to her gathered pupils, holding her hands behind her back, keeping her posture straight. Hermione knew she kept her arms like that so she wouldn’t fidget with her fingers or pick at her nails, but she thought Harriet looked remarkably like Professor Slytherin, what with how she stood and how she dressed in her black tailored robes with the silver and green accents. Of course, Hermione had enough tact not to tell her.

“In order for it to work, you have to fill yourself with a positive feeling. I guess the most basic way of explaining how to do this is to think of a happy memory.”

“Is that really all it takes?” asked Wendy Darker. She’d been one of the more reluctant joiners, and Hermione postulated it was because the Darker family were notorious fence-sitters, and Wendy had been keen on being Slytherin’s apprentice before being woefully outclassed. Hermione once heard her saying to Artemis Barlow at the sinks in the loo that she wanted to get an apprenticeship to have an excuse to move from home without marrying.

“No, not really.” Harriet rocked on her feet for a moment, gathering her thoughts.

“I’ve heard you can’t cast it if you’re not a seventh-year. At least, that’s what my uncle said,” commented Florence Frilende from Hufflepuff.

“Not true at all,” Harriet replied, shrugging. Her glasses caught the Aerie’s odd, ubiquitous light whenever she turned, every slight shift of her head obscuring her eyes. The effect came off as quite eerie, in Hermione’s opinion. “If you’re younger, it’ll be more difficult to manifest a full Patronus. That just has to do with your magic being smaller. I was taught that your casting power is a bit like a muscle.” She formed a small circle with her hands, interlocking her fingers. “The more you stretch it, challenging the kinds of spells you cast, practicing, the bigger the muscle gets.” She widened the circle. “The bigger the muscle, the easier it is to cast more powerful spells. So, it’s simply more possible if you’re older, but not im-possible when you’re younger.”

As they considered this, Harriet gave her wrist an easy flick, and her wand slid into her open hand. “So, the easiest place to start with the Charm is to think of a happy memory, but that’s not all you have to do. Sometimes, it’s not just a memory but a series of them. What you’re really after is the feeling. It was once described to me as ‘the encapsulation of sheer, unfettered joy.’”

Hermione huffed through her nose. That’s definitely Professor Snape.

“In my own experience, it’s not just a feeling of happiness, but also…hope and safety and…love. It’s about letting all those warm thoughts and emotions fill you up until anything else disappears. Casting it here is a lot different than casting it in front of a Dementor, but if you can memorize the feeling—.”

She paused for a moment, then twisted her wand. “Expecto Patronum.”

Gasps burst from the spectators as Harriet’s silver crow bloomed into being, and it flowed over their heads, casting the room in a crisp, spangled light. Hermione held her breath as she felt the outpouring of Harriet’s emotion. She almost shivered as she remembered what it was like to be really happy. She hadn’t experienced such joy in years.

When the Patronus dimmed, Hermione exhaled, and she knew the others felt the same sense of loss, the abrupt cessation of contentment that cut almost painful across their senses. Tears warmed her eyes, and she exhaled, breath shaking.

“It’s not just effective against Dementors. All Dark creatures are repulsed by the Patronus’ presence, and it can lessen the damage of Dark curses, act as a guide, and send messages. Not quite sure how the latter works, but I’ve been told it’s possible.” Harriet laughed—a small, self-effacing noise that she cut short with a cough. “Er, anyway. Who wants to give it a shot first?”

Naturally, everyone did, and no one was successful. Harriet didn’t let their collective frustration bring the mood down, instead encouraging them to try again. “Take a moment, if you need it,” she said. “Really think about your memory. Let it sit with you, let yourself feel it.”

Normally, this kind of wishy-washy indecisiveness in magic drove Hermione up a wall; she hated anything so unquantifiable as a feeling being part of a spell, but she listened to Harriet’s instruction and crossed her arms as she leaned against the wall.

It was more difficult than she anticipated. She thought of her favorite memories, but when she really considered them, so many dimmed under the overarching shadow of her daily worries. Her first kiss with Terry. Her childhood home. Her first perfect spell. Everything drooped beneath the heavy rain cloud following Hermione.

Someone leaned against the wall next to her, their elbow brushing hers. Hermione blinked, turning her head to see Draco.

“Come on, Granger. You haven’t got it down yet? I’m surprised.”

She huffed through her nose. “Forgive me if I can’t find the right inspiration.”

Draco ran a hand through his hair, and he matched her tired sigh. She noticed the dark circles beneath his pale eyes and the furrow forming between his brows, but he still looked better than he had last term—fatigued, but less drawn and ill. Less hunted.

“I’m not about to ask in front of this rabble, but do you know what memory Potter uses?” The look Hermione gave him must have surprised him because he continued. “She’s not what anyone would call joyous, and from I understand, her life has been rather horrid. Yet, she manages to cast a Patronus without difficulty.”

Not without difficulty,” Hermione corrected. “She once described it as a series of memories—a sequence of thoughts that conjure the impression of home as she understands it. For most people, a memory is all that’s needed; negativity doesn’t subsume it. So, Harriet bypasses that negativity by overwhelming it with many good memories.”

Draco considered this, then turned his hand, giving his wand a small flick. “Expecto Patronum.”

A silver mist formed—not quite solid, but thick, with a definite form lurking just beyond their sight.

“That was close!” Hermione enthused. “What were you thinking about?”

A light flush colored his cheeks, and Draco coughed. “It’s…silly.”

“Oh? Well, c’mon, tell me. Don’t leave me in suspense.”

He grunted. “When I was little, we had a Muggle-born living with us. Older, I think. She taught me this Muggle game called ‘I Spy.’ One day, we spent all summer afternoon in the garden playing and even got mother and father to join in.” He cast his eyes down, the corner of his mouth hitching in a small smile. “No matter how many times I ask father for her name, he won’t give it.”

Others in the room continued with their attempts. None got farther than bursts of mist and hazy silver clouds until—.

Woah!”

A lioness prowled past people’s legs, a long tail swishing through the air as she bounded about and returned to sit by her owner’s feet. Walt Murton blushed scarlet as his year mates cheered, and Harriet squeezed his shoulder, grinning. Gabriel Flourish stood by him, red in the face too, though looking decidedly sullen.

“Those two are mad for her,” Draco murmured.

“Who?”

“Murton and Flourish. For Potter, Merlin help them.”

Oh. Yes, I see what you mean. Flourish more so, I think.”

“Mmm,” Draco answered, and Hermione knew by the slight dip in his tone that he didn’t agree with her, but didn’t wish to argue. “It’ll end up being ugly between them.”

“Who?”

Murton and Flourish, Granger. Are you not listening?” Draco shook his head. “It doesn’t matter. Let’s give it another go. We can’t have the third-years outdoing us, can we?”

Murton’s achievement triggered a slow snowballing of success, and soon the Aerie was a veritable zoo of blue and silver animals, swirling stars and galaxies of bright, sparkling lights. With the addition of every new Patronus, it became a tad easier for the others to immerse themselves in their good memories, and Hermione better understood what Harriet meant by stringing several memories into one. She thought of how it felt to embrace her best friends, the feeling in her middle when she could settle in her bed at night, loved and accepted by a family of her own choosing. She shut her eyes and infused her incantation with that emotion—.

“Is that a hyena?” Elara asked, puzzled, watching as the four-legged scavenger gambled around Hermione.

“A Spotted Hyena, if I’m not mistaken,” Hermione said, matching Elara’s confusion. “It’s not precisely what I would have expected, but I’m pleased. What’s yours?”

Elara grimaced, her cheeks pink. Hermione grinned.

“Are you embarrassed, hmm?”

Draco, still attempting to make his Patronus corporeal, snorted. “It was a snake. I saw it from over here.”

Elara swatted his arm.

“Come on, tell me, then.”

Sighing, the taller witch finally relented, muttering, “A Runespoor.”

“A Runespoor? One of those serpents with three heads? Fascinating!”

As the lesson progressed, Harriet turned her attention to assisting students with other areas of Defense. Krum found himself surrounded by Quidditch enthusiasts, much to his chagrin. Hermione helped Draco perfect his pronunciation of the spell.

“You’re being much to posh about it,” she insisted.

“No, I’m not.”

“You’re saying ‘expectoooo, when it should be much more concise about it. You sound like your father.”

He rolled his eyes. “I do not. Has anyone ever told you you’re a know-it-all?”

“Believe it or not, they have.” Hermione propped her fist on her hip. “You know I’m right, Draco Malfoy. Stop being stubborn.”

He tried again, pointedly cutting his elongated vowels—and the pooling silver mist he’d been producing coalesced, and he nearly fell on his backside in shock when a large bird started running around his legs.

“A pheasant!” Hermione clapped, smiling. “I don’t know what I expected you to have, but it fits!”

Draco grumbled, brushing off his robes as the pheasant cocked its vaguely opaque head toward him. He shrugged his shoulders. “Ruddy bird.”

“Oh, but pheasants are good luck! They represent nobility, good fortune, and familial loyalty. They’re very regal.”

Her words cheered him up, and he looked at his Patronus with more appreciation as it began to fade. Hermione opened her mouth to ask what form he’d thought it’d take when a soft pop! of displaced air turned her head.

“Winky?” The little house-elf gave her head a nervous bobble as her large eyes rolled over the busy room full of students. She stood almost beneath a table, her little hand clasping the wooden leg. “Are you all right? Is everything well?”

“Miss Herme-ninny, Winky is having a letter for you.”

She retrieved an envelope from within her pillowcase, extending it toward Hermione.

“Oh, thank you. Is there a reason you’re giving it to me now? Is it urgent?”

Winky shook her head, ears flapping. “No, Miss Herme-ninny. Winky is being watchful like Miss asked, and she is watching the bad witch. The bad witch is being taking the letters from the owls and reading them.”

Hermione’s brow rose and she looked at Draco who wore a similar expression. “Umbridge is screening the post? She can’t do that.”

“I’m sure we’ll find a new Educational Decree proving she can,” Hermione darkly returned. “We’ll have to tell the others tomorrow. There’s nothing we can do about what comes in the morning.” To Winky, she added. “Thank you, Winky. I appreciate your work.”

The house-elf beamed before going about her business, and Hermione opened her letter, peeling back the wax seal.

“Is that from father?” Draco asked as Hermione read. “I recognize the crest.”

“Hmm.”

“What does he want?”

“Nothing,” Hermione bluffed, folding the letter shut again, stuffing it into the envelope. “Just the usual news from the Ministry, nothing worth notice. Oh! Did you see that? One of the Hufflepuffs has a hippogriff for a Patronus!”

Hermione steered the conversation away from the post she stashed inside her pocket. The message concerned her, but not overly much; she simply didn’t wish to worry Draco. Mr. Malfoy had written to inform her his contacts within the Guardians were reporting an increased interest in Hermione’s activities. She’d postulated Gaunt and his fools would eventually pinpoint her as a source of the increased unrest even after she’d taken Lucius’ advice to be more circumspect and aloof with her identity when contacting Wizengamot families. It did make her uneasy, but really, what could the wizard do while she was inside Hogwarts beyond having Umbridge harass her? The harpy already did that.

Hermione exhaled one sharp breath through her nose, not wanting an answer to that question.

 

xXx

 

“Er, Granger?”

The lesson had nearly reached its conclusion and probably should have been called thirty minutes prior when one of the younger Slytherins, Liam Godfrid, approached Hermione. She paused her conversation with Elara to look at the shorter boy, arching a brow. As far as she knew, he’d only just come in and hadn’t attended the session.

“Did you need something?”

“I don’t know,” he told her. “I just want to tell you some of us couldn’t make it tonight. That lot in Umbridge’s Inquisitorial Squad has been loitering around a few of the Mirrors and it was too risky.”

“How did you come, then?”

He scratched the back of his head, though he looked rather proud. “I got out of the castle and went the long way to the Mirror behind the greenhouses.”

“Clever,” Hermione replied, distracted. What are those buffoons up to? The Inquisitorial Squad had no means of entering the Aerie; the Tell-No-Tales Curse ensured no member of the Coven could willingly or unwillingly give out the password or location, but nothing could entirely prevent a bystander from snooping and discovering the password through no fault of a member. “Which Mirrors specifically were you having difficulty with?”

“For me and Basil, we couldn’t come through the one in the dungeons. Elsie Honeybrook said she saw Warrington lurking on the third floor.”

“Have they really nothing better to do?” Elara said. “Warrington isn’t a prefect and doesn’t have a reason to be loitering on the third floor. Why hasn’t Filch called him out?”

“He’s been turning a blind eye to Umbridge’s favorites.” Hermione pursed her lips in a passing impersonation of McGonagall. “And the other professors have been reluctant to tangle with her under threat of probation.” To Liam, she added. “You can go on now. Thank you for telling us.”

Elara folded her gloved hands together and narrowed her eyes as she watched Godfrid hurry off toward the other second-years. “We should tell Harriet.”

Hermione looked across the room. Harriet chatted with the Weasley twins and Cho Chang. She laughed at something George said, and she looked so genuinely pleased with how the session had gone, Hermione didn’t have the heart to interrupt. It’d been so long since she’d laughed.

“No,” Hermione said, slowly. “No, there’s no need to involve her. We’ll check some of the other Mirrors and ensure we get everyone out of the Aerie without interference from the Inquisitorial Squad. I’ll try the one on the seventh floor.”

“I’ll check the one on the Hufflepuff side of the dungeons. I doubt any of that lot would care to check there.”

As discreet as they could be, Hermione and Elara peeled away from the group and approached the waiting Moon Mirrors on the room’s far side. Elara departed with the password for the dungeons, and Hermione headed higher. When she hopped the short drop from the frame, she found the corridor illuminated by a single torch on the far end of the passage, the walls bare but for the tapestry of Barnabas the Barmy trying to teach an octet of trolls to dance Rameau’s Pygmalion.

She looked both ways, noticed nothing amiss—and still didn’t see the spell coming.

Petrificus Totalus.”

Her arms and legs snapped together, toppling her into the wall next to the silver glass.

“Well, well. Look at what I’ve discovered.”

Though she could do little else but blink, Hermione’s heart jumped into her throat as she heard the familiar voice come slithering from the dark. Lestrange followed like fire after smoke, the grin he wore nothing short of sinister.

“It’s Potter’s little Mudblood,” he crooned, coming closer one slow, methodical step at a time. “Without her cheating attack dog and the uppity blood-traitor in tow. How fortunate for me.”

Lestrange stood not a foot away from her, and Hermione could do nothing but stare and silently panic. He touched the Moon Mirror, but instead of passing through the cold surface, his fingertips brushed solid silver. He grunted and smacked his palm against it, Hermione flinching.

“I imagine you think you’re smart. Smarter than anyone else—you and Potter and Black.” His dark eyes glimmered with the distant torchlight like small, prickling pits open unto the bowels of Hell. He leaned nearer until Hermione could breathe in the smell of him, an expensive cologne dimmed by the thick saccharine tang of unmitigated Dark magic.

Her pulse raced beneath her skin, eyes trembling. “If Lestrange gets you alone,” Harriet’s voice echoed in her ears. “He will hurt you.

His other hand moved in her peripheral vision, rising up from his pocket until Hermione could see what he held. She whimpered when the short, black dagger flashed between his fingers.

“You’re not smart,” he whispered to her as if confessing a secret. “You know what I think you are?” He dragged the flat of the blade against her chin, then dipped it lower along her side. “I think you’re an obstinate piece of rubbish who’s causing far too many problems for your betters.” Hermione couldn’t see it, but the dagger’s tip pulled against her cuff, tugging on her sleeve, dipping below it. It dug into her skin. Lestrange stepped back to see better, yanking the cloth aside to bare her wrist and forearm to his inspection. “And I think you need a reminder of your place.”

Hermione couldn’t scream as the dagger pierced her flesh.


A/N:

Me: “Here, this box is for you.”

Hermione: “Oh, thank you.”

Hermione: “…”

Hermione: “There’s nothing in here but angst.”

I changed Hermione ’s Patronus. The Otter represents a sense of playful curiosity, fearlessness, and the water element. CDT!Hermione has left behind that carefree playfulness Canon!Hermione kept close to her heart. Her determination and inquisitiveness has turned much sharper; I selected the hyena among a few other choices (heron, magpie, fox, cat) because the hyena represents cunning, survival, ferocity, and pack bonding. They’re curious, and thought to be witches in African folklore.

I chose a Runespoor for Elara. There ’s a lot of symbolism in the three heads—the planner, the visionary, the critic—that I feel matches the side’s of Elara: analytical, mystic, and critical.

Also, another thing we might not think about: the MPA was passed in 1982, so the Malfoys have had other Muggle-borns aside from Ingham and Hermione (and the poor unnamed child murdered by Vol/Gaunt.) Draco ’s had more exposure to Muggle-borns than in canon. The connotation here of Lucius not telling Draco the girl’s name is she’s probably dead.

 

Chapter 267: the board's choice

Chapter Text

cclxvii. the board’s choice

 

In her thirty-nine years of teaching at Hogwarts, Minerva had witnessed her fair share of misbehaving students.

Most grew out of their unruliness once they left the school or as they reached their final years. Some needed only one or two detentions to learn their obstinance and disrespect wouldn’t be tolerated at Hogwarts, and their behavior moderated. A few had difficulty adjusting to life in boarding school and acted out; Minerva anticipated this and, in the case of her own House, took steps to help or mediate.

She didn’t consider any of the children she’d seen pass through those hallowed halls bad, even those who later became truly evil men and women. It was a tragedy each and every time the morning Prophet arrived and she opened it to read news about one of her former pupils being arrested. In the wake of You-Know-Who’s first fall, when the Ministry busied themselves grabbing Death Eaters left and right, Minerva had dreaded seeing the pictures in the papers, unable to avoid the flashes of gap-toothed smiles and young, rounded faces flickering in her mind.

She always wondered how they’d failed them, what they could have done differently to lead those poor boys and girls to better paths. It was a tragedy whenever she looked at Severus and recalled her own negligence in his care, regret turning her stomach. She strove to be better for the students, no matter the circumstances engulfing their world; Dark Lord or no Dark Lord, she wanted Hogwarts’ children to thrive and learn to the best of their ability.

She didn’t have bad students, but Minerva thought Accipto Lestrange might be the closest thing to it.

The son of Bellatrix and Rodolphus Lestrange, the boy had been brought up in the household of his distant relatives Faucon and Ospra Lestrange—according to Albus. The Headmaster had confessed to Minerva he suspected it was a rather uncomfortable situation, the young Lestrange reared in the care of a butler and steward while Faucon and Ospra, two of the final members of the French branch of the family, spent much of their year in Cannes raising their own son and daughter. Both Faucon and Ospra had been suspected of funding You-Know-Who during the war and had subsequently distanced themselves from England and its Wizarding society. Taking in the son of a noted, infamous Dark witch had not been in their plans.

However, even taking into account his troubled upbringing, Minerva struggled to find sympathy for Accipto Lestrange. From the moment he stepped foot in the castle, he’d been a cruel, maligning little boy who thrived on delinquency and contempt. His youthful pranks had always held an edge of malice, and as he’d aged, his attitude had become progressively more and more aggressive, and he’d grown cunning in hiding his activities. Despite what the student body may assume, the faculty were not blind to Mr. Lestrange’s abuse of narcotic potions, but they had thus far been unable to prove either his usage or possession of the illicit substance. No amount of detentions had ever dissuaded the lad, and his Head of House enabled his nefarious activities.

Still, never in Minerva’s wildest imaginations would she have thought a student of the school capable of this level of maliciousness. Nor would she have expected the Board to be so willfully incompetent.

“There has been a clear and flagrant violation of the school’s rules and bylaws,” Albus said, directing his stare down the polished table toward the head of Hogwarts’ Board of Governors, Thaddeus Grimwood. He was a long, slender wizard with gray eyes set above a thin and short, groomed beard. “Mr. Lestrange willfully attacked another student, both with magic and with a weapon, and left Miss Granger petrified until she was found by a fellow student.”

Mr. Grimwood held a quill in his callused hand and stroked his thumb idly along the vanes, making no notes upon his parchment. “We understand your concerns and express our own regrets in seeing a pupil of this academy injured. Unfortunately, there are no witnesses to this alleged assault, Headmaster. We only have the word of those involved to go off and…well.”

Incredulous, Minerva looked to Albus, whose brow rose toward his hairline. “Miss Granger is currently in our hospital wing with a rather awful slur emblazoned upon her arm. Do you imagine she did this to herself, Mr. Grimwood?”

The other members of the Board turned their heads like owls as they watched the conversation, the majority of the old, fastidious wizards pale and sweaty as the discussion devolved toward an argument.

“I wouldn’t dare to presume, Albus. I simply have to express my apprehension in accepting the young witch’s version of events.”

“I beg your pardon?”

Mr. Grimwood paused to shuffle through the sheaves in front of him. “I have several reports from an agent of the Ministry in the school describing Miss Granger as, ah, ‘resistant to Wizarding integration,’ and—.” He folded the top page, reading the one below. “A ‘disoriented attention-seeker.’ You can understand my reluctance to punish a young man whose praises have been sung by the Minister himself solely on the word of a potentially unstable little girl.”

Minerva couldn’t believe what she was hearing. “Miss Granger is not a little girl!” she snapped, ignoring the tempering touch Albus laid on her arm. “She is very nearly of age and could not be a more principled or upright student! No matter the opinions of Madam Umbridge!”

“Minerva,” Albus said.

“No, Headmaster. I will not have one of my students depicted as a—a deranged deceiver!”

“But is Mr. Lestrange not your student as well, Deputy Headmistress?” Mr. Grimwood asked. “Allow me to present you with a scenario. A Muggle-born witch with a turbulent upbringing, bounced from one home to another, feels neglected and insignificant in comparison to her peers. She sees an opportunity to ruin the prospects of a promising young wizard slated for a career in the Ministry by inflicting minor self-harm upon herself—.”

“Ridiculous!” Minerva cried, flabbergasted. “Miss Granger would do no such thing! And Mr. Lestrange’s antagonism of our Muggle-born students is well noted in his record!”

“Neither my infirmary’s matron nor I would describe Miss Granger’s injuries as minor, Mr. Grimwood.”

The loathsome wizard merely hummed, sorting through his documents. In the past, Minerva wouldn’t have described Thaddeus as “loathsome.” Difficult, certainly. A bit staid and partisan, of course, but Minerva couldn’t always call herself impartial, either. He’d once been rather chummy with Professor Slytherin, but in recent terms, she’d noted his agenda had fallen more and more in line with the Ministry’s, and his language changed to reflect that fluctuation.

The door to the meeting room opened. Mr. Grimwood shifted in his chair to see the entering Auror, adjusting his lapel so the golden pin there caught the firelight.

“Is the rest of the Board disinclined to argue with Mr. Grimwood’s view of the situation?” Dumbledore asked the others arrayed at the table while Thaddeus was occupied. They shifted under his penetrating stare, and Mr. Goldstein cleared his throat.

“It’s a complicated situation, Albus,” he rasped. “You’re asking us to make a permanent decision on supposition.”

“I’m asking the Board to approve my earnest recommendation for the expulsion of a pupil who attacked another member of his own House.” Had Minerva not been familiar with Albus and his tone, she would have thought his voice calm, but years as his friend told her his patience was running thin. “Dear Apollo, when did it become du jour to ignore flagrant violence in our school simply because the Minister expresses nominal interest in a student?”

Mr. Goldstein didn’t answer, and the others avoided eye contact.

Minerva could count on one hand the number of incidents as extreme as this that she’d encountered while working at Hogwarts. Most had been the result of two boys attacking one another with Dark magic—twice because of a blood feud between the families, another time over a witch. Once, an older boy had assaulted a second-year in a heinous manner, and there’d been no doubt of his fate. The Board expelled him without conferring, and the Aurors arrived to bring him to Azkaban in the morning.

She knew the Board was bias. It always had been, as far back as Minerva’s own school days, preferring to side with the old families and whoever had a voice among the governors—but never in all her years had they behaved so flagrantly and with such disregard for a student’s safety. Had they really fallen so far? The bleak state of the world had rarely felt so overwhelming.

Inadequacy besieged Minerva, and she looked to Dumbledore. “They can’t seriously mean to leave him enrolled here, can they?” she asked him in an undertone. “Not after Miss Black found Miss Granger in that state.”

“It appears they’ve made up their minds, Minerva.”

Mr. Grimwood nodded to something the Auror muttered in his ear, then addressed the Headmaster once more. “The Slytherin dormitories have been searched as part of this supposed altercation. According to Auror Dawlish, one of the fifth-year girls’ luggage could not be accessed.”

“Ah,” Dumbledore said, clearing his throat. “That would be Miss Potter. As an apprentice to Master Slytherin, she is required to keep certain valuable texts of Ministry-controlled magic. Perfectly acceptable for her to have, but kept under a strong ward for protection of the other students.”

Minerva really had to have a word with Miss Potter about her trunk and those snakes of hers.

Mr. Grimwood moved past the issue, uninterested. “The weapon was found.” To Auror Dawlish, he crooked two impatient fingers. “Bring them in.”

“Well, this should be all the proof we need, then,” Minerva grumbled, shifting in her seat. “If they found the blade in Mr. Lestrange’s luggage—.”

The door opened again, but it wasn’t Accipto Lestrange being led inside by another Auror, but instead a pale-faced Elara Black and her irritated Head of House. The Board visibly wilted in Professor Slytherin’s presence, and his cold gaze cut across the room to Albus.

“What is the meaning of this?” the Headmaster asked, his voice low, collected, but serious all the same.

“The result of the Aurory’s search,” Mr. Grimwood said, accepting a covered item from the second Auror. Minerva sat forward to see better, and when Thaddeus turned his hand, he inadvertently flipped open the handkerchief, revealing the dark, obsidian blade inside. “This would be the weapon, as described by Miss Granger. And—would you look at that?” He lifted it higher to inspect the pommel, squinting. “It’s inscribed with the Black family crest. An heirloom, I would say.”

“He stole it,” Miss Black burst out, the words strained as she pulled against the Auror’s grip on her arm. “His mother stole it. The ninth knife has been missing from the set for as long as I’ve been alive, and he’s been going about Hogwarts, showing it off—.”

“How convenient for it to be found in your armoire, Miss Black,” Mr. Grimwood said. “How convenient indeed, when you were the one to discover Miss Granger in the first place.”

The young witch’s face flushed an ugly red. “He planted it there.”

“Male students cannot enter the ladies’ dormitories. Surely you’re aware of that.”

“Then he had Vuharith do it—!”

“Enough.” Mr. Grimwood sighed, shaking his head. “The picture is becoming clearer and clearer to me. If you mean to insist on the perpetrator being expelled, Albus, the Board needn’t look farther than this room.”

Miss Black let out a small, furious gasp. “He—!”

Slytherin waved his hand, a wordless Silencing Charm falling over the poor girl. “Are we done with this farce? No one of my House will be expelled today. The Headmaster won’t press the matter and jeopardize Miss Black.”

Indeed, Albus could only give his head a slight nod, his fingers pressed to his creased brow. Slytherin smiled—all teeth.

Mr. Grimwood had the good sense to lower his gaze when he addressed the other wizard. “I’m sure the Minister will be glad to hear this has all been a misunderstanding.”

Will he?” Slytherin stepped closer, settling one pale hand on the table’s end as to angle his body toward the seated man. Grimwood stiffened. “How are things in your new advisory position in the Minister’s cabinet? I hope it’s everything you wanted it to be.”

Grimwood’s throat bobbed as he swallowed.

“How is your family, Thaddeus?”

“G-good. They’re good.”

“I’m sure.”

Slytherin straightened, and he extended his hand. “I’ll confiscate that, if you will.”

Left without a choice, Mr. Grimwood extended the dagger from Slytherin to take, and he snatched it away with an aggressive motion. The exchange signaled for the rest of the Board to make their departure, not waiting for another word from the Headmaster. The Auror released Miss Black, and Minerva rose to go to her.

“Are you well?” she asked the frightened girl, laying a hand on her arm. Miss Black nodded, but Minerva could feel her shaking.

“His mother stole the dagger from the Black family,” she reiterated. “And I don’t—I wouldn’t—.” Her eyes darted toward their Defense professor, then away before she lowered her head. “We don’t keep anything like that outside of Harriet’s trunk.”

“You should be keeping nothing of the sort anywhere in Hogwarts,” Minerva said, though the comment lacked conviction even in her own ears. “We know you’ve nothing to do with what happened, Miss Black.”

“But he’ll get away with it, won’t he?” she demanded, pulling away from Minerva’s touch. “They won’t touch a hair on his head simply because he’s thrown his lot in with Gaunt, and anything that—that bastard says is law!”

Slytherin brushed past Minerva, but rather than offering comfort to his student, he slapped the flat of his palm against her chest, pressing the dagger there. “Take that and desist with your hysteria,” he hissed. “If they see you with it, I will report it stolen.”

Black winced as she backed away, rubbing at the forming bruise with one hand while the other held the dagger in question. Rather than listening to Slytherin, the girl turned her eyes to Minerva, waiting for dismissal, and Minerva saw no reason for her to linger.

“Go on, Miss Black. Mind Madam Pomfrey’s visiting hours, and remind Miss Potter of curfew.”

She nodded, then departed, the door softly closing in her wake. Minerva exhaled, ignoring Slytherin, and approached Albus once more where he still sat at the table’s head.

“We cannot allow that boy to wander the halls unchecked,” she told him, impressing every ounce of her earnestness into her tone. “I don’t give a fig what those bawbags from the Ministry say! He’s a clear and present danger to the other students, Albus!”

The Headmaster took a long moment to reply, wearing his age in his tired, upset expression. “We’ll start with in-school suspension,” he said. “That requires no outside clearance beyond our administration, and in the meantime, I will work on the more rational members of the Board and beseech the other Heads in my office to see if there is precedence in this matter.” He lifted his head to look Minerva in the face. “But I must confess, in the current political climate, I do not feel hopeful.”

Minerva’s chest tightened, and her pulse raced. She’d never felt so helpless—her hands tied by the bureaucracy she’d once been employed by, the same government she’d served and lived under. One of the children under her care had been carved into like a jack-o-lantern, and she had to tell her the boy who’d done it wouldn’t face any punishment?

“Albus,” she asked, her throat almost too dry to speak. They were failing. They were failing every witch and wizard entrusted into their care, and she couldn’t do a thing to fix it. “Albus—how are we meant to run this school if we cannot guarantee the safety of our students?”

“To the best of our ability, my dear professor. It is all we can do.”


 

A/N: Remember, in this AU, the Board of Governors has quite a bit of power over the school and Albus ’ decisions.

Chapter 268: a favor repaid

Chapter Text

cclxviii. a favor repaid

 

The wind cut through Harriet’s hair as it poured across the mist-clad grounds and stirred the eddying fog. She barely felt the cold of the encroaching winter despite how it bit against her skin, reddening her cheeks and chapping her lips. Her exposed ears burned with the morning chill.

Harriet.”

Hermione’s voice broke through her stupor, and Harriet blinked, her friend frowning at her. Given the sharpness of her tone, Harriet guessed this wasn’t the first time she’d called her name.

It had been a very long week, one which mostly passed in a daze of frequent trips to the hospital wing, sessions in the Aerie, and bitter hours suffering Slytherin’s particular brand of tutelage.

Harriet had been helping others return to their common room after dismissing the Coven when she learned Hermione had been attacked. By the time she rushed to her friend’s side in the infirmary, the injury had already been cleaned up and covered over, though Elara’s recounting of how it’d looked would haunt Harriet. After her first glimpse of it, she’d spent the evening wanting to march down to the Ministry and start shouting.

Madam Pomfrey assured them Hermione would be fine and that the wound would heal with time. “It’ll scar,” she had said. “Wounds touched by cursed magic always do, and the blade used here was most definitely cursed.”

Her fingers tightened, wanting to grab Gaunt by his ruddy throat.

“You’re going to crush the bloody thing, Potter,” Malfoy snapped, and Harriet loosened her hold on the whining Puffskein, murmuring apologies. On the other side of the paddock’s fence, Hermione arched a knowing brow.

“Stop worrying about it,” she said, and when Harriet opened her mouth to argue, she cut across her. “I know you’re worrying about it, and I say you shouldn’t.”

“It’s not fair,” Harriet retorted, flexing her fingers again. Luckily the Puffskein’s fur was particularly dense, and it didn’t seem to notice. “Why aren’t you angrier? He carved Mudblood into your arm. He shouldn’t be allowed to fucking—.”

Hermione pointed the shears at her in warning. “Of course it isn’t fair. Of course I’m furious.” She lowered the shears and kept clipping at the Puffskein’s fur as Harriet held it steady and Malfoy collected the trimmed bits in a bag. Somewhere across the paddock, Grubbly-Plank chatted with Hagrid, their voices carried on the breeze. “But what would you have me do, Harriet? Would you have me linger in the hospital wing for another week and have a pity party, or would you prefer I hide in the dormitory and cower?”

“No, I wouldn’t.”

“Then please, pay attention. Stop brooding on it.” Hermione paused to hand off a large, fluffy clump to Malfoy and the Puffskein chirped. “I’m not going to let Lestrange get into my head. Whatever he meant to accomplish, he failed.” She sniffed, a prim little noise, then blew a curl away from her mouth. “All I can do is push forward with everything I have and ensure Gaunt is thrown from his office on his backside. Then, rotten little pustules like Accipto Lestrange will follow. I will not let a bully dictate my actions and control my behavior. He doesn’t frighten me.”

She punctuated the statement with another snick of the shears.

Harriet kept mum, though she couldn’t keep her eyes from straying to Hermione’s sleeve, the cloth hiding the bandages underneath. She didn’t understand why her friend wasn’t angrier—why she wasn’t bursting with rage over the Board of Governors’ decision to keep that bastard in the school, why she hadn’t left the hospital wing with her wand in hand, out for blood—.

She tilted her head, stretching her sore neck.

“It was foolish of me, anyway,” Hermione continued in a quieter voice, her confidence wilting. “I should have taken the time to use the Atlas, but it’s always so difficult to remember the exact corridor the Moon Mirrors open onto, and you know how finicky it can be in recalling the right name and the right position. I just meant to pop out and check for a moment.” She exhaled. “But that isn’t an excuse. Cut corners make lopsided decisions, my dad used to say. I shouldn’t have been so careless.”

“Don’t speak rubbish, Granger,” Malfoy told her, clearing his throat when Harriet stepped on his foot. “You weren’t careless. If father had been on the Board, Lestrange would have been out on his backside. You can’t do that sort of thing to a witch; it’s barbaric.”

“The one time your daddy could have been useful,” Harriet snarked.

“He’s basically in hiding, Potter. Him and mother. They’ve barely stepped foot outside of your godfather’s frumpy hollow.” He frowned, picking a stray bit of fur from his glove, depositing it into the bag. His expression darkened. “Lestrange will get what’s coming to him.”

“What do you mean?” Harriet asked. Malfoy blinked, and his face resumed its usual cocky smirk.

“I’m entirely certain I haven’t the faintest idea what you mean.”

“You talk like a ponce when you’re lying.”

“And you talk like a guttersnipe all the time. What’s your excuse for that?”

“Knobhead.”

“Pillock—.”

The Puffskein interrupted by extending its long, flexible tongue so it could lick Malfoy’s face, leaving a streak of slobber across his skin. Hermione snorted, trying to stifle a laugh, while Harriet didn’t bother, outright guffawing at his outraged look.

“Good job,” she told the half-groomed creature.

The mood didn’t last long. It barely extended to the remainder of the period, and when the bells tolled across the grounds to summon their class back inside, Harriet and Hermione trudged behind the others, meeting Elara at the entrance hall. The taller witch stood just outside the doors, leaning her back against the wall, and Harriet realized the rationale behind choosing to stay outside rather than inside when she saw Darren Dread and another Inquisitorial Squad member by the Great Hall doors, picking on a third-year Hufflepuff.

“Leave it,” Hermione muttered under her breath before Harriet could think to intervene. “They’re simply being annoying. We need to pick our battles, especially if we can’t expect help from the administration.”

Harriet’s mood plummeted further later that afternoon when Professor Snape descended from the High Table at Slytherin’s behest and started handing out schedules for Career Counseling.

“I’d almost forgotten!” Hermione enthused when she received hers, sounding more like her usual self. “I have a whole binder of ideas I’ve put together of different career ideas—there’s just so many to choose from! I don’t have a clue where to start. Mind, I’ve already decided to make an appointment with Professor McGonagall later on, seeing as I won’t get any proper advice from our Head of House.”

“What’s Career Counseling?” asked the first-year Muggle-born Karis Warren.

“An advisory session specifically for fifth-years,” Elara answered as she eyed her own written time slot with particular disdain, folding the parchment in half. “It’s supposed to be a time when our Head of House helps you decide what O.W.Ls you should concentrate on so you can matriculate to the proper N.E.W.T courses for your chosen field.”

“You haven’t said before what it is you mean to do,” Hermione commented to Elara. “I’m curious.”

“Because I’m not sure I won’t simply be unemployed,” Elara confessed, apathetic to Hermione’s gobsmacked gasp. “Really, the House of Black makes plenty in investments, and I wouldn’t need employment necessarily to do something I’m interested in.”

“But surely there must be something you wish to do?”

Elara shrugged as she reached for the tea. “Which is why Slytherin will give some dross about attaining O.W.Ls in the subjects I’m best in and continuing to N.E.W.T level even if I’m undecided. In all truth, you’re meant to go for as many N.E.W.Ts as you can possibly stand without cracking under the pressure. The more you have, the better your C.V.”

“Must be nice,” Artemis Barlow in the year above them huffed. “To sit on a mountain of gold and have your pick of what to do. The rest of us have to fight for internships.”

Elara poured her drink, shooting a cool look in Barlow’s direction. “It is nice.”

As her friends chatted, Harriet stared at her plate of untouched food, her hands empty of any schedule. She didn’t need to ask why Slytherin hadn’t made one for her; it was obvious. The moment she became his apprentice, Harriet had handed over her future prospects to Slytherin, and wherever her path led, he would be the guide.

And after?

Harriet just stared.

After existed as a nebulous concept—a realm beyond Harriet’s comprehension. When she was young, the world seemed to end with the Dursley’s driveway, and everything she knew about it could fit in a boot cupboard under the stairs. What did Harriet even know about after? After what? To say “after the Dark Lordfelt akin to saying “after the sun implodes.It was ridiculous. There was no after for Harriet Potter, and so there was no need for Career Counseling.

“Are you going to eat, Harriet?”

She shook her head. “No. Don’t have much of an appetite.”

 

xXx

 

“You never mentioned what you’d like to do.”

Night had fallen across the castle like a heavy down blanket, and Harriet knew they’d wake in the morning to a fresh covering of snow. The tops of her ears still hurt from being in the cold that morning, and she ran her fingers over the prickling skin in thoughtless, idle motions. She, Elara, and Hermione sat together on a sofa in the common room, the one facing the best hearth, and though Harriet hated the painting of a serpent nesting in a rowan tree’s roots that hung above it, tonight she made an exception. Hermione had her head on her shoulder, and Harriet could smell her conditioner, notes of almond and jasmine lingering despite the day being done.

Hermione prodded her side.

“Ouch—what was that?”

“Earlier, you never said what it is you’d like to do after Hogwarts.” Hermione tilted her head up with a thought hum, a crease forming between her brows. “I don’t think we’ve ever really spoken about it.”

They hadn’t spoken about it because, as if by an unspoken taboo, they all knew how dark and uncertain their futures would be. “What is it you want to do?” Harriet asked to avoid the question. “You said you have a whole bloody binder of ideas.”

“Don’t be cheeky.” Hermione rolled her eyes. “I’m really not sure. Despite what everyone may assume, I don’t want to be stuck in a dusty archive with books as my only company.”

Harriet feigned a dramatic gasp, and Elara looked up from her novel to smile. Hermione’s face flushed.

“Oh, ha ha, you two.”

“Go on, Hermione. You know we’re teasing. What is it you want to do?”

She settled back into the sofa again, though she straightened so her head no longer rested on Harriet’s shoulder. “I want to make a difference. I know a lot of people say that, but I’d really like for what I do to have an impact on people’s lives.”

Harriet considered that for a long moment, looking toward the fire banked in the hearth. The common room buzzed around them, voices echoing in soft, muffled hums that careened through the cavernous space. The cold outside leached into the walls, so most everyone clung close to one of the fires, leaving the best to Elara, Hermione, and Harriet.

“You never said what it is you’d like to do after Hogwarts.”

Live, Harriet thought herself, almost desperate. I want to live to see after.

“Well, that settles it,” Elara said, the corner of her mouth hitched in a mischievous half-smile. “You’ll just have to become Minister for Magic.”

“Now you’re just being silly,” Hermione replied, though she smiled too. “There’s never been a Muggle-born Minister.”

“There’s never been a Dark Lord Minister, either, but look where we are.”

“Actually, in 1733, not long after the Ministry was formed, Erasmus Gamp became Minister, and he later would fashion himself a Dark Lord, though the scholars argue whether or not he met the standards by the strictest definition.”

“What? There’s criteria for being a Dark Lord?”

“Oh, most definitely. However, You-Know-Who has been labeled the Dark Lord, in that he typifies all criteria to an extreme. It’s why it has become so eponymous to him.”

Laughter burst from Harriet, louder than she intended, and she covered her mouth. “Sorry, sorry! I just—I pictured a young Professor Slytherin getting handed a ‘So You Want to be a Dark Lord’ pamphlet at his own Career Counseling.”

“Now that’s absurd,” Elara told her.

“Honestly, Harriet,” Hermione giggled.

Their laughter came to an abrupt end when shouting echoed from the long corridor belonging to the boys’ dormitories. Heads around the room turned toward the source of the noise as it drew closer, growing louder, and Harriet slowly rose to her feet.

Lestrange came barreling into the common room, his expression nothing short of livid. In one fist, he held his robes by the collar, and in the other, he had one of his textbooks. From what Harriet could see, the former had been reduced to tatters, and the latter was vandalized with the words “GET OUT.”

“Which of your spineless cowards did this?” Lestrange demanded. “Who is responsible?!”

Harriet’s eyes darted over to Malfoy seated nearby with Theodore Nott. He toyed with his family ring on his finger and smirked.

“What ever is the matter?” Cengor Pendarves asked, closing his assignment portfolio. “What need have you of your lesson material while on your indefinite suspension? It seems redundant to me.”

“Fuck off, Pendarves,” he snarled before wheeling on Harriet and her friends. “This is your fault. You think I’ll let you get away with this? I’ll make what I did to that dirty-blooded bitch seem like nothing when I’m done with you—.”

His Shield Charm barely caught the burst of flame that lashed against it, singeing his sleeve as it devoured what remained of the ruined robes, a great plume of roiling orange fire boiling over the far wall. One of the younger students screamed in fear, and Hermione said, “Harriet, don’t—!”

Elara’s arms collided with Harriet’s middle, yanking her back, her feet nearly leaving the floor. Pendarves and Pucey stepped into the wide space between the feuding pair, and Warrington grabbed Lestrange’s arm before he could think to raise his wand in retaliation.

“Give me a reason!” Harriet shouted, struggling as her friends wrangled her back. “Give me a fucking reason, I swear to God—.”

Hermione squeezed Harriet’s wrist, trying to get her to lower her wand. “Stop! You’ll bring Slytherin down on all our heads.”

Someone in the watching crowd crowed, “Watch out, she’ll do you in like she did Boot!” and Harriet would have hexed them if she’d had them in her line of sight.

“Just get out, Lestrange!” another yelled, and a third echoed their demand. “Get out! Get out!”

The forming chant resounded in the common room. Accipto’s dark eyes roved over the people shouting for his removal, and even he knew he was outnumbered. His face closed off, fury replaced by cold, removed apathy. He dropped the ruined textbook and slapped Warrington’s hand off his person, saying something Harriet didn’t catch. Turning, he shouldered his way through the crowd of on-lookers who refused to move for him and disappeared from the common room.

“Merlin, Potter,” Draco said as he approached their group. He had one hand tucked into his pocket, casual as could be, but Harriet knew he had a firm grasp on his wand. “Try not to burn the place down around us.”

“Your fat head would prop it up,” Harriet grumbled, her heart not really in the response. She shoved her wand back into the brace and dropped onto the sofa.

Others drifted over, ostensibly trying to lift the mood again. They laughed and they joked. Flourish told a story about one of Fred and George’s sweets making a Gryffindor classmate ill in the middle of McGonagall’s lesson. Apparently the fountain of vomit had been rather spectacular. Another spoke about Umbridge somehow managing to be hexed blue. The details escaped Harriet as she stared into the belly of the flames, and the voices of her friends washed over her like a warm, abrading tide. The noise filled her ears like the buzzing of honey bees.

Her heart refused to settle. It thumped and raced in her chest, and her blood hummed in her veins. Her neck ached and burned, the skin prickling, her jaw locked, sweat building on her nape beneath her plait. The common room felt very far away indeed as she sat and stewed, and the more she stewed, the more her rage felt like a physical thing embroidered with thorns inside her belly. It rolled over and twisting, her entire body thrumming with the need to move unbidden by her own thoughts.

How dare he? How dare he? He thinks he can raise his wand against me? He thinks he can challenge me? Touch what ’s mine? He DARE—!

More than an hour passed in peaceful companionship, and attention wavered from the grim, bespectacled witch on the sofa. She stood, straightened her robes with a practiced jerk of the lapels, and stepped around her friends. She started for the common room entrance.

She didn’t notice the pair of silver eyes following her.

 

xXx

 

Stupefy.”

The blue light from the Atlas’ open lens stung Elara’s eyes as she hurried through the inky blackness of the unlit dungeons. The braziers stayed dim and dark as if wrapped in quenching spells, and she bumped into several obstacles, so focused on every turn and bend the little dot labeled Harriet Potter took. They wended deeper and deeper into the school’s ancient belly.

She ran to stop her friend from doing something stupid. The younger witch’s voice echoed back to her, chased by the definite thump of a body hitting the floor.

Elara emerged at the end of the next corridor, discreetly attempting to catch her breath as she tucked her Atlas and its chain away again. She looked both ways and found Harriet standing with her back to her, motionless, staring down at the unmoving form of Accipto Lestrange crumpled on the flagstones.

“There you are,” she sighed. “Harriet, let’s go back to the common room. You’re not going to do this.”

Harriet didn’t move. She didn’t react.

Worry had started to needle at Elara’s mind before Harriet even departed, and by now it prodded at her like a fire-poker, urging her swiftly forward to grasp the other witch by her shoulder. She looked into her face.

Harriet’s gaze remained fixed on Lestrange as if Elara weren’t there. Her eyes, wide and distant, gleamed in the light of her own open Atlas, colored a familiar crimson red.

What in God ’s name? What is that?

Fear choked Elara, and she could barely force words past the knot in her throat. “Harriet,” she called, softly, gently, brushing the backs of her knuckles against her cold, clammy cheek. “Harriet, let’s go back to the dormitory. You don’t want to do this.”

“I do. He deserves it,” she answered, quiet as a breath, her voice raspy and chased by sibilance. Elara’s hand shook as she grasped Harriet’s arm and tugged.

“No. You’re not going to do this.” She opted to make her tone firmer, less cajoling. “He’s defenseless and unarmed. You would hate yourself for it. Harriet, listen to me. Go back to the dormitory.”

Slowly, so slowly, as if from a great distance away, Harriet appeared to hear her, and she stirred. Her body gave a weak jerk, and she inhaled, the red in her eyes bleeding back into a murky, desolate green. Her lids lowered, and she swayed as if suddenly exhausted.

“Go back to the dormitory,” Elara repeated, giving her arm a final squeeze.

“Mmph,” Harriet grunted, but she did shuffle into motion, returning the way she’d come without another glance at Lestrange. Elara watched her go, and the farther Harriet went, the more her heart climbed out of her throat—

Leaving her alone with Accipto Lestrange in the belly of Hogwarts’ unvisited dungeons.

He remained unmoving, Harriet’s Stunner holding fast, and Elara steepled her hands as she considered the unconscious wizard. She did nothing else for a moment, then sought her Atlas again, giving the fob holding in place a slight tug so it fell into her bare palm. She looked for Harriet, finding her well on her way to the Slytherin common room once more, and then checked the surrounding corridors. No one lurked about—not a ghost or a prefect or a professor.

“I didn’t do that for your benefit,” she whispered as she tucked the Atlas away. Her hand then went to a different pocket—a hidden one sewn into the waistband of her skirt. She grasped the object hidden there. “No. You see, I didn’t lie. Whatever she planned to do, Harriet would have hated herself for it afterward. She would have felt regret.”

She tucked her foot beneath Accipto’s shoulder and had to give him more than one solid kick to roll him to his back. He didn’t react. Elara knelt, then leaned over Lestrange, one hand braced on the cold, cold stone beneath them, so close he could have felt her breath if he’d been at all aware.

“Harriet’s a very good person,” she admitted, sighing. “I don’t know what came over her, but she doesn’t hurt people, deserving or not. She’s the best person I know, better even than Hermione, and far, far better than me. I am not a good person. I will enjoy this very, very much.”

Her arm moved, and Elara balanced the tip of the dagger Accipto’s mother had stolen from the family so long ago against his slack brow. The dark clung so tenaciously to the dungeon, that Elara thought she could still see Hermione’s blood staining the edge. How ironic that it had come back to her hands. How ironic everyone but three professors thought it confiscated and kept far from her possession.

“Do you know what’s so particular about this blade?” she asked the darkness. “It won’t cut anyone of the Black family. I could drive it into my cold, unmoved heart and leave not a scratch.” Her fingers tightened on the haft, ready to repay a nasty favor. “Let’s see how much Black you’ve really got in you, shall we?”


A/N: I still think there ’s a lot of division in Slytherin House about Muggle-borns, but I believe they would view Lestrange’s actions, attacking one of their own in such a heinous way, as anathema. It’s a big line to jump across, and even those who might have been more sympathetic to his anti-Muggle-born rhetoric will look at what he did as something barbaric and frankly nuts. A long, long time ago, Snape spoke about “circles” within the Dark Lord’s entourage, and this is why he had them. It’d keep radicals like Lestrange from turning away impressionable but less vicious sympathizers. But anyway~

Elara: “Harriet, eat a Snickers. You’re not you when you’re hungry.”

Harriet: “….”

Elara: “Better?”

Harriet: “Better.”

Chapter 269: great-uncle

Chapter Text

cclxix. great-uncle

 

“Didya see it?”

“Hard to miss. It’s across his whole bloody forehead.”

“Do they have any idea who did it?”

“Nothing they can prove.”

“Bloody hell. Lestrange is never going to be able to live this down.”

Severus leaned on the mezzanine’s railing and listened to the voices of the students rise from below. The attack on Accipto Lestrange had been a constant topic of discussion for Hogwarts over the last two days, and little of it was tinged with pity. Most simply assumed the boy had reaped what he’d sowed after the incident with Granger and didn’t feel inclined to look deeper. Even many staff members had turned a decisive blind eye.

The Potions Master sniffed, gripped by a sinister sort of amusement. How ironic, he thought. For a moron so possessed by his own purity to have ‘Mudblood’ permanently emblazoned on his forehead.

Severus leaned off the railing and continued on the upper passage, unnoticed by the student horde below. The words he heard continued a familiar pattern—gruesome, cruel curiosity and gossip-mongering, speculation and delight that the head of the bothersome Inquisitorial Squad would be out of commission for a while. Umbridge, of course, was furious, and the Board was quaking under pressure from the Ministry—but they’d already made their own bed.

The door to the stairwell’s staff entrance opened before Severus could reach it, and he paused in the shadows stretched between the tall windows to watch who came through. Minerva stepped into view, quietly allowing the door to shut behind her. She shut her eyes behind her square spectacles and heaved a breath of relief.

“Taking a break?” Severus said, startling the older witch into swearing. He arched an amused brow.

Och, you ruddy bat,” she wheezed, palm pressed flat to her chest. “You did that on purpose.”

“Perhaps.” He glanced once more over the students below, able to anticipate when the bell would ring. He braced himself, and the bells echoed through the stone corridors, vibrating through Severus’ bones. Minerva paused to allow the noise to pass, then joined Severus at the railing to watch her charges hurry off toward their classes. Severus likened them to cockroaches scattering when the lights came on.

“Albus is still with the Board,” she said, and from the corner of his eye, he saw how she wrung her hands. “Thaddeus Grimwood is being particularly tenacious in his search for answers about Accipto Lestrange.”

“Annoying fuck,” Severus grunted, earning a stressed tut of disapproval from Minerva. “Gaunt’s funneling embezzled funds into his pockets. If we’re lucky, he’ll walk into the lake and the weight will drag him down.”

It was a testament to Minerva’s irritation that she didn’t reprimand him. “He’s always been so…friendly with Professor Slytherin before, but now….”

“It’s politics. Campaigning means Gaunt’s wringing every last Galleon he can out of the pure-bloods, and he’s using the money to push his agenda where he pleases. It pleases him to flex his influence here and to keep reminding Dumbledore and Slytherin he exists—like a muling, needy child.”

“This feels like more, Severus. It feels like he’s trying to integrate the school as part of the Ministry, and that’s—absurd. Outrageous.”

He clenched his jaw and refused to agree, though he knew Gaunt’s recent behavior had been pushing the boundaries of what could ostensibly be considered “flexing.” If he kept pushing Slytherin’s patience, the professor would push back—and Severus worried what would happen to Albus, seated so precariously between the two.

Minerva sighed. “How much of this are we meant to allow before the school descends into chaos? We cannot condone what those girls have done, no matter what’s happened to Miss Granger.”

“Girl,” Severus said.

“I beg your pardon?”

Girl, as in the singular form of girls. If I had to guess the identity of the culprit, I would say it was Black, and she acted alone.”

Minerva looked at him as if offended, then away, the offense dissolving into disgruntled acceptance. “All the more reason we should intercede.”

“If we intercede, we’d paint a target on Black’s back for Lestrange, the Ministry, and anyone with an ax to grind. At the moment, the identity of Lestrange’s attacker is muddled. Black had her possessions searched prior to the incident, and as far as the Board knows, Slytherin confiscated the dagger. Albus vouched for Potter’s things, and Granger’s luggage was clean. Many members of the House claim Potter, Black, and Granger were in the common room at the suggested time of Lestrange’s attack.” Severus turned his hand, his open palm facing up. “Let it go, Minerva. Does it truly matter what happens to that miserable little shite?”

The witch’s mouth pressed into a firm line, and she shot Severus a sharp, biting look. “Of course, it matters. Accipto Lestrange is still a student of this school, more the fool us. Our charges are mutilating each other, and yes, I have compassion for the boy. I have seen too many children pass through this institute into the hands of madmen, and I must question where it is we’ve failed this lad—why he’s turned to violence and misery instead of goodness and mercy.”

“Don’t be absurd.” Severus rolled his eyes. “Some brats are the way they are, and there’s nothing you can do to change them.”

“Could we have changed you, had we paid more attention?”

He bit his tongue. “This isn’t about me, Professor. Do yourself a favor and let it go.”

Gathering his robes, Severus departed the mezzanine, climbing the tight spiral steps to the floor below. Now mostly vacant, few students saw him emerge through the narrow passage utilized by the staff, and he was quick to snap at those still lingering to chat.

On his way to his office, Severus heard a familiar voice call out to him.

“Professor Snape.”

Severus halted, his robes eddying about his ankles at the sudden stop of motion, and he turned his head to stare down the recent subject of his thoughts.

“Miss Black,” he said, mouth lingering on the last syllable with particular displeasure. “You and your friends are growing far too audacious if you think you can skip class as you please and shout in the halls.”

Black grimaced, but held firm to the satchel at her side. Severus noted she had her little trinket hanging loose on its fob, ready to use at a moment’s notice.

At least they ’re not completely brainless.

“I have Divinations. I’ll tell Trelawney I had a vision or something that made me late.”

Severus narrowed his eyes at her flippancy. “I’m in no mood for your cheek,” he said, lip curling. “Not after the newest travesty you’re forcing us to deal with.”

She stiffened and stuck her nose in the air. “There’s no proof. I never touched Lestrange.”

“Oh, shut up,” he snapped. “Do I look like a drooling Auror? Anyone with half a brain knows what you’ve done. What is it you want, Black?”

She scowled at him, looking far too much like her mongrel of a father. “Can…can you make it so the portraits don’t hear?”

Severus didn’t move at first, but when Black refused to say more, unmoved by his unimpressed glare, he retrieved his wand and cast his muffling Charm. The spectating portraits grumped and shuffled off into other frames.

“I won’t bother with lying,” the witch said in a tone that clearly said she didn’t think much of Severus’ supposed wits. “I won’t deny I did what I did to Lestrange. You’re not going to do anything with that information, so it doesn’t matter if I tell you. But, you should know, I didn’t go after him initially.”

“Initially?”

“No. Harriet did.”

Now that gave Severus pause. He knew Potter better than he ought, and he couldn’t say it was in her demeanor to Stun and attack someone, even someone as loathsome as Lestrange. She would defend herself—fiercely—but he’d seen her accept punishment simply to spare those who loathed her and she loathed in turn.

“There was something—odd about her that night.”

“What do you mean odd? Speak plainly, girl.”

“Simply that, odd. She didn’t seem to hear me when I called out to her, and I thought—.” She paused, shifted her feet. It was odd for Severus to be able to look any student in eye, let alone a witch, but Black stood nearly at his height. “I thought her eyes were red for a moment, but that’s absurd, isn’t it?”

A different pair of red eyes flashed in Severus’ recollection and he swallowed the sudden urge to vomit. Red eyes? What the fuck?

“Where is she?” he demanded.

“She’s fine now,” Black said as if this were a perfectly stupid question to ask. “She and Hermione have a free period, and she’s being obnoxious with her snakes. I thought—well. With everything that happened afterward, and once I gave it more consideration, I can’t be entirely sure of what I saw. I decided I should tell you all the same.”

Severus didn’t know what to think. Red eyes? The fuck did he know about red eyes beyond the fact that Tom bloody Riddle’s eyes were a particular shade of dark, odious scarlet? Magics existed that affected the irises, both in intention as a side-effect, but they weren’t extensive or overly common. Had Potter been cursed? Had Black been seeing things?

Whatever the answer, Severus still descended to the dungeons and went to the vacant common room. He summoned Potter out from the dormitory, and she came, glowering at him for apparently waking her from a nap. A red nape peered at him from her untidy hair, tongue flickering.

“What’re you doing?” the girl grumbled as Severus took out his wand.

“Shut up,” he said, casting spells to detect different traces of magic. There were vague smudges of malignancy around her, but nothing Severus himself didn’t pick up from being in Slytherin’s vicinity. It was like an ugly, ghostly cologne. Nothing indicated she’d been cursed or touched by any manner of magical interference.

Severus canceled his spell and gave the girl another look over. “How are your lessons with Slytherin progressing?”

She blinked at him and idly scratched her stomach. “I dunno. He’s going over the stuff we talked about in detention the other night. He’s a berk, but that’s normal.”

His attention lingered on her eyes—a shadowed green found in the deepest parts of the forest, offset by the purple smudges left by fatigue, so dark they bordered on bruises. The ‘stuff she so glibly mentioned was the integration of runes in defense matrices—a remarkably boring, if advanced, practice of picking etymology and choreography apart to develop stronger spells. The only kind of harm Potter would run into was her head smacking a solid desk when she fell asleep.

“What happened with Lestrange?”

“What d’you mean? The—?” She jabbed a finger toward her own forehead. “Reckon you and the other professors know more about that than I do.”

“Don’t play stupid. You were following him.”

Her brow crinkled, and Potter shook her head. “No, I didn’t. D’you think I did—?” She again indicated her forehead. “I think he got what he deserved, but I wouldn’t do that shite! What the hell, Snape!”

She doesn ’t remember. She doesn’t remember what Black saw.

Severus grunted, then dismissed her, Potter wandering off toward her room after muttering about how rude he was. Severus left the common room, no closer to solving the mystery.

He rubbed at his temple as he approached his office, wondering what he was meant to do with this information. Black, for all her faults, wasn’t fanciful, and if she claimed to have seen an oddity about Potter, Severus was inclined to believe she’d noticed something, even if it hadn’t been exactly what she thought.

He opened his office door—and stopped. It appeared he had a visitor.

“Which of the elves let you through the Floo?” he asked, gruff, as he kicked the door closed behind himself. The man behind his desk lifted a brow, and his drink.

“I think it’d be intolerably cruel of me to say and unleash your offensive temper on the poor thing.”

For much of his early life, Severus’ mother had made it a point to tell him how very much he resembled his great uncle Tiberius Prince. He didn’t know why she felt the need to do so after she’d been so unceremoniously disowned by his grandfather Gallus, but she seemed to believe it a mark of his superiority, as if resembling any of the toffs in the House of Prince meant anything at all to Severus. Frankly, he thought if what he saw now was what he had to look forward to, he should do the world a favor before it was too late.

He’d first met Tiberius in his school years, not long before creating his rather embarrassing ‘Half-Blood Prince’ sobriquet. Unlike his brother Gallus, or their shared father Carus Prince, Tiberius had found Severus worth nominal interest, if only because of his talent with potions. He’d kept contact with him since then, exchanging occasional letters, but it wasn’t often the now Head of the House of Prince felt the need to visit him.

Tiberius sipped from his tumbler of cognac as he observed Severus, his dark eyes cold and watchful. “I’ve heard your administration has been facing difficulties.”

Tired, Severus answered with a noncommittal, “Hogwarts always has its share of difficulties” and hoped his great-uncle would either get to the point of his visit or move on. He didn’t have an abundance of spare time to entertain visitors.

Apparently, Lord Prince was in no rush, as he spent several minutes sampling his spirits while Severus cleared books off his desk, returning them to the shelves or sorting them into piles bound for his quarters or the library.

“One of your students is blackmailing me,” he said, casual as could be. Severus froze as he set a tome on a higher shelf, but he moved fast enough to make it seem normal.

“Oh?”

“Mmm. It’s over the vote in December.” Tiberius set his glass on the desk, ensuring it had a coaster beneath it. He stretched in that graceful, practiced manner the pure-bloods seemed to know from birth and yawned. “Mind, it was fairly well done of them. You should pass on my compliments.”

“If I had any idea what you’re talking about, I would,” Severus lied, idly wondering if he could strangle Potter and put them both out of their misery.

“You won’t even give me a hint? I’d love to know which one managed to thwart my wards and enter my office. Will you introduce us?”

Severus grit his teeth. “No.”

“Touchy, touchy, I see. Did I not already say to pay them my compliments? At the end of the day, I can only applaud a well-placed dash of espionage. Though, I doubt they’ll find it so simple to try again.”

The Potions Master thunked a bottle into his cabinet with particular heat. “Again, I’ve no idea what you’re on about.”

Tiberius rolled his eyes and gave him an indolent stare, one Severus himself might give a dishonest student. “I already know the one doing the blackmailing is the Granger girl, Severus. You needn’t be coy; it insults both of intelligence. Our good Minister’s followers have been sure to spread that information where he could—.” Here, Tiberius laughed, a huff of air that passed through his sizable nose. “Of course, he assumes no one besides his magnificence could have ever postulated on the identity of the person stirring the metaphoric pot.” He picked over what remained on Severus’ desk as if bored and looked over a stray essay. He pronounced it drivel and tossed it aside. “Though, Verus did assume it was someone more closely linked to Bones’ cabinet.”

“Verus is an idiot,” Severus said, referring to his other great-uncle, a man more alike to Gallus in his disdain of Muggle-borns and half-bloods.

“You won’t hear me disagree.” He settled on his glass again, examining the remaining sip of cognac glistening at its bottom. “You should tell your three students if they mean to break into Brierstone again, they shouldn’t tromp through Verwerry past the pub. Drunks are mostly useless, but perfectly capable of remembering three pretty young witches from out of the area when they’re headed in the direction of the estate.”

Severus didn’t groan, but the irritated noise he emitted against his will was very close to it. Idiots, all three of them. It infuriated him they thought leaving campus for an instant was a good idea, but to actually go in search of blackmail material? And he knew exactly how Potter had gotten in without having to ask, as most Wizarding homes came built with perfect egresses for crow-sized burglars.

Tiberius finished his drink, his tongue catching the last drop against his lip. Severus sensed a shift in his attitude, understanding that the conversation was about to shift from droll, teasing gossip to whatever Tiberius truly wanted to speak. The shift happened in his shoulders, the tightness of his posture and the cant of his head.

“I do plan on voting against Gaunt,” the older wizard pronounced. “And you should know your House will do so, especially considering where your…allegiances lie.” He said this with a sneer, as Tiberius—and much of House Price—had never been a fan of the Dark Lord.

True Slytherins—,” he’d said when Severus first spoke to him about joining Riddle. “—do not follow. They lead.

He recognized Tiberius’ thinly veiled and ultimately misplaced concern. “I’m hardly connected to the House,” Severus said. “Your choices do not reflect upon me.”

“Keep that in mind when more than just our House changes direction.” Tiberius stood, straightening his robes. Though bespoke, they lacked the embellishment and gaudiness another wizard of his station might have worn. Tiberius had a taste for the finer things, but he’d always been a practical man. “It pleased most to follow Gaunt’s agenda when it aligned with our ideals. He’s overextended his reach now, and I know you understand that whisper of discontent has been growing louder among the families for the last five years. Oh, he can play the bully and threaten some to tow the party line, but he can’t threaten us all. If even a spineless jellyfish like Lucius Malfoy can find his bollocks and change course, so can the rest. I do hope you and Dumbledore are prepared for the fallout.”

Severus didn’t tell Tiberius the terror Lucius and his family had endured at Gaunt’s hands, and didn’t relay Voldemort’s fury at the dissent. He’d nipped any other fulminating insurrection in the bud by liberal applying Crucio to his remaining Death Eaters, cowing them to the point of abject misery and silence. Tiberius thought Gaunt couldn’t threaten them? He was going to find out how wrong he was.

Tiberius snapped his fingers, and his cloak jumped off the hook by the door—and smacked Severus in the arm. He accepted the slight and snatched the article of clothing from the air, holding it open so his great-uncle could slip it over his arms. Tiberius pulled it on, sniffing—then turned suddenly, too close to Severus’ face. He didn’t retreat, as that would have put his back against his shelf, but he did frown.

“I want to meet the girl who broke into the manor. The one you’re protecting.” Tiberius’ thin mouth quirked at Severus’ thunderous scowl. “Mind your manners, boy. And tell her to ring the bell next time.”

He disappeared into the Floo, and Severus threw the glass at the hearth.

Chapter 270: abstain

Chapter Text

cclxx. abstain

 

The reality of time running out didn’t truly hit Hermione until Harriet received her robes in the post.

Their fifth year at Hogwarts was passing them in a blur of secretive activities, furtive letters, and heavy homework assignments. Hermione enjoyed the distraction of it, barely noticing how the month passed, how the weather chilled and the world faded to hues of gray and brown. She kept writing to people she could hardly recall the names of, and every missive snuck into the school from Mr. Malfoy reminded her of the fast-approaching solstice, but it truly didn’t hit Hermione until that very moment.

They sat together on Harriet’s bed, the curtains drawn closed for privacy, though none of the other girls were about. Hermione had her legs crossed and the sleeve of her jumper pulled to her elbow, revealing the ugly, demeaning scar left behind by that rat Lestrange. Elara held the arm in her lap, one hand on her wand, the other holding open one of those grimoires Harriet said felt disgusting to touch. Elara would tap the wand’s tip to one of the scarred letters, mutter an incantation, then grumble under her breath.

Given the nature of the curse in the injury and Elara’s own bloodline, she hoped to clear the residual Dark magic from the ropey, distorted skin, so it could be healed fully. Hermione doubted it was possible regardless of Elara being a Black, but she consented to spend her Saturday morning being poked and prodded. Harriet had scrunched herself into the corner by the footboard, wrapped in a blanket and her familiar. Crooks had sauntered over on his bandy legs to inspect, though he left a healthy distance between himself and the possessive Horned Serpent.

Winky popped into existence, a package held above her head.

“Winky is having a package for Miss Harry!” she squeaked. Harriet extracted herself from her cozy nest to accept it, swatting Livius’ nose away from Winky’s arm.

“Thanks,” she said around a yawn. “Hmm. Doesn’t have a note.”

“It’s being from the Headmaster, Miss!”

“Huh.” Harriet tore the wrapping along the seam and peeled aside the top flap. The lighting wasn’t bright, but Hermione spotted the distinct plum color right off. “Blegh. I forgot about that.”

“Those are Wizengamot robes,” Hermione said aloud, her thoughts otherwise grinding to a halt. “But of course they’re Wizengamot robes. You’re going to vote.”

The reality of the vote for Minister being days away shocked Hermione in a visceral way, and for a second, she couldn’t breathe.

“Are they allowing you to vote without an adult proxy then?” Elara asked, looking up from Hermione’s arm.

“Yeah. Professor Dumbledore explained it a bit more in-depth to me in our last lesson.” Harriet wrinkled her nose as she pulled the robes from the wrapping. “He’s held the votes for my family in stasis since—y’know. And it’s not usual to let a minor into the Wizengamot, but being the very last person in the family makes an exception. When there’s literally nobody else, they don’t have much of a choice but to let me vote on something like this.”

Elara nodded along with what she said. “I wish I could attend. They’re being rather strict about who can enter the chamber this vote.”

“I would guess they’re always strict about it when it comes to the vote for Minister. Are you all right, Hermione—?”

Both witches startled when Hermione scrambled off the bed, yanking open the hangings.

“But the vote can’t be so soon!” she cried, diving for her carrel. She shoved aside stacks of books and parchment to find the binder she sought, stray notes spilling around its bulging seam. “I haven’t received confirmation from so many people yet! The Macmillans haven’t answered, and the Clagg’s are still on the fence. Gaunt’s Omega party still has far too many votes!”

She started rifling through the binder as quickly as she could until she found the sheet she desired. Her friends joined her.

“Hermione, I’m certain it will all be fine,” Elara placated. “Take a breath. You’ve done everything you can, and it isn’t your responsibility to control their votes beyond what you have suggested to them.”

Ignoring her, Hermione ripped a scroll from its holder and shoved it toward Harriet, who nearly stumbled under Hermione’s enthusiasm. “This is a list of every scenario I could think of happening. Now, here—the Ogden family will lead the Alpha party, and that’ll encourage this family here, and them here, to follow. The speed with which they vote is going to influence the Shafiqs. If their vote goes Omega, so will Stokk. And this here—.”

On she went, trying to explain every detail in her head, willing Harriet to understand. For her part, Harriet tried to listen—and Hermione knew this, even as she also acknowledged her own panicked rambling could be incomprehensible. She still couldn’t believe the fate of the entire Wizarding world could change in just a few days—and she wouldn’t be there to see it herself.

“Blimey,” Harriet muttered as she read the scroll, unfurling more and more inches. “That’s a lot. All right…but what’s this bit here about the Peverells? I don’t think I’ve heard you mention them as one of the sixty-six families.”

Elara shook her head before Hermione could answer. “The Peverells have been extinct for years. They don’t have a House.”

“Yes, yes, of course,” Hermione said, her voice more than a touch hassled. “But I’ve researched it. There’s a precedence—set in 1865 in the vote for Minister Spavin, then  later acknowledged in a fairly unknown law—wherein if a House’s line has been acknowledged as split—as the Peverells were in that 1865 vote—a member of the acknowledged split can contest how the subjective votes are entered.”

Harriet nodded, “Erm, that sounds all well and good, but I’m not quite sure what you mean.”

Elara, meanwhile, had taken a soft breath, and her brow rose.

“The Potters are known to have descended from the Peverells. If you think it necessary, you can contest how the votes that were inherited from the Peverell House are counted.”

“What d’you mean by ‘necessary’? Wouldn’t I do that regardless?’

Hermione caught her lower lip between her teeth. “It’s Gaunt,” she confessed. “The House of Gaunt, I should say. They inherited the Peverell votes, and I…I don’t think it’s a good idea to contest if you don’t need to. Gaunt…would not be happy.”

Bloody hell, am I related to that cunt?”

Ignoring her outburst, Elara explained, “No more than you are to any other Pure-blood family. The point, Harriet, is you shouldn’t provoke him more than necessary.” To Hermione, she added. “The Gaunts are more directly related to the main branch of the Peverells. It’s a known thing.”

“Known, but not acknowledged,” Hermione told her, one finger in the air. “That makes all the difference in the eyes of the Wizengamot. Now, contesting how the votes are counted won’t mean they get added to the Alpha party. They are simply withheld from the total.”

“Won’t they review and come back with a total in Gaunt’s favor?”

“No, it doesn’t work like that. The votes will be considered as abstained.”

“And how many votes are we talking about?”

Hermione fidgeted, then grimaced. “Three.”

Three? That’s it?” Harriet complained. “That’s nothing.”

“In a campaign this tight, it might mean everything.” Sighing, Hermione added, “I know it’s not much. I know everything might be in vain, and chances are slim Gaunt will be removed, but I—.” Her voice choked, closed around emotions she’d been struggling to keep contained for weeks now. For months. It was a feeling that had filled her chest the moment she realized Gaunt’s vengeance wouldn’t be reaped upon her—but upon her parents, and she had no choice but to send them away.

Maybe that was why Lestrange’s attack didn’t anger her as much as it angered Elara and Harriet. Maybe she deserved it for what she’d done.

“We can’t stand by and do nothing,” she managed to say. “Even if we lose. There’s a time and a place to keep quiet, and it’s not now. People need to know that Gaunt is going to be our ruin if we don’t protest his lies.”

Harriet tucked the scroll away in her pocket, then touched Hermione’s arm. When Hermione leaned into it, she looped her arm over her shoulders. “It’ll be all right,” she told her again. “D’you want me to flip Gaunt the bird while I’m there?”

Hermione snorted. “No, I want you to leave well enough alone. Don’t give him a reason to be more of a nuisance than he is now.”

“Too late.” Harriet loosened her hold, then dragged her feet back toward her bed. “He’s already a nuisance—he and his bint Umbridge. D’you know I have to leave for home by Floo instead of taking the train? Dumbledore doesn’t want me to take any chances.” She flopped onto the mattress. “I swear to Merlin she was following me yesterday—all over the castle.”

“She probably is,” Elara told her. She extended a hand for Hermione’s binder, and she reluctantly relinquished it. Elara glanced through the pages. “Should I hazard a guess, I would assume she knows about the Coven.”

Harriet bounced into a sitting position so quickly, her hair stood on end. “What!” she squawked, flattening her fringe.

“She knows something is afoot. No matter how often we check exits or the whereabouts of the Inquisitorial Squad, it was inevitable Umbridge would notice a large chunk of the student body disappears somewhere unknown.”

Harriet grumbled and slouched, her mouth dangerously close to pouting. “Fred and George were right; we should take turns hexing her shoes to the floor.”

“Fred and George also aren’t afraid of being expelled,” Hermione retorted with clear disappointment in her tone. “And that’s your fault, Harriet.”

My fault?”

“You gave them that money for their start up and now they’re right terrors.”

Conversation turned to other topics, their shared excitement for the winter holiday. Harriet worried about leaving the Coven without anything to preoccupy them, but Hermione reminded her the vast majority of students had elected to go home, if only to escape Umbridge’s constant attention. Elara had plans with Andromeda, and Hermione—.

When her friends weren’t looking, she sat among her books and parchments and dried, musty tomes, and she withdrew a small frame from within her desk’s crowded drawer. She looked at the still portrait of her parents, and for a moment, she allowed herself to dream. She thought of what it would have been like to have parents who didn’t find her to be too much, and what she could have done if they’d been more accepting of magic—or if she’d been born Muggle, if she’d gone Cheltenham as they’d plan.

The moment passed, and Hermione tucked the frame away. She got up, smoothed her robes, and got ready to pack.


A/N: Just a short chapter here for transition. The next chapter: the vote 😨

Chapter 271: three hundred and thirty-three

Chapter Text

cclxxi. three hundred and thirty-three

 

Harriet had mixed feelings about the end of term.

On one hand, she couldn’t wait to get away from Umbridge and the Inquisitorial Squad. The former followed Harriet whenever she could, her quill always scratching away at the parchment on her clipboard. Harriet kept her nose clean and was nothing but a model student, and yet Umbridge always had a negative comment about her. The witch reminded Harriet of a dreadful pink Dementor who’d taken to haunting her like vengeful, brassed off ghost.

The latter harassed most anyone, so much so that the professors had taken to holding the Inquisitorial Squad members back after lessons so their peers and the rest of the student body could get to their next classes without interference. To avoid them and Umbridge, Harriet spent much of her free time in the common room or the Aerie, either fiddling with interesting bits of magic or simply exploring. She felt as if a permanent pair of eyes had been set on the back of her neck, and the pressure to maintain perfect decorum wherever she went drained her terribly.

On the other hand, she would miss lessons with the Coven. They’d gotten her a group photo for Yule, taken by one of the Gryffindor members, Colin Creevey. It had everyone but her in it, even Hermione and Elara, who must have kept it a secret so she would be surprised when it was presented in their last lesson for the year. Harriet didn’t cry, but it was a near thing.

She would miss Hogwarts despite the trouble she always found in its halls. She would miss tea with the Headmaster, where she’d talk about her lessons with Slytherin and Professor Dumbledore would have stories to share about the many things he’d seen in his life. She’d even miss detentions with Snape, where she could find a measure of peace from the rest of the school and sit with a book and read while listening to the Potions Master huff over bad essays or the latest Umbridge debacle. They would duel at least once a week, then analyze her form, disseminating what they could about Slytherin’s skill.

But then, it was time to leave, and while everyone else took the carriages out to Hogsmeade so they could ride the train, Harriet went with Remus up to Professor Dumbledore’s office, and she stepped through the Floo into Grimmauld Place.

“You’ll have to stay here while I go collect the girls at the station,” Sirius told her as she sat at the table with a cup of tea prepared by Mably, who always came home on the holidays to be with Elara.

“I don’t see why they couldn’t come through the Floo too,” Harriet groused. “I don’t like being the only one.”

“Dumbledore said something about appearances and all that rot. I’m sure he’s got his reasons.”

Soon enough, Sirius returned with Hermione and Elara in tow, joined by Malfoy, as Lucius and Narcissa Malfoy were still at Grimmauld. “They’re driving me barmy,” Sirius grumbled as Narcissa doted on Draco, who’d gone red in the face. “But at least I can leave the house for a spell and clear my head. With Gaunt’s Guardian arseholes out in force, Lucy and Cissy are stuck inside most of the time.”

For a few days, they enjoyed a normal holiday—or, well, as normal as could be expected for something in Harriet’s life. Grimmauld had never looked better, the rather grimy and blatantly ancient furnishings and dilapidated architecture corrected by Narcissa’s firm hand, tended to by her house-elves Dipthy and Delby. Elara wasn’t terribly fond of the changes, and she sulked in her room for an afternoon until Narcissa allowed her to pick the wallpaper in the lounge.

Dobby came to stay with them as well—more than delighted to subtly harass his former masters while they resided in Grimmauld. Narcissa and Lucius always found their tea too hot or too cold, the furniture always slightly in the way, their robes wrinkled and one sock always missing. Harriet would hear Dobby cackling every time one of the Malfoys cursed.

With him came the surprising addition of Winky, another elf from the school’s kitchens.

“I promised her I’d help find her a family,” Hermione explained over a game of Muggle checkers. “I asked her to help with—well, you know, the election.”

Harriet snorted to herself. Help with blackmail, more like.

“Yes, anyway—I promised to help her find a family after she assisted me. You know how I hate the idea of elves being property, but I can’t simply expect for them to change their ways overnight, and Winky’s terribly miserable. I was hoping you would take her in.”

“Me?” Harriet sputtered, surprised. “What? Why?”

“Because you could show her what it’s like to be in a family that treats her as an equal rather than a—a dog.” She took a breath to control her temper, then sighed, lowering her voice. “She belonged to the Crouches before. Crouch Senior had her managing his son after he smuggled him out of Azkaban, and they both treated her awfully. I thought, seeing as you would understand being on the receiving end of the Crouches’ harassment better than anyone, you might be able to bond with her, and Winky might like helping someone her former masters have hurt. Please consider it.”

Harriet didn’t have to consider it long. She didn’t like the idea of owning a person, but she also didn’t want Winky to feel homeless, not after having dealt with the likes of Barty Crouch Junior. She accepted Hermione’s proposal, then she went about introducing Winky to her familiar and golems.

“It’s just me and Livius and these little idiots here,” she explained as they all sat on her bed. Harriet scratched at the back of her head, awkward. “I think I got a house or something, but not until I reach majority and get access to the main family vault. I could use the extra help with Livi—he needs more time outside, seeing as he’s getting so big, but uh, you might not be comfortable with that. Err, so I can understand if you’d like to find a different family, maybe a bigger one….”

Winky looked between Harriet and the snakes, lingering longest on Livi, who knew better than to bite any of the elves in that house or at Hogwarts.

Why doesss it ssstare?” the Horned Serpent asked.

She might be joining our family,” Harriet explained. He had nothing to say to that, though Harriet saw his interest in Winky was markedly more curious than before.

Finally, Winky seemed to come to a conclusion, and she asked, “Is Missy Harriet being alone?”

“Not really. I’ve got my godfather and Elara and Hermione—and the Flamels, I’ll have to introduce you to them. My mum and dad died when I was little, killed by Vol—You-Know-Who. I’ve got relatives, but they’re not…not great people. Haven’t talked to them in a few years now.”

Winky nodded, large ears flapping. “Yes, Winky is being happy to belong to House Potter!”

“Oh?” Harriet weakly replied. “That’s great, Winky. Thank you.”

“Thank you, Mistress Harriet!”

“Just Harriet, Merlin….”

So, a little bed was made beneath Harriet’s nightstand, and they argued about laundry and organizing and cleaning. Harriet mostly let her have her way, but wrangled out an agreement that she would join the dinner table with Mably and Dobby. Dipthy, Delby, and Kreacher refused to take part, even when they left place settings for the missing elves.

For those few short days, the many residents of Grimmauld Place enjoyed a hectic, but otherwise unproblematic beginning to their Yule holiday. Then, it was time to go to the Ministry.

 

xXx

 

Harriet looked at the robes neatly laid on her fluffed counterpane and thought she might be ill.

“Is Harriet not liking them?” Winky asked as she stood on tip-toes to peer over the bed’s top. “Winky can iron them better, she can!”

“No, no, that’s not it. You did a lovely job,” Harriet rushed to assure her. “I’m just not excited about where I have to wear them to.”

Exhaling through her teeth, she finally reached down to pick the robes up and shrugged them on over her day clothes. The front had a series of finicky clasps that closed in such a way as to let the fabric lay flush against her torso, and when Harriet paused to look at herself in the mirror hung on the wall, she made a face as if she’d bitten into a lemon.

“Blood hell,” she grunted. “Plum really isn’t my color.”

She looked ridiculous—though, she had to wonder if it were at all possible not to look ridiculous in those robes. She appeared especially silly because she was a teenager dressed in stiff, overly prim attire meant for an older witch, and she thought no one could take her seriously.

I don’t have to be taken seriously, she reminded herself. All I’m doing is casting a vote. That’s it.

She headed downstairs after bidding Livi and Winky goodbye, taking the stairs one at a time, careful of her thick hem. She could hear male voices rumbling together as she stopped on the landing to look down, and she saw Professor Dumbledore had arrived in his Wizengamot robes, joined by Sirius and Mr. Malfoy in theirs, as well as much of the rest of the house. Mr. Malfoy looked as pale as a sheet, and he leaned against one of the walls with his wife’s hand on his shoulder.

“Ah, Harriet,” Professor Dumbledore greeted as she descended the final steps, her face tinged a delicate pink as she felt all eyes turn to her. “I’m glad to see all is in order with the robes. Very stately.”

It was on the tip of Harriet’s tongue to say she looked like a git, but she respected the Headmaster too much to do that. “Thanks, Professor.”

Sirius looped an arm around her shoulders, though Elara chivvied him away before he could muss up her plait. “Honestly,” the taller witch said with a delicate sniff. “She doesn’t need you hanging off her, wrinkling her clothes.”

Hermione joined them, extending a scroll from Harriet to take. “Here. It’s an assortment of last-minute notes and things you can look at while the vote is happening.” She exhaled and tucked one of her frizzy curls behind her ear. “I can’t anticipate how things will go, but we can only hope at this point.”

Harriet nodded as she tucked the scroll into one of the seamless pockets sewn into the robes’ front. Elara helped with one of the old-fashioned clasps she hadn’t quite tightened the right way. “All right,” she said. “Is Mr. Malfoy going to be sick over there?”

Hermione glanced in his direction, then away, her sympathy limited. “He’s being his usual dramatic self,” she said in a dry undertone. “He hasn’t gone back to the Ministry since abandoning Gaunt, you see. He’s petrified of walking into the chamber and being stuck in the same room with the man. It’s not as if he could do anything in public. Ridiculous.”

Privately, Harriet thought it prudent for Mr. Malfoy to feel some measure of fear when being in Gaunt’s presence. After all, the Minister’s goons had abducted her off a busy, public platform without any issue, and Gaunt wasn’t what anyone would consider rational. Harriet’s neck could attest to that. Malfoy was in the best position to understand Gaunt went to great lengths when he felt slighted.

They set out through the Floo not long after that, Malfoy sticking to Professor Dumbledore’s side like a Niffler to a sack of gold. Sirius found it amusing and made several comments as they strode through the Ministry Atrium, attracting curious looks from employees and visitors alike, but Mr. Malfoy didn’t pay him any mind. The wizard’s pale, pointed face had taken on a distinct green tinge.

After checking in, they boarded the lift, the gate screeched closed, and they descended.

Harriet broke the grim silence by asking, “Is this…is it going to take long?”

“I can’t assume you have more important things to be doing,” Mr. Malfoy drawled, and Sirius trod on his foot.

“Not terribly long, no,” Professor Dumbledore answered. He had his sole hand folded against his middle in a casual pose that looked ever so slightly awkward because of his missing limb. Harriet thought he looked better than the rest of them in his plum robes with the gaudy silver ‘W’ on his shoulder. Like a proper wizard. “A typical session may last through the entire afternoon into the evening, but a vote requires much less debate, you see. The arbitrator will call for the sixty-six representatives to vote one by one, and then a result is had.”

“Is there a specific order that we have to vote in?” she asked.

“No.” Malfoy answered her this time, gripping the serpentine head of his walking cane as if it might vanish at any moment. “What Miss Granger failed to understand in engineering this fiasco is that the arbitrator must be properly bribed—oh, shut up, Black.” Sirius had pulled a truly gruesome face, and Malfoy rolled his eyes. “They must be bribed to call the Houses in a specific order. Many of the lesser scum follow the votes of their betters and so must be called on after those votes have been cast.”

“That’s not how I would have chosen to word it,” Professor Dumbledore said with a thoughtful tilt of his head. “But not entirely far off from the truth. The identity of the arbitrator can be difficult to ascertain before a vote such as this, but the Order came through, and Mistress Amble was genially coached in how important it was for certain names to be called before others.”

Harriet nodded. It didn’t shock her to hear that the Headmaster accepted the inevitability of blackmail and bribery; it seemed everything to do with magical politics involved either posturing or strong-arming or ensuring gold found the right palms. It made her dizzy, trying to understand it all.

The lift slowed, and the gate rolled back to reveal the corridor beyond. “Level nine. Department of Mysteries.

Dozens upon dozens of witches and wizards had crammed into the space and blocked the stairwells, both those in their plum Wizengamot robes and those not. A camera flashed, releasing puffs of smoke, and Harriet thought she saw the distinct blonde hair of a certain Prophet reporter dipping among the crowd, chased by her emerald green quill.

“Let us mosey toward our destination, shall we?” Professor Dumbledore said, speaking above the frightful volume. “Oh, Harriet, if you could assist an old wizard, please. Those stairs are something awful….”

He offered his arm as if he needed to be guided forward, and Harriet understood he simply didn’t want her to get lost in a potentially unfriendly horde. She looped her arm around his, and they stepped off the lift into the teeming fold.

As soon as he appeared, many people wanted to speak to Dumbledore, and Harriet found herself all but smashed into his side, an elbow knocking her glasses askew. The crowd surged, voices raised.

“If you could please give Miss Potter room, gentlemen, thank you….”

There were Wizengamot members and Aurors, reporters and correspondents. There was one bloke from the ICW that Harriet didn’t catch the name of who stopped to tell Dumbledore, “We’re watching this vote with interest, Professor. There’s been rumors, you see—.”

The Headmaster paused at length to speak with a vaguely familiar wizard with black hair, long sideburns, and a mustache Harriet recalled spotting at Sirius’ trial years ago. “Malcolm McGonagall,” Professor Dumbledore introduced. “He’s the Head of the House of Ross, and our dear Professor McGonagall’s younger brother.”

She shook hands with the wizard. “How do you do?” he said.

“Erm, good, thanks.”

All in all, Harriet expected to pass through the tight, packed corridor like a limpet, unremarked on by any of those around her, but for better or worse, this didn’t happen.

“Erroneous Pyrites,” introduced a silver-haired man with sharp, glinting eyes and gold-capped teeth, extending a white-gloved hand for Harriet to shake. “Master Slytherin has told me quite a bit about you.”

Harriet’s heartbeat spiked. She felt sweat building beneath the thick collar of her robes. “He has?”

“Naturally. You are his apprentice, after all.” They shook, and then the man laced his fingers together, arching a brow. “He’s expecting me to follow your example this afternoon.”

Harriet took that to mean Slytherin had ordered him to vote as Harriet would. Her deranged Master had been mostly ambivalent toward the whole matter of the vote. “You are all like children building sand castles,” he’d explained to her the day before she departed. “You, Granger, Gaunt, Dumbledore. Your progress has been acceptable, so I don’t particularly care how you spend your free time. I won’t be requiring you this Yule holiday, anyway.”

“What do you mean by sand castles, Master?”

“It’s pointless. No matter how tall it is built, or how deeply you dig the moat, the tide comes in, and the castle crumbles. Surely I do enjoy seeing Gaunt troubled, but ultimately, it’s futile. You will see.

There were other faces there that she hadn’t expected to meet. Linden Craft and Cedric Diggory sought her out, the pair both dressed in Ministry robes, though nothing to do with either the Wizengamot or the Aurory.

“I’m working in the Department of International Magical Cooperation,” Diggory explained, smiling. “And Linden’s interning in the Department for the Regulation and Control of Magical Creatures. We knew you’d be here and came to wish you luck.”

“Thanks, you two.”

Linden leaned in closer to her, perhaps closer than Harriet was strictly comfortable with, to whisper, “A little birdie told us you’ve started a group at the school.”

He nearly gave her a heart attack, thinking the Coven had somehow been exposed, but Cedric explained, “We haven’t heard anything specific, promise! We want to join though, whatever it is.”

She stammered, “You want to join, but you don’t even know what it is you’re joining?”

“We know you’re at the head of it, and that’s all we need to know.” Linden crossed his arm against his middle. “If you think everyone’s completely blind to what’s happening with Slytherin and Gaunt and the Dark Lord, you’re mistaken. We want to help, if we can.”

There wasn’t much more Harriet could say to them there in that setting, not surrounded by so many ears, and not with the Headmaster curiously looking on. She trusted Professor Dumbledore and understood he must have some passing knowledge of the Coven, because no one was bloody clever enough to keep a group that size from the Headmaster, but she took their privacy seriously.

“I’ll write,” she told Linden and Cedric before moving on.

They were nearly to the chamber’s doors when Harriet almost collided with another wizard, and she glanced up on instinct to apologize. She looked into the face of the older Snape impostor—the man whose house she’d broken into and stolen blackmail from. Harriet froze and gaped like an ugly fish. The wizard blinked, eyes narrowing—and then smirked.

“Oh, Tiberius. Hello,” Professor Dumbledore said to him.

Rather than returning his salutations, the man replied, “Give Severus my best, Headmaster,” and moved on. Professor Dumbledore frowned, then asked if Harriet had happened to meet Lord Prince before. She shook her head so hard she rattled her teeth.

That can ’t be good. Merlin’s bollocks.

The room in which the vote for Minister would be held much resembled the one Harriet’s trial had been in, if smaller and more cluttered with nice cushions on the long benches and swiveling sideboards prepped with refreshments. The smaller space afforded less seating for the public, which meant only a handful of people not wearing Wizengamot attire were allowed past the Aurors guarding the doors. The air smelled of pipe smoke and incense, a few members already in place, smoking or sipping cups of tea.

“Let’s find seats over here, shall we…?”

They situated themselves somewhere in the middle of the tiered rows, Harriet placed between Sirius and Dumbledore. Malfoy seated himself behind the latter, and Harriet got the distinct impression he was using Dumbledore’s height to hide.

I don’t blame him for trying.

Others joined them there—Mr. McGonagall, Neville’s grandmum Augusta Longbottom, a dark-skinned wizard named Shacklebolt Harriet thought was probably related to one of her students, Basil, and was apparently part of Dumbledore’s Order. Mad-Eye Moody’s brother sat in front of them, along with old Ollivander, and even Xenophilius Lovegood, who always managed to make a bloody scene whenever he saw Harriet. He insisted on shaking her hand at least six times, embarrassing the daylights out of her.

She noticed most everyone present was a wizard.

Madam Bones stopped to shake Professor Dumbledore’s hand. “I can’t say I’m particularly enthused about my chances,” she told him, accepting a cup of tea from Augusta Longbottom. “But pressure from your side of the fence has been unrelenting, Dumbledore. The least I can do is live up to my side of the arrangement.”

“You do yourself a disservice, Madam Bones. You would make an excellent Minister.”

She threw her tea back in one gulp, scalding or not. “We’ll see.”

Gaunt arrived when the chamber was nearly full, trailed by those whom Harriet guessed were his closest followers. His red gaze swept the tiered rows, and Harriet leaned back, using Sirius to block his vantage. Sirius obliged, and she was fairly certain he tossed the git a two-fingered salute when he finally did look in their direction. Dumbledore softly chided, “Come now, Sirius,” but his beard twitched with a hidden smile.

A stooped witch Dumbledore quietly identified as Amber Amble, from the Department of Magical Law Enforcement, eventually called the chamber to order. Everyone quieted, and Harriet’s pulse ratcheted up another level as she tried to keep herself calm. The court scribe, Anne Katrina Gambol, joined the first witch in the room’s belly, along with a strange brass device with two blank, glass faces and several affixed lenses.

“It registers your vote,” Sirius muttered after Harriet nudged him and pointed at the contraption. “It’s a bit of a magical lie detector, you could call it. It won’t count the vote if a person’s Polyjuiced or under a compulsion like an Imperius. If it doesn’t register the vote, it’s not legal.”

Amber Amble cleared her throat. It was a thick, phlegm-filled sound. “We convene today, the Wizengamot, in the solstice of the year 1995, beheld by magical providence, to count a vote in volume, not in body, for the British Ministry of Magic’s thirty-fifth Minister for Magic. The results recorded here today are witnessed by the full authority of our governing body and are held in truth. If you object to his sentiment as it has been given, please speak now.”

The room remained silent aside from a stray, smothered cough in the back. Harriet could hear the court scribe’s quill scratching on the parchment as she hurried to write everything Madam Amble said.

“Very well. We will begin with the vote from the House of the incumbent Minister, as is tradition. Will the Head of House Gaunt please stand?”

Naturally, it was the Minister himself who stood, the gold of his ring glittering in the chandelier’s thick light as he ran a lazy hand through his hair. “House Gaunt levies eleven votes in favor of myself, Marvolo Gaunt.”

The right face on the brass contraption changed, illuminated with the numerals ‘XI.’

“Thank you, Minister Gaunt. Next, the House of the challenger. Will the Head of House Bones please rise?”

Madam Bones stood up. “House Bones levies four votes in favor of myself, Amelia Bones.”

The left face of the contraption flashed with ‘IV.’

As Madam Amble called on the next House to vote, Harriet set about retrieving the scroll from her pocket, grimacing at the noisy, distracting crinkle that rose as she did so. Professor Dumbledore loudly cleared his throat, and she yanked it the rest of the way out, wilting in her seat.

“Thanks, Professor….”

“Pay attention, dear.”

Harriet unrolled Hermione’s notes in her lap and redirected her gaze to the counter, then to the scroll. The next House was Burke, and according to Hermione’s speculations, it was no surprise their four votes went to Gaunt.

Next—.

“Will the Head of House Malfoy stand?”

Mr. Malfoy fairly wobbled as he rose, presenting himself to the inspection of his peers—and his former Master. Harriet saw his throat bob as he swallowed, though there was no trace of his nerves in his voice when he spoke. “House Malfoy levies thirty-seven votes in favor of the challenger, Amelia Bones.”

Whispers broke out among the spectators, so much so that Madam Amble had to call for order several times before the volume receded. Gaunt stared at Malfoy all the while, and Draco’s father sunk into his seat like a man defeated.

“A mistake, Lucius,” Gaunt said, his tongue lingering like a snake’s. Menace dripped from every syllable, and Harriet felt a trill of fear chase along her spine.

“Quiet, please.”

The vote continued in this fashion, the numerals on the glass faces creeping upward on either side. Amble called Harriet’s name much earlier than she expected, and suddenly being urged to stand by Sirius scattered her wits. She stepped on her hem and staggered.

“Er—House Potter levies, uh—I don’t—?”

Seven, you tiny imbecile,” Malfoy hissed behind her.

“Seven! House Potter levies seven votes in favor of um, Amelia Bones.”

Chortles popped up among the listening witches and wizards. “Thank you, Miss Potter,” Madam Amble said. “Though, we could without the stuttering next time.”

Harriet wished the bench would swallow her whole—like that chair Elara used to have at Grimmauld. Just eat me, holy shite.

Dumbledore came next, giving five votes to Bones—and then Sirius, with twenty-eight. This set off another round of discontent mumbling, and Harriet could see people leaning toward one another, some shaking their heads, others nodding. I hope that means something good.

“Will the Head of House Prince please rise?”

That man Professor Dumbledore called ‘Tiberius’ got up. “House Prince levies three votes in favor of Madam Bones.”

“Thank you, Lord Prince.”

As he resumed his seat, Harriet heard Professor Dumbledore hum under his breath. “Interesting.” He glanced at the scroll in Harriet’s lap, gently tapping his finger against one of the many names. “You may want to watch what happens next.”

The next House was House Selwyn—and though Hermione inked a tidy little Omega symbol by their name, indicating she expected they’d vote for Gaunt, they voted for Madam Bones. It was then that Harriet noted an arrow in the confusing mess of Hermione’s handwriting, one clearly linking ‘Selwyn’ to ‘Prince.’

Oh. That ’s what they mean by the votes of some Houses being dependent on others….

The name “Prewett” was called, and Harriet was startled when Mr. Malfoy stood again, giving another three votes to Bones.

“I don’t understand,” she whispered to Dumbledore, and he whispered back—.

“It would be impossible to fully explain at the moment, but suffice it to say the votes of some Houses are either proxied or owned by others, and for one reason or another, they aren’t fully absorbed into that House for a set period of time. Those votes will continue to be viewed as separate. An example of such would be when I held the votes for House Potter in proxy while you were a child, until you grew to an age where you could accept your seat.”

Harriet continued watching, listening to the repetitive droning of Madam Amble’s rather guttural voice calling people to stand and give their preference for Minister. Harriet kept consulting Hermione’s notes—and frowned when “Slughorn,” clearly labeled with an Alpha symbol, suddenly voted for Gaunt.

What?

It happened again with Shafiq, and again with Ollivander.

Harriet’s gaze flicked across the room, searching—and found Gaunt already looking in her direction. They made eye-contact, and his mouth curled in a smug grin.

That bastard.

It appeared that while Hermione had been working on several of the Dark-inclined families, Gaunt had been threatening those on the other end of the spectrum. He’d thrown off Hermione’s speculation.

Shite, Harriet thought, frantically attempting to count and recount the marks on the parchment as the vote continued. Shite—shite! What did he do? Who did he get to? Did he ruin things?

The next three were all for Gaunt—Greengrass, Gamp, Dolohov. Harriet bit her lip as the numerals on the right face continued to flicker higher and higher, challenging the ones on the left.

Parkinson made a surprising switch to vote for Bones, but Crouch—a firm member of Hermione’s middle Lambda party despite having had a Death Eater in the family—voted for Gaunt. Nervous glances were thrown toward Gaunt, heads bowed, shoulders hunched.

Damn ….

Harriet despaired as the numerals fell even, and then crept higher on the right.

Professor Dumbledore exhaled, sounding tired. “Well….”

No, Harriet told herself. Come on, there has to be someone else. That can’t be all—.

The left face glowed ‘CLXVI.’ One hundred and sixty-six. The right, ‘CLXVII.’ One hundred and sixty-seven.

No!

“Thank you, Madam Rowle,” Madam Amble said to the Head of House Rowle as the witch sat again. “And thank you, members of the Wizengamot. This concludes the vote held here today, with one hundred of sixty-six votes in favor of the challenger, Amelia Bones, and one hundred and sixty-seven votes in favor of the incumbent, Marvolo Gaunt. Congratulations to—.”

Harriet rocketed to her feet. “Wait!”

The chamber fell deadly silent as her shout echoed against the walls. Gaunt, who’d stood as well, ostensibly to accept his victory, stared at Harriet. Even Professor Dumbledore appeared rather alarmed by her sudden exclamation.

Merlin, now isn ’t the time to get tongue-tied, numpty!

“I—I contest,” she said aloud. Many in the Wizengamot chuckled, and Gaunt laughed. It was a hard, cruel sound that reflected little amusement in its depths.

“That’s not how this works, little girl,” he said. “Your meddling can only take you so far. The vote is absolute—.”

“I contest the votes from House Peverell,” she continued before she could lose her nerve. She felt like an idiot, standing there with dozens of unfriendly eyes turned upon her, questioning, belittling.

“There is no House Peverell.”

“There was,” she clarified. “And there’s a precedence for the acknowledged split in the House, in—.” She consulted the notes clasped by her shaking, sweaty hand. “In 1865. A member of the acknowledged split can contest how—how the subjective votes are entered.” She gained more confidence as she spoke. “As a member of House Potter, I can argue how the votes inherited from House Peverell are counted because it’s been acknowledged by the Ministry in the past that there’s a dispute in who should have inherited those numbers. It means the votes have to be abstained.”

Next to her, Professor Dumbledore inhaled a small but surprised breath. Heads swiveled like weather vanes swinging in the wind as they turned from Harriet to Madam Amble, who blinked at the young witch.

“She’s—well, yes. She’s right,” she acknowledged as if she couldn’t believe it.

“That’s outrageous,” Gaunt snarled, leaning on the rail in front of him. “I don’t care what precedence she believes she has. The Noble and Most Ancient House of Gaunt is the last surviving family of the main Peverell branch. The Potters are nothing but a distant, irrelevant offshoot! Those votes are mine.”

“But a precedence cannot be dismissed so easily.” Whoever she was, Madam Amble didn’t cower in the face of Gaunt’s clear displeasure. “A precedence is a standard we have to evaluate. So long as the counter recognizes the claim, it is legal.”

All eyes turned to the counter. For a moment, the glowing numbers didn’t change, and Harriet’s heart fell to her stomach, thinking all Hermione’s research had been in vain, but then—.

The numerals on the right flickered. CLXVII became CLXIV. One hundred and sixty-four.

No one dared breathe. A quill fluttered to the floor, and they all heard the feather brush the stone, so deathly still and silent the chamber had become. The counter did not change again.

“Well, I—. That’s that. Con—congratulations, Madam Bones,” Madam Amble stuttered, her scribe scrambling to pick up her fallen quill. “Our new Minister for Magic!”

Amelia Bones stood up, moving like a puppet on strings, her expression shocked. “We could do with the stuttering, Madam Amble,” she said, her voice gruff. She had to fix her monocle from where it had fallen off. “Thank you. I am glad to accept the office.”

Harriet couldn’t believe it.

They’d done it. They’d done it. Just like that. Gaunt was no longer Minister.

She didn’t know what overcame her, but Harriet—still standing—turned to the other side of the room, and she called out, “It’s as you said, Mister Gaunt.” Her voice rang high and clear above the startled but jubilant applause. “The vote is absolute.”

Harriet smiled—and in that expression, she exerted every ounce of savagery held in her body, every moment of agony she’d endured in Azkaban or under his brand, every second of misery she’d experienced watching Hermione look at the scar on her arm or sob over Jaime Ingham or the unnamed Muggle-born boy Gaunt let die on the Malfoy’s floor. He’d lost, and Harriet bloody well let him know it.

Gaunt saw—and he snapped. Suddenly, he pointed a wand straight at Harriet’s face, and she didn’t have hers in hand. There was nothing between her and the fury of an enraged, jilted fragment of a murderous Dark Lord.


 

A/N: Random note, but I was reading a fic lately where the author kind of held the fic hostage with a comment count wall, which isn ’t the point of this note. What is the point, is one of the comments on the fic mentioned “You’re so rude. You don’t even thank your commenters,” and I thought, “Huh. I don’t either. Do people think the same about me?” So, I just want you to know, if you leave comments or kudos or likes or reviews or just silently read, I very much appreciate you clicking on my fic, giving it a chance or reading all the way to the current update. And if you do leave a comment, I read them and they make my day, even if I just don’t have the time to respond as often as I’d like. Anyway, back to the fic! I hope you enjoyed the chapter. It was a bit tedious to write because there’s not a lot happening necessarily, just a whole lot of characters and wordy politics squeezed into one scene.

Technically , Professor McGonagall should be the Head of the House of Ross, but I think with the rest of her responsibilities, and because she doesn ’t have children of her own, she probably passed that down to her brother. If you’re curious, it would become the House of McGonagall after Malcolm’s death or abdication. It takes a generation for any potential contests from the House of Ross (ie, a member who claims to be more directly descended from the branch and holds the name, formally ordering Headship to be bestowed onto them rather than proxies of a different surname) to pass before the name is officially changed.

Eventually I ’ll get the list of the official vote (and the Coven membership, one day, I swear) on the Discord.

Harriet: *glances around the chamber*

Harriet: *sniffs*

Harriet: “Smells like the patriarchy in here.”

Or

Gaunt: *loses election*

Dumbledore: *starts twerking*

Chapter 272: the after party

Chapter Text

cclxxii. the after party

 

Harriet did the only thing she could do when the red light flew toward her face.

She raised her arm over her head, shouting, “Protego!,” and felt the desperate pull of her magic fizzle over her skin. It was too weak, too paltry and feeble, like a warbling bubble too thin to do anything—.

Professor Dumbledore’s hand closed around her shoulder, forming a fist in her plum robes, and a solid yank pulled her sharply to the side as he hurled forward a more substantial shield. It split when Gaunt’s curse connected—but not before the spell ricocheted, flying over their heads to strike the wall. Voices shrieked and screamed as the stone cracked and shuddered, raining dust upon them. The chandeliers swayed and flickered.

“Good God, man!” someone shouted.

Harriet fumbled to get her own wand, for all the good it would do her now. She’d nearly fallen off the bench when Professor Dumbledore grabbed her, and she struggled to sit up, straightening her glasses. She looked across the courtroom.

The only word she could use to describe Gaunt at that moment was deranged. His eyes, wide and furious, bled with red color, and he bared his teeth in the most vicious expression Harriet had ever seen. He’d gone blind to the room around him, heedless of the people shouting his name, and in that instant, there was no one there but Gaunt and Harriet. Nothing stood between them, and he fully intended on killing her where she sat.

Then, the instant passed, and the madness receded, leaving Gaunt to glance from side to side, a sly, calculating gleam shuttering his eyes as he sneered. He didn’t resist when the Wizengamot called for him to be removed, and Harriet watched him and his closest supporters exit the room with a feeling of tentative hope and blood-curdling dread. He didn’t stop to look back, and Harriet didn’t look away from the back of his head until it vanished beyond the heavy doors.

He’d walked into the chamber as Minister, and now he left as an everyday citizen.

Harriet’s group didn’t stay to congratulate Madam Bones. The Wizengamot had to finish some last-minute agenda as they swore the witch into office, but Harriet sat through it without hearing a word, the top of her head and shoulders covered in dust from the wall and ceiling being smashed by curse damage. Grit stuck to the bottom of her shoes. More than one nervous wizard or witch peeked above them and studied the growing cracks.

When they called an end to the session, Harriet flinched as Sirius closed a hand around her elbow and urged her to her feet. Professor Dumbledore lingered in the chamber to speak with a few people, but Sirius and Mr. Malfoy rushed without waiting for him. The latter fairly ran to get out of the room and ignored a voice calling out his name. Sirius pulled Harriet with him as he followed Malfoy, his long legs able to cover the distance easier than Harriet’s.

“There’s an active Floo through here. We need to leave before the Guardians follow,” Malfoy said as he led them deeper along the narrow, frigid corridor. Those gathered there didn’t immediately notice them and were more interested in speaking with the other Wizengamot members filtering out of the chamber instead. “The common rabble aren’t aware of it.”

“There has to be a benefit to being a prissy knobhead,” Sirius snarked, but Mr. Malfoy paid him no heed. He led the way down a set of short, wide steps, then passed through a brass gate, letting it clatter open as they entered an empty solar. As Malfoy had said, they found a hearth there with Floo Powder left in an earthenware jar on the mantel. He lifted it and extended it for Harriet to take a pinch first, which surprised her, considering how badly he wanted to get out of there.

The Guardians wouldn’t attack him here, would they? She paused. Gaunt did just try to cut my head off in the middle of the Wizengamot. Merlin’s arse.

Without daring to glance behind her, she shoved her fingers into the glittering powder and threw a large amount into the banked fire, scattering half across the marble floors. “Grimmauld Place!

She held her breath as she traveled, and only once the cool, fresh air hit her face and she started to tilt forward did she open her eyes. Harriet stumbled as she always did on the grate, but Remus was there to steady her. A dozen faces all turned in her direction, the parlor silent as a grave.

“Well?” Hermione asked, her hair a fright from her nervous hands running through it. Next to her, Elara looked almost green with apprehension. The others from the Order bore similar signs of distress, and Harriet didn’t keep them waiting anymore.

Just as she had in the courtroom before Gaunt tried to murder her, she smiled. Hermione gasped.

The room erupted in cheers.

 

xXx

 

As the days unfolded, Harriet felt as if she were holding her breath.

The Prophet reported no news about Gaunt—nothing about what happened in the Wizengamot session and no statement from him in the wake of Bones’ ascension to his former office. Bones announced her intended itinerary, mainly issues she wanted to address or laws she would be recalling, but that wouldn’t occur for a few weeks yet. Harriet kept expecting something to break, for the tentative calm to explode in their faces, but nothing happened. Gaunt, for all intents and purposes, had disappeared.

Mr. Flamel tried to assuage her nerves when he and Mrs. Flamel visited. “Gaunt is—how do you say? Un narcissique?

“A narcissist?”

Oui, exactement. And he has been dealt a grievous wound. When ze beast is injured, it retreats to its lair. It seeks better defense.”

Standing by Sirius’ liqueur cabinet, Lucius Malfoy made a noise somewhere between a scoff and the squawk of an injured peacock. Fatigue wrinkled his usually pristine, if narrow, face. “Don’t invite the devil to dance, Monseuir Flamel,” he drawled, clearing his throat to regain composure. He selected a bottle and studied the label. “I find it best not to speak his name because he will come to get his due. I wouldn’t invoke his presence before we have a moment to drink ourselves into oblivion.”

Mr. Flamel replied something scathing in French that Harriet didn’t catch, but Mr. Malfoy did. “What an example you set for your son.”

His reply didn’t rattle Malfoy, who used a spot of wandless magic to uncork the bottle he’d chosen. “I’ve made my bed, my good sir. I cast my vote against him. I’ve stood up for goodness and all that rot. It’s cost me nearly everything, but ah, so long as my family and I live, it doesn’t matter. I do believe I’ve earned my libations, however.” He picked up a tumbler and began to pour a drink. “We’re in the eye of a storm. It will not last forever.”

Mr. Malfoy’s grim portent stayed with Harriet like a lingering rain cloud. With some pointed goading from Mrs. Weasley, Sirius threw a Yule party, celebrating both the end of the year and the end of Gaunt’s term in office. Nobody expected anything to change overnight, and they understood the Dark Lord’s influence wouldn’t vanish anytime soon. Guardians of the Magical Right still populated the Ministry, and it would take further time, preparation, and persuasion to vote those people out.

But, for now, they celebrated that frail new hope and looked forward to the new year. They raised their glasses and toasted the new Minister.

 

xXx

 

Voices and laughter echoed from the floors below, though Harriet couldn’t understand what they said where she sat on the darkened landing.

She and the other teenagers staying in the house had been sent to bed hours before, but vague, unsettling dreams kept Harriet from sleeping, and she’d wandered out to the railing in the dark. Music played, and the air smelled of soot from traffic coming in and out of the hearth, and Mrs. Weasley’s decadent cooking. Candlelight filtered from below, and as she sat there with her arms around her knees, leaning her head against the balusters, she felt less alone, her nightmares pulling apart at the seams until only ugly, torn bits of emotion remained.

She considered going downstairs but decided Andromeda or Mrs. Malfoy would probably send her right back up. They had dated ideas about teenage witches being around inebriated adults.

Harriet felt more than saw Set sitting in the dark with her. She didn’t acknowledge him. She wondered if he played a part in her increasingly disturbed night terrors.

Doors opened and closed below, the laughter growing and fading, glassware clinking. They sounded drunk. She didn’t begrudge them for it, but she did resent her and her friends being denied any wine and chivvied off like children. After all, Hermione had done a great deal of the work in persuading people to change their votes, and Harriet braved Gaunt blasting her in the face in front of witnesses. That definitely deserved a glass of firewhiskey.

Quiet footsteps shuffled closer, then up the stairs. It took a moment before the person became visible, and Mr. Flamel paused mid-yawn when he spotted Harriet sitting on the landing in her pajamas and dressing gown.

“Hello, petit oiseau,” he said, quiet and surprised. “What iz it? Why are you up still?”

She shrugged. “Couldn’t sleep.”

Mr. Flamel studied her for a moment, then exhaled, lowering himself to sit on the top step near her. His knees popped as he did so, and he grunted. “Sacrebleu, I’m too old to waste the night away on good wine and decent company anymore.”

Harriet snorted. “Only decent?”

“They are English, after all.”

Harriet shook her head and whispered, “I don’t think people have had a lot of reasons to celebrate in recent years.”

He hummed, brushing lint from his trousers. “Maybe. Life has a curious way to it, Dark Lord or no Dark Lord. People will continue to live. They have little victories, celebrations. The world may be dark, but there’s light to be found in the home.”

Harriet thought of Privet Drive—then, she thought of Grimmauld, and all the things she’d gotten into with her friends, the laughter and tears, the games and pranks and silly antics they had despite Voldemort haunting their every waking moment. Those were like celebrations, weren’t they? Every breath Harriet took should be a celebration. She’d almost lost them a dozen times.

“I’m afraid of what’s going to happen,” she admitted to him, her grip tightening on her knees. She thought she heard Sirius singing, Remus guffawing at his bawdy lyrics. One of the Order members booed and another clapped. “Deep down, I must have not believed it possible. Gaunt’s been Minister for years, and it’s like….everyone was wanting an excuse not to choose him, but they were too—I don’t know. I just—I don’t know what he’s going to do. I—.”

Cold, hard fingers forming a fist in her hair, holding her head to one side. The heavy brand swinging toward her neck—.

“No one can know the whims of a madman. Trying to figure it out—it iz like being trapped in a room with only the wallpaper to see, oui?”

The Yellow Wall-Paper,” Harriet mumbled, thinking of the American short story where a woman went insane while imprisoned in a room by her husband. “‘The color is hideous enough, and unreliable enough, and infuriating enough, but the pattern is torturing.’” Maybe there was sense to that; attempting to see patterns in Gaunt’s design made Harriet feel sick. Maybe the whole Wizarding world was trapped in that room, too. Just scuttling in circles, seeing shapes in the wallpaper where none existed.

Mr. Flamel raised a brow, blinking, and she huffed. “Why is everyone always surprised I read?”

Non, non,” he bluffed, busying himself with finding something in the pocket of his waistcoat. “Ah. Here, prends ça.”

“I still don’t know French, Mr. Flamel.”

“This is why Beauxbatons is superior,” he grumbled. “Take this.”

She extended her hand, and he settled a trinket of some sort in her palm. It was warm to the touch, as if it’d been sitting in the sun rather than a pocket. She honestly couldn’t say what it was, other than it was heavy and reminded her of a hagstone with a hole naturally formed through the stone, but other tiny, intricate markings had been carved into the glossy black surface.

“It’s a simple piece of Druid’s glass,” Mr. Flamel said. “Keep it with you, oui? For luck. Do not leave it behind.”

Baffled but nonetheless grateful, Harriet nodded. “I will. Thank you, Mr. Flamel.”

They sat for a while longer, listening to the party below. Candlelight continued to flicker and glow on the walls, the portraits fast asleep. Harriet could hear Perenelle, and if his fond, distant expression was anything to go by, so could Mr. Flamel. The chatter increased, people clapping, and she gathered that Professor Dumbledore must have arrived. She hoped the Headmaster enjoyed the party, but also managed to get some rest after the long day he’d had.

Harriet thought she heard the front door creak open, but she didn’t hear it shut. Eventually, quiet footsteps made for the steps, slow and uneven, muffled by the carpet runner. A dark shadow rippled over the wall, blocking the light, and Harriet drew her legs closer to herself as she peered at the stairs below. Her muscles loosened in relief when she recognized the lanky, staggering figure.

“It’s Professor Snape,” she muttered. Mr. Flamel made a noise of acknowledgment, sounding half-asleep. He came fully awake when Snape started up the last flight and stopped mid-way to stare at them. He wore his traveling cloak, the collar mussed, and for one second, Harriet thought he might be drunk—it would explain his strange gait, his stark, pale face. But then, she got a better look into his expression, and she saw blood coming from his nose, his mouth. A distinct tremble gripped his entire body.

Their eyes met and held. He stared as if not entirely sure of what he saw.

“Snape…? Snape—!”

The Potions Master faltered and started to topple backward, but Mr. Flamel proved remarkably spry despite his complaining knees. He sprung up and caught Snape about the middle, levering his arm over his shoulders to keep him upright. “Ah—no, no. Up you come, mon ami. Let’s get you looked after.”

Harriet scrambled to her feet. “Is he all right? Can I help? Professor—?”

She tried getting on the other side of him to help him stand as Mr. Flamel did, but Snape’s arm shot out to stop her, bracing his shaking hand against her chest. His skin best resembled the belly of a dead fish, and it glistened with cold sweat. There was blood under his broken fingernails, and it darkened the white cuff of his undershirt.

Harriet knew without asking where Snape must have gone, and who must have done this to him. She gripped his arm and tried to shift it over her shoulders so she could help. He resisted.

“No,” Snape managed to say, clenching his jaw. Red stained his crooked teeth. “I’m fine. Go to bed, Miss Potter.”

“Like Hell you’re fine—.”

“Harriet,” Mr. Flamel said—and it was sharp, foreboding. She didn’t want to, but Harriet let Snape pull from her grasp, the old alchemist bearing much of his weight. She numbly watched the two men walk up the next set of stairs to find space in one of the empty bedrooms above.

Blood streaked the front of her nightgown in the shape of long, slender fingers. Below, the party continued, but Harriet could already feel its warmth dissipating. The peace wouldn’t last. For some, it’d never come at all.


A/N:

Harriet: *peeks out window*

Harriet: “Yup, world’s still going to shit.”

Remember, there's a Discord you can join here: link

Chapter 273: the boy who lied

Chapter Text

cclxxiii. the boy who lied

 

The morning had ventured dangerously close to the afternoon by the time Harriet woke to a rapid knocking on her door.

She rolled out of bed, her head feeling as if it weighed half a ton, and grumbled to her knobby knees. She sat at the edge of the mattress.

“S’too early,” she complained. Against her heels, she felt Livius’ impatient nose inspecting her feet, and the smaller golems on her nightstand hissed a displeased chorus.

Breakfassst time!

Eat! Eat!

Sssnack! Sssnack!

“You don’t even need to eat,” Harriet retorted, reaching among them to grab her spectacles, shooing away Kevin before he could bite her questing fingers. “Where’s—where’s Winky? D’you ask her?

Livi freed his head from under the bed’s skirt, knocking his horns against the rail. “The elf left usss.”

Harriet figured she’d gone to help the others with breakfast—or, judging by the cold winter sun at the window—lunch. Harriet had gone back to bed after Mr. Flamel took Snape upstairs, but she’d laid awake listening to the footsteps overhead for hours. It’d nearly been dawn before she finally dropped off into sleep.

The knock sounded again on the door.

“I’m coming,” she called, swallowing a yawn. Turning the knob, she jerked the door open, finding Hermione at the threshold. Her irritation faded. “What’s wrong?”

“You’re not awake?” the other witch asked, eying her mussed pajamas. Harriet noted Hermione had on a lovely pair of robes in a pale magenta. She looked nice and well put together. “Why aren’t you awake?”

“Am I supposed to be awake?” Harriet hadn’t been aware of any plans for the day. They hadn’t planned anything for after the election, having been…unsure of how it would go. She wondered if anything had happened overnight, but she guessed someone would have woken her earlier if it had.

“Yes,” Hermione told her, her tone just short of exasperated. “Oh, get in here.” She shooed Harriet back into her room, then went to the wardrobe, opening it. She spoke as she searched her robes. “We have to leave soon, or we’ll be late, and we’ve only a brief window of opportunity to get out of the house without someone protesting.”

“Wh—?” Harriet broke off when one of her apprenticeship cloak whacked her in the face. “Blimey, Hermione. I don’t even know where we’re supposed to be going.”

Rather than answering, Hermione selected a pair of Harriet’s best shoes and set them out on the bed with her white cords. Harriet wrinkled her nose.

“I don’t want to wear that anywhere.”

“It’s important,” Hermione told her. “We’re going to want to set the right impression.”

“Are you going to tell me what’s happening?”

Hermione fidgeted as she selected a pair of socks—and Harriet swatted her hands away before she could choose her knickers as well.

“Well. You’ll see when we get there….”

She left to allow Harriet to get dressed, and she did so with begrudging stiffness, trying to figure out what Hermione was up to. She considered dressing scruffy just to be spiteful, wanting nothing more than to fall back into bed, but she did as Hermione bid and dressed well, taming her hair and using a spell to ensure her robes were pressed and lint free.

What is she planning? I have a bad feeling about this.

Once dressed, she stepped out into the corridor and quietly shut the door behind her. Downstairs, she could hear Hermione and Elara talking, their voices soft and muffled by the distance. Harriet glanced toward the stairs leading to the floor above—the stairwell sat dark, silent, no sign of the man who’d struggled up those steps the night before. Harriet stared for a long while, heart heavy, then turned away.

 

xXx

 

Harriet shivered as she stepped from the Floo’s heat, and the soot fell away from her cloak, Charmed to repel it. A heavy chill clung to the Tarland Tavern, seeping in from the snow-clad street beyond the fogged windows, unchallenged by the candles or dim fire churning in the hearth. The pub’s occupants looked around when she arrived, but their gazes didn’t linger. Harriet guessed there was something foreboding about her appearance, dressed as she was in her tailored robes and fitted cloak. The clasp at her throat gleamed like an animal’s lurid, feral eye in the dark.

The others arrived after her. Elara took a surreptitious sip of potion to cure her nausea and secreted the vial away into her sleeve. Hermione looked grim and pained. Sirius rounded off their intrepid party, and he was quick to inspect the uncrowded tavern. Finding nothing suspicious, he shoved his hands into his trousers’ pockets and grunted.

From a booth in the corner where the winter sunlight shone best, a familiar blonde woman with poison-red nails waved.

“Hermione,” Harriet muttered in disbelief. “What in the fuck is Rita Skeeter doing here?”

Hermione had the grace to flush a rather blotchy red as she cleared her throat, and her answer came out as a question. “You’re going to give her an interview?”

Harriet balked. “Give her an interview—?!”

“It is a good idea. I agreed with her,” Elara interrupted. “The public likes Skeeter, for all that she’s a lying, manipulative troglodyte, and they read what she publishes. There wasn’t time to convince you of our idea. Now, while Gaunt hasn’t retaliated, is the best time to push the real narrative. Give her an interview, and she’ll get it into the Prophet.”

“The narrative—?”

“Voldemort,” Sirius supplied, loud enough a few of the patrons flinched in their seats and glanced at him. “It’s a good time to repeat what you’ve said since the beginning: he’s back, we’re in danger, and the public needs to know. But—.” He held up a finger and shot Hermione and Elara a look. “If you want to leave, we can leave. That’s the deal.”

Harriet did want to leave—she wanted to go back to Grimmauld, crawl into her bed, and not emerge for several hours or days. This was a terrible idea!

“You can tell her what happened after the vote,” Hermione added. “When Gaunt attacked you.”

“They didn’t make that information public,” Harriet retorted. “They didn’t even stop him before he left.”

“But you can make it public.”

Reluctant, Harriet listened to their quiet inveigling, and she finally gave her head a single, short nod.

Sirius patted her shoulder, then tipped his head toward the bar. “I’ll be having a pint if you need me.”

Elara didn’t roll her eyes, but Harriet sensed it was a near thing.

Hermione led the way across the pub to Skeeter’s booth, Harriet grumbling until she was in earshot, at which point she shot the older witch a cool, unfriendly look. She slid onto the opposite bench next to Elara.

“Well, I must say it was quite a surprise to get your owl, Miss Granger,” Skeeter said to Hermione with a sharp, biting smile. “And at such an inopportune time, too. You do realize I’ve an article to write covering the election, yes? It should have been out this morning, but I had to make time for this meeting at your insistence—.”

“We want you to write something else,” Hermione said, cutting across her. Her tone came out crisp and no-nonsense. “Something that will not only benefit you, but the whole of Wizarding society. For once.”

Skeeter’s keen eyes flicked toward Harriet, then away, the look almost hungry, eager. “Your letter mentioned an interview?”

“I’ll give you one,” Harriet told the witch, not quite able to unstick her clenched jaw. She would be giving Hermione an earful later, but at least she hadn’t let Harriet embarrass herself by showing up in her tatty Muggle clothes. Hermione’s insistence upon the apprenticeship robes and cloak made sense. “I’ll tell you about the Dark Lord’s return. Now that Gaunt’s out of office, your editor shouldn’t have a problem printing that truth, right? But I have conditions.”

Skeeter sucked on her teeth and reached for her tea. Despite the hour, Harriet could smell the pungent, cloying scent of alcohol rising off the surface. “Of course. What is it, Miss Potter?”

“I won’t have you making me sound like an incompetent child,” she snapped, thinking back on Skeeter’s articles covering the Triwizard Tournament. The stuff she’d written about Longbottom had been bloody embarrassing, even for the Prat Who Lived. “Or making Terry Boot into a spectacle. Don’t make this out to be a ruddy fairy tale—it’s important.”

Skeeter waved an irritated hand. “You don’t need to tell me how to do my job, little girl.” From her clutch purse, she removed a scroll and a simple black Self-Inking Quill. She licked the pad of her taloned thumb before unfurling the blank scroll and urging it to lay flat. “I agree to your silly conditions—and Granger needn’t threaten me.”

Harriet glanced at Hermione and found her watching Skeeter with a raised brow.

“Now,” the witch began, ink already gleaming on the parchment in the weak winter sunlight. The sight of it made Harriet feel nauseous, her empty stomach twisting in her middle. Skeeter smiled again. “Why don’t we start at the beginning….?”

When she began speaking, Harriet found the retelling of the story didn’t hurt as much as it had months prior, that time and repetition had dulled the sting of recounting Terry’s death and Voldemort’s rebirth. She steered away from the elements Mr. Dirigible had told her were sensational at her trial—the dueling, the high-stakes escape, the miraculous rescue. She painted the scene in broad strokes and didn’t linger on the details or names. Skeeter pointed this out, and Harriet simply told her she hadn’t recognized anyone. She’d land back in court if she libeled a Death Eater, no matter if it was true or not.

The scroll grew with the writing, though if Skeeter noticed or cared about it or the smudged ink on her fingers, she said nothing. They broke once for the loo, and Harriet had to get a cup of the worst brewed tea she’d ever suffered through to soothe the ache in her throat. Hermione and Elara stayed mostly quiet aside from a few points they wished to have clarified, and Elara once demanded Skeeter show how she’d recorded a particular section.

Once the topic came to a close, Skeeter started to stray—she asked about the election, Harriet’s view on it, and she practically salivated when Harriet told her about the former Minister’s brief but violent reaction. She wanted to know about her life as an apprentice, but Harriet would only give her brief, acerbic responses she knew would meet Slytherin’s approval. Honestly, she didn’t know how he’d react to this interview, but she’d already decided it aligned well with his wish for Voldemort to be outed.

She did, however, make it a point to add a little extra.

“I believe You-Know-Who has agents among us,” she said, watching Skeeter’s quill, reading her shorthand, wary of her extra flavor. “And I believe they’ve been here since his first downfall. They have been at our ears, guiding our hands, and they’re just as dangerous as the Dark Lord, if not more so.”

Skeeter continued writing. “Bold words, Miss Potter. Especially considering you won’t name names.”

Harriet shrugged, fidgeting with her cord’s tassel under the edge of the table. She wished one of her golems had snuck into her pocket, but they’d been miffed at her by the time she left, knowing Winky would see to them for her.

Outside, the afternoon had darkened, a storm threatening. Muggles rushed by on their way home.

“Why you?”

Harriet blinked, looking at Skeeter again. “I beg your pardon?”

“It’s rather curious. All of this happening, so much attention focused upon you. Why not Mr. Longbottom? He was available for You-Know-Who’s scheme, was he not?”

Harriet fidgeted but said nothing. She could feel Skeeter watching every shift in her expression.

“I don’t know Voldemort’s mind, Rita,” she settled on saying, savoring how Skeeter flinched, dragging her quill on the parchment. “I can’t speculate on why he does what he does. That way lies madness, as the Muggles say.”

“I don’t set store by what Muggles say.” Rita scrawled a final line on her scroll, and when she lifted the quill, the long roll snapped closed with a flourish. “It’s madness to listen to the mundane in a world of magic.” The scroll disappeared into her clutch. “Thank you for the illuminating interview, Miss Potter.”

Harriet took this to mean they could leave at last, and she urged her friends out of the booth, grunting at the soreness in her arm. The cold had been affecting it more ever since Madam Pomfrey had to remove and regrow the limb after her first botched Animagus attempt, and her left arm burned where Crouch had stabbed it with the dagger. She wanted to get home and put the salve Snape had made on it.

“Say, Potter,” Skeeter said as Harriet stood. “Off the record—your parents. They died in eighty-one, didn’t they?”

Harriet’s hands froze on the lapels of her cloak as she straightened it. She narrowed her eyes at the reporter. Why on earth would she be asking that?

“Yes. Why?”

“Oh, no reason.” Skeeter smiled. She reached out and patted Harriet’s shoulder with her taloned hand. “No reason at all….”

 

xXx

 

THE DARK LORD RETURNS: IS THE BOY WHO LIVED ACTUALLY THE BOY WHO LIED?

 

“Merlin’s arsehole,” Harriet mumbled as she unfolded the Prophet that night. She knew that, elsewhere in the house, most everyone would be doing the same. Most everyone in the Wizarding would be settling down to read the evening edition. “That cow!

Rite Skeeter had kept her word. She wrote an article extolling the need for safety, exposed the Dark Lord’s return, and threw suspicion upon the Ministry’s efforts to cover the incident up. She made a brief but thoughtful mention of Terry’s death, and didn’t malign Harriet’s character. If anything, the madwoman had made her sound competent and wise beyond her years, a victim whose selfless message was for others to take precautions and protect their own families.

And then…the bullshite began.

Potter’s words are a clarion call to arms, but they also ignite a flurry of questions. Questions that, if answered, could alter the very fabric of our understanding of the past. For, as Potter’s tale unfolds, a shadow of doubt is cast over one of our most cherished beliefs: the identity of the Boy Who Lived.”

Skeeter trotted out old articles and stories and pictures from the past, lining up little details that challenged the reader to question what really happened on that awful Hallowe’en in 1981. She had excerpts from the incident reports, photos of Harriet’s ruined childhood home before it was torn down, pictures of a young Frank Longbottom holding his infant son. There were reports out of Hogwarts, commentary scrounged from the society at large. She cast aspersions on Longbottom’s magical prowess, bringing up his ignominious losses during the Triwizard Tournament, while she highlighted Harriet’s attainment of a coveted apprenticeship at such a young age, and her record of school service.

The worst were the images of Harriet from her trial, her head turned and her chin up, her scar like a brilliant flash of white lightning on her throat.

“‘That is a curse scar,’ says a notable researcher at St. Mungo’s Hospital for Magical Maladies and Injuries. ‘A very old one, from a very Dark curse. Yes, I would say it’s entirely possible it came from You-Know-Who. I would urge Miss Potter to have it examined at the hospital.’”

Notable researcher,” Harriet seethed, the paper crinkling in her hands. “More like a great, nosy tosser who shouldn’t be looking at ruddy pictures of me!”

“So, dear readers, as we light our wands and stand vigilant against the gathering darkness, let us also open our minds to the possibility that we may have been misled. Could it be that the true savior of our world has been living in the shadows all along, waiting for her moment to step into the light?

Only time will tell. But one thing is certain: the story of Harriet Potter is far from over.

Harriet thought she might be ill.

“I think I’d rather be accused of murder again, honestly….”


A/N:

Gaunt: “I’ve received a letter.”

Gaunt: “It’s from Potter!”

Gaunt: “…”

Gaunt: “All it says is ‘bitch.’”

Chapter 274: the gallows witch

Chapter Text

cclxxiv. the gallows witch

 

It hadn’t been Elara’s intention to eavesdrop.

To be fair, she was in the greenhouse long before Snape and Harriet left the house to use the garden for their training session. She set out after lunch, knowing it would take her an absurd amount of time to harvest what she needed. Indeed, she’d killed one of the yew trees already and was hoping no one would notice or attribute it to her. She continued harvesting the bark from the second tree, going slow and using her gloves and the scraper made of bones. She cracked a window for a bit of air, flipping the latch to pivot the glass out on its stiff hinges, and thus she heard when Harriet and Snape came downstairs.

For a while, they exchanged nothing but spellfire, and Elara listened to the pop and whistle of moving magic, the heavy thumps of their steps on the cold flagstones. Snape barked the occasional correction, Harriet would curse, and they’d go again.

When their dueling slowed, Snape said, “That article was a monumentally stupid idea,” and Elara stiffened.

“Probably,” Harriet agreed, which matched what she’d said when they left Skeeter at the Tarland Tavern. Despite her reluctance, she didn’t throw the blame on Elara or Hermione. “But it’s already been done.”

Elara knew Hermione was currently at her desk writing a scathing letter to Rita and questioning whether or not to make good on her threat to turn the woman in as an illegal Animagus. Elara had cautioned her against it. Skeeter kept to the letter of their agreement, if not the spirit, and it would only behoove their working relationship if Hermione gave her warning and moved on. If Rita kept pushing, Hermione would have no choice but to turn her in, and the rotten beetle needed to be reminded of that.

“Vol—The Dark Lord wasn’t…angry, was he?” Harriet asked, hesitating. “He didn’t hurt you again after—?”

“That is none of your business, Potter.”

“It is though, isn’t it?” she rushed to say. “It’s a consequence. It wasn’t—I did the article with Skeeter, whether or not it was my idea, I still did it, and if the Dark Lord hurt you because of that—.”

“You cannot shoulder the actions of others,” Snape replied, sounding testy. “In your narrow perception of the situation, would you also demand credit if the Dark Lord saw fit to reward me for your choices?”

Harriet stayed quiet for a moment. “That’s…different. That’s from—y’know, your job.”

“The coin is two-sided, Potter. Either reward or consequence, they are both mine to bear and both results of my own decisions and the decisions of the Dark Lord. Don’t be a martyr. It’s tiresome.”

They dueled again. Elara set the scraper aside and leaned over the bench, peering out the window. Had anyone been there to witness her doing so, she would have definitely corrected their assumption that she was spying. She was only—curious. So, Elara peeked out the window, craning her neck until she spotted Harriet and Snape.

The latter returned his wand to the brace hidden by his sleeve, looking unruffled aside from an inexplicable scorch mark on his upper arm. Two crudely made swords had been driven into the earth, and Harriet busied herself by yanking them free and grunting with the effort. She canceled the Transfiguration, and they returned to rocks that she placed by the fountain again. Snape smoothed out the path with a silent spell.

Elara watched how Snape turned his head, his gaze settling on Harriet as she tidied the garden. In a rare, unguarded moment, Elara saw emotion flicker over his narrow, sallow countenance, his brows drawing together, his lips pursed in a pained grimace. It startled her, seeing the staid Potions Master appear so anxious, if only for an instant. A moment passed, and his face resumed its usual distant, cool affect. Harriet finished fixing the begonia and turned to him again, tucking a loose curl behind her ear.

“Slytherin will want to see you before the holiday is over,” Snape said, and Harriet made a face as if she’d smelled dung under her nose. “Mind yourself. He seems pleased with this newest development, but no matter his iteration, the Dark Lord’s mood is mercurial at best.”

“Do you really think I don’t know that?” Harriet retorted. She let out a frustrated sigh, then wiped perspiration from her brow. “Fuck.”

She headed toward the house, and Snape stared after her, hesitating before he followed.

That was odd, Elara thought. Snape must be more worried about Slytherin’s reaction than he’s letting on. Hermione insists the apprenticeship contract prevents the slimy bastard from heaping abuse upon her, but she’s naive to how insidious and cunning abusers can be.

“Do you mean to eavesdrop on the garden for the rest of the afternoon?”

God—!”

Elara smacked the top of her head on the window as she rushed to duck inside. Andromeda stood next to her, arms crossed, though how and when she’d come into the greenhouse, Elara couldn’t say. The older witch arched a brow, and Elara ignored how her cheeks flushed as she rubbed her bruised scalp.

“I wasn’t—never mind. What do you want?” she grumbled.

Andromeda smirked as she uncrossed her arms, revealing a small sachet cupped in her hand. “I came to check on your progress and give you this. Ashes from your hearth.”

“Thank you.”

Elara reached inside her cloak’s pocket, removing a square wooden box. It was partitioned inside, and she placed the sachet inside the first. She eyed the yew bark she’d shaved off the tree.

“I truly don’t understand why this is necessary.”

“It’s traditional—and expected,” Andromeda told her, placing particular emphasis on the words. “You’re asking for a favor. Don’t serve insult on your first meeting.”

Elara made no further comment, carefully picking up the bark shavings and slotting them beside the sachet.

“Your hair next.”

“Isn’t it frowned upon to share bits of yourself? And, well, stupid?” Elara asked.

Andromeda sighed. It was a very pure-blood sigh, taken in through the nose and noticeable only in the rise and fall of her straight shoulders. “It is a sign of respect. You bring the salt of your home, the bones of your ancestor, and the blood of your being.” Andromeda held up a hand before Elara could speak. “Naturally, over time, totems have come to replace the more literal interpretations. The ashes for the salt, yew for the bone, hair for the blood. Just three hairs, darling. No need to be dramatic. It’s traditional.”

Elara felt her eyes were in danger of rolling out of her head if she heard another word about tradition. Still, she carefully plucked three hairs from her head, twisted them together, and set them in the box. She shut it, sealing the edges.

They returned inside, Elara tromping up the back steps after Andromeda went first. She happened to see Harriet and Snape heading upstairs in the foyer, the latter directing a sharp glower in Elara’s direction. He seemed annoyed when he realized they’d come from the garden without him noticing. Elara met his glare with a raised eyebrow, and Snape eventually curled his lip and turned to follow Harriet.

Andromeda and Elara continued into the lounge, finding the senior Malfoys inside. Narcissa had one of her house-elves standing on the arm of the sofa to hold up her traveling cloak so she could adjust the color of the embroidery on the sleeve. Lucius sprawled on the divan with a glass of wine, as was his wont, and he drawled as he spoke to his wife.

“I question the necessity of this trip, my love,” he complained. “Can it not be put off until after the holiday?”

“We’ve spoken on this, Lucius. You’re being tiresome.”

“Yes, but it is such an imposition on you.” He took note of Elara and Andromeda entering the room, his eyes sliding onto them as he sipped the wine. “Why must you pose as a coven member for a girl who’s barely family?”

Elara settled in one of the winged chairs, brushing dirt from the garden off her skirt. “It’s nice to see you too, Uncle Lucius. Still homeless?”

Andromeda snorted, then covered her nose.

“Mind your tongue,” Mr. Malfoy barked, almost sloshing his drink. “I am merely pointing out the obvious. This excursion comes at a rather inopportune time.”

“I did promise her,” Andromeda said, folding her hands together before herself. “And my dear sister is feeling so magnanimous after receiving refuge in Elara’s home.”

Narcissa smiled—tight-mouthed and dark-eyed, the kind of smile that radiated a low, leashed contempt. Elara suffered no illusion that Narcissa wanted to leave the house with them, just as she knew Lucius didn’t really care about any perceived “imposition.” He was terrified Gaunt would find his wife if she stepped foot outside of Grimmauld.

“Why can she not bring the—.” He waved his hand in a vague manner. It shouldn’t have been insulting, but Lucius managed to make it so. “The Potter girl or Granger? Though, I would imagine anyone might take offense to the latter showing up on their doorstep.”

Elara made a mental note to ask Dobby about placing thumbtacks in Lucius’ dress shoes.

“It’s more appropriate to have the elders of her coven present her. The Gallows Witch demands respect,” Narcissa said. “Do sit up, Lucius. You’re slovenly.”

He took the reprimand in stride and straightened in his seat, frowning.

Elara didn’t know what to expect for this evening. It seemed ages ago Andromeda had promised to introduce her to a witch who knew more about her condition, and at the time, she’d been almost certain it’d never come to pass. Elara hadn’t had any inclination to fulfill her sole caveat of attending therapy with a Menslumencer, but she eventually agreed, and  had continued to see Healer Lane at Hogwarts. Andromeda had decided it was time for her to meet her acquaintance.

“Melisande Dullahan is the head of the Aeter coven,” Andromeda explained, using a strict, no-nonsense tone. “She’s very, very old—and very, very Dark. It is rumored among certain circles that even You-Know-Who went out of his way not to cross her. Melisande is not particularly…concerned with affairs of the mortal world, but if entreated with proper respect, she’s willing to impart knowledge. Selective knowledge.”

“And she’s the best option to go to with my questions?” Elara asked, dubious.

Andromeda didn’t reply to her immediately, taking a moment to formulate an answer. “She’s a valuable connection to have. I would introduce Harriet and Hermione as well, but oh, I don’t know. I don’t think the poor dears would react well.”

Elara, Andromeda, and Narcissa departed Grimmauld just after dinner, at a time when their absence wouldn’t stir too many questions among the plethora of people who passed through Grimmauld. They used the Floo for the first half of their journey, arriving in a dark, unappealing tavern somewhere in far-flung Scottish village, and Andromeda Apparated them from there to the outskirts of a wild, gorse-filled forest clinging to a mountain’s side.

Narcissa took one look at the snow-clad scenery and wrinkled her pert nose. “You could have mentioned the need for hiking boots,” she sniped. Andromeda tucked her plait of thick curls inside her own cloak’s hood and rolled her eyes.

“I would have, had there been a need. I can’t be blamed for your ridiculous shoe choice.”

Ridiculous? These are from Pierrat’s in Paris, I’ll have you know.”

“Pierrat is a bore and so are his designs.”

“You remain frightfully uncultured, Andromeda.”

“And you’re just as materialistic as ever, little sister.”

Elara ignored their squabbling as she studied the trees, approaching the dirt path Andromeda had landed them near. What little light remained in the sky illuminated the thick hoarfrost burdening the spruces and pines, the limbs groaning like old crones in every shift of the evening breeze. Elara’s breath escaped her white plumes, and her face prickled against the sudden, intense chill. She peered through the trees, listening.

“Do you hear that?” she asked. “What is that whispering?”

“It’s best not to listen,” Andromeda told her as she adjusted her scarf and nodded toward the path. “Keep your wits about you and lets get going.”

Elara turned one last look upon the darker part of the forest, hearing the inveigling murmurs, then followed her aunts along the path.

They walked for a while, though true to Andromeda’s comment, the way stayed relatively flat, if a tad unkempt. A large cottage appeared in the gloom, hauntingly silent in the snow-bound wood, but stately in its own way, buzzing with tangible magic. The wards hummed like unfriendly wasps when they crossed through the garden gate. Andromeda took a breath for courage, then walked up the stone steps to the looming front door. She grasped the iron knocker and banged it twice upon the wood.

“She’s expecting us…right?” Elara muttered, and Andromeda nodded.

“We wouldn’t have been able to enter the area otherwise.”

They waited in silence, but didn’t have to do so for long, as the door creaked open to reveal the ugliest house-elf Elara had ever seen. She couldn’t rightly say it was a house-elf. It best resembled an erkling, what with its skinny, withered limbs, hunched figure, and the needle-like teeth it bore in a terrifying grin.

“What does it want?” the creature asked, its deep voice heavy with sibilance. “Why is it here? It does not belong. It has no business knocking upon this door.”

From inside the house, a voice called, “Druzan? Escort my guests into the parlor.”

The elf—Druzan—cowered, his narrow, wrinkled head nearly colliding with the floor as he bowed. “Inside it comes. Quickly, quickly.”

Elara was beginning to second guess this visit, but she nonetheless allowed her feet to carry her up the steps, and the trio of witches followed the odd creature as he scuttled from the foyer through a short, unlit corridor. The parlor they entered much resembled Grimmauld Place, if somehow less comfortable. Benches replaced the sofas and they looked like pews, giving Elara the creeps.

She sat between Andromeda and Narcissa. The former looked more at ease than the latter, who, despite her natural composure, kept fretting with her cloak.

“Have you met this witch?” Elara asked her in an undertone. Druzan had scampered away like an imp, but that didn’t assuage the feeling of being watched.

“No,” Narcissa confessed, sounding uneasy. “Mother introduced Andy and—Bella when they were girls. I was too young.”

Elara squeezed her hands together, and though she kept tracing her thumb along the seam of her glove, she otherwise kept herself from fidgeting.

Wooden stairs creaked under descending feet. A shadow crossed the room’s entrance, and Elara looked around as a woman entered the parlor. Elara froze.

She knew the woman—or, rather, she’d crossed paths with her before. When Andromeda had said Melisande Dullahan was an ancient witch, Elara had pictured some octogenarian woman resembling a beardless Dumbledore, not a woman who could pass for thirty, if not for the uncanniness of her stark, golden eyes.

Elara had met the witch years ago, in the summer before her third year, when she and Harriet had stayed with the Flamels. She was tall, her features hawkish, black hair as dark and glossy as oil pouring from her pale scalp. When they’d met, Elara had likened the woman to Snape, and she couldn’t help but do so again—though Snape frightened her a lot less than the stranger entering the parlor did.

“The Black Coven,” Melisande Dullahan greeted, her eyes on Elara. “With new faces, I see. Have so many years passed us by?”

Andromeda smiled—a pleasant, if stiff, upturn of her lips. “Thank you for meeting with us, Madam Dullahan. My mother Druella is no longer with us, and Bellatrix is—ah—unavailable.”

“They incarcerated her in that dreadfully trite prison,” Dullahan said, folding her long, lissome arms together. “A shame. She had much potential.”

Elara thought of Bellatrix Lestrange and the things Sirius had said about her in Azkaban. She didn’t comment.

“This is Narcissa, my younger sister, and Elara. She’s the Heir to the House of Black.”

“Wizards and their Houses,” Dullahan replied with a sniff. “Enough. The greetings have been observed. You brought the girl here and your missive requested a meeting. Is your presence required?”

In answer, Andromeda and Narcissa stood, startling Elara. Where were they going?

“No,” Dullahan said, her voice sharp. “You shall stay. Druzan shall bring you repaste. The girl will follow me.”

Elara didn’t retort, “the girl has a name,” but it was a near thing. Being spoken about as if she weren’t in the room had always irritated her. It’d been a favorite of the sisters at the group home.

Wait—I ’m supposed to follow her?

Andromeda and Narcissa resumed their seats while Elara stiffly rose. The former gripped her wrist for a moment, and when Elara bent her ear closer, she said, “Don’t forget the box.”

She hadn’t. As she trailed Melisande Dullahan back into the corridor and through another archway into a cluttered work room, she removed the wooden box from her cloak pocket. She couldn’t resist inspecting the shelves, overburdened as there were thick books, glass bottles, and all manner of trinkets Elara could only speculate the purpose of.

Then, of course, there was the wall of skulls.

Dullahan sat on a tall stool by the long, wooden workbench. Doing so put her directly by the mounted skulls, and her slender hand went out to stroke one of their number. “The Aeter Coven, as it stands,” she explained, the corner of her mouth hitching. Her thumb brushed over the skull’s brow. “My daughter, Delphinia. Forgive her for not having her voice at the moment.”

“No offense taken,” Elara replied, stilted, wondering if the woman was serious or perhaps a tad mad.

Dullahan chuckled, removing her hand. “Tell me. Do you still have my token, girl?”

So she does remember me. Rather than answering, Elara dipped her hand into her pocket, directly into her purse. The drawstring gave her trouble for a moment, but she managed to loosen it, and she withdrew the plain, black rock with the rune engraved upon it.

“Don’t be so quick to hand over a favor,” the older witch tutted. “I agreed to a meeting, after all. What do they teach witches these days at that abominable castle?”

Elara returned the rune to her purse and extended the box. Dullahan accepted it, then popped it open, peering at the contents. She shut it without a word—and it disappeared.

“What is it you want to know?”

Elara licked her lips, taken off guard by the sudden shift. “I want to know more about what I am,” she settled on saying.

“What you are? That’s hardly informative. A human, a witch, a woman. Surely, you’ve a mother who could tell you such things?”

She got the distinct impression Melisande was taunting her, but Elara didn’t back down. She met her stare with a blank expression.

“No, I haven’t. And no. You know what I mean. Nécromancienne.”

Dullahan’s red lips pursed, moved on silent syllables. “A Necromancer, little witch. You know a name for it, but must come to me?”

“Books on Necromancy aren’t exactly thick on the ground in England,” Elara wryly admitted—and she almost jumped out of her skin when Dullahan laughed. “And even those I could find never spoke about…about how I came to be this way, or how to control.”

“That is because there is a difference between a witch practicing Necromancy and being a Necromancer.” The witch spun a finger in the air, her nails black and as sharp as talons. “They are not born, but rather made. That ability you have to take life and death into your young, naive hands is both a blessing and curse laden upon you when you slipped the bonds of humanity.”

Elara blinked. “I beg your pardon?”

“Hmm. What do the wizards call it?” She spun her finger again, and a book lurched off a shelf, landing in a cloud of dust on the workbench. Again the finger turned, and the book rose as if tugged by an invisible string until it faced Elara, and she stared at the ugly portrait within of a writhing black mass of shadow and nightmare. “An Obscurial.”

“I am not an Obscurial,” Elara scoffed even as her heart raced. Obscurials were a thing of the past, from a time when Muggles hunted witches and wizards, and children grew up in fear of discovery.

“I believe the technical terminology is Near-Obscurial. Do you not comprehend? Our state of being is a sliding scale. Upon one end exists humanity, and upon the other exists the Beast. Magic is power, and when it is denied, it seeks to shatter the shell that binds it. When the cracks form, your magic sheds the bonds enforced by nature itself. This is how your hands reach out to touch that which exists beyond our realm.”

Elara’s gaze fell upon her gloved hands. Her knees felt weak.

“Is it…is it Dark?”

“Exceedingly so,” the witch replied as if this was the most obvious thing in the world. “Dark magic is that which exists in antithesis to the anima of the human body. The Unseelie brought it to bear upon this world to entice and destroy the unaware. But if you are aware….” The woman’s mouth curled in a truly spine-chilling smile. “But, I’m getting away from myself. You didn’t ask for a history lesson.”

“Can I learn to control it?” Elara asked. “I don’t want it to…to overcome me. What if it—? You said it’s a curse, and what if it hurts someone I love?” She breathed in a heavy, uneven gasp. “But I don’t want to learn Dark magic if it means losing myself.”

“Then you are a fool.” Melisande sighed, but she reached up a hand and summoned another book to her grasp. It was slim, and Elara hesitated to call it a book at all. It better resembled a journal, if thinner still. “Take this. A gift from Aeter to the Black. It will teach you to summon a proper familiar.”

“I have a familiar,” Elara said even as she accepted the small book.

Melisande tutted. “I said a proper familiar. What you have is a pet.” The witch sounded annoyed and increasingly bored with Elara’s presence. She turned to the workbench, and her attention strayed to the skulls—Delphinia in particular. “Its shape is unknown until you speak it into being. It is a spell of my own creation. It eats the influence of Dark magic, but you must feed it, little witch. It is the cyclical nature of things.”

Elara tucked the book beneath her arm. “Thank you. May…may I write? If I have questions?”

“If you have payment.” Melisande arched a dark brow. Her eyes reminded Elara of a dragon’s hoard, and she could guess what mysteries resided hidden inside. When she turned away, Elara felt the magic in the air shift, and she knew before the witch said a word that she was dismissed. The Gallows Witch had no further need for her. “Goodbye, Elara Black. Until we meet again.”

 

xXx

 

Elara studied the aged pages in the lamp’s dappled glow.

She tucked her legs firmly beneath her quilt, her finger tracing old words. A vase of French roses sat on her nightstand with the burnished lamp.

When Elara lifted her wand to cast the spell, she didn’t know what to expect—didn’t know if she should trust the word of a witch who kept company with skulls and mean-spirited imps. But, she spoke the spell regardless, and when the jellyfish made of starlight and strings of glowing ether eddied about her head, she shut the book.

Her bare fingers reached out to caress a rose. The petals didn’t wilt. Elara smiled.

 

 

 


 

A/N:

This is a large difference in how Elara and Harriet were raised. Harriet believed the things happening around her were just weird coincidences and didn’t deny magic, because she had no conception of its existence. Meanwhile, Elara was told magic was real—but that it was a curse of the devil. She denied it in a different manner that I believe would have led her to become an Obscurial.

Chapter 275: protectors of the sacred place

Chapter Text

cclxxv. protectors of the sacred place

 

Harriet could hear the dragon, but she couldn ’t see it.

Branches groaned and cracked under the draft of its beating wings as Harriet ran through the forest. Heat crawled up her neck and stung her skin like a bad sunburn, the leaves curling as they withered and embers drifted in the smoke-filled air. Her breath came to her in stuttering bursts, the air thick as stew and yet void of what Harriet ’s lungs needed. She kept gasping, and the smoke pressed against her mouth like a blanket.

The dragon was coming.

Harriet willed herself forward, her feet heavy, clumsy. She kept stumbling, and the dragon drew nearer.

Ahead, a clearing broke the line of trees, and Harriet came skidding to a halt on the blackened earth, nearly falling to her knees when she spied what waited for her there. The looming figure of Fenrir Greyback rose like a titan against trees too tall to be real, the slavering jaws of the werewolf parting wide to reveal the marbled face of a centaur. The centaur ’s lips moved as if speaking, but Harriet couldn’t hear him.

Movement in the corner of her eye had her turning, startled, a scream catching in her dry throat. Terry Boot stood behind her, a sad expression upon his pale, drawn face. He spoke, but the words made no sense.

“I can’t—,” Harriet choked, hand closing around her neck, the dryness growing unbearable. “I can’t h-hear—.”

The heat overwhelmed. Flames lapped at her back, unseen but tangible, and Harriet curled in upon herself, knees hitting the ground as she struggled to breathe. The pressure tightened, pulled, her vision blurring in a swirl of inky blackness—.

Until it stopped. Her awareness shifted.

Harriet walked a cold, familiar corridor, her stride confident but subdued as to limit the sound of her brogues upon the stone tiles. She lifted her arm—exposing a stranger ’s hand holding a strange wand, a gold ring glinting upon a long finger as the wand swished and silent spells left Harriet’s mouth.

What was she saying? She felt confident, but couldn ’t identify the words.

Dark magic rippled, crawling against her skin before it expanded, laying itself on the tiled walls in a obfuscating membrane. The vague teal light bled with sickly red. Harriet ’s face twitched, one rough hand stroking across her chin as foreign emotions bloomed in her chest. Irritation, anticipation—pride, anger.

She looked at a door. It was plain and black, not overly remarkable, but Harriet felt she ’d seen it before. She thought she might know what was behind it.

Harriet ’s hand—the strange hand that was too large and too wide, framed by pale nails and a dusting of dark hair—reached out to touch the door’s gold trim. Magic unknown to her stirred beneath her touch, answering her whims—and it was strong, eddying high, twisting like a riptide threatening to suck her in. Something beneath the odd, creepy membrane her spell created started to erode, flaking from the wall in great hunks like the shed skin of a snake.

Harriet grasped the door ’s handle. It resisted—some cloying, distant magic still prickling and fighting, but it faltered beneath her strength. The door came open.

She didn ’t hesitate to celebrate her victory, though it burst in her chest with smug satisfaction. She stepped inside, snapping the door shut as she whipped her cloak in after her. Her wand briefly glowed in her hand, and unspoken magic veiled her passage into the black, unlit foyer. She couldn’t see a thing, and yet she moved as if she knew the place inside and out, passing directly down a flight of steep, narrow stairs.

The feeling in the air should have frightened Harriet. It pulsed like the heart of a living thing, hidden eyes seeming to stare and follow her progress, filled with malice and distrust. But no fear touched Harriet, only a sense of urgency, of want. Whatever waited for her at the end of this journey, she ’d been hunting for it for a long, long time. It was hers by right. She would take it. Those nasty little insects had no right—.

The stairs ’ incline decreased, sweeping outward as they connected with a large, circular room lit only by a strange nebula of moving starlight overhead. Four more doors waited here along the rounded wall, and though they much resembled the plainness of the first door, these stood twice as tall and twice as wide. Each bore a different symbol that glowed a dull, indolent red.

As Harriet looked at them, the symbols disappeared.

She started toward the one farthest on her right—and suddenly, she spun, anticipating, and a Shield Charm grew around her in a solid gold bubble. It intercepted a violet spell slung toward her from the darkness.

“You are not welcome here.” A man in blue robes entered the vestibule, his hood pulled high enough to obscure his features. “You are out of bounds and trespassing in restricted territory—as you have been warned before, Mister Gaunt. I will not hesitate to remove you with violence.

The subtle emphasis on the title infuriated Harriet—but it wasn ’t Harriet at all, was it? It wasn’t Harriet whose lip curled in a nasty snarl. It wasn’t Harriet whose heart swelled with selfish, poignant hate as her arm rose, wand lifting—.

It was Harriet who felt terror jolt through her chest as she realized what he meant to do—.

No!

“Avada Kedavra—!”

Harriet woke gasping, covered in sweat, shaking in her sheets.

“Missy Harriet?” Winky’s tired voice said. Harriet flinched, and the house-elf spoke again, louder. “Missy Harriet, is you all right?”

Harriet rolled to her side, almost off the bed, and vomited. Her stomach twisted, revolting against what she’d seen, and fire raged under her skin like an infection. It made her ache, dizziness adding to the nausea until it she couldn’t breathe. A foreign sensation slithered through her veins, and Harriet choked, coughed, until it relented, and she could see once more.

Gasping, Harriet grabbed at her throat and rubbed her scar, digging her fingers into the knotted skin. It had happened again. Another dream—with Harriet somehow wearing Gaunt’s face. Another dream in that weird, familiar corridor.

What if it wasn ’t a dream?

“W—Winky,” she wheezed, spitting bile between her teeth. The house-elf rushed to clean up the mess, which hadn’t been Harriet’s intention, and her face flushed anew as the sick vanished from the floor. “Winky, I—I need to go to the Headmaster.”

Winky hesitated as she brushed Harriet’s damp hair back from her face. In the dark, her large eyes seemed to glow. “It is being very late, Missy Harriet.”

“It’s important.”

Fortunately, Winky didn’t ask any more questions. She hustled Harriet into her spectacles and dressing gown, the fabric uncomfortable where it lay over her sweat-soaked pajamas. She Disapparated from Grimmauld with Harriet in tow.

They landed directly in the Headmaster’s office. Harriet could barely see it, what with having her head down and her unbound hair falling into her face, but Dumbledore’s office had a particular feeling to it—a warmth, a tingling like wind chimes captured in the breeze, playful, curious magic inspecting her like an inquisitive bird. She expected the office would be empty and she’d need Winky to wake Professor Dumbledore—but she found him already seated at his desk, surprised to see her.

He wasn’t alone; Professor Snape sat in one of the visitor’s chairs, and his dark brow rose when he turned to stare at her, a cup of something half risen to his mouth. They must have been in a meeting when Harriet interrupted.

“I—.” A sudden rush of embarrassment went through her. What if it was just a dream? What if she was panicking over nothing? What if she was barging into her Headmaster’s private time like an errant child crying over a nightmare? She’d had reoccurring dreams before, but not things like this. She’d seen the centaur and Greyback and all number of twisted people mirrored from her everyday life, but this hadn’t been a nightmare of that sort. She had to tell him. “I—think he killed someone, Professor.”

“What are you on about Potter?” Snape demanded, rising to his feet. He set the cup on the desk’s edge with a hard clack.

“Gaunt,” she stuttered. “I think—he’s killed a man.”

Snape and Dumbledore paused, then exchanged looks. “Gaunt has killed many people, Potter,” the former slowly said. “As I am sure you are aware.”

“Not—.” She let out a frustrated noise. “Not—I saw him. I saw him in that—that weird room with the doors, and there was a man in navy blue robe who tried to stop him, and he—Gaunt—used the the K-Killing Curse—.”

The wizards exchanged another look, this one sharper, more meaningful. Dumbledore’s bearded chin jerked toward the hearth, and Snape disappeared through it after tossing in a quick pinch of Floo Powder. Harriet stared after him, her hands still shaking, her scar burning.

“Harriet.”

The Headmaster’s voice pulled her attention back toward him, and he gestured at the chair Snape had vacated. “Sit, please.”

She did so, her legs wobbling, and Winky followed, wringing her small hands together. The Headmaster came to stand in front of them, and he asked Harriet, “If you would look at me, please.”

Her gaze jumped up to meet his, startled, and Harriet watched as the Headmaster’s blue eyes seemed to search her own. Satisfied, he nodded, then leaned against the desk at his back. “Winky, you may return to Grimmauld, or visit the kitchens, if you wish.”

Winky looked to him, then to Harriet, her large, nervous eyes beseeching.

“It’s okay,” Harriet assured her, though she didn’t feel okay in the slightest. “I’ll—you can go back to bed. I’ll get home all right.”

Winky dithered for a moment longer, then took her leave, disappearing with a snap of her fingers. That left Harriet alone with Professor Dumbledore, who sighed, gently nudging Professor Snape’s drink away from the desk’s edge. Harriet could smell the vaguest bite of alcohol, and she wondered what she’d interrupted—an important meeting, or just an evening spent between friends?

“Can you tell me what you saw, Harriet?”

She took a breath, and started at the beginning. She didn’t feel the same urgency she had when she woke, so her words weren’t as harried and scattered. After all, that bloke was dead, wasn’t he? If he was real. If Harriet wasn’t going barmy.

Professor Dumbledore listened intently to her as she spoke, fingers worrying at his beard the more he heard.

“Could you describe the room to me?” he asked. “This place you saw Mr. Gaunt?”

Except she hadn’t seen him there, had she? She’d been there. Inside Gaunt.

“I’ve seen the door before, I think,” she told him. “The black door with the handle in the middle, in a dark, cold hall. There’s a kind of teal-ish light, and there’s stairs inside, then a room. It’s dark, too, and there’s other doors that sometimes have sigils on them, and sometimes don’t. Gaunt wanted to go through one of them. Professor, I—.” She swallowed, mouth dry. “I was—.”

A flicker of movement shone through the dark window a second before the Patronus coalesced, and Harriet stared in quiet, stricken wonder as the silver phoenix radiated cool, pale light.

Tothyll is dead.” Snape’s voice emanated from the spell. “Gaunt retreated unspotted when the alarm was raised.

The phoenix faded, chased by a high trill from Fawkes, and Professor Dumbledore shut his eyes.

Harriet forced herself to breathe, her stomach revolting again. “That was the wizard, wasn’t it? Tothyll?” She gripped the arms of her chair and willed herself to be brave. “Professor, I didn’t see Gaunt. I was Gaunt. What is happening to me?”

She didn’t know if Dumbledore heard her, as he failed to react at first. Then he exhaled, and nodded.

“You share a link with Tom,” he explained, his voice subdued with the seriousness of the topic. “One he forged the night he gave you that scar.”

Harriet’s clammy hand rose to touch her neck.

“That connection is similarly shared between the former Minister, Voldemort, and Professor Slytherin. I believe, more often than not, you’ve experienced these moments where your awareness touches his when your mind is at its most vulnerable, and you simply forget them before you wake. Tonight, you witnessed something particularly distressing, and so you remembered.”

It had happened so fast—just like it had with Terry, but this time, Harriet had felt the spell, the hatred, the vitriol that summoned the Killing Curse into being. That was not the kind of magic she ever wanted to know or understand.

“What does he want?” she asked, trying to distract herself from the uncomfortable, crushing feeling attempting to take hold of her lungs. Harriet didn’t feel like herself. It was as if she were sitting in the next chair, watching what was happening, but taking a convenient holiday from her body. “I saw him—saw the door, before. I dreamt of it. He tried to get in, but a witch interrupted him, and he had to leave.”

“He has been attempting to breach that door for several months now,” Dumbledore admitted. “Not at all an easy task, despite it being just a door. Though it is worrying that he has managed to get inside, we weren’t unprepared for this eventuality.” Professor Dumbledore shifted his gaze to the silent portraits, his mien thoughtful, pensive. “What do you know of the Department of Mysteries?”

It took a long while for Harriet to answer. Her thoughts came sluggishly to her mind, and her mouth didn’t want to move. “It’s in the Ministry. Hermione…Hermione once told me…that Malfoy said Gaunt is interested in it. That he….” Her lips parted on a small, knowing gasp. “Oh. The door. I saw it there, in the Ministry’s lower levels. It’s the entrance to the Department, isn’t it?”

“It is.”

“It’s not what I’d expect.

“It never is.”

“What does he want so badly in there, Professor?”

For a long instance, Dumbledore had no answer for her, whether this was because he didn’t know what to say or didn’t want to answer, Harriet couldn’t tell. “Years ago, just before your birth, there was a prophecy made.”

“A prophecy…?” Harriet’s brow furrowed as her clumsy thoughts echoed with voices.

What has he told you?” Gaunt snarled in the Azkaban holding cell. “What do you know about the prophecy—?”

Snape glared at her, malice and terror in his black eyes, his words aiming to hurt, to kill. “There was a prophecy. I doesn’t matter what it said, who said it—there was a prophecy, and that prophecy sent the Dark Lord skipping right to your front door—.”

“Whether by fate or simple happenstance, I was there to witness the delivery of this particular prophecy. Me, and one other person who only heard half.” Dumbledore drummed his fingers against the desk. “This prophecy foretold the rise of a champion who would defeat the Dark Lord.”

Harriet bit her lip. “It was about me?” she ventured, incredulous. “Or—no. It was about Longbottom?”

“Well, prophecies are a funny thing, my dear girl. It could have referred to you. It could have referred to Mr. Longbottom. It could have referred to no one at all, or someone completely other than yourselves. Prophecies come to life by the interpretation of those who know them. A prophecy spoken and never heard is simply words upon the wind. Regardless, when Lord Voldemort heard the snippet relayed to him, he made the prophecy real when he broke into your home and attempted to kill you.”

“But what did it say, Professor?”

“I’d rather not tell you at this time, Harriet.” The Headmaster shook his head, his mouth pressed in a firm line. “Some knowledge cannot be unheard once it is learned. I would keep this secret to myself, until such time I feel it cannot remain with me, though I hope I shall be free to take it to my grave and never have to impart it upon you.”

A frisson of irritation went through Harriet, stinging in her already sore scar, but she forced the feeling away. She trusted Professor Dumbledore. She wanted to know what absolute bunk had sent Voldemort after her family—felt it was her right, really—but if the Headmaster thought it better she not know, then Harriet could respect his wishes.

“When a prophecy is spoken, its record is struck and recorded within Halls of Prophecy, which resides in the Department of Mysteries. We believe Gaunt is convinced that if he hears the prophecy to its completion, he will understand how to defeat you. That is why his current obsession is to break into the Department.”

Harriet thought that was the barmiest shite she’d heard all evening. Defeat her? He just needed to use a well-aimed Killing Curse, the bloody nutter.

“I don’t understand. I thought—well, didn’t Snape give Voldemort the prophecy already? That’s what he told me.”

Dumbledore shook his head. “Young Severus had the misfortune of hearing only part of the prophecy and made the poor decision to deliver it to his then-Master. It is a choice he’s regretted for most of his life.”

“So…if Gaunt gets this prophecy then…he’ll kill me?”

“No,” Dumbledore replied, firm. “He will not. In fact, I believe he will be sorely disappointed should he ever hear the prophecy in full, as isn’t nearly as illuminating as he is hoping. Your escape from Lord Voldemort in June rattled Mr. Gaunt—and now, your efforts to unseat him from his position of power have convinced him you hold a magic he must be wary of. Regardless, should his endeavor to break into the Halls of Prophecy come to fruition, it is my hypothesis he will be unable to remove the prophecy.”

“Why?”

“Because the prophecies stored within the Halls may only be taken by those the prophecy refer to.”

“But—I don’t understand. Isn’t it about him? About—Voldemort? And me? Or, well, maybe Longbottom?”

You, Harriet. And, yes, that is the spirit of things, but with who’s hands would he be trying to pick it up with?”

Harriet stared, more confused than ever. What in Merlin’s name does he mean by that?

Dumbledore straightened. “Come. Let’s find something sweet in the kitchens before I return you home. There’s nothing more for you to worry about tonight, Harriet. Mr. Tothyll’s death is an unfortunate event, but it is not something you or I can do anything about. The Unspeakables within the Department of Mysteries understand the dangers of their profession, which include protecting their underground sanctum from trespassers.”

“Not even a former Minister can walk in?” Harriet asked as Dumbledore urged her to her feet, and they started toward the door rather than the Floo.

“Not even him—not even me!” Dumbledore chuckled, subdued in light of the heavy evening. “The Department existed long before the Ministry came into being. To be initiated into their ranks is to accept a sacred covenant, their sole purpose being the pursuit of knowledge of the protection of what is hidden in their walls. They were known in the past as the ‘Hǣlendas thæs Hælgan Stōwe,’ or—.”

“Protectors of the Sacred Place,” Harriet said before he could finished—and she flushed scarlet at Professor Dumbledore’s surprise. “Oh, err—Salazar Slytherin’s notes spoke of it. Remember, we translated the whole journal? We never did figure out who the Hǣlendas were or what they were protecting.”

Dumbledore gave his head a fond shake as they exited his office down the spiral stairs and entered the cold, quiet school.

They walked in silence for a time, fatigue returning to Harriet slowly as the horror of her vision dissipated. Her mouth still tasted bitter, and her drying sweat turned ice cold in the unwarmed passage. She shivered. “Professor?” she inquired.

“Yes, my dear?”

“Will I have to see more things like that?” she asked, dreading the answer.

“I fear you will.”

“I don’t want to,” she told him, sounding small and terrified. “I really don’t want to.”

“I know,” Dumbledore sighed, his only hand on her shoulder. “I know.”

Chapter 276: kneel

Chapter Text

cclxxvi. kneel

 

Harriet sipped her tea as she read the paper alone at the Slytherin table.

The winter holiday had come to a close, and while the rest of the students returned to the school aboard the Hogwarts Express, Harriet had once again been asked by Professor Dumbledore to arrive via Floo, so she’d come alone earlier in the afternoon. Those people who’d stayed over the break eyed her funny as she sat at her House table by herself, burying her head in the paper.

She counted it a blessing the loathsome Umbridge witch didn’t sit at the High Table. As far as Harriet knew, Minister Bones had called her back to the Ministry.

They should find her a cell in Azkaban, she thought, teeth clenched, but she’d settle for the woman simply being gone for now. So long as Umbridge was far, far away from Harriet. She kept reading the paper.

Rita’s article had resulted in a mixed bag of letters to the editor, which Harriet guessed to be good news. The Wizarding world could be rather intractable in their opinions, so it would take more than one speculative posting from Skeeter to make people believe Neville wasn’t the Boy Who Lived. Thank Merlin. I don’t need that kind of attention. Harriet exhaled in relief and turned the page.

The new Minister didn’t outright say Voldemort had returned, and Harriet assumed Bones would only make things more difficult for herself if she did, though she’d been wishing for some form of transparency. Bones urged the public to view the recent disappearances and deaths as the work of a new terrorist and budding Dark Lord and to prepare accordingly. It was a step in the right direction, but Harriet wanted to strangle someone just to get them to admit it was ruddy Voldemort. Would that be so bloody hard?

Hermione’s newest endeavor was investing in the media, per Mr. Malfoy’s suggestion, using Elara and Harriet’s gold to buy shares in the Daily Prophet and other circulating outlets, like Witch Weekly.

“Lucius says controlling the narrative is half the battle,” Hermione had told her, ignoring how Harriet had lifted a brown and mouthed ‘Lucius?’ “Rita will behave herself if she realizes more than her freedom is at risk. She’s fanatical about her work. Besides, it’ll make things easier, won’t it? If we’re not having to fight public opinion every step of the way. They can’t circulate lies if the shareholders refuse to fund it.”

Harriet didn’t tell her that sounded terribly close to something Slytherin would say.

Taking another swallow from her teacup, she kept reading. To her ever-lasting irritation, Gaunt hadn’t done them the noble service of dwindling into the night and vanishing completely. He had no comment for what had happened at his ignominious defeat in the Wizengamot vote, but he did have plenty to say on Bones’ suitability as Minister.

Fear-mongering is a far greater threat to our society than a fictitious Dark Lord,” the reporter quoted Gaunt saying. “I fear Madam Bones has succumbed to the paranoia often fostered in her former department. It may serve well for an Auror to constantly warn the public of invisible enemies, but not for a Minister. I worry for the state of our economy and the safety of our children if we are to be hindered by a perpetual state of lock-down and home-grown terror—.

“Fecking arsehole,” Harriet muttered, lip curling. She glanced around to ensure Slytherin didn’t hear her cursing, but that particular arsehole hadn’t made an appearance in the Great Hall yet. She instead glanced toward Snape reading his own copy of the evening Prophet, then toward McGonagall chatting with Sprout. The air surrounding the staff seemed lighter than it had been in months, the High Inquisitor’s absence like a festering wound that had been finally cleaned out and healed. Flitwick even laughed at something the Ghoul Studies’ professor said.

At least that’s something Bones has done right, Harriet thought, humming softly under her breath. No more Umbridge. No more High Inquisitor shite. She wondered if the people in the Coven would want to continue lessons, since the professors would be free to teach normally again.

Lost in thought, Harriet almost didn’t notice Longbottom standing at the end of the Slytherin table, staring at her.

To be sure, he meant to be inconspicuous, but Longbottom lacked any form of subtlety, which was especially sad considering Harriet herself wasn’t all that subtle but noticed his pitiful efforts anyway. Whatever he meant by skulking at the end of the table, Harriet wanted nothing to do with it. He’d been asked to arrive through the Floo as well, for his own safety.

There was an hour left before the others arrived—perhaps more. Professor Dumbledore had told her it depended on the weather and how it interacted with the magic protecting the rails. Apparently, a major duty of the Department of Magical Transportation was maintaining the train and the wards that hid the land surrounding the rails from the Muggles. Things at the Ministry being what they were, it wouldn’t surprise Harriet if they’d let the wards go to pot and her friends ended up late.

That isn’t bloody important right now.

Folding the paper, Harriet tucked it under her arm and stood from the table. She managed to be more discreet than Longbottom and didn’t run from the hall, but she did walk quickly, hoping to reach the dungeons before he caught up. Unfortunately for Harriet, she barely had a chance to cross into the entrance hall before Longbottom started running, shouting her name.

“Will you shut up?” Harriet snapped as she stopped at the head of the dungeon steps, glowering at the loud twit coming up behind her. “Do you really need to attract so much attention everywhere you go?”

A light blush colored Longbottom’s cheeks, but Harriet couldn’t tell if he was embarrassed or just angry. Judging by his furrowed brow and heavy frown, she guessed the latter.

“What are you on about, Potter?” he demanded.

She stared at him. “I beg your pardon?”

“With that article you had Skeeter write. What do you mean by it?”

“Mean by what?” Harriet retorted, already frustrated by this conversation. She knew nothing good would come from Longbottom chasing her down, and knew his fat, narcissistic head would be hurt by Skeeter questioning his status, no matter that people weren’t blindly believing it. “I’m not the one who wrote the bleeding thing.”

“Yeah? Then why is she telling people that I’m not—.” He paused, swallowed. Harriet could see how his hands tightened into fists at his sides. “Why is she calling me a liar?”

“You’d have to ask her. I make it a point not to talk to Skeeter, but it was important for her to write about the Dark Lord.”

Longbottom glared, part of his face illuminated by the torches set at the entrance to the dungeons, but the other part left dark, his expression difficult for her to discern. “Is it true?”

“Of course it’s true. What do you think I’ve been saying for the past six months—?”

“Not about Voldemort,” he snapped, the fire in the torches trembling for a moment. “About—who I am. About the Boy Who Lived.”

A muscle in Harriet’s jaw twitched, but she otherwise kept her face steady. “What does it matter? Do you really need validation for whatever stupid title people give you? Who cares what Skeeter says and her readers believe?”

“Obviously you, if you’re making it a point to give the bint an interview!” Longbottom took a step closer, and Harriet narrowed her eyes. She didn’t grab her wand. Not yet. “This isn’t—this isn’t a laugh, Potter. You’re the one always chasing glory, getting all the attention. This is my life. My legacy. My mum died to that bastard. You’ve no idea what I lost. I—.”

Harriet saw red. “You entitled cunt,” she hissed. “Glory? Are you fucking mental? My parents are dead, I was maimed, my god-father was sent to Azkaban, and I was raised among Muggles who could barely stand the sight of me—all while you were coddled and loved and the whole ruddy world praised your stupid fucking name. Does it matter if it’s true? Do you think I’m ‘having a laugh?’ Do you think I find anything in my whole bloody life remotely funny?” She got in Longbottom’s face, snarling, and his eyes widened in surprise. “Don’t talk to me about loss.”

She expected him to say something—or maybe she didn’t. Harriet didn’t rightly know what she thought would happen, didn’t know where this sudden blast of temper had come from. It overtook her the moment he opened his mouth and dared to start whining about loss and attention. She knew he’d lost his mum—but he had a mum now, a woman who’d married his dad when he was barely out of nappies. He grew up loved, protected. He grew up with people bowing to his whims, and without the dozens of tutors who’d trained him throughout his childhood, Harriet fully believed he’d be an extraordinarily average tosser of extraordinarily average skill.

Harriet grew up unloved and shunned, with a hungry belly and bruises and fingers chaffed from harsh cleaning chemicals. She grew up thinking her parents were drunks, that she was the unwanted castoff of negligent riffraff, and she still had to make sacrifices to this day because of Lord sodding Voldemort. Longbottom spat meaningless drivel about his legacy, and Harriet direly wanted to punch him in the teeth. If he really wanted the legacy that should have been his—the hardship, the torture, the terror and struggle—he could have it.

Fuck you.”

She expected Longbottom to say something, but she didn’t expect to hear Professor Slytherin’s voice from behind her.

“Miss Potter.”

She stiffened, dread spooling in her stomach where the rage had been just a moment before. Her scar tingled. Fuck.

Harriet shut her eyes for a second, then turned to face their Defense professor as he silently came up the steps, his skin looking particularly pale and ghoulish in the wavering light. He had his red eyes fixed on her, his mouth pulled in a particularly peevish sneer. “Ten points from Slytherin for your language,” he said, with an unvoiced note of censure in his tone. “Cursing like Muggle filth is unseemly and unacceptable.”

Harriet bowed her head, grinding her teeth.

Longbottom didn’t have the same common sense to shut his gob. “Wizards curse just as much as Muggles,” he said to Slytherin with blatant venom. “You would know that if you were a pure-blood.”

Harriet choked.

Slytherin’s gaze switched to him like a hungry snake sensing movement. He stared for an uncomfortable amount of time, and Harriet got the distinct impression that he wanted to do something much, much worse to Longbottom than take a few points. Her recollection of what happened in Umbridge’s office remained vivid, and no matter how much she disliked Longbottom, Harriet thought she might start sobbing if Slytherin dragged Longbottom into a locked room with them.

“If you were clever, you would have ensured you were never in a room alone with me.”

Slytherin’s lips parted, and the tip of his tongue flashed over the edge of his too-sharp teeth in an irritated gesture. “Detention,” he finally settled on. “With your Head of House. I cannot be bothered to punish every insignificant puling Gryffindor who raises his voice against me.” Then, he smiled, mouth closed and eyes as cold as a dead fish. “It’s never ended well for any of them.”

Quick as a flash, his arm moved, and his fingers closed on the hood of Harriet’s robes, tangling in her hair, pulling the fabric taut enough to choke. “With me, girl,” he snapped in a vicious line of Parseltongue, and Harriet had no choice but to follow as he yanked her down the stairs. Longbottom remained where he was, staring.

Slytherin didn’t let go until they reached the dungeon corridor. Harriet stumbled, then jerked her robes straight. She turned to scowl at the wizard—and immediately recoiled when he grabbed her by the face, cold fingers harshly digging into her cheeks. Her heart thumped against her ribcage in fear.

Enough of your insolence,” he hissed. “My patience growsss thin with you, Potter. I have been gracious and lenient with your inattention, but it is time you were reminded to whom you are pledged.”

His nails left scratch marks on her skin when he released her, not that Harriet dared voice a complaint. She felt the stinging on her face and ignored it. Slytherin seemed satisfied with her stoic response.

“Follow.”

She did as told, falling into step behind Professor Slytherin as he led her to the common room. It was empty, of course, everyone from the House having left for the holiday, but the house-elves had already prepped the hearths for their return. This meant Slytherin had a dramatic backdrop for his favored seat, the winged chair rimmed in burnished firelight, seeming to embrace him in a golden lining as he sat down like a king assuming his throne.

Harriet stood off to the side, awkward, waiting.

Slytherin gestured to the floor in front of his feet. “Kneel.”

She didn’t move. “Professor, I—.”

Eyes wide, Slytherin flicked his spider-like fingers—and the nape of Harriet’s nape burned as if freshly branded. Gasping, she couldn’t help but fall to her knees, grasping at the spot with her head bowed toward the floor.

The pain eased, though it didn’t retreat entirely.

That’s better,” Slytherin murmured, the susurration like wind through reeds. Harriet didn’t look at him, but she felt his attention as keenly as she felt the cold leaching through her knees from the stone floor. “You were told, were you not, that you must attend me before the holiday’s end?

Harriet swallowed. “Yes, sir.

Master.

Yes, master.

He allowed the disrespect to slide for the moment. She would pay for it later. “And yet, this is the first I’ve seen you.

Harriet licked her dry lips and tried to formulate an excuse. Truthfully, she didn’t have one. Slytherin hadn’t summoned her, so she hadn’t taken it upon herself to speak with him. Snape had warned her Slytherin would want her to account for the article Skeeter wrote, but she’d put it off—put it out of her mind, concentrating on her studies and hoping the wizard wouldn’t care enough about her inattention.

It appeared she’d been wrong.

“I was busy, master.”

You are never too busy to serve my whims,” he retorted, sharp as a whip. Harriet winced. “Such nonsense you prompted that reporter to write. I find myself pleasssed in how you have shifted attention, but I cannot fathom your disrespect in not reporting to your Lord.”

Again, a sudden whorl of temper licked through Harriet like a hot flash, but she didn’t dare let it past her teeth. He’s not my Lord, she told herself, furious. I do not belong to the Dark Lord, no matter what face he wears. I should have told Skeeter to let the whole world know exactly who Slytherin is. Put it in every bloody headline for the next year, and see if he likes how I’ve shifted attention then.

She voiced none of this. “I’m sorry, master.

Slytherin didn’t say anything. Harriet fidgeted on her knees, her nape still prickling like a blister. She’d moved her hands away from it and had to resist the urge to touch it again, to make sure it wasn’t really injured. Slytherin didn’t tolerate fidgeting. Any sign of boredom or slipping focus received harsh reprimands in his lessons.

Tell me…do you believe you are the Chosen?” Slytherin asked, his voice low, cool. He posed the question lightly, but the hair on Harriet’s arms raised, her intuition telling her the wrong answer would be dangerous. “Do you believe you are the prophesied downfall of the Dark Lord?

Harriet stared at the carpet below her, tracing the many fibers with her eyes. She chose her words with precision, hardly daring to take a breath. “I don’t think it matters, master. You told me you don’t believe in prophecies, and so neither will I.” She shrugged her shoulders, hiding a shiver. “You said you wanted me to tell the world the Dark Lord has returned. I am simply doing as you wished.

He laughed at that. Harriet hated his laugh—cold, high, and unrestrained, the kind of laugh he loved to make when she suffered a stunning defeat in their mock-duels or ended up injured. It crawled over her spine like limp, fumbling hands.

Ah, you are listening, then,” he said as his laughter eased, and Harriet stiffened when he stood. She felt the edge of his tailored robes brush her arm. “I will simply need to be stricter with you. I do not mind the occasional willfulness in my servants, dear Harriet, but don’t let the leash hang you.

He started to walk away, and Harriet shifted to rise—.

Remain as you are until I give you leave. I will know if you don’t.

She stopped and settled on her knees again, bitterness souring the back of her throat. She heard Slytherin exit through the common room entrance—but his rune emblazoned on her skin persisted in burning. So, Harriet stayed kneeling near the empty chair, and the portrait of the snake twisting through the rowen roots kept vigil over her head.

The burning didn’t stop for hours, not until the sounds of the first students returning to the dormitory from dinner echoed into the outer corridor. Only then did the feeling ease, and Harriet dragged herself off her bruised, throbbing knees. The back of her eyes strung with tears of frustration as she stomped off for her bed and a warm shower.

Chapter 277: for protection

Chapter Text

cclxxvii. for protection

 

There were few times Severus truly felt relieved, but this was one of those moments.

He stood between Filius and Pomona on the upper mezzanine, watching below as boxes and trunks floated from an open door. He heard the clatter of china falling, breaking, and a blatant swear.

The winter holiday hadn’t ended quite yet, but Madam Umbridge had far outstayed her welcome.

“Do you think she’s making off with the towels?” Pomona asked, snorting as another trunk clattered to the flagstones, the Charm moving it canceled early by Filius. It hit hard, hard enough for the lock to give, and the lid to split open. Pink knickers flopped out, and the trio of professors all wrinkled their noses. Severus thought he might be ill.

“Those look like my nan’s knickers,” Pomona commented.

“Did you have much cause to look at your grandmother’s undergarments?” Severus quipped—earning him a hard cuff about the ear. Filius chuckled.

Umbridge came out of the room shrieking, red-faced and swift to pile her intimate wear back into the trunk and seal it closed. She shot a furious look at the spectating professors above.

“You really must work on your Locomotion Charm, Madam!” Filius called down. “It’s such an easy spell, really! Watch! Locomotor!”

One of the boxes whipped itself into the air and slammed into the wall, startling a portrait. Severus couldn’t help his smirk as the woman yowled like a kicked cat. He thought of Potter’s flayed open hand, her shuddering sobs, and his smile fell. He sent a silent spell to stick Umbridge’s feet to the floor. The bitch fell and smacked her nose against one of her trunks.

“Ooh, that was mean, Severus,” Filius commented, his tone still bright and jovial.

“I know,” he drawled.

“Just you wait,” Umbridge huffed, her hair in disarray. Blood dripped over her upper lip. “Just you wait—.”

“Give our love to the new Minister, deary!” Pomona called. “Though, I’ve heard a rumor the Office of the Inspectorate might be next on the chopping block. Don’t worry! The Prophet has a rather extensive section for job listings!”

Madam Umbridge’s departure was not a quiet, dignified affair. It involved much shouting and screeching on her part, with Albus simply waving the order for her dismissal like a Chinese fan. Even Slytherin appeared from the dungeons to watch her stumble down the lawn for the last time, a sinister smile on his seemingly young face. Severus knew that never boded well, but he sighed all the same.

It seemed to him that Hogwarts sighed as well, and despite the pressures still sitting on his chest like mounting stones, Severus laid down that evening and slept better than he had for many weeks. He was happy for the castle to resume some level of normalcy, no matter how dreary it was.

They were in the eye of the storm. He would enjoy it while it lasted.

 

x X x

 

Potter arrived at his office unannounced the morning after the students had returned from their holiday.

She had a package in her hands.

“It’s a present,” she told him as if Severus were an idiot. He glared at her from behind his desk, narrowed gaze flicked between the gift and the girl’s face. He leaned back as if she held something poisonous. “You know, for your birthday.”

His eyes narrowed further. “Who told you it was my birthday?”

The idiot girl choked and tried prevaricating, looking anywhere but at Severus directly. “Well—I—definitely not Professor Dumbledore—.”

Severus pinched the bridge of his nose.

He accepted the package, if only to stop her from waving it about and knocking something over. He almost chucked it at her head when whatever waited inside started to move.

“Her name’s Sally,” Potter explained after he set the package down on the desk and spelled the paper off. They both looked down at the blue snake there, and it looked up at them, aquamarine scales sparkling in the candlelight. Severus flattered himself in knowing many venoms and thus many snakes, but he couldn’t identify this creature’s species. It had the head of a viper, but not the right color, nor the correct size. It was only five or six inches long and thinner than one of Severus’s fingers.

“It’s a snake.”

“Yes, Potter, I have eyes,” he retorted, confused. “I’ve no need for a pet.”

“Well, she’s not a pet, is she?” Potter told him with a huff. “She’s a golem. I made her, y’know, with all the stuff I’ve been learning.” She scratched the back of her neck, and Severus tracked the motion. “She doesn’t have to be fed or taken care of or anything like that. She’s supposed to alert you if there’s danger.”

Severus frowned. “Supposed to?” he repeated, bemused, poking the snake with his wand. It didn’t react as a true serpent would, inspecting the tip of his wand with its nose but otherwise unperturbed.

“I couldn’t exactly test it out, could I?” Potter hissed at the snake, and it hissed back, the sound rather faint and thready. “Yeah, she doesn’t have the widest vocabulary, but I made her so she’d only reply to me—not Slytherin or any of the other twats. Not that I’m trying to spy on you or anything.” A deep flush spread across the girl’s cheeks, and she cleared her throat. “Happy birthday, Professor.”

Severus didn’t thank her. He didn’t know how—didn’t know what to make of this—and so he changed the subject. Instead, they spoke on her training with Slytherin, his behavior, and what hints he’d dropped on future plans.”

“I think he wants better control of the castle,” Potter told him. “He wants me to make spells and golems and to understand old magic, like the stuff Hogwarts is made of. It doesn’t feel important right now, but it could be in the future. He wants more eyes, more say over the building itself.”

Severus feared her supposition would come true. Slytherin already had far too many spies in too many places—the stupid snake portraits a constant thorn in Severus’ side—but if he managed to seize control of Hogwarts entirely, beyond even what the school bestowed upon the Headship? He shuddered to think of the possibilities.

He ’d poison the well with Dark magic.

After Potter left, he didn’t know what to do with the odd gift she’d thrust upon him. Truthfully, he considered throwing it in a drawer and forgetting the whole incident. The snake stared at him until Severus growled, Transfiguring a paperweight into a miniature climbing tree to sit on the corner of his desk. He plucked the docile creature up by the tail and lowered it onto the spindly wooden branches, watching as it twisted about them and got comfortable.

Severus let the snake slip to the back of his mind, only remembering it when he happened to glance at that side of his desk or when one of the students complimented his pretty new pet. His focus only shifted back to it that weekend, when he slid on his cloak in preparation to leave the castle, and the snake chimed. He ignored it, and the snake chimed again.

“What?” he demanded of the watching creature, growing annoyed. It chimed a third time, and Severus reached out to remove it and make good on his thought of throwing it in a drawer. “Potter and her nonsensical gifts—.”

The snake suddenly lunged, and Severus flinched when it circled his wrist, winding until it rested tight against his skin. “Fucking hell,” he said, ignoring how the words came out breathless from the sudden fright. He tucked a finger between his wrist and the snake, trying to pry it free, but it wouldn’t give.

Trust Potter to curse me with a defective reptilian bracelet burdened with a stupid name, he seethed in his thoughts, bringing his arm up to glare at it. The creature stared at him in turn, unmoving, though its black tongue flickered.

He didn’t have time for this. He finished shrugging on his cloak, ensuring the sleeve covered his new unwanted accessory, then pocketed the pouch of gold allotted to him by the Board. He departed from the castle through the main doors while many of the students and staff members still slept, bracing himself against the early morning frost hardening the downy snow drifts. Hagrid was already up and about, massive shovel in hand, as he cleared the main path to the gates.

“All right, Professor?” he called with a raised hand as Severus passed. “What has you out ‘ere so early?”

Severus tolerated nominal nosiness from Hagrid. He was the groundskeeper, and in a perfect world, he’d be all the security the school needed. Severus couldn’t fault him for at least attempting to do his job by questioning the goings on of those entering or leaving the grounds, but it didn’t mean he had to be polite.

“Business for the school,” he replied in a curt tone, and Hagrid nodded, throwing an avalanche of snow and ice over his shoulder.

“Oh, aye, out to Hogsmeade for the term’s order, I’d reckon. Huh. Ain’t you a bit late?”

Severus didn’t reply to the half-giant, continuing to the gates and the road beyond. Yes, he was late this year in collecting the supplies and ingredients Hogwarts needed to refresh its stock for the new term. Little wonder, given his other concerns, though it niggled at Severus, this slight slip. He didn’t usually forget things. He’d never forgotten before.

I’m getting old, he thought, and then huffed a bitter, quiet laugh into his gray scarf. Old and careless at thirty-five. Merlin’s bones.

At least Umbridge had been removed. Bones might not be an ostentatious Minister, but the woman had acted quickly to correct festering issues, often conferencing with Albus to discuss the little fires she could put out quietly without attracting attention that would save them from burgeoning problems down the line. Bones wasn’t in it for the glory. She worked to pry loose the hooks Gaunt’s Ministry had harpooned into the school, and was slowly barricading the doors he’d slammed shut both with the Muggle world and the Wizarding world as a whole. Severus could appreciate that.

He walked the whole way to Hogsmeade, proceeding straight to the apothecary, which he billowed into without care and started bullying the proprietor to secure the best deals. Mr. Shin had been a capable student, but he was still nervous about Severus, and the Potions Master wasn’t above taking advantage of that if it meant slashing the budget and pocketing the change. He would need to start tithing to the Dark Lord again soon, and Merlin knew how that drained his vault.

Business finished, he stopped at the Three Broomsticks for tea, and Madam Rosmerta didn’t bother to pester him with chit-chat, knowing his preference for quiet and solitude. He sat and drank to dispel the uncomfortable chill settling in his bones, and his eyes strayed to the flash of bright blue adorning his pale wrist.

Severus’ thumb brushed against the glittering scales, the snake warm and dry under his touch. He hadn’t noticed the gold gilding its edges, or how it shone, resembling a solid band of turquoise brushed in gold leaf.

Much too feminine, Severus grunted, but he let it be and went back to his Earl Grey. Why would Potter make me a birthday gift? Little fool.

The cup ran dry before his liking, but he didn’t order another. He checked his pockets to ensure his shrunken purchases from the apothecary remained in place, then paid his tab, heading out the door. Already, his mind turned to the tasks that waited for him back at the castle, chief of which was handing Slytherin’s mercurial mood.

Something would happen, Severus knew. The bastard was privy to something Severus himself hadn’t yet discovered, and so he would need to devote more time to spying, more time to plucking at the fine threads of his network to see what he’d missed. He couldn’t learn the Dark Lord’s ever thought, but he could try.

Something would happen. Gaunt wouldn’t let sleeping dogs lie.

He passed beneath the bowing limbs of a frost-laden oak, bare shrubbery brushing the edge of his cloak. His breath left his mouth in a haze of cold, prickling white. He could see the gates ahead.

Severus stepped forward—and pain lanced through his wrist.

It wasn’t the Vow. Snapping his teeth shut with an audible click, Severus yanked his sleeve down, glaring at the snake that had its small, sharp teeth burrowed in his flesh.

“You miserable bit of glorified shoelace—.”

He froze, breath catching as his eyes flicked over the trail. The sun radiating through the thin wisps of morning clouds glowed against the top layer of snow, rendering Severus partially blind from staring at it during his walk. If he hadn’t stopped, if the snake hadn’t bitten him, he wouldn’t have noticed the slight warble of displaced light against the trees, the incongruent luminescence darting toward him—.

Severus had his wand in his hand in an instant, snarling, “Finite Incantatum!

The wizard’s Disillusionment fell, and he blocked a Stunner sent by Severus, returning his own. The Potions Master twisted, hearing twigs crack behind him, and his sudden Shield Charm sent a curse rattling off into the weeds. The Disillusionment Charm dissolved off the second wizard, revealing a pale, angry face. Gold pins flashed at their lapels.

Guardians of the Magical Right. What in the fuck are they doing?

Severus jabbed his wand at the nearest branch. “Sylva Ferro!” The large blade snapped from the tree’s bole, and a silent Moderantum connected it to his left hand. He faced the first wizard, blocking a series of nasty hexes, a Cutting Curse slicing open his thigh just before he sent the sword flying toward the second wizard. He heard a thump, a cry, and then the broken gurgle of a collapsed lung.

It didn’t take him long to dispatch the remaining assailant. Whoever they were, they weren’t skilled enough to take on a trained Death Eater head-to-head. Severus managed to disarm him, and the sorry bastard let out a wild yelp as tree roots twisted around his body, pinning him to the forest floor.

Severus panted, limping, blood soaking his trouser leg as he stood over the wizard and aimed his wand between his brows.

“Don’t—don’t—,” the wizard stuttered.

“Coward,” Severus scoffed, observing his face, but he didn’t recognize him. He was either new or so insignificant he’d flown under Snape’s notice.

And to think, he could have killed me if not for—.

“Listen—listen! Wait!” the wizard shrieked, struggling in his bonds, his wide eyes flicking between Severus and the path behind him. Severus could hear the other wizard still wheezing, but he didn’t have to look to know he’d driven the makeshift sword through his chest into the ground, pinning him in place. He’d bleed out in a moment, and Severus couldn’t be moved to care. “Fuck—wait! I’m sorry!”

“What was the purpose of this?” Severus demanded. “Who put you up to this? Speak, or I shall start removing fingers.”

“I’m sorry—it’s nothing personal! We were just following orders—.” He shrieked when Severus pressed the tip of his wand to his clammy forehead. “Oh, shit! Okay—okay! Gaunt! It was Gaunt. He told us—he told us, he sent us here to wait f-for someone from the castle. One of the professors. He said we n-needed hair, and to keep them silent—. But that’s it, mate! We weren’t told anything else!”

Severus sucked air through his teeth, sneering.

Polyjuice. Gaunt wanted to Polyjuice as one of the professors and get into the school, which would explain why these bumbling morons hadn’t been ready to fight someone of Snape’s caliber. But for what purpose did Gaunt need to get into the castle? Severus didn’t know, but it surely had to do with Potter. It always did.

He Stunned the wizard, then turned his own arm. He glimpsed the flash of blue beneath his cuff.

He remembered Potter standing in the corridor of Grimmauld Place. It was late—late enough she should have been safe in her bed, not chatting with the alchemist in the dead of night—.

He started to fall, and he remembered the alchemist grabbing him, catching him, the girl ’s hands reaching out—.

He remembered his blood wiped against her white nightgown.

“She would be devastated if you died,” the alchemist told him as he tended to his wounds. “You know?”

Severus didn’t know. He didn’t think it’d make any difference at all to the girl, but maybe—.

He curled his hand around the snake—Sally. What an insipid name.

Maybe it would make a difference.

The wizard behind him let out one final, rattling breath. Severus sighed, and set about cleaning up the mess.

Chapter 278: when the storm comes

Chapter Text

cclxxviii.when the storm comes

 

Harriet twisted the silver ring around and around her middle finger.

“What if no one shows up?” she wondered aloud, chewing on her bottom lip. It felt as if she’d paced from one end of the Aerie to the other, but she hadn’t left that room. Hermione and Elara sat at one of the tables, the latter flicking through the Daily Prophet, the former resting her eyes. It was Krum, slouched into one of the low lounge chairs with extra cushioning, that answered her.

“You vorry too much,” he grumbled, sounding half asleep, dawn only having passed an hour or so before. “They vill come.”

“But what if they don’t?” Harriet reiterated. “They’re late, and no one’s here.”

She’d wondered if people would want to continue their lessons with the Coven once classes went back to normal. Without Umbridge present to breathe down their professors’ necks, the usual lesson plans had been resumed. Harriet had thought she’d welcome the change—but now she felt anxious and adrift. She hadn’t realized how much she looked forward to the Coven meetings.

“You vere tutoring long before there vas the Coven,” Krum reminded her, shifting in his seat. “I have a feeling you vill be tutoring long after there is not a Coven.”

Harriet turned to frown at the older wizard. He still made her somewhat uneasy, but usually only when she spotted him in unexpected places. Her nerves always jumped before she forced herself to relax. “What does that mean?”

Krum didn’t explain himself—and Harriet didn’t have time to pester him into answering. The first students finally came trotting into the hall, out of breath and panting, one holding a stitch in her side.

“The Inquisitorial Squad hasn’t disbanded,” Hestia Carrow informed her. “They’ve made a rotation to stake out the Moon Mirrors and chase anybody off from using them.”

Harriet’s brow furrowed.

From the table, Hermione voiced a question they’d all been wondering. “Why on earth haven’t they disbanded? There’s no reason for them to continue meeting without that horrid woman in the castle.”

More students started to arrive with similar stories of how they had to run from the Inquisitors or dash to reach empty Mirrors. None of this sat well with Harriet, but what could she do? Now that study groups weren’t banned, perhaps a word with the Heads of Houses or even the Headmaster could call the Inquisitorial Squad off from harassing suspected coveners. Otherwise, she didn’t have the authority to tell off other students for having their own group, even if she disagreed with them.

But what are they after? What are they planning?

Harriet put the issue from her mind for the moment and started the lesson, welcoming everyone back before they delved into a review for last term. Everything went swimmingly, aside from Esther Gamp accidentally setting Andrew Saxby ablaze. Harriet was quick with a water Charm, and Hermione kept a jar of burn creme on hand, so Harriet still counted that as a win.

Then, it was time for their session to come to an end, as classes would be beginning soon, and the professors were bound to notice such a large chunk of students missing from breakfast. Harriet and her friends bowed their heads over their Atlases to inspect the castle’s outer corridors.

“We need to go through these ones here,” Hermione said, which earned a round of groans. “I know, I know they’re out of the way, but they’re not being watched….”

Harriet tuned out the complaining, her gaze fixed on her Atlas. She stared at the dot labeled ‘Accipto Lestrange’ as it wandered a corridor on the fifth floor. Harriet wouldn’t have found that extraordinary, except for the fact that there were no mirrors in that area. No Moon Mirrors, no other Inquisitorial twats, and she knew Lestrange had Herbology for his next class.

What is he doing?

So, while the others headed off for class, Harriet went to find a free Mirror closest to that area of the castle—armed with her Atlas and her wand at the ready. She didn’t run into trouble, not now that most everyone had to be somewhere, but she remained cautious as she approached the corridor Lestrange had been lingering in. She waited, watching the Atlas, until he rounded the far corner. Harriet pressed herself against the wall and peeked into the corridor.

Nothing out of the ordinary waited there—a few shelves and cabinets, a gallery of rather plain portraits, a collection of bland, mundane mirrors, and a dented suit of armor. Harriet walked forward, her footsteps cushioned by a drab carpet, her eyes darting this way and that to inspect her surroundings. Sunlight came through the windows, and torches sprung to life, providing ample illumination. She opened a door, found a broom closet, then opened another, exposing an empty classroom.

He had to have been in this corridor for thirty minutes. Why …?

“Oi,” she said, prodding one of the portraits. The old man in it snorted, coming awake. “Did any of you lot notice what that boy was doing here?”

“Boy?” he echoed, clearing his throat.

“Yeah, a boy. Older than me. Wears a headband over his fat forehead.”

“Mmm, can’t say I’ve seen anybody matching tha’ description,” the portrait replied, still sounding half asleep. “Mind, little lass like you shouldn’t be out chasin’ boys. Quite unseemly, tha’.”

Harriet rolled her eyes and turned away, stumped. She studied the Atlas again and saw Lestrange now moving quickly toward the greenhouses.

Strange, she thought, but Harriet couldn’t fathom a reason for loitering there. Maybe he just wanted somewhere quiet. Still….

She cast a final, lingering look around the corridor, her mouth pulled into a suspicious frown, then left.

 

xXx

 

“Look at the ruddy price on these!” Harriet gasped, holding aloft a brightly wrapped package of fudge. “Merlin’s arse! Four Galleons?!”

“Will you knock it off?” Elara complained as she jerked Harriet’s arm down. “You’re raining crumbs on me.”

“Aw, but it’s balancing out your saltiness.”

“I will hex you, Harriet Potter.”

Honeydukes was packed with students who’d had the same idea as Harriet and her friends. The first available trip to the village after the holiday ended usually meant finding excellent discounts on most everything in Hogsmeade—but this trip, Harriet discovered the opposite to be true.

Hermione tugged on her scarf, studying a row of price tags glued to various jars of humming gumballs. “These prices are rather steep,” she remarked. “It was the same in Scrivenshaft’s and Tomes and Scrolls. Half their shelves were bare.”

A hand landed on Harriet’s head, and she startled, dropping the fudge. “Bloody hell….”

“Mind yourself there, Potter,” Fred Weasley said with a grin, ruffling her hair. George crouched to help her clean up the mess before the shop owner noticed and kicked them out. “We heard you lovely ladies talking about the prices.”

Hermione’s mouth formed a thin, disapproving line, and she shrugged off George’s arm when he rose to lean on her. “Yes, and?” she said. “You shouldn’t be eavesdropping, but surely you’ve noticed it as well.”

“‘Course we noticed. It’s the price of material, Granger. It’s been getting scarcer and scarcer and more and more expensive.”

George nodded along with his brother. Harriet stared at the split package in her hands and wondered if it was still edible. “We’ve been feeling the pinch, too. We’ve cut back on our experiments. Can’t exactly afford to keep wasting products if we want to open our shop after graduation.”

Elara rolled her eyes. “Exactly what the world needs. Yet another joke shop.”

“There’s the spirit, Black!”

Hermione looked between the twins, then back to the shelves. “Surely with Bones in office now, prices will adjust? She means to open more avenues for international trade and to extend our access to Muggle goods.”

“Mmm, in theory, yeah,” Fred told her. “But Dad’s saying that kind of stuff takes time. There are a lot of bans on individual items, then bans on trades, then bans on possession, and Dad said it all has to be repealed through voting. They can’t swoop in and do a total overhaul in one go.”

Hermione looked like she wanted to argue, so Harriet diverted her attention away from the subject. “Nice day in the village, innit?” she said, voice raised to drown out any protests. “I was worried there’d be another blizzard and we’d all be stuck inside again.”

“I’m surprised they let you out at all,” George commented, grinning. “They’re not worried you’ll get snatched off the streets again like a lost kitten?”

“Don’t say again—it was a platform in London, not Hogsmeade,” Harriet huffed. Her cheeks warmed. “And don’t put that thought out there, Merlin. It’ll manifest or something. I think McGonagall considered giving me a detention so I’d have to stay in, and I really needed to come to the shops today.”

“What’s the urgency for?”

“She needs to buy a Yule gift for Slytherin,” Elara answered before Harriet could, the corner of her mouth lifting in a smug smirk. “I told you to do so before. Now he’s unhappy.”

Harriet’s face scrunched in disgust. “I don’t want to get him anything. But he’s been—pouting, I guess you’d call it.”

“‘Pouting’?” Fred and George echoed. “Slytherin?

“Yeah. He gets passive-aggressive and mentions how good apprentices pay homage to their masters and all that rot.” Harriet sighed. “He’s just a mooch. I’ll buy him something pricey and he’ll shut up.”

Their group moved out of Honeydukes, Harriet paying for the dropped fudge, deciding it was fine even if some had touched the floor. Hermione looked disgusted.

“Hey, Potter?” George asked as they walked onto the main street, careful of the ice slicking the pavement.

“Yeah?”

“What’s he like in private? Slytherin?”

“Uh….” They stepped off the kerb onto the cobbled lane, passing another group of students on their way to the Three Broomsticks. Cengor Pendarves walked with his date, seventh-year Ravenclaw prefect Lubena Zinovac, up the other side of the street, and Katie Bell and Angelina Johnson stood outside Spintwiches, admiring the window display. “He’s not all the different than he is public, I guess.”

“Really?”

“Yeah. He tries to be—I dunno how to say it. Nice? But it’s not really nice at all.” Harriet reflected on her private meetings with Professor Slytherin, concentrating on those times between lectures and lessons when he wasn’t trying to force knowledge into her skull. “He’s cold. He pretends, but it’s obvious he doesn’t care about anybody but himself, and he can be…cruel. Very cruel. If I didn’t have something he wanted, he wouldn’t know I existed.”

George peered down at her, brushing snow from his hair. “What does he want from you, then?”

“I don’t know.”

They had only just reached the door of Gladrags Wizardwear when the screaming shouted.

Harriet whipped around, eyes wide, ignoring the cold air that cut across her face and how Elara’s gloved hand suddenly gripped her forearm. All along the street, students and village residents alike stopped what they were doing to look toward the square, the place where the screaming echoed from. It didn’t take long for people to start running, and Harriet finally caught a glimpse of black robes rippling against a sudden gout of flame. It was definitely produced from a wand.

“Wh—what is that? What’s happening?” Hermione stuttered, dropping her paper shopping satchel. “Harriet—?”

Harriet grabbed a hold of George’s arm, shaking him from his startled staring. “Go to the castle,” she snapped at him, his brow jumping. “Apparate to the gates, and run for the castle. Get the Headmaster.”

“Potter—.”

Go, George!”

He didn’t hesitate for any longer, and already Harriet had moved on to Fred. One of the roofs across the way smoked under a hailstorm of spitting embers. “Grab Pendarves and Zinovac!” she told him, jabbing a finger toward the other pair across the lane. They had the sense to have taken out their wands, but appeared confused on what to do. “Find younger students and get them to the Floo in the Three Broomsticks! Stay out of sight!”

He jerked a hasty nod and darted across the street. Harriet didn’t wait to see how Pendarves or Zinovac reacted, hoping they’d been to enough of the Coven meetings to trust Harriet’s judgment. She grabbed Hermione and Elara and yanked them toward the closest alley.

“Harriet, what are you doing?” Elara demanded.

They paused on the next street, a narrower lane with less popular shops and a few houses. Harriet flicked her wrist, grabbing her wand as it slipped from her brace.

“Dervish and Banges is this way,” she explained, swallowing the sudden dryness in her mouth. “Most of the third-years hang out there on the village trips.”

“No,” Elara argued, grabbing her arm again. Harriet pulled herself free. “No. We need to get you to the Three Broomsticks!”

“We don’t know what’s happening,” Harriet argued. “We don’t know if this is an attack or how many there are. We have to warn them.”

“Damn it all, Harriet. What if they’re here for you?!”

“Not everything is about me!” she shouted. “We have to do something! Hurry!”

Elara didn’t argue more, whether because she agreed or because she knew she’d never get Harriet to follow her, it didn’t matter. The taller witch turned into her Animagus form, and the trio rushed up the street—unfortunately needing to run closer to where the echoing booms and shouts emanated from. Harriet thought she heard laughter.

They passed a witch in maroon robes, half-buried in the snow, her throat split in a dark, crimson line. Tears tracked down Hermione’s face as Harriet forced her to keep running.

She saw Dervish and Banges ahead of them, a narrow two-up, two-down with tall, garishly lit windows in the front that had many small, curious faces pressed to the glass. Harriet was the first to crash through the door, and she snarled, “Get away from the windows!” at the line of little twits.

They gasped, but they didn’t need further prompting to retreat, their eyes wide and frightened. Harriet spotted Gabriel Flourish and Walt Murton among their number, plus several other Coven members like Hardik Tandel, Rose Zeller, and a terrified Astoria Greengrass. The little blonde girl grasped onto the hand of her older sister like it was a lifeline.

“Daphne,” Harriet said, out of breath. “Get them back, behind the shelves, out of sight.”

The shop owner approached them—an older wizard with graying sideburns and a color-changing tie. “What is happening?” he asked in a dry, cracking voice. “We heard explosions and thought they must be fireworks going off at old Zonko’s place, but then the smoke appeared, and there were folks running….”

“There’s been an attack,” Elara informed him, having resumed her normal shape. Hermione helped Daphne urge the younger students farther from the entrance. Harriet stared out the door, easing it closed until it offered only a narrow vantage of the street beyond. “We don’t know by who, but someone’s been sent to notify the Headmaster.”

The man seemed mollified by the mention of Dumbledore. “But there’s Aurors posted all over the village!”

“I think they’ve been killed,” Harriet told him, and he gasped, pressing a wizened hand to his chest. “I don’t think it’s safe to take this lot all the way back to the Three Broomsticks. Do you have an open Floo?”

“Not here, no.”

Harriet didn’t curse, but it was a near thing. Her palms felt sweaty, and her pulse raced with fear. Over fifteen people stood in that shop, their eyes on her, waiting to be told what to do. What if she was wrong? What if she didn’t do the right thing? She couldn’t be responsible for this many people—.

Movement on the street caught her eye.

A tall, burly wizard in flowing black robes sauntered by the shop from the direction of the square. Though she didn’t know what to make of him, Harriet gestured for her friends and the shop owner to step back out of sight. The owner doused the lights with a wave of his wand.

“Quiet,” she muttered, and the scant whispering shared between the younger students fell silent. Harriet all but held her breath as she pressed closer to the cracked open door, watching the street beyond.

The wizard kept walking, moving at a leisurely pace, his body angled in such a way that his face stayed hidden. He wore his hood and black gloves—but that wasn’t terribly unusual at this time of year. It wasn’t until he lifted his wand to fire a Blasting Curse at a woodshed that Harriet realized he wasn’t some poor bloke caught out on his afternoon stroll. He passed by the shop—.

Harriet kicked open the door.

“What are you—?!”

She flicked her wand, putting power behind the motion. “Stupefy!”

The spell caught the wizard unawares, and he fell in a heap onto the cobblestones. His wand slipped from his fingers and rolled toward the gutter.

Everyone in the shop held their breaths.

Her hands buzzed with nervous, anxious energy as Harriet eased the door open wider. She let out a slow, hazy gust of air through her nose as she stepped out of Dervish and Banges, glancing up and down the street. It was empty.

“Harriet…?”

She tightened her grip on her wand as she took another step forward, her gaze fixed on the wizard. She entered the uncovered lane.

Harriet!

Hermione’s frightened voice barely rose above the patter of falling snowflakes and the distant sound of spellfire crashing through the tightly packed buildings. Harriet held her wand ready as she reached the wizard’s side, and she delivered a hard kick to his arm, rolling him to his back so she could see his face.

The visage of a bone-white mask greeted her, and a terrified chill chased itself up Harriet’s spine.

It was a Death Eater.

 

xXx

 

Slytherin found them twenty minutes later.

He cast one bored, indolent look over the Death Eater crumpled in the snow and waved his hand, conjuring ropes to bind him. Aurors crawled over the village like a troop of fire-ants, appearing at the mouth of every alley in their maroon robes, searching for more Dark Wizards. Slytherin turned to watch them as he stood on the front step of Dervish and Banges. He didn’t look around when Harriet eased the door open again.

“There’s been an attack,” he said, voice cold and unamused. Two Aurors rushed over to apprehend the unconscious Death Eater.

“Err, yeah?” Harriet replied, wondering why Slytherin was stating the obvious. He didn’t usually do that.

His narrowed eyes cut toward her, a sliver of red glaring through his thick lashes. “Not here, dear apprentice,” he drawled in answer. His wand twirled through his pale, bony fingers. Harriet’s heart stuttered in her chest. “There’s been an attack on Azkaban prison. The prisoners have been freed.”


A/N:

Harriet: “I got you a gift, Master.”

Slytherin: *accepts package* “Oh?”

Harriet: “It’s definitely not floor fudge.”

Slytherin: “…”

Chapter 279: erosion

Chapter Text

cclxxix. erosion

 

The world fell to pieces in only a matter of hours.

Being so far off from London, Hogwarts only received news in confused bursts or half-thought messages. Several parents arrived to remove their children without explanation. Hogsmeade smoldered in the distance. Everyone kept waiting for the owls to come, for the evening edition of the Prophet to arrive. The Headmaster’s seat in the Great Hall remained empty.

When they finally got the full story, Hermione thought she might be ill.

Hogsmeade had been attacked. Yes, several of the Aurors stationed there had been killed, and many buildings suffered structural damage, but the injuries to students and residents had been minimal. It became clear those black-robed terrorists in the village had been sent to cause a scene so the Ministry would rush to send Aurors to the site. After all, only an overwhelming show of force would be suitable when children were threatened. This meant when the Ministry received word that Azkaban had been assaulted, they had very few people to dispatch, and it took precious time to retract Aurors from Hogsmeade and redirect their focus. By then, it’d been too late.

Azkaban was cracked open like an oyster. All the murderers, maniacs, and fiends had been released. All the Death Eaters incarcerated in eighty-one were unaccounted for. The Lestranges. The Carrows. Dolohov. Pettigrew.

In the morning, the situation only worsened.

Hermione looked up at the staff table—and there sat the loathsome, toad-like form of Madam Dolores Umbridge, a smug smile unfurling across her face as she surveyed the baffled students. The Headmaster’s seat was still empty.

Hermione would always remember reading the Prophet that breakfast; it would sit with her, a surreal feeling akin to a nightmare becoming a reality, hearing the Great Hall echo with cries of distress. Their professors were unable to give them any form of reassurance.

Madam Bones was dead.

“‘A terrible thing,’” says new Interim-Minister Gaunt, selected last night by an emergency council meeting of the Wizengamot to assume the station until a new Minister can be voted into office. Minister Amelia Bones was discovered dead in her home last night with signs of a struggle. ‘It’s a terrible thing to see such a competent witch lose her life to such senseless violence. But I did warn Madam Bones that fostering paranoia would negatively affect our society.’

Hermione didn’t know how he did it. How he managed to twist what was so clearly a raid committed by You-Know-Who’s flunkies into something that was Madam Bones fault.

“‘Those individuals apprehended in Hogsmeade yesterday by our capable members of the Aurory were not Death Eaters. They were criminals who took advantage of flying, superfluous rumors to don a long-dead mantle and wreak havoc. After all, what better time to be a Dark wizard than when it is suggested that the Dark Lord is returning? I am of the opinion that, had Madam Bones seen reason, had she not pushed such an idea upon us, she would be alive today.’”

Hermione gripped her paper so tightly, she tore holes in the sides.

“‘For the duration of my tenure, only a single man escaped Azkaban—and not for long. Now, hordes of these witches and wizards we saw fit to remove from our society have been allowed free once more due to lax security and a failure to act. I will begin immediately to ensure such lapses do not occur again.’”

A few members of the Wizengamot had gone missing. Others too. Many of those who’d previously voted against Gaunt’s reelection had been quick to ask him to return as Interim-Minister. Umbridge had returned as if she’d never left. The staff looked miserable.

Hermione felt as if she was watching a sandcastle she’d spent all year building fall to pieces. It wasn’t a slow, eroding death, swept away by the encroaching tide—it was a sudden kick from a bully, and that bully was Marvolo Gaunt.

She glanced at the High Table again and happened to meet Madam Umbridge’s eye. The witch simpered, then waved, wagging her stumpy fingers.

Hermione lurched to her feet, the paper forgotten. She dropped her satchel and started for the doors.

“Hermione!” Harriet called, but she didn’t answer. She rushed from the Great Hall through the foyer, her heart pounding, and exited through the main doors to the grounds beyond. Gravel crunched under her shoes as she kept going.

She heard footsteps running behind her. She expected it to be Harriet, but—. “Granger!” Malfoy shouted as he chased after her. He gripped her arm, drawing her to a stop, and held on when she tried to wriggle free. “Granger, where in the blazes are you going?”

“I don’t know!” she shouted at him, voice breaking. “I don’t know! I don’t know where I’m going, I don’t—.”

It overcame her then, a surge that caught her about the knees and yanked like a riptide, pulling her legs out from under her so she crumpled beneath the weight of her emotions. She hit the ground as the first sob tore through her chest, and she felt the snow and gravel bite at her legs.

Malfoy knelt beside her, heedless of the mud staining his school trousers. “It will be all right,” he tried to comfort.

“It won’t!” Hermione retorted, the words barely coherent. “It’s my fault she’s dead. It’s my fault—fault Bones is dead and those men and women are missing and those Death Eaters are free. It’s my fault!”

“What are you on about?”

She’d spent tireless months on research and letters and blackmail. She spent hours and hours and hours lying awake at night, thinking of all the good she wanted to accomplish, of all the things she wanted to do in Terry’s memory. He deserved justice. They all deserved justice. But it didn’t matter. All of her efforts meant nothing.

“If I hadn’t pushed him, he wouldn’t have done this,” Hermione cried. “Your father warned me. He warned me there’d be consequences. Did I listen? Of course not! I’m so stupid—.”

Draco found a handkerchief in his robes and tried to dab at her wet cheeks, seeming overwhelmed and out of his depth. He pressed the handkerchief into her trembling fist. “Don’t be ridiculous,” he said.

“I’ll be ridiculous if I want to be ridiculous!” Hermione shouted—and he nearly landed on his arse. Some part of her knew she didn’t make much sense at the moment, but a greater part didn’t care. “None of it matters. Nothing I did matters. He’s right back to being Minister, and nothing I say will persuade the Wizengamot to vote against him again. No one will want to run. He’s won. Your father was right.”

Hermione sobbed, using the handkerchief to wipe away the worst of the snot, and rather than being repulsed, Draco stayed with her, waiting. He kept one hand on her shoulder, the other resting on his thigh—fidgeting and unsure of where it should be. For a long minute, neither said a word, and the worst of Hermione’s hysterics eased.

“When I was younger,” he murmured, his voice rather shaky and unsettled. “Before you ever came to the Manor, I remember—. Gaunt would visit, and he’d say things about my mother that I didn’t understand until I grew up. He’d say such—foul innuendos about her to my dad, and my dad hated him. No matter that he always went along with the Minister’s ideas and espoused rubbish in public, I know my father, and I know he despised Gaunt with every ounce of his being. He couldn’t do anything about it. He never could until you gave him a choice.”

He shifted, gravel crunching his knees as he gripped her hands. “It’s not about winning or losing, Granger—Hermione. You said it yourself: father knew better than anybody that there would be consequences, but you gave him and others a choice. It means something that they took it. I’m not bloody stupid, no matter what Potter says. I understand my dad isn’t perfect, that he has his moments where he can be…intolerable. I can’t say he’ll ever treat house-elves better or begin campaigning for Muggle-born rights, but I…I was so proud when he chose to go against Gaunt. Against the Dark Lord. Malfoys do not lay down for anybody, and I think you reminded my father of that.”

Hermione gave a watery snort, dabbing at her eyes. “I don’t think he’s as noble as all that. I think he’s just a wizard who loves his family.”

“It certainly doesn’t hurt.”

Wiping her face, Hermione took a deep breath, and then another, letting the last of her tears drip from her lashes. She didn’t know if she could stand up just yet. She looked into Draco’s face and found him already studying her, his pale eyes bright in the winter sunlight, his blond hair slightly disheveled with strands crossing his brow. Hermione wondered when his jawline had gotten so strong or when he’d dared to grow so tall.

“The things you’ve done matter, Granger. Don’t rob people of their own agency by deciding everything Gaunt does is your fault. I know Potter’s head is that fat, but I didn’t think yours was as well.”

Hermione prodded him in the ribs, huffing a small, humorless laugh. She didn’t know if she believed him. Her chest ached with the misery of it all, and she couldn’t see a way forward, but Hermione knew she couldn’t give up. Giving up wasn’t an option. If people like her stopped fighting Gaunt, there would be nothing left of the Wizaring world.

“Can we please get off the ground now? It’s cold and I’m filthy.”

Rolling her eyes, Hermione accepted Draco’s hand, and he helped her stand, waiting when her knees wobbled and she needed a moment more. He kept her hand held in his as they started back toward the castle, letting go when they reached the front steps leading to the open doors.

Harriet and Elara waited there, nervously shifting in their cloaks, and Harriet rushed down the steps when Hermione neared. A breath escaped Hermione in a grunt when Harriet collided with her, but she embraced her friend as tight as she could. She felt Elara’s arm come around the pair of them, pulling them closer.

“He won’t get away with this,” Harriet whispered, voice muffled against Hermione’s shoulder. She could feel the shorter witch’s breath, the warmth of her two friends making her realize how cold she’d gotten. “One day, Gaunt will get what’s coming to him. He’s not going to be Minister, even if I have to kill him myself.”

Hermione didn’t reply. She buried her tear-streaked face in Harriet’s hair, and embraced her as closely as she could.

Chapter 280: spiraling

Chapter Text

cclxxx. spiraling

 

Her gaze turned to look down upon the fallen witch, and sinister glee trickled through Harriet’s veins.

Red spotted the outside of navy robes, dark in the weak, inefficient light. Harriet could hear the rattling intake of breath moving through damaged lungs, the wheeze painful to listen to against the stilted silence. She circled the witch in slow, savoring steps, and the witch looked at her from beneath the robes ’ low hood. Gimlet eyes glittered with hatred. The witch held her injured side.

“Well?” Harriet drawled, a voice too deep to be her own escaping her mouth. “Are you going to tell me what I wish to know?”

The witch sucked in a deeper breath—and spat at Harriet ’s polished shoes. “Fuck you,” she choked, red dribbling between her swollen lips. “I will not break. I am a PROTECTOR of the—.”

“Yes, yes,” Harriet interrupted, sighing, a wand twisting between her long fingers. A golden ring glinted on her middle digit. “I do so love when you people choose to be difficult. It’s always such…fun to watch you scream.”

Harriet felt her mouth spread in a wicked grin, and red light spooled at the end of the raised wand—.

“Miss Potter!”

Harriet jerked upright, gasping, the dream dissolving as she tore herself free.

She sat in the Transfiguration classroom, her quill still held in her clenched fist, though the only notes she’d managed to take were now smeared with drool. Looking around, Harriet noticed most people had gathered their belongings and departed, Hermione and Elara included. Professor McGonagall stood before her, a look of disapproval on her severe face.

“Uh, err…” Harriet slurred, adjusting her glasses. She didn’t know when she’d fallen asleep. It’d been a struggle all day to stay awake through her lessons, her nights sleepless and filled with uncomfortable, restless dreams. She really hoped this latest vision had been a nightmare and not a glimpse of reality. She really did. She’d lost count of how many people she’d seen scream at the end of Gaunt’s wand.

It shouldn’t have been possible, but Professor McGonagall’s mouth formed a thinner line as her nostrils flared. “Miss Potter,” she started, moderating her tone. “You cannot be falling asleep in class.”

“Yeah, I know—.”

“No,” McGonagall interrupted, tensing. “You cannot be doing this.”

Harriet paused, hearing the emphasis her professor placed on the word—and she realized McGonagall wasn’t disappointed she’d needed a nap in the middle of her lecture. She was warning her.

“Umbridge isn’t here,” Harriet grumbled as she rubbed her eyes under her spectacles.

“She makes it a point to visit classrooms intermittently,” McGonagall replied, testy. Harriet knew this. In the month they’d been back from holiday, Umbridge had made it her mission to interrupt as many of Harriet’s classes as possible. “You mustn’t give her a reason to punish you. I fear the repercussions will be much greater than they should be.”

Harriet sighed, her eyes heavy, and jerked her head in the approximation of a nod. Ruddy Umbridge.

She collected her things and made a rushed apology to Professor McGonagall before leaving. Her friends hadn’t waited for her, as they knew she had a session with Professor Slytherin next, and he always sniped at them if they walked her to his classroom.

Harriet slapped her cheeks as she staggered through the corridor, earning a weird look from a passing Hufflepuff she couldn’t remember the name of.

C ’mon, Potter. You’ve had worse nights. You’ve gotta stay alert.

She reached Slytherin’s empty classroom and shuffled through the door, making an attempt to hide her obvious reluctance. He waited as he usually did—at his desk, reclining, looking as if he had all the time in the world to idle away. His red eyes watched Harriet as she came closer.

“You look horrid, Miss Potter,” he said, and Harriet froze, glancing down at her robes. She straightened them, evening out her white apprenticeship cords, then glanced at him again. Slytherin sent a Scouring Charm flying into her face, and Harriet yelped. “You had ink on your face,” was his only explanation.

Harriet coughed and sputtered, her eyes burning as she wiped suds off her mouth. The skin chaffed where the spell had scrubbed her clean.

“Enough idle chit-chat,” Slytherin said, rising from his seat. “I wish to see your progress with the Mirror Shield. Hopefully, it is not as abysmal as it was last we met.”

Harriet didn’t groan, but it was a near thing. She set her book satchel down out of the way and shrugged her robes from her shoulders, anticipating they’d get ripped and dirty if she left them on. She faced the wall for a moment, unseen by Slytherin, and shut her eyes, mustering her patience.

Slytherin didn’t speak, but Harriet felt his impatience all the same, and she turned to face him, approaching the wide aisle that split the desks in the middle of his classroom. Slytherin waited, dressed in his black robes with the glinting red lining. He kept his wand balanced between two fine-boned hands.

“Have you made any adjustments to the incantation?” he asked. It almost sounded friendly, but Harriet knew otherwise.

“Not the incantation, master,” she replied, choosing her words carefully. “I took your advice and concentrated on the wand motion. I tried substituting jera this time.”

“Interesting,” he remarked.

The newest project Slytherin had set Harriet involved creating a spell capable of reflecting anything it came in contact with. Ideally, all Shield Charms had the potential to deflect incoming spellfire if they were both theoretically powerful enough and high enough in the refraction index. Because of that, Harriet turned her attention to trying to compile something that would take less power to create but still manage to reflect curses.

Her results proved…middling so far. The “Mirror Shield,” as she called it, at least had form and could bounce a few lower-level hexes, but anything higher than a Locomotor Wibbly went right through the damn thing. She’d modeled it after the Protego Calilumen spell, which specifically created a shield meant to counter the VERD of warm-hued spells, regardless of their specific purpose or the projected power. Harriet wanted to make something that would essentially shift color as spells encountered it, negating the VERD and mirroring whatever hit it. In a fight where stamina and energy could be burnt quickly by replacing multiple Shield Charms, having such an asset in her arsenal would be invaluable.

If she could get it to bloody work, it would even counter the Killing Curse—not that she was in a hurry to test it out. She wasn’t entirely certain it would counteract Dark magic.

Professor Slytherin had been assisting her. Most of his assistance was comprised of hitting Harriet with curses and cackling about it.

Harriet readied her stance, wand raised.

Incendio,” Slytherin incanted with a lazy gesture.

Protego Speculo!” Harriet returned, and a milky, opalescent wall appeared before her, catching the streak of orange light firing toward her. For half an instant, the Shield turned solid, and the Fire-Making Spell flew back toward Slytherin. He deflected it.

Glacius.”

The Freezing Spell glittered in the air, and Harriet thought it’d pass through her Shield for sure—but the color in the Mirror Shield warbled, and the spell bounced, if weakly.

Harriet couldn’t believe it. The Mirror Shield had all the power of a normal Protego, which couldn’t block the VERD in a spell like Glacius, what with it being colored slightly blue, making its refraction quite high. But she’d done it!

She smiled, breathless. I did it? I did it! Not perfect, but it’s a step in the right direction—.

Slytherin tipped his head, and then—.

Bombarda Maxima.

Harriet’s eyes widened.

In an instant, she dropped the Mirror Shield, recoiling. “Protego Maxima!”

The new Shield glimmered, almost solid in appearance, and rippled under the impact of Slytherin’s Exploding Charm. Harriet threw her weight into it, holding the Shield, and her feet slid across the floor from the force. The spell dissipated, and Harriet’s ears rang.

Unruffled, Slytherin tutted, though even from a distance, Harriet thought his eyes appeared bright and glassy with sick amusement. “Your spell will never succeed if you don’t have faith in it, dear girl,” he mocked. “You don’t think it’ll hold up against an elementary Exploding Charm?”

Nothing about that attack had been elementary. Harriet’s lungs stung from the effort of holding her Shield in place, and her earlier fatigue returned to throb in her temples. She wanted to spit at him. She bit her tongue so hard, she tasted blood.

“Come now,” Slytherin said, sweeping his hand out before himself. “Have another try, apprentice. Let’s test your success.”

They ran through the exercise twice more. Both times, her results proved poorer than her first attempt, and Harriet attributed it to her shaken willpower. She didn’t want to succeed if it meant having Slytherin throw a curse at her capable of breaking all her bones.

“Again,” her master said, raising his wand for yet about bout—but a knock sounded at the door, and his head snapped toward it. “Enter,” Slytherin called, frowning.

“Forgive the intrusion, my Lord.”

A silver-haired wizard entered the room. He was tall but also rather gaunt, his body stretched like sticky toffee, garbed in professional robes Harriet had seen favored at the Ministry. He wore white gloves, and when he removed his hat to bow his head, she caught the glimmer of gold in his mouth.

Wait, Harriet thought, squinting. I’ve met him somewhere before.

“Erroneous,” Slytherin acknowledged, and the newcomer straightened, tucking his hat into his robes.

“My Lord,” he replied. “I must beg your pardon for my sudden intrusion. Unfortunately, it appears access to your Floo has been indefinitely paused, and the owls aren’t…finding their intended recipients. I thought it best, in these circumstances, for me to report directly.”

Slytherin rolled his eyes. “Gaunt and his petty games,” he dismissed, casual as could be.

“The post is being intercepted?” Harriet blurted out, tensing when the wizard looked at her. “And the Floo isn’t working?”

The wizard glanced again at Slytherin, asking for permission, and when he nodded, the wizard answered. “It would appear only the Floo in Madam Umbridge’s office is operational. The rest have been closed for…inspection. Or so we are led to believe at the Ministry. Ah, and of course, I wouldn’t put anything incriminating in a letter if I were you.”

Fuck, Harriet thought, hands balling into fists. I have to warn the Coven to watch what they say.

“Potter, you’ve met Erroneous Pyrites, have you not?” Slytherin asked as he pocketed his wand, turning away. “Erroneous—my apprentice, Miss Harriet Potter.”

Pyrites took the lazy introduction in stride, dipping into a gallant bow. “A pleasure to see you again, Miss Potter.”

“Err, yeah. You too.”

Slytherin started toward the steps in the rear of the classroom, those that led upward to his office. “Come, Erroneous. You’ve made the trip here; I can spare a moment to listen.”

Pyrites nodded and hurried to cross the room, following Slytherin. Harriet remained where she was, wondering if she could leave early. Surely she could go, right? Why would he keep her around to listen to his scheming?

Her hands had no more than twitched toward her bag when Slytherin barked, “Follow, Miss Potter. You are not dismissed.”

Bugger.

Confused and more than a tad wary, Harriet trudged after the pair of wizards, her shoes clicking on the steps as she climbed up to the office. The space remained the same as ever—an eerie, Dark reflection of the Headmaster’s office, a ghoulish counterpart filled with wooden shelves and strange, spiky objects, empty portraits on the wall where painted snakes could slither in and whisper what they’ve seen in the school. Harriet hated having to be there.

The office had two chairs—one for Slytherin and one in front of the desk meant for a visitor, which Pyrites assumed without a word. Harriet found a spot out of the way and leaned against the shelves, crossing her arms.

Slytherin sank into his cushioned seat, then waved a hand, summoning the carafe from the ancient sideboard. He poured himself and Pyrites a sizable libation, which the older wizard accepted, though Harriet noticed he didn’t take a sip.

“The Ministry is in quite a state of upheaval,” Slytherin commented with his own glass in hand, observing Pyrites through narrowed eyes. “I’ve been waiting for a report from you.”

Pyrites bowed his head under the blatant reprimand. “I must apologize, my Lord. Leaving Minister Gaunt’s purview without arousing questions has been difficult—and, of course, contacting the castle has been made more difficult.”

“Severus seems to manage just fine,” Slytherin commented.

Pyrites’ eye twitched. “Severus is a…singular wizard, my Lord. He has the capability to move with an anonymity your other agents cannot afford.”

Harriet blinked, surprised. I’ve never heard Slytherin compliment Snape, she thought. He usually treats him like rubbish. Then, she processed what she’d heard. Does that mean Pyrites is a spy, too? There’s others?

“Gaunt has seen fit to tip the Ministry on its head, but he is rarely in attendance himself,” Pyrites reported. He swirled his wine in the glass, watching the liquid and how it shone under the waxy candlelight. “His obsession with the Department of Mysteries remains unchecked. My sources report more rumored Unspeakables have gone missing.”

Slytherin merely hummed. “What a bore,” he remarked. “He would seek access to the place of unlimited, unknown magics, and desire the dullest room of the lot.”

Against the wall, Harriet recollected her dream—that room with the doors, encumbered by the burning desire to enter and possess what lay inside.

“When a prophecy is spoken, its record is struck and recorded within the Halls of Prophecy, which resides in the Department of Mysteries,” Professor Dumbledore’s voice echoed in her mind. “We believe Gaunt is convinced that if he hears the prophecy to its completion, he will understand how to defeat you. That is why his current obsession is to break into the Department.”

Harriet swallowed, considering what would happen if Gaunt finally managed to find the prophecy, if he heard it in its entirety. Professor Dumbledore felt Gaunt—and Voldemort, by extension—wouldn’t find what they sought if they did actually get their foul hands on the prophecy, but who would they take their disappointment out on? Harriet? Her friends? Snape?

She stared at the covered window, at the minuscule gap between the shutters that allowed the thinnest line of light to enter. Winter was waning. Spring would be upon them soon, and with the new season came the emboldened threat of her Wizarding exams. If she performed poorly on them, Slytherin would be furious.

The thought depressed Harriet. What did exams matter in the face of such opposition? She woke every morning dreading what would be printing the Daily Prophet. Trying to muster care for her future proved difficult.

Slytherin and Pyrites continued to speak on matters inside the Ministry, and Harriet listened as best she could despite the minutiae escaping her. Pyrites warned that Gaunt had not forgotten about Hogwarts in his mania, and he fully planned to make Dumbledore and Slytherin’s lives as miserable as possible.

“Oh, he can try,” Slytherin sighed, observing his nails. “His efforts remain short-sighted and aggravating, and with the Dark Lord at his ear, he will only continue to spiral.”

Pyrites departed shortly thereafter, bowing himself out of the room as if bidding farewell to royalty. Harriet couldn’t help but curl her lip, and Slytherin saw. He laughed, and Harriet flushed, expecting a reprimand.

“Obeisance has its place,” Slytherin told her, setting his glass on the edge of his desk. “Wouldn’t you agree, apprenticcce?”

Harriet shifted under his use of Parseltongue, grimacing. “Not like that,” she told him. “That was just…gross.”

“And what if I required it of you?” he asked, leaning his chin upon his hand, his arm propped on the arm of his chair. “Would you obey, Harriet?”

She wanted to say no, but she didn’t. She corralled her temper and kept her revulsion in check. “Of course, master,” she replied, her tone dull and her face expressionless. “But I wouldn’t like it.”

“The prideful never do. Make no mistake, dear Harriet; my servants do not bow because they want to, but rather because I want them to. They bow because they’re smart enough to keep their heads down.”

Harriet didn’t know what to make of that statement, though it felt threatening. His attention crawled over her skin, and the new bruises she’d earned in their practice session ached.

In the distance, the bell rang.

“Ah, that’ll be it for this lesson.” Slytherin looked away, and Harriet breathed, shivering. “You’re dismissed, Miss Potter.”

Harriet nodded and started for the door, eager to grab her satchel and disappear. Slytherin’s voice forced her to stop before she’d cleared the threshold.

“Keep yourself out of trouble, apprentice. Let’s see if you can finish a school year without ending up bloody in the hospital wing.”

Gulping, Harriet nodded, hoping for the same thing. “Yes, master.”

Chapter 281: drums in the deep

Chapter Text

cclxxxi. drums in the deep

 

With a defeated yawn, Elara let her forehead thunk against the table’s edge. She closed her eyes and wished she could go to sleep.

She’d been reading for hours. Hours and hours of studying, having skipped lunch and Divinations, and she had so little to show for it. Elara wanted to sink through the floor—potentially through Hogwarts itself, and float right down to the dungeons and land in her bed. She could stay ensconced there until morning without issue.

Wouldn ’t that be lovely?

The thing about Dark magic was it did and didn’t enjoy being perceived—which proved a nightmare for anyone attempting to read old texts and grimoires to learn it. The magic ached to be remembered, hated to be forgotten—and yet, it didn’t like being explicated, laid out in notes with little check marks and smudges of highlighter. The letters had a propensity to change languages, shifting to tongues not spoken in this earthly realm, and only peering through her Atlas brought them back to any kind of sense.

Elara’s head throbbed.

Above her, the cold tendrils of her ghostly jellyfish brushed against her cheek. Its presence lessened the…intensity of the Dark magic, the strangeness that could overtake her like a fever, but the longer Elara kept it out, the hungrier it grew. It lessened the effects of Dark magic, but it wanted—needed—more. Failing to practice left Elara feeling…drained.

Harriet had named the jellyfish Steve. Elara hadn’t had the drive to argue. She called it Steve.

Sitting up, Elara checked her pocketwatch, seeing it was nearly time for the Coven to meet.

“All right,” she murmured to herself, and she cast a small series of simple Dark spells. They could barely be classified as Dark in Elara’s estimation, but the fact remained, and Steve bloomed with various colors overhead, swelling on a silent inhale.

Elara shut the book.

“I’m going to be as blind as Harriet at this rate,” she muttered to herself, pressing the fingers of one hand against her tired eyes. The other, she drew through the air, passing through Steve, and he dispersed. Elara shivered.

She allowed herself to rest for another moment, then she leaned up onto her feet, smoothing the slight wrinkles out from her skirt and her robes, consulting her watch yet again. Then, she tucked it away alongside her cracked Atlas, leaving the Dark books on the table, knowing they’d be safe from curious eyes. She passed through the open doorway and felt the Master Ring warm on her finger, hiding her private study away into the secret depths of the Aerie.

Harriet and Hermione had already arrived. So had Krum, and his gaze flicked over Elara with something less than friendly deepening the lines of his frown. He didn’t like Dark magic. He’d left Durmstrang because he couldn’t stomach it anymore, and having more experience with it, Elara guessed he could sense it hovering about her. Whatever the case, Krum made no comment and merely ignored her.

Others had arrived early as well, most notably the besotted twits Gabriel Flourish and Walt Murton, both of whom hung on Harriet’s every word as if sunlight shined out of her mouth. Murton’s face always turned pink when he looked in her direction, even when Harriet didn’t notice him.

Hermione broke off from her conversation with Malfoy to hand Elara her lesson plan, and she flicked through it, seeing what Transfiguration spells people had written on the list after their last session. Nothing there would prove difficult for Elara, aside from a few of the selections that would be on the N.E.W.Ts. She’d been noticing more and more of those lately, and she pondered how Umbridge’s return had impacted the study routines of the seventh-years.

She almost felt sorry for Krum, who’d come back to school to repeat his final year, and they got saddled with the likes of Umbridge. Almost. He also seemed to dislike her, and Elara decided she disliked him in turn.

Harriet went to the chalkboard and started writing out what they’d be practicing today, scribbling out each subject. More people arrived. Elara settled into a seat by Hermione and watched her god-sister and the rest of the room, guessing that perhaps fifty of the one hundred or so people in the Coven would be attending today. Not everyone came to every session; it’d be ridiculous for nearly a third of the school’s population to up and vanish for an hour or two several times a week. Sometimes, people filtered in, read the board, saw nothing they needed help with being reviewed that day, and left. Sometimes, they only arrived to practice before an exam the next day.

Some attended every meeting—Pendarves and the Weasley twins; Edna Patridge, who wanted to be an Auror; Luna and Lisa Turpin from Ravenclaw; and a number of younger students who’d found the tutoring invaluable to their marks. Even Elara and Hermione had to miss the occasional session due to their other activities—therapy and choir for Elara, debate club for Hermione—but a few members never failed to show.

She speculated attendance would increase as final exams approached. Or, it would decrease as Umbridge’s looming presence sank upon them like a choking fog. A few covenors had been taken aside by the witch and interrogated about the group, but none had faltered. Harriet warned people not to drink anything handed to them.

“I hope Susan is okay,” Hermione muttered, catching Elara’s attention. She glanced at her, gloved fingers plucking the chair’s padded arm. “Her family took her from Hogwarts when her aunt died. Megan Jones and Ernie Macmillan don’t know when she’ll be back.”

“Perhaps she won’t be,” Elara said.

“I hope she is. I want to apologize.”

“You’ve nothing to apologize for.” Hermione opened her mouth to argue, and Elara cut across her, unrelenting. “You didn’t kill Amelia Bones. According to Sirius, she knew intimately what danger she would face if she took the office. It was the Dark Lord, Hermione. Very few can stand against him.”

One of said few turned to face the room, chalk smeared across her nose.

“All right, you lot. Let’s not waste what time we have and get started….”

Lessons got underway, Elara devoting most of her time to practicing and sorting out seventh-year Transfiguration spells. A particular incantation needed to shift object density to a vast degree. It could be tricky, and most of the N.E.W.T students in attendance couldn’t quite figure out how to attain the right balance. They meant to change bowling balls into balloons, but their balloons kept sinking like lead weights.

“You gotta twist your wrist more,” Harriet said when she popped by, making her rounds. “The Transfiguration is getting spelled through a whole spectrum, yeah? Plastic to rubber and helium. So, it has to have more motion to make it through changing the plastic. Magic doesn’t like plastic, so it tends to get sticky trying to change it.”

Her advice worked, and several of the bowling balls turned into floating balloons. Harriet was already on her way to the next group, weaving through gathered students.

Elara stared after her, brow furrowed. How did she know that?

From the corner of her eye, she saw Salazar Slytherin sidle into one of the portraits on the wall. He beckoned to Harriet, and she scurried over to him.

“I thought Potter was learning Defense spells,” Davies commented as he prodded his balloon. It warbled in the air, floating, but the rubber didn’t have quite the right elasticity. “I didn’t know that included Transfiguration.”

“She’s learning whatever Slytherin tells her to learn,” Elara replied with a superior tilt of her nose, though she’d been wondering the same thing. “That includes wandwork that can be applied across a wide spectrum of magical disciplines.” Across the room, she saw Harriet’s back stiffen. The Founder’s expression looked intense as he continued speaking, gesturing, the snake on his shoulders riled and showing its fangs. The hair on Elara’s nape stood on end. “Pardon me.”

Stashing away her wand, she hurried over to Harriet, instinct driving her forward, others hurrying to step from her path as she went. Elara reached Harriet, laying a hand on her shoulder—and Harriet jerked back. Her eyes were wide behind her spectacles, and her face had gone deathly pale.

“What is it?” Elara demanded, dread building.

Harriet swallowed. “They’re in the Aerie,” she breathed. “Umbridge and the Inquisitorial Squad are in the Aerie.”

 

xXx

 

News spread among the covenors with all the swiftness and chaos of a wildfire.

There was an initial burst of fear—then outrage and confusion.

“How did they get in?!” one demanded.

“What do we do?!” shouted another.

“We’ll be expelled if we’re caught—.”

“They can’t find this room,” Harriet shouted over the din—but Elara saw how her shaking fingers twisted the Master Ring on her hand. The Aerie responded to one’s desires; it led students to the knowledge they sought. Harriet had forged the rings to bend to her, Hermione’s, and Elara’s whims to keep curious noses out of their business and away from dangerous places. However, the truth was that they hadn’t tested the Master Ring against the pointed, searching will of a group of people determined to hunt them down. The Aerie might listen to Harriet, but it would also listen to Umbridge.

They could find this room. It would only take them time.

“Be quiet!” Hermione demanded. “Quiet! Now…I’ve set up a plan in case something like this ever happened, where we needed to evacuate swiftly. We’ll take the Moon Mirror to the Underneath—or, the Chamber of Secrets, if you will.”

Gasps radiated through the room, and Harriet groaned. “Oh, fuck,” she said, emphatic. “Not there! If Slytherin finds out, he’ll skin me and sell my organs in Knockturn Alley! Circe’s cunt, Hermione!”

“As Harriet as so politely pointed out,” Hermione continued without pause, though she did raise her voice. “You cannot linger in the Underneath. There’s a second Moon Mirror across the Chamber aside from the one we’ll enter through, and from there, I can direct you to use the password you need to find the Mirror closest to your dormitory.”

“Ve need to hurry,” Krum told her, his wand at the ready. He had his eyes narrowed, staring into the distance. “Now, Herme-ninny.”

The covenors didn’t need much prodding to start disappearing through the Moon Mirror housed in their study hall, following Hermione into the Underneath—but, one Mirror only provided so much space for people to pass through. They had four dozen-odd students to evacuate before Umbridge managed to find them.

How did they get in? Elara thought, willing time to slow, for people to hurry. Panic began to set in, and Harriet snapped and grabbed anyone who started shoving in the line. Did someone try to tell Umbridge? They’d be stupid if they did. They would have had to show her how to enter, because the moment they opened their mouth—.

Four dozen became three, then two, then one, and just as Elara began to believe they’d make it out of this without further issue—she heard feet running in the corridor. She and Harriet exchanged horrified glances.

Shit!” Harriet swore in a savage gasp. “Shit! Elara, you and I are the only ones who know the password to the Underneath—take them and run.” She gestured to the group of waiting students nearest her. “Get to a Mirror! Run!”

“Harriet—!”

“You must run!” Krum shouted, ushering his own set of students toward another opening. Harriet dashed after him. “Hurry!”

Elara had no choice but to usher her group in another direction, willing her lungs not to give out on her as they ran. Behind them, someone breached the study, and she heard—.

There! After them!”

She didn’t look back to see who they meant.

Elara’s legs strained as they bolted along the outer corridor, hurling themselves through the next archway. The Aerie shifted, providing yet another hallway for them to run down, the walls lined by watching windows and thick, teetering shelves. Voices echoed in the confined space.

How did they get in? How did they get in? Who told? Who ’s the traitor?

Elara began to flag—and Pendarves yanked on her arm, refusing to let her fall behind. He, Pucey, and Elara made for the oldest students present, their numbers rounded out by Eleanor Branstone, a sobbing first-year from Hufflepuff, and Takagi from Slytherin’s second year. 

“Wait!” Pendarves ordered as they came upon another archway. They skid to a halt before entering. “We have to all think of the same destination, right? That’s how the Aerie works? If we’re all thinking of different areas, we’ll keep going in circles. We all have to think of the same Mirror in the same place.”

Panting, Elara massaged a stitch in her chest, terrified her asthma would act up. “To the library,” she wheezed. “The one you enter through when you come from the Mirror outside the library. That one.”

Pendarves nodded. “All right. Everyone, picture that Mirror. If you haven’t been there before, just think of the library. Keep thinking about it. Got it?” He coached Branstone and Takagi, and though they looked frightened, both nodded. “Good. Keep that in your mind. Okay, let’s go—.”

He pulled Elara along with him as they stepped through the archway as a group. The corridor beyond shifted, following their desires. The Aerie had a ubiquitous style to it that could baffle the unawares into thinking nothing had changed in the vast, sprawling passageways, but Elara knew they’d come to the right place. She recognized the placement of tapestries and the one bust of a long-dead astrologer whose nose had been blasted off during her second year.

The Mirror waited ahead—and so did two people.

“Looks like the old toad was right to tell us to stay behind,” Warrington said, sneering as he and Darren Dread pulled their wands from their pockets and leaned off the wall. “Unlucky prats. You lot are coming with us.”

Branstone and Takagi shied behind Elara and Pendarves. Pucey’s face paled, but he remained resolute.

“Don’t be ridiculous,” Pendarves said, his voice carrying the authority he usually implemented when acting as prefect. “Get out of our way, Warrington. We have places to be.”

“I don’t think so,” Warrington retorted. “The only place you’re going is out on your arse, Pendarves. You’ll be expelled for this. You’ll all be expelled. Umbridge will reward me for catching Potter’s bitchy friend.”

Dread snorted.

Elara had quite enough of this confrontation, and she ripped her wand free, leveling it at Warrington. His cocky smirk wavered, his feet shifting.

“Get out of the way,” Elara ordered, bearing her teeth. “Or I’ll give you a brand to match the one on Lestrange’s face.”

Warrington’s eyes widened.

“Do you think I’m bluffing?” she asked, lowering her voice into a cold, malicious hiss. Pendarves’ fingers gave her arm a nervous squeeze. “Do you think I’d allow a pathetic worm like you to get me expelled? Either move or start saying goodbye to body parts.”

Warrington hesitated. Snarling, Elara flicked her wand—.

Both Warrington and Dread stumbled away from the Moon Mirror. They hurried farther down the corridor, refusing to turn their backs on Elara, both shaken by her fierce words. Elara had meant every last one of them. She wasn’t Hermione, and she definitely wasn’t Harriet. If Umbridge’s lackeys wanted to hurt her, she’d make them bleed first.

She whispered the password to the silvered glass, then stood aside, letting the others pass before her as she stared at Warrington and Dread. Once Pendarves disappeared, she finally turned to follow.

“You’re mad, Black,” Warrington muttered.

Elara didn’t disagree.

 

xXx

 

Unfortunately, more running had to be done to reach the second Mirror in the Underneath, and then through the school itself. Elara sprinted alongside other Slytherins to find the common room, and spots danced across her eyes. She thought she might pass out, but somehow, she managed to continue on, and her legs gave out from under her once she crossed through the entrance.

She leaned against the closest wall and slid down its length. Her limbs shook, and her blouse clung to her sweaty skin.

We made it, she thought, amazed. Relieved laughter echoed, someone shouting, “Fuck Umbridge!” as others cheered. Someone else took up the chant, and Elara heard Hermione chastise them for their swearing.

Her lungs heaved in her chest, and her heart raced. Elara felt on the verge of being sick, but it passed as she took in deep, cleansing breaths. Her pulse slowed.

When she collected herself, she lifted her head and surveyed the common room. She cataloged the faces there.

All at once, it felt as if her heart had dropped ouit of her chest.

…Where is Harriet?


 

A/N:

Hermione: “You had one job.”

Elara: “I know.”

Hermione: One job.

Elara: “I know .

Hermione: “How did you lose Harriet?”

Elara: “…I forgot the child leash in the dorm.”

Chapter 282: from the mouth of a traitor

Chapter Text

cclxxxii. from the mouth of a traitor

 

A few times in Harriet’s life, she’d been in serious trouble.

The worst time definitely had to be her detention with Umbridge. That had been an experience she never wished to repeat, and she sometimes had nightmares of her fingers moving across a sheet of parchment, gripping a quill she couldn’t let go, her skin flayed open as blood oozed down her arm. She always woke in a panic and needed to wash her hands.

But, even in that instance, Harriet had known the detention would come to an end, and people who loved her would be waiting on the other side of the door to take care of her. The reminder had stayed with her throughout the detention, and she’d clung to it like a lifeline, letting it tug her through the misery to the other side.

When she was younger, the trouble had been a different kind of terrible. Her magic would cause accidents at school, and she’d walk home feeling like a boulder had taken up residence in her belly. She knew nothing good waited for her when she reached Privet Drive.

How many times had she considered running away? How many times had she considered turning right at the end of Wisteria Walk instead of left, and running until she disappeared?

There’d be no running or disappearing now. Harriet knew doom had come home to roost.

She sat in the Headmaster’s office—she, Luna, Flourish, Murton, Malfoy, and Krum, all arrayed in a line of conjured chairs with the Headmaster himself behind his desk. Two Aurors stood off to the side, and Professor McGonagall waited by Professor Dumbledore, her lips pressed into a line so thin, they vanished.

Slytherin was behind Harriet. He rested a hand on her shoulder—and his fingers drilled into her collarbone, threatening to break it. Each time she shifted, he pressed down harder.

We should have followed Elara, she bemoaned to herself. But at least they made it out.

“Potter is the ringleader,” Umbridge said in her deranged rant, pacing back and forth between the captured students and the desk. She hadn’t stopped speaking since they’d been dragged into the office some thirty minutes ago. “I’ve got her this time. No wriggling out of this! I caught her fleeing from the scene with these—co-conspirators! They refused to obey official Ministry orders and attempted to escape! She’s the main head of this—this terrorist cell!”

“Terrorist?” Harriet balked—and Slytherin pressed down so hard, she snapped her jaws shut and groaned.

You will be punished for this later,” he hissed, earning spooked glances from Malfoy and Flourish. “If we can manage to keep your worthlessss hide from being expelled.

Harriet wanted to throw up.

More people arrived through the Floo. Another Auror, and then a bloke Harriet thought might be part of the Board of Governors. Grimwood, she thought his name was. She’d seen him speaking with Slytherin before, though she didn’t recognize him immediately. He usually presented himself better, but at the moment, Grimwood looked pale, ungroomed, and waxy, like a corpse let out to wander from his coffin.

Then, Gaunt came.

He stepped through the Floo like a dark omen falling upon an unsuspecting village. He had the same cold magnetism as Slytherin, as if something scaly and venomous had crawled onto the carpet, and no one knew what it’d do next. He smiled as he adjusted the fastening on his expensive cloak, and when his eyes slid toward Harriet, that smile widened.

“Good evening, gentlemen,” he said, disregarding the waiting women. “Well, well. Miss Potter. Breaking the law again, are we?”

Dumbledore cleared his throat. He looked as severe as Harriet had ever seen him, and his lack of warmth made her stomach twist with fear. “I hardly see how hosting a tutoring group in a school can warrant all of this attention. It is hardly illegal.”

“Educational Decree Number Twenty-Four!” Umbridge barked like a tenacious parrot. “Passed by Ministry order! It forbids the formation of student groups without the express consent of the Office of the Inspectorate. And this goes further than that, I assure you! I am convinced Potter has been attempting to rally a sect of insurrectionists—all under the guidance of her master!”

Slytherin actually choked. “I beg your pardon?”

Behind his desk, Dumbledore exhaled and adjusted his spectacles. “Do you have any evidence of Miss Potter’s actions, Madam Umbridge?” he asked. “Or is this purely supposition?”

A grin unfurled over Umbridge’s flat mouth, and she snapped her stubby fingers at one of the Aurors. He left, the rest of the room staring at one another in various states of confusion.

Your efforts are paltry and aggravating,” Slytherin hissed—this time to Gaunt. “Your irritating lackey won’t live to see the summer holiday.

As if I care. She’s served her purpose,” Gaunt drawled. And then, he added, “He has been calling for you.

I do not anssswer to pretenders.

Harriet heard the Auror return, though she couldn’t turn in her seat to see him. Dumbledore and McGonagall stiffened, and when the Auror came into view again—.

He pulled a sullen Neville Longbottom along by the arm.

Longbottom? Harriet’s mouth opened, and no words came out. No, surely not. He couldn’t have—.

“Mr. Longbottom showed me where Potter’s group has been meeting,” Umbridge said, sounding particularly proud of herself. “He’s insistent she’s using the group to foster anti-Ministry propaganda!”

Neville nodded—one solid jerk of his chin toward his chest, his gaze fixed on the carpet. His cheeks bore sticky spots of half-dried tears and red splotches.

“Mr. Longbottom, dear,” Umbridge simpered in her sickly-sweet tone. “I know you can’t speak at the moment, but could you point at the person responsible for organizing this group?”

Neville’s hand came up—and he jabbed a finger straight at Harriet.

She and Longbottom had never seen eye-to-eye. From their first year at Hogwarts, he’d disliked her for one reason or another, and their second year had only solidified that intense aversion. Over the years, Harriet tried to temper her distaste, to do what was right and tolerate Longbottom or otherwise ignore his existence. She’d understood he hadn’t liked her—but when had that dislike grown into this? How was he capable of this?

If Hermione hadn’t acted so swiftly, more people would have been in that office. Dozens of students would have been facing expulsion. Why would he do this? How?

She didn’t know, and it frightened Harriet.

“Why can’t the boy speak?” Gaunt asked. Longbottom shot him a furious glance, and he opened his mouth. His jaw trembled.

Curse damage blackened his palette and gums. His tongue was missing.

Oh, fuck, Harriet thought, leaning back in her chair, barely feeling Slytherin’s hand anymore. Her body buzzed with shock.

She hadn’t asked many questions about the curse Hermione and Elara had imbued into the Coven charter. When she had, Harriet got the impression the pair hadn’t wanted her to know more of the details, and she’d been fine with that. She’d believed the Tell-No-Tales Curse to be a form of Tongue-Tying Jinx, not—.

Gaunt laughed.

“Minister Gaunt!” Professor McGonagall said, outraged. “Really! A student has been injured!”

“He’s not injured,” Gaunt retorted, still cackling. “No, the magic is rather particular and sheds no blood. I’m impressed he managed to mime his way to showing you anything, Dolores.” He approached Longbottom, who glared at him even as Gaunt leaned nearer, smiling like a shark. “I imagine the last thing you’ll ever speak was Harriet Potter’s name.”

Professor Dumbledore leveled a look at Neville so cutting, so disappointed, Harriet felt a shiver go down her own spine.

She couldn’t believe it. Neville, the Boy Who Lived, had betrayed them.

“Mr. Longbottom needs to be taken to Professor Snape,” Dumbledore said. “We shall see what can be done to fix his condition.”

Longbottom turned to stare at the Headmaster, wordless hurt flickering in his eyes when Dumbledore didn’t look at him again. The Auror gripped Neville by the arm and led him toward the door.

“Mmm. Illegal groups, Dark magic on campus. Tsk, tsk.” Gaunt folded his hands before himself. “Well, Miss Potter will definitely have to be expelled. The others we can be lenient with. It’s not as if we can interrogate the poor things.” He smiled again, teeth too bright, too sharp, eyes like those of a hungry beast gleaming in the underbrush. “After the expulsion is finalized, we can move on to other charges.”

Harriet’s heart thumped in her chest—rattled like a loose tin lid, her throat closing in upon a wispy breath. Azkaban. He meant Azkaban. It wasn’t enough for Gaunt to see her expelled—he’d see her thrown into the prison, the prison Voldemort could stroll right bloody into whenever he wanted—.

The roaring in her ears was so loud, she almost missed Luna’s airy voice.

“I was the ringleader,” she said, pleasant as could be. One of the Inquisitors had bruised her lip when they grabbed her. “It was my plan all along.”

Everyone in the room stared.

“Miss Lovegood—,” Gaunt started, only to be interrupted by Walt Murton.

“No, I was all m-my idea,” he stuttered. “I c-came up with it all!”

“No, I did!” Flourish argued. “I was the mastermind!”

“Longbottom wasn’t even part of it,” Draco added. “He doesn’t know anything.”

“Was Harriet even there?” Luna went on.

“Why’s H-Harriet even here?”

“I didn’t see her there.”

“I’m pretty sure she was in the dorm!”

Draco glowered at Gaunt, a proper pure-blood smirk upon his mouth. He must have been terrified, but he didn’t falter. “Yeah, I think a few dozen people can attest to Potter being in the common room. That many witness accounts would outweigh any confused recollections from this afternoon, wouldn’t they?”

“What group are you talking about?”

“We were just in the library!”

“Is it illegal to be in a l-library now?”

A secret smile grew behind Dumbledore’s twitching beard. McGonagall just looked baffled.

“Enough,” Krum said, his deep voice silencing the others. He stood from his seat, and he nodded toward the Headmaster. He took a breath. “I founded this group. I am the leader. I vill bear the consequences for its existence.”

Harriet opened her mouth, refusing to let Krum take the fall for this—and Slytherin bore down on her shoulder with renewed strength. “Shut up,” he hissed when Harriet whimpered. “For once in your life, shut up, girl.

Umbridge was beside herself. “No, it was Potter!” she screeched. “Potter is the one behind all this and must be held accountable!”

Krum scoffed and said something in Bulgarian. It sounded insulting. “A fifth-year cannot have done this.” He turned his head to look over his shoulder, dark eyes fixed on Harriet. “She is just a little girl, da? I took advantage. I am from Durmstrang. I am used to Dark magic.”

No, Harriet shouted in her own mind. No, that’s not fair! He didn’t do anything!

Dumbledore studied Krum over his half-moon spectacles. It seemed to Harriet a private conversation passed between the two before the Headmaster sighed. “Thank you for taking responsibility, Mr. Krum.”

“Professor—!” Harriet gasped.

Slytherin snarled, “Quiet!”

Potter is the ringleader!” Umbridge shouted, shrill. “She must be expelled!”

“You have no proof,” Krum growled, his stance firm. “You vill never have proof.”

Grimwood chose this moment to speak up, and he stuttered worse than Walt did. “I-I cannot s-say the Board will a-approve e-expulsions for anyone but th-the group’s f-founder,” he managed to force out of his mouth. “T-They would most d-definitely recommend s-suspensions, with r-re-enrollment pending academic r-review.”

What in the bloody hell is wrong with him? Harriet wondered, mildly disgusted by how drool slipped past his lower lip and speckled his beard. If she didn’t know better, she would think he’d suffered a stroke of some kind—and why did he keep looking at Slytherin?

Gaunt glanced between the head governor and the Defense professor, and he tutted. “It’s not clever to leave them nearly braindead, Tom.

Mmm, no. Perhaps I will simply leave him six feet under. That is your preference, Marvolo, is not?

They make for quieter company. Usually.

Not after He is finished with them.

Gaunt tipped his head, gaze sliding to Harriet. Grimwood fumbled his way through explaining the expulsion procedure while Gaunt and Slytherin continued hissing. “Your apprentice is listening.

And yet she rarely comprehends.” His hand moved from her shoulder to cup her neck. Harriet swallowed. “If she did, we wouldn’t be in this position, now would we?

Merlin, Harriet thought, trying not to panic. I wish they’d expel me simply so I could get away from him.

Gaunt didn’t reply to Slytherin. He continued to stare at Harriet, unblinking, and the fervor of his gaze earned several uneasy looks from the others in the room when they noticed. Minutes passed. Dumbledore rose from his seat.

“Marvolo,” he thundered.

Gaunt twitched. “When Slytherin tires of you,” he whispered, the winding susurrations seeming to merge together in a barely comprehensible hiss. “You’ll end up in my hands. You’ll scream as you have never screamed before. There will be nothing but an empty carcass to hand over to Voldemort when I finish with you.

“Marvolo!”

It won’t be long now, Harriet,” Gaunt crooned. Harriet tried very hard to keep her lower lip from wobbling. “I don’t care if you’re expelled. Cling to the safety of these walls while you can. I am going to kill you. I am going to kill you and your friends very, very soon.

The back of her eyes stung with unshed tears, and she shook under Slytherin’s painful grasp. She wasn’t safe. She wasn’t safe anywhere, but especially not in the hands of a Horcrux, hunted by another.

Set curled beneath her feet, icy talons skating unseen along her ankles.

“Minister Gaunt!”

At last, his crimson eyes lifted, and Harriet took in a shuddering breath. Next to her, Luna reached out a concerned hand, and she grasped it, panting.

“My apologies,” Gaunt said. “I was sharing a few words of warning for Miss Potter. But where were we?” To Grimwood, he said. “I believe it’s time for me to depart. If the culprit has been found and this group disbanded, there’s no further need for Ministry intervention.”

“But Minister Gaunt!” Umbridge whined. “Potter is guilty! She—!”

Silence!” Gaunt snapped, Umbridge recoiling, her pink heels clattering on the flagstones. “You’ve brought me no proof but the silent finger-pointing of a moron too clueless to recognize when he’s been cursed. Do not think to summon me again, Umbridge, unless you have definitive evidence of Potter’s wrongdoing.”

“Of—of course, Minister—.”

Gaunt turned away, dismissing her without a word. His cloak swelled around him as he marched to the Floo—throwing one final, piercing glance toward Harriet. His lip curled into a ghastly smile.

I’ll see you soon, Harriet.

He vanished into the waiting flame.

 


A/N: Just a note to add that yes, I know I said just a chapter or so ago the only working Floo was in Umbridge ’s office. I think the Minister would order the Floo in Dumbledore’s office opened in this instance so he would not be forced to walk. So it was open for awhile, but I imagine it was closed again soon after.

Harriet: “…”

Harriet: “Are we having a Sparticus moment?”

The others: *nod*

Harriet, choking up: “You lot are the best.”

Chapter 283: poisoned envy

Chapter Text

cclxxxiii. poisoned envy

 

Overnight, Neville Longbottom became the most unpopular student Hogwarts had ever seen.

A third of the school involved themselves with the Coven, whether they dabbled and stopped by for Hermione’s copied study guides or dedicated themselves more fully to its operations. The size of their group meant it didn’t stay as secret as Harriet had hoped it would; most people in Hogwarts knew a group existed, even if they knew nothing of the specifics, where it met, or what they called themselves. Still, those people who hadn’t joined the Coven had friends who had, and when the rumor spread that Neville Longbottom had attempted to get everyone in the society expelled, he turned into a social pariah.

“I don’t think he wanted to get anyone else expelled,” Ron told her when Harriet cornered him after Potions. “I mean—he’s got friends in the group too, don’t he?” He lifted his right hand enough to show the little silver band on his pinky finger. “He only meant for it to be—you.”

“But why?” Harriet asked, still baffled by the turn of events. “You know him better than I ever will. Why did he do this? Was he coerced or—? I don’t understand.”

Ron fidgeted with his bag, his thumb brushing over Chudley Cannons pins that flashed bright orange and yellow. “Nev hasn’t been…right since last June. He and I haven’t really gotten on in a while because he’s so bloody obsessed with his image, and everything else becomes background noise to him. He thinks he was born to defeat You-Know-Who. That’s his—I don’t know, destiny?” Ron exhaled with frustration. “All the training and the Aurors and the people begging for autographs makes him think he’s the hero, that if he’s not the one ‘saving the day’ or earning everyone’s respect, then he’s nobody. Nothing.” He scoffed. “Goes to show what he thinks of normal people.”

Harriet scrunched her nose. Behind her, she could hear Snape in the classroom collecting vials, glass clicking and clacking in his hands as he moved about the space. “What does that have to do with me, though?”

“Innit obvious?” Ron shook his head, a small, incredulous smile on his lips. “He’s ruddy envious. It’s cos’ you’re the hero, Potter. You thumb your nose at You-Know-Who, you stand up against Gaunt, you tutor children, and you throw yourself into danger to protect people you don’t even like. You defeated a basilisk, fought off a werewolf, and can even cast a Patronus. You’re an apprentice, like the first one in Hogwarts for decades or whatever. Dumbledore obviously loves you, and whenever Nev eavesdropped on the Order meetings with one of my brothers’ Extendible Ears, they always talked about you. Never about him. He could never wrap his fat head around it.”

Hesitant, Ron reached out to pat Harriet’s shoulder. “I tried telling him before that he can’t be famous forever. He’d always be the Boy Who Lived, but people were going to stop asking for autographs one day, right? He didn’t like that. He doesn’t like that he never seems to be in the right place or say the right thing to get the kind of attention you do. When Skeeter wrote that article, he—I dunno. The boys in the dorm told him it’s just Skeeter rubbish. But we could tell he hasn’t been right. If he’s not the Boy Who Lived, he’s not anybody.”

“So the only solution was to get me expelled?” Harriet demanded. “To ruin my life instead?”

Ron shook his head and shrugged. “I dunno what he was thinking. I don’t think he was thinking, but I don’t think he was tricked. I don’t think it was an accident. That’s all I can tell you.”

“Fine….”

“I’m glad you didn’t get the boot, Potter. Shame about Krum.”

“Thanks, Ron.”

Dean and Seamus shared a sentiment similar to Ron’s, and Fred and George could only shrug like their brother had when asked about Longbottom.

“Honestly, we reckoned he had a bit of a crush on you,” Fred confessed.

“Like a boy pulling a girl’s pigtails. He talks—talked—about you a lot,” George added.

“But I guess we weren’t paying enough attention. We never assumed he really hated you. What a berk. Sorry, Harriet.”

Longbottom didn’t go anywhere without someone slapping things out of his hands or gum getting stuck in his hair. In class, people lobbed wadded-up bits of wet parchment at him—and most professors looked the other way. They were mad, too, though for different reasons.

In the wake of the Coven’s exposure, the Ministry proclaimed sedition thrived in Hogwarts’ halls and needed to be eradicated. They came for Dumbledore first, as they had in Harriet’s second year, waving an order for dismissal pending review. Dumbledore departed with his usual serene dignity—but the Ministry didn’t stop there. Slytherin was escorted off next, followed by Hagrid and then Snape, with a rumor that McGonagall would follow soon. Temporary teachers came in to take their places and apparently refused to teach anything in the classrooms.

Harriet couldn’t say she was upset to see Slytherin leave, as it meant an end to the punishment he’d arranged for her. She’d been forced to tend to his ghastly menagerie of magical creatures in the dead of night and bore new scars for her efforts.

Aurors trawled the corridors, questioning students, invited there with permission granted by the new acting-Headmistress, Dolores Umbridge.

“It’s an absolute mockery,” Hermione snapped, shutting yet another heavy tome. They stood in one of the Aerie’s storage rooms, searching for Ravenclaw’s old notes on the Master Ring. Elara remained at the archway, looking out into the hall beyond, staying alert. As far as they knew, Umbridge hadn’t managed to enter the Aerie again, not without a covenor whispering the password for her, but Harriet wasn’t taking chances. Coven meetings had been canceled indefinitely.

“How can they appoint her as Headmistress? I don’t care a whit if it’s only temporary!” Hermione continued to rail. “She’s an absolute cow—and worse, she has no qualifications! By Hogwarts law, she can’t retain the position. They’ll have to pick someone else, and soon.”

Harriet dreaded who Gaunt would select. Someone worse than Umbridge, undoubtedly. It felt as if her life was falling to pieces.

Hermione and Elara had been spending their evenings in detention with Professor McGonagall, who remained unspeakably angry with the pair of them for the curse they laid into the Coven’s charter.

“She has us reviewing foul pictures of curse damage from the last war,” Elara explained. “She’s so infuriated, I doubt she’ll ever trust us again. Hermione’s burst into tears a few times now.”

Meanwhile, Harriet and the four students who’d been dragged into the Headmaster’s office found themselves suspended, unable to attend classes or school functions while the status of their enrollment was considered. This gave Harriet an abundant amount of time to wander, her heart full of dread as she contemplated what Gaunt and the Dark Lord would do next.

She pulled her Invisibility Cloak free of her trunk and used it wherever she went in the school, staying silent and out of sight. She worried about the Coven—she worried about herself, about Hogwarts. Gaunt’s words bled through her nightmares like thick, red ink, and it made her sticky with sweat whenever she saw his name in the Prophet.

I’ll see you soon, Harriet.

What did he mean? Was he bluffing? Did he have a plan?

If Harriet didn’t stay hidden, Umbridge took to following her like a bad smell. The witch fumed over the Coven debacle and her inability to pin anything on her, so she hounded Harriet every second she remained in Umbridge’s presence. On three occassions, Umbridge had forced her to turn out her pockets, confiscating everything she could. Last time, she threatened to take Harriet’s wand—and Harriet had refused to leave the dorm without her Cloak ever since.

She would sneak outside past midnight and use Hugh to send messages. She wrote to Mr. Flamel, who told her to stay alert and to keep her necklace of trinkets close. Her letters to Snape went unanswered, though Dumbledore’s missives assured her he was well and that Hogwarts wouldn’t be in such dire straits for long.

Harriet didn’t know if she believed him.

Krum visited—but only briefly, coming no further than the grounds when he met with Harriet not far from the gates.

“I vant you to know it is all right,” he said, his gaze turned toward the lake, squinting against the deep orange light reflected from the setting sun. “There are more important things for me to do now. Graduating does not matter. Your Headmaster has told me where I need to go—and you need to stay here, in school. You need to learn all you can and be safe. Do vell on your tests.”

Unhappy with his answer, Harriet nonetheless asked, “Where will you go?”

“Bulgaria, for a time. The Order has need for me there. But, then, back to England, where I can do good.” He smiled then, sheepish, a strange expression on his usually scowling face. “I am quite taken with the clumsy Auror, da?”

Later, Harriet waved goodbye—and penned a note to Tonks, reminding her to keep in touch with Krum while he was abroad.

One afternoon, as Harriet wandered through the upper corridors, her legs tired from walking and her stomach upset with hunger, she came upon an unexpected sight. Longbottom sat on one of the wooden benches before a sunlit window, his back to the light, spine bent and his head bowed with his hands on his face. His bag lay shredded upon the flagstones, the bottom corroded from hexes, his books and things torn and shattered from spellfire. Harriet could see the marks on the stone where the curses had missed.

For a long moment, she did nothing but stare.

This is exactly what he deserves, a nasty voice in Harriet’s head sneered. Poor little Longbottom. I bet he cries to his mummy about how mean everyone is to him. He almost ruined my fucking life. This wasn’t enough. He deserves worse. He deserves to open that window, to step on the sill—.

Harriet shook herself hard, refusing to acknowledge her own thoughts. No, she told herself. No.

She pulled the Invisibility Cloak from her head and inhaled a fresh breath, letting the material slide off her skinny shoulders. Longbottom stiffened as she approached, but he didn’t look up until she grabbed one of the ruined books. He froze when he saw Harriet.

The curse had reached past his tongue into his mouth, and she could see where it stained the creases of his lips and one of his nostrils black. Through the pale skin of his throat, a permanent shadow was visible.

She glowered at him, then took out her wand. She pointed it at the sullied textbook. “Reparo.

Longbottom didn’t move as Harriet picked up the next book, then the next, Vanishing splintered vials and crushed quills. She capped what intact inkwells remained and siphoned away the ink. She placed the volumes and inkwells on the bench next to him as she went.

“I’ll ask them to stop,” she said into the silence. “I don’t know if they will. That’s not up to me.”

Of course, Longbottom said nothing. He couldn’t.

Harriet turned over his Herbology text. She paused when she spotted his handwriting inside, the notes added into the margins and attached with magical sticky paper. A quick reparo would remove the notes as well, so Harriet carefully flattened a torn page and stitched it into the binding with a nifty spell she’d learned from Ravenclaw.

“I asked Hermione and Elara to explain the Tell-No-Tales Curse to me in detail,” she said as she worked, her eyes on her task. “I was upset, you see. I couldn’t imagine them putting something like that into a contract children had to sign. Then, Hermione told me the curse is solely rooted in intent.”

She finished the book and added it to the pile. Most of his possessions had been fixed or Vanished, so Harriet picked up the last item—his bag. She looked at the flap, how it’d been doodled and written on with Muggle markers by his friends.

“That’s the thing with Dark magic. It’s helpful and harmful in the same breath. No one can make you say anything about the Coven against your will. If you don’t want to say it, no potion, no spell, no amount of torture can make it come out. That’s good and bad. I asked, ‘but what if they threatened Longbottom? Threatened someone he loves, like his parents?’ And Hermione said it doesn’t work like that. The Tell-No-Tales Curse is for the benefit of the group, not the individual. You can’t be coerced, not even for your own benefit.”

Harriet finished fixing the bag and tossed it to his feet. It landed with a thump.

“It starts off small. If you say something about the Coven by accident, your throat starts to get soar. It’ll get itchy, a bit swollen. You’ll have a cough for a few days. That would probably explain why a few of the first-years seem to have permanent head colds. If you start saying stuff on purpose, you might get blisters on your lips or on the inside of your cheeks. Uncomfortable, but fixable. It’d probably leave a bit of a scar.”

Harriet stood before Longbottom, staring down at him. He refused to meet her gaze, his hands clenched into fists.

“Elara informed me for the curse to get this bad, you’d have to be malicious and mindful. You’d have to betray the Coven to an enemy with full knowledge of doing so. No half-measures. It’s an old spell meant to protect witches from being sold out to Muggle hunters. Dead men tell no tales. It starts rotting you from the inside out.” Harriet’s eyes remained fixed on the top of his head. She imagined the weight of her judgment sat heavy on him. “I figure Gaunt was right for once. The last thing you ever said was probably my name. If you’d said anything more, it’d be worse, and you wouldn’t be here. There’s no cure. I imagine Snape told you that by now.”

Longbottom lifted his head and glared. Harriet could see the hatred so clearly in his tear-filled eyes. How had she missed it before?

“It probably makes you angrier to know I don’t give a fuck if you hate me, huh?” She tucked her wand away in her brace. “I don’t forgive you. There is nothing for you to say to me, and I want nothing from you. Apologize to the others and you can start making amends. If you want to be a hero so bad, act like one.”

Harriet turned to leave, gathering her Invisibility Cloak once more. She pulled it on over her head—and heard a clatter, glass breaking, books thumping on the floor. Turning, she saw Longbottom had swept the things she’d picked up and fixed back onto the ground, ruining them once more. The inkwells broke, black ink running through the textbooks, staining the crumpled bag. Neville stormed away, shoulders hunched, disappearing into the dark at the far end of the corridor.

Two days later, Longbottom withdrew from Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

Chapter 284: midnight missions

Chapter Text

cclxxxiv. midnight missions

 

Harriet sat in the near-silent common room, tearing the Daily Prophet into pieces.

Shhhrp!

She started with the first page and tore a long strip from the top to the bottom, ripping through the shrieking wanted poster of Bellatrix Lestrange. She took the strip and folded it in upon itself several times until she had a stiff, tidy triangle. Harriet balanced the triangle between her thumb and forefinger and held it up, taking aim before she used her other hand to flick it toward the crackling hearth. She missed, and the triangle skittered off somewhere behind the grate.

“Damn it.”

Malfoy lowered his own paper and looked at Harriet, one pale brow raised in question. He’d folded down the section about the escaped Death Eaters so he couldn’t see their faces. “What on earth are you doing, Potter?”

“Finding a better use for this rag.” She started shredding another piece. “All they want to write about is the flight patterns of Snigeons, completely ignoring the fact that there’s a nutter in the Minister’s office.”

Above them, the painted snake in the rowen roots wended about its tree, hissing nonsensical babble about children who should be in class. Harriet ignored it but minded what she said.

Draco hummed in agreement, his ankle balanced upon his opposite knee. He turned the page. “The Prat Who Lived should be thankful they’ve posted very little about him. ‘Injured in an accident and sent home to recover. I assume that’s because no one in the Coven would dare confirm a thing about the situation lest they get a dose of what Longbottom did.”

Harriet moodily flicked another triangle toward the hearth. This one sank into the banked flames.

“Say….” Draco lowered his paper again. “What would happen if we were to speak of the Coven, and someone overheard without us knowing? Would we end up like Longbottom?”

“I’m not bound by the curse,” Harriet reminded him. “But no. For instance, the portraits can’t repeat anything they hear about it. And if that bint Skeeter were in here as a beetle listening in, the words wouldn’t come out. They’d get stuck in our throat.”

“It’s a wonder why Black didn’t make a curse that simply did that in the first place.”

“Elara and Hermione,” Harriet corrected. She knew he fell all over himself when it came to her best friend, but he shouldn’t forget she had a mean streak in her, too. “And yeah, I asked the same thing. They said they could’ve used a variation of the Tongue-Tying Jinx, but said that if someone’s really determined to rat the Coven out, they’re going to find a way around any curse or jinx or hex keeping their mouth shut. The point of it was to make sure everyone knew who the traitor was.”

Draco just shook his head, muttering, “Barbaric.”

Harriet didn’t entirely disagree, but she wouldn’t lambaste her friends for making a choice she didn’t have the strength to. Harriet didn’t want to hurt people—and sometimes, that was to her detriment.

“We should make a passphrase.”

“Wazzit?” Harriet replied, preoccupied.

“A passphrase,” Malfoy repeated, frowning. “Clean your ears out, you little gremlin.”

“What for?”

“So you can hear.”

“Not—.” She glowered at him. “Why a passphrase?”

“So we have something to use between covenors. We’d choose a line that references the Coven in a manner that could only be shared between covenors. Look, it’s like you said. If we tried to speak about the group while someone was eavesdropping, the words wouldn’t come out. Wouldn’t that potentially work on Polyjuiced or glamoured spies?”

“Hmm….” Harriet considered him. “I think there’s merit to the idea. I’ll talk to Hermione.”

“I’ll do it,” Draco rushed to say, and Harriet giggled. His cheeks turned red. “Oh, shut up, Potter.”

They sat in silence for a time. No one came through the common room; they wouldn’t, given they’d been forced to attend classes. Harriet tore up an entire page of the Prophet before she spoke again.

“D’you reckon they’ll let us take our exams?” she asked. “They’re next week, and they haven’t said a thing to us. Luna tried asking Umbridge and got detention with Filch.”

Behind his paper, Malfoy shrugged. “They should. The exams are Ministry regulated, and it shouldn’t matter if we’re suspended. But saying that, I wouldn’t hold my breath.”

Harriet chewed on her bottom lip as Malfoy’s words stirred her anxieties once again. Without O.W.L results, would she be able to come back next year? She had too, right? She was Slytherin’s apprentice.

“If they swear in Umbridge as Headmistress, I’m not returning to Hogwarts next year,” Draco confided. “I don’t need my O.W.Ls or my N.E.W.Ts to get by in life. I would rather do nothing than stomach that hag again.”

“Hermione said she doesn’t have the credentials.”

Granger should realize that if Gaunt manages to seize Hogwarts and fully subsume it into the Ministry, none of the rules will matter anymore. He could make Hagrid Headmaster.”

Harriet flicked a triangle at him. “Lay off Hagrid.”

“Fine, fine. Don’t sick Black on me; I enjoy the use of all my limbs.”

Harriet stuck out her tongue. “Prat.”

“Twit.” Malfoy stood, running a hand through his tidy hair, and tossed his whole paper into the hearth. A great burst of flame rose before the flume swallowed it whole. “There’s nothing we can do now but wait.”

That was easy enough for him to say. Harriet felt like she might grow old from the waiting, from the worry that tore her apart as she watched Umbridge prance about the school and her professors got marched off one by one. They still hadn’t called the emergency Wizengamot vote. Gaunt was still Minister.

How much more waiting could she withstand?

Sighing, she tossed her paper into the hearth as well, and she watched the fire devour the rumpled pages.

Her scar started to itch.

 

xXx

 

Night swaddled the dormitory in silver-streaked darkness when Harriet opened her tired eyes.

Her neck still hurt from earlier, her skin red and puffy, inflamed despite Harriet doing her best not to touch the area. She lay on her back in her messy sheets and gazed at the blurry canopy overhead through half-shut eyes. Her body felt heavy with fatigue, her dreams an endless, knotted mess of nightmares and impatient visions.

Waiting, waiting. Impatiently waiting. Was that Harriet’s feeling, or His?

Nothing out of place made noise in the dormitory—Pansy snoring, Millicent’s cat purring, water sleepily churning against the thick windows. Inhaling, Harriet could only assume the irritation in her scar had woken her, and she grumbled, sitting up.

“Bloody unfair,” she mumbled, groggy, kicking open her bed hangings. Livi stirred beneath the ruffled skirt, but he didn’t appear. Winky had brought him a large rabbit for supper, and he was quite comfortable where he was. The golems watched her from the nightstand, bumping Harriet’s fingers as she reached for her spectacles.

“Ruddy tired. Stupid, buggering scar and stupid, twat-faced Dark Lord….” Harriet grabbed her Atlas and slung it around her neck. She didn’t care if the rattling woke anyone else, the piece of Druid’s glass thunking against the lens. Harriet held it out of habit as she shuffled into her carpet slippers and dragged herself toward the washroom.

The lamp hurt her eyes, and they needed a moment to adjust before she could see again. The girl peering back at her from the mirror looked fairly ghastly, her green eyes smudged and swollen with black circles from lack of sleep. Her hair was an absolute mess and best resembled a crow’s nest.

Pulling the top of her pajamas aside, Harriet surveyed her scar and made a disgusted noise in the back of her throat. The redness outlining the white branches looked close to blistering, and it itched fiercely. Stripping off her top, she rooted through the shelves until she found the creme Madam Pomfrey had given her, and she slapped great globs of it over her chest, collarbone, and neck. Some of the itchiness abated, but the redness remained.

“Merlin,” she said, poking her skin. “That’s nasty.”

Figuring she wouldn’t be getting back to sleep anytime soon, Harriet dressed, doused the lamp, and slumped back into the dormitory, but she settled in the chair at her carrel rather than her bed. Leaning on her arm, she rubbed at her head and the tension forming there, then sighed.

Her gaze fell on one of the windows.

I wonder what they ’re doing out there….

She slipped her hand inside her collar and pulled out her Atlas, finding her wand next. She pointed it at the glass.

“Non Ducor Duco.

Blue light poured from the Atlas as it expanded. Harriet shifted, angling her body so it wouldn’t shine over the beds. The hangings had Dampening Charms on them for both noise and light, but they weren’t very strong.

Search: Tom Riddle, the Tor.

The Atlas warmed beneath her fingers as it tried to find Tom Riddle at the Tor—but question marks bloom, half the Tor coming into view, only the Sangforts seemingly in residence.

“Well, he didn’t go there,” Harriet mumbled to herself. Really, she had no way to guess where Slytherin would go outside of Hogwarts; she didn’t know the bloke all that well. She knew he was a psychopath who delighted in torturing children and didn’t much care to learn where he liked to holiday.

Search: Albus Dumbledore.

Dumbledore wasn’t anywhere she knew either, and nor was Snape when she looked for him.

Frustrated, Harriet turned her attention to Umbridge, wondering what the toad was up to at this time of night. Maybe she was out crawling through the corridors, looking for students to punish. Fortunately, she wasn’t; Umbridge’s dot showed itself in one of the guest bedrooms near the Headmaster’s office. She couldn’t get into Dumbledore’s quarters, and everyone knew the gargoyle outside the main office door often pretended it couldn’t hear her giving the password.

Snorting, Harriet swiped her fingers over the Atlas, letting it scroll through various corridors and passages. It didn’t look like any students were out of bed, and Harriet didn’t blame them. Even Filch had tucked himself inside his quarters and wasn’t out patrolling. Harriet let her thoughts wander as she traced idle lines through her favorite halls and classrooms. She almost missed a flicker of motion in the corner of the Atlas’ view.

Pausing, Harriet scrolled back, finding a cluster of people moving through the fifth-floor corridor. She squinted, separating the names over the dots—.

Antonin Dolohov. Amycus Carrow. Accipto Lestrange. Thorfinn Rowle. Rodulphus Lestrange. Bellatrix Lestrange.

Harriet blinked, then blinked again. She didn’t dare breathe.

Shock fell over her in a wave as she watched a horde of Death Eaters slowly move through the nearly printed lines of Hogwarts.

I’m dreaming, she thought, slack-jawed and horrified. It’s a bad dream. I’m having another dream—.

Her scar throbbed, and Harriet stood, her chair smacking to the carrel. She almost knocked her glasses off in her haste to rub her eyes and pinch her skin. When she looked at the Atlas again, the dots were still there.

Oh, fucking hell.

Standing in the cold, dark dormitory, wearing nothing but her nightdress and slightly dirty carpet slippers, Harriet thought she might be ill—or pass out. Her vision swam, and she had to take a deep, ragged breath.

There were Death Eaters in the castle.

What was she meant to do? Never in her wildest imaginings had Harriet thought Death Eaters would stroll right into Hogwarts, brazen as they pleased. This wasn’t a gaggle of arsehole Guardians coming here in the guise of protecting the castle; Harriet avoided them whenever she could, but they had to behave themselves, to a degree. No, these were wanted Death Eaters who’d gone to prison for murder, torture, and other unspeakable things. They were here, in a school filled with unsuspecting children.

What could Harriet do? Dumbledore was gone—Slytherin, Snape. She didn’t even know where they were. The Floos were all closed. She felt like a hand was closing in around her throat, squeezing, the walls closing in—.

McGonagall!

Frantic, Harriet searched for McGonagall on the map and found her unmoving in her quarters.

I have to wake her, and Flitwick, and Sprout. I have to—.

Harriet could see the names of students in the dormitories, fast asleep. What if she caused a panic? What if she didn’t? What if—what if the Death Eaters were coming for them? What if they weren’t prepared? What should she do?

Close to hyperventilating, Harriet flew across the room on silent feet and slipped through Hermione’s curtains. She fumbled into the dark but managed to grab her friend by the arms and shake her, hard, hissing, “Wake up! You have to wake up, right now!”

“Wh—what? Harriet—what on earth are you doing—?”

“Get up,” she whispered, forcing urgency into her tone. She still held the Atlas in her other hand, the edge clenched tightly between her fingers. “Get up, Hermione! There’s Death Eaters in the bloody castle!”

What?!

Harriet shushed her, and with one hand wrapped around her wrist, she yanked Hermione toward Elara’s bed. The other witch took longer to wake up, but once she was, she stared at Harriet like she lost her mind. Both she and Hermione looked like ghosts in the Atlas’ cold, blue light.

“Look—look!” Harriet shoved it toward them. “Death Eaters! Tell me I’m seeing things!”

Hermione squinted, but given how her face paled and her expression fell, Harriet guessed she wasn’t seeing things after all. She wished she had been. “How—how did they get in?!”

“I don’t think that really matters at the moment, Hermione!” Harriet swallowed, her mouth dry, and she licked her lips. Think Potter, think. “We have to get McGonagall. She’s still Deputy Headmistress. She’ll be able to do—something. She’ll at least know where Dumbledore is!”

“Christ,” Elara muttered, and Harriet looked down to see her dazed god-sister watching the Atlas. Rowle and Rodulphus had broken away from the main group when they reached a fork in the corridor.

That ’s not good.

“The house-elves,” Elara said, shaking herself more awake, her expression hardening. “We can send the house-elves to find the professors and protect the students—evacuate them if they need to. But we shouldn’t alert the Death Eaters by waking the students. We have no idea why those monsters are here and can’t leave the dorms unaware.”

“Okay,” Harriet said, voice shaking with adrenaline. “Okay—Winky!”

It took yet another minute to explain the situation to the house-elf once she arrived, and as Harriet listened to her frightful squeaking, she felt less convinced about the effectiveness of this plan. Would the professors listen to a bunch of house-elves wailing about Death Eaters? They didn’t even call them Death Eaters. Winky kept referring to them as ‘bad, bad wizards,’ and thunking herself on the head, fat tears dripping from her eyes. If McGonagall didn’t take her warning seriously, what would happen? What if she decided to go out into the school unprepared—?

Her stomach twisted.

“We’ll go to McGonagall,” Harriet finally decided when Winky departed, lurching from Elara’s bed. She went straight to her hamper, grabbing the first clothes she could. She didn’t bother with modesty at the moment, yanking on the uniform she used the day before as quickly as quietly as she could. Seeing what she was doing, her friends did the same.

“What do you mean?” Hermione whispered, frantic. “We can’t go out there! We’re safer in the dormitory!”

Are we?” She pointed at the Atlas, buttoning her shirt. Accipto Lestrange moved with the Death Eaters, never a step out of place. They’d moved down to the fourth floor. “He knows the password to the common room.”

Hermione clasped a hand over her mouth. Her arms shook.

“Me and you will go to the McGonagall,” she said. “We’ll show her the Atlas. If we take this route here, we’ll be nowhere near the Death Eaters. And—Elara?”

The taller witch looked at her, half her face lit by the weak aquamarine glow thrown by the moonlight sliding through the waves outside. Fear almost choked Harriet, and she reached out to cling to her god-sister’s arm.

“Go to the Headmaster’s office.”

“What good would that do? I need to come with you two.”

“No—you need to get through the Floo. Umbridge took over the office, yeah? It’s the only active Floo in the building. Go through it to Grimmauld Place. Alert the Order. Someone there has to ruddy know where Dumbledore is—or Slytherin or somebody, for fuck’s sake.”

“Send one of the house-elves!”

“We can’t trust them to know what to do!” One of their dormmates moaned and shifted in her sleep, roused by their voices. Harriet forced herself to speak lower, squeezing Elara’s arm. “The house-elves are going to be scared. They could make a mistake, and we can’t afford that right now.”

Elara closed her mouth, her eyes fixed on Harriet’s.

“You’re faster as an Animagus. Take the Invisibility Cloak. It’s too difficult for one person to run with it on, let alone two. Even if Hermione and I get caught—.”

“Don’t you dare—!”

Harriet grabbed both her hands, holding on tight. “Even if we get caught, which we won’t, you have to reach the Order. Someone has to get Dumbledore.”

It took another handful of minutes to argue with Elara, adamant as she was against leaving Hermione and Harriet on their own. By then, the main cluster of Death Eaters had moved to the third floor. Rowle and Rodulphus had split up, and Harriet had the dreadful suspicious they sought students out of bed. She hadn’t seen anybody—but what if she was wrong? What if she was wrong?

“We have to hurry,” she begged Elara. “Elara, I’m bloody terrified if we don’t do something now, it’ll be too late.”

At last, Elara agreed, and Harriet’s hands slipped from hers. They moved to the common room, Hermione clutching her own Atlas, leaving Harriet free to take out her wand. When Elara shifted into her dog form, Harriet tied the Invisibility Cloak around her, and the snarling Grim disappeared.

“Go fast,” Harriet whispered, heart in her throat. They crept to the common room entrance and slowly, slowly eased it open.

The dungeons yawned before them, black as night and all the more horrifying for the monsters they knew skulked freely in those halls. They were running out of time. The Death Eaters were coming.

Harriet doubled her grip on her wand, steeling herself.

Run.”


 

A/N: I ’ve gotten a couple of comments about Snape being in the classroom despite being suspended last chapter; it’s not an error. The conversation with Ron happened before he was suspended. “ They came for Dumbledore first …Slytherin was escorted off next, followed by Hagrid and then Snape . ” They didn’t get the boot all at once.

Chapter 285: no other choice

Chapter Text

cclxxxv. no other choice

 

The climb from the dungeons to the seventh floor had never felt so long in Harriet’s life.

McGonagall kept her quarters near the Gryffindor common room, which was great for the students in her House if they’d any need of her, but bloody awful for two Slytherin witches running through the school like their life depended on it. Hermione’s breathing had reduced into a tight puff as she tried to keep up with Harriet, who couldn’t seem to get enough air into her lungs. She kept listening, her ears perked for any sign of movement aside from their own, and Hermione kept looking at the Atlas, searching for the Death Eaters.

“Wait—!” Hermione gasped as they reached the fourth floor. “Wait, wait!

“What is it?” Harriet demanded as they stopped. Hermione used the moment to study the Atlas, bringing it closer to her face. Her brow gleamed with spots of dewy perspiration in the blue light.

“I think—oh, they’ve definitely turned around.”

“What?” Harriet shoved herself next to Hermione so she could peer at the Atlas as well. As Hermione had said, the Death Eaters had gone from the third floor back to the fourth. Though across the castle from them, it was still much too close for Harriet’s taste.

“But they were almost to the second floor a moment ago!” She gripped at her hair, pulling until her scalp stung. “And where in the bloody fuck did Rowle go?”

“I don’t—don’t know—.”

Harriet grabbed Hermione by the arm and pulled her into motion again. If the Death Eaters were on the move, maybe they were looking for her. Maybe they knew where she was somehow. The idea horrified her, but she didn’t have time to fret about it. They had to run.

Sprinting, they crossed onto the fifth floor. Harriet used a Moon Mirror to take them a floor higher still, and by the time they dashed up the stairwell two steps at a time and reached the seventh floor, both witches felt ready to collapse.

One of the many, many benefits of the Atlas was its uncanny ability to read passwords through the wards and translate them onto the glass. Without it, Hermione and Harriet would have been stuck outside the portrait of a stern Victorian woman who didn’t look to have any inclination to let students into the professor’s quarters. However, she had no choice once they sputtered the password, and the pair tumbled into the dark room beyond.

McGonagall’s sitting room reflected much of the witch’s personality. Even without the lights on, Harriet could see it was kept prim and tidy, a tartan blanket on the back of the sofa, a vase of preserved thistle flowers on the corner of the mantel. The vast number of photographs hung on the wall by the desk took Harriet by surprise, but she guessed it shouldn’t have. For all her strictness, McGonagall was caring and well-liked. She must have made a vast number of friends through the years.

The moment passed, and Harriet dashed around the sofa, across the room, and through the door she guessed led into the bedroom. She hoped McGonagall would forgive her for the intrusion as she dashed to the side of the bed and reached to grab the slumbering woman’s arm.

“Professor! Professor Mc—.”

McGonagall woke with a gasp and sat up in the same motion, wand out, a searing hex nearly taking Harriet’s head from her body. The stray sparks burnt her cheek.

Lumos Candela!

The candles flickered to life, and McGonagall blinked at the pair of them. Her usual strict bun had been let down in a long plait, and she appeared younger without her glasses. Harriet imagined she and Hermione must look quite deranged standing in her bedroom in their slap-shod uniforms, their faces red with sweat.

“Miss Potter!” McGonagall finally managed to say. “What in the blessed fates do you think you’re doing?! You can’t just—.”

“Professor, there’s Death Eaters in the castle,” Harriet interrupted, stressing her words. “Five, we counted.”

McGonagall just stared at her. “What on earth are you talking about?” she demanded, but she sounded less aghast and more serious, demanding.

Hermione rushed forward with the Atlas extended. “Here, look here—.”

McGonagall accepted the Atlas, her brow furrowed, then reached for her square spectacles. Harriet plucked them from the nightstand and handed them to her. McGonagall settled them on her face and peered down at the glowing lens dropped on her covered lap.

“The Atlas can show where people are in the castle,” Hermione rushed to explain. “So long as we know the area and have been there before. Harriet couldn’t sleep, and she gave it a quick check, and—oh, just look, Professor!”

McGonagall did look. The Atlas was focused on Thorfinn Rowle, and though Harriet couldn’t see very well, she thought he might be somewhere on the second floor, on the far side of the Astronomy Tower’s lower wing. He passed quite close to the dot Charity Burbage, slumbering unawares in her quarters.

A sharp intake of air crossed McGonagall’s lips. Her face paled. “But that’s impossible.”

“The Atlas doesn’t lie, Professor,” Harriet insisted. “I would not have jumped to conclusions if I wasn’t completely certain.”

For a moment, McGonagall looked stunned and at a loss for words.

“We sent Elara to the Headmaster’s office,” Hermione said, breaking the silence. “For her to use the Floo. She can contact the Order—.”

“You should not have sent her anywhere!” McGonagall said in a furious rush, shoving the Atlas back toward Hermione. She threw the blankets off so she could get out of bed. The sudden flurry of motion caused Harriet to stumble. “None of you should have left the safety of the dormitory! What were you thinking, running here when there’s Death Eaters in the corridors?!”

Harriet didn’t point out it wasn’t as if they’d gone on a midnight stroll for fun. McGonagall wouldn’t even have known about the Death Eaters if not for them. They hadn’t wanted to leave the bloody dormitory. McGonagall didn’t seem in a mood to hear reason.

The older witch yanked on her dressing gown, tying a particularly sturdy knot about the middle. With her wand in one hand, she all but lunged at the wall, startling Harriet and Hermione. She placed her palm flat upon the stone and splayed her fingers, almost as if trying to push it outward.

“Professor, what—?”

“Quiet,” McGonagall whispered. She squeezed her eyes shut, concentrating. A moment passed with nothing seeming to happen. McGonagall lifted her hand, shook it out, and pressed it to the stone again, uttering a low, urgent, “Come on,” beneath her breath.

Harriet and Hermione exchanged glances. What was she doing?

“Oh, that absolute bitch of a woman!” the professor cried, Harriet and Hermione jumping in fright. “I cannae commune with the castle because of her!”

McGonagall yanked her hand back and gnashed her teeth. She turned to Harriet and Hermione. “No matter that she is loathed, Umbridge is Headmistress of the castle for now, and because she refuses to recognize me as her Deputy, I cannot reach Hogwarts’ wards.”

She passed a hand over her brows, deep lines forming between them as she tried to formulate a plan. Harriet felt at a complete loss. If even McGonagall wasn’t certain of what to do, what chance did the rest of them have? Had they done the right thing? Was Elara safe? What if the students were at risk? Should they have woken them up?

McGonagall straightened. “Yes, okay—you two, with me. Let’s go quickly. I can activate the emergency defenses from the Headmistress’ office and alert the Aurory. Hurry—.”

She led the way back into the sitting room. They hadn’t yet reached the portrait when a sudden boom! rocked the frame.

Quicker than Harriet or Hermione could react, McGonagall shoved them back, standing in front with her wand drawn. The portrait gave a feeble shout—a warning—before it caved in, the frame splintering, canvas burning away. Smoke poured into the room.

A black boot stepped through the open portal.

Harriet’s heart hammered against her sternum. They hadn’t been paying attention. In the panic, they’d been watching where Rowle was, but they hadn’t watched the main group—.

“Where oh where has that little snake gone?” crooned a high, feminine voice, the sound sending chills down Harriet’s spine. “Oh where, oh where could she be?”

Harriet pressed her sleeve to her mouth and tried not to cough, her eyes watering. Dark shapes loomed, and she and Hermione pulled closer to Professor McGonagall. The older witch quietly incanted, “Fumos Redacto.”

The smoke cleared in increments, revealing the Death Eaters who’d crept into the room. Harriet had seen Death Eaters and Dark wizards before, but not like this. Fresh out of Azkaban, they best resembled ghastly horrors, swaddled in their black robes, silver masks upon their withered faces. The one she thought to be Antonin Dolohov stood over six and a half feet in height, and Amycus Carrow better resembled a twisted, twitchy scarecrow. Between them, Bellatrix Lestrange stood, seemingly without a care in the world. She lifted a hand and removed her mask.

It was startling how much she resembled Elara. Their eyes were different colors, and their hair didn’t have the same texture, but there was something similar in her bearing, something in her sharp jawline and high cheekbones, the exacting curve of her brow. But for all their similarities, there existed a wealth of differences. The skin was waxy and off-color. Her lips were chaffed. Her sunken eyes glinted with malice, and the wicked smile she wore spoke volumes about her state of mind.

Hunting for students through a school proved great fun for Bellatrix Lestrange.

Behind her waited Accipto. He had his wand out—held prone on his flat palm, allowing it to spin. The end came to a rest pointed at Harriet.

He used a ruddy Point-Me spell. That’s it? Bloody hell.

There she is,” Bellatrix cackled. “Little Harriet Potter.”

“How did you get into the school?” McGonagall demanded, her back stiff, wand held at the ready. She didn’t know where the attack would come from first. Harriet could tell by how she wavered ever so slightly between targets. Half-hidden behind her professor, Harriet studied the Death Eaters.

She didn’t know them well, but she could hear Snape’s voice at her ear, telling her to pay attention, to catalog what she saw. Of the four, Carrow looked the most ill and least coordinated; she didn’t know if that was because of Azkaban or if he’d been like that before, but she guessed he’d be the slowest to move. Dolohov looked solid and physically strong, quick. Bellatrix’s hand fairly twitched upon her wand, eager to see battle, but for all her bravado, Harriet thought she’d wait for Dolohov to act, striking while they were distracted. Harriet knew Accipto was fast, but in this dynamic, she guessed he would defer to the Death Eaters first.

All she could do was guess. It made her palms slick with terror.

Holding her hand where the Death Eaters couldn’t see, Harriet slowly gripped the back of McGonagall’s elbow. She gave it a tiny push, and McGonagall allowed the motion, her wand angling ever slightly toward Dolohov.

“We have my good son to thank for that, don’t we?” Bellatrix said in answer to the question. She moved enough to reach for Accipto’s face, stroking his cheek. He didn’t appear pleased by the gesture, but he allowed it. “Such a good boy, my Accipto. So handsome.” Her narrow, sharp fingers brushed upward over his covered forehead. “Except for this, of course. Oh, but we’ll settle things in the end, won’t we, my son?” She laughed. “I’ll show that McKinnon whore-spawn what a real Black witch is like.”

How did you get in?” McGonagall thundered again. Bellatrix pouted.

“Vanishing Cabinet,” Accipto answered, his eyes narrowed. “I heard about them from the war, that cowards could step into one if someone came blasting their door down and appear in the other. Aunt Ospra has one, but the mate was burned. Fortunately for me, there’s one on the fifth floor here. It took a while to find—but how lucky for us that it opens directly into a second cabinet in Borgin and Burkes?”

“Well, you can do us all a great service and step right back through it, Mr. Lestrange,” McGonagall retorted through clenched teeth. “I don’t know what you meant by bringing them here, but you will not accomplish it. The authorities have already been notified.”

Bellatrix clucked her tongue. “Then we’ll just have to be on our way, won’t we?” She raised her wand, jabbing it toward McGonagall’s face. “Step aside, you withered hag. My Lord requires the Potter girl. Give us her, and we’ll walk away. Either that, or you can die, and we’ll start punting first-years off the roof. What kind of sound do you think their little heads make when they pop on the ground?”

Carrow wheezed a laugh.

McGonagall had heard quite enough, and she fired a fiery curse toward Dolohov. He shielded, the spell rocketing into a window, glass shattering in a wild spray of thick, jagged splinters. In an instant, Bellatrix launched a spell at McGonagall—.

Protego Horribilis!

Harriet blocked the incoming Dark magic and fired her own curse, Bellatrix quickly jolting aside, shoving Accipto away. Hermione struck Carrow with a Leg-Locker Curse, and he toppled, smacking his head on the mantel.

Stupefy!

Harriet tried catching Dolohov off-guard, but she was right to think he was fast, a flick of his wand sending the spell away, another twitch blocking McGonagall’s attack. The carpet sputtered, set aflame. The tartan blanket flew off the back of the sofa and wrapped around Accipto like a straight jacket, throwing him to the floor. Harriet blocked another spell from Bellatrix, her arm moving, readying to step forward and press the advantage—.

They weren’t expecting someone to come from behind.

Suddenly, arms around Hermione, startling a shriek from her. Surprised, McGonagall’s eyes jumped to her—.

It was enough to get past her guard. Dolohov hurled a spell, purple light glaring, and it caught McGonagall in the middle. Harriet stumbled as her professor clipped her, falling back, slamming into the wardrobe with a pained shout. Harriet lurched in front of her, deflecting a second attack from Dolohov—.

Enough!” Bellatrix snarled.

Panting, Harriet held her ground, surveying the room. Carrow looked to be unconscious. Accipto fought with the blanket, and Dolohov crouched to free him. Bellatrix kept her wand pointed squarely at Harriet, a small smile on her deranged face.

Peter Pettigrew had an arm around Hermione, keeping hers pinned to her side. His wand jabbed into her throat.

Harriet couldn’t stop staring. Where did he come from? she wondered, heart sinking. He wasn’t on the Atlas with the others? He must have split from the group before I even had the chance to spot them!

She imagined it hadn’t been too difficult for him to slip around them as a rat. In the heat of a duel, no one would have noticed him darting by, getting positioned—.

“We can make this nice and simple now,” Dolohov said as he stood. He had an accent Harriet thought might be Russian, but not thick. “You will come with us, Potter, quietly. Come along, and we won’t kill the Mudblood.”

“No—,” Hermione started, but Wormtail dug his wand in a little farther.

On the floor, McGonagall uttered a weak, raspy cough. Harriet couldn’t spare a lingering look, but she could see the blood. It formed a thin, smeared puddle on the flagstones, oozing from beneath the witch’s body.

Dolohov directed his wand toward the professor. Bellatrix—and Accipto, now standing—kept their wands on Harriet.

“You’re very formidable,” Dolohov acknowledged. “And quick. But do you think you’re quick enough to stop me from killing the old witch and protect yourself?”

Harriet didn’t know. She didn’t know. Her knees shook.

“I say we cut off her hand and get on our way,” Bellatrix said, her heavy eyes flicking over Harriet. “Surely that’s all we need?”

“No,” Dolohov snapped. “No, this will go much easier if she cooperates—and you want to cooperate, yes, Potter?”

Harriet didn’t respond. She tried to think of a dozen different things she could do, but if she attacked, someone would die—either McGonagall or Hermione. She couldn’t protect them both at the same time.

Her chest rose and fell with quick, panicked breaths.

Potter,” McGonagall wheezed, her shaking fingers brushing her ankle. “Don’t—.

“If you fight us, I will kill the witch,” Dolohov said. He didn’t have the same mocking tone as Bellatrix; his words came out as hard assurances. “And Wormtail will kill the Mudblood. Come quietly, Potter. Come quietly, and we won’t harm the others. You have my word.”

“Your word means nothing!”

“It should. Must I vow on my magic? Come now. Make things easier for yourself. We will not harm them.”

You’ll just harm me, right?

Harriet didn’t want them to hurt her. She knew exactly what fate awaited her in the hands of the Dark Lord and his Death Eaters, and it involved all manner of torture and degradation before her inevitable end.

If she fought, maybe she could get away. In fact, she wagered she could; if she dashed to the window right now and jumped, she could change into her Animagus form, and she probably could reach the Forbidden Forest before they cursed her out of the air.

But they would kill McGonagall and Hermione. Then, they’d move on to the other students.

Slowly, Harriet lowered her wand.

There was no other choice.


A/N: Ideally, they would have started hexing the DEs the second they stuck a toe through the portrait lol. But then we wouldn ’t have the Monologue. All hail the Villain Monologue!

The DEs, fifteen minutes after kidnapping Harriet: “Oh my god, this was a mistake.”

The DEs: “Oh Merlin’s arse, why does she keep biting ?!

The DEs: “We’re going to need back-up.”

The DEs: “Someone send help—ahhHHHH!”

 

Chapter 286: ashes to ashes

Chapter Text

cclxxxvi. ashes to ashes

 

The pads on her paws thumped over the stone floor as she ran through the moonlit castle.

The only time Elara enjoyed running was in her Animagus form. It seemed to be the only time her lungs wanted to work. Her mind embraced the fleeting freedom, the exaltation. A pleasant ache radiated in her limbs as the muscles coiled, stretched, and the floor flew below her.

The Invisibility Cloak fluttered along the length of her back.

For a brief moment, she forgot about the Death Eaters. A dog’s mind thought only of the immediate—run, bark, bite, eat. It didn’t swallow Elara, but it provided a thin buffer between her mind and her panic. That buffer only started to fade when she reached the seventh floor and found herself panting in front of the Headmaster’s gargoyle.

Reluctant, she changed forms again, the Cloak adjusting as she rose tall. The panic returned in full force, and Elara had to lean upon the wall as he lungs seized, prickles of pain moving ghost-like down her sides.

Wheezing, she stuck her hand in her pocket and fumbled through it—gasping with relief when she found one of the emergency vials Snape had given her. No bigger than the tip of her thumb, it nonetheless had enough of the Antihistamine Potion in it to quiet the feeling of brambles in her chest. Elara took the potion, then tossed the vial aside. She took long, cleansing breaths.

Hurry.

She opened her eyes, then fumbled with the Cloak’s tie, parting the front so she could see her own clothes and it hung loose on her shoulders. She gripped the fob chain hanging from her pocket, having been left unattached in her rush to dress. Elara pulled, and the Atlas fell out, dangling from the chain. Light from the torches bent where the large crack damaged the lens.

Still breathing hard, Elara brought the Atlas up to her eye without bothering to open it fully. She peered through it—and the password to the gargoyle appeared in fuzzy blue letters above its immobile head.

“Marvolo?” Elara said aloud. Good lord, that woman is obsessed.

Rock groaned and ground against itself as the gargoyle sprung to life, and it moved aside so Elara could enter the spiral staircase. She did so and allowed the motion to carry her upward, taking a moment to finish catching her breath as she turned her thoughts to Harriet and Hermione.

She didn’t know if she believed in God. Most days, she decided she didn’t, but in times like these, Elara couldn’t stop how the prayers came to her, how they sat in her mouth like physical weights until she muttered them softly under her breath. She would pray if it meant her friends would be all right. She would do a great deal more than that if it meant she could protect them.

The carved door at the top of the steps was locked, not that Elara was surprised. If Dumbledore had been in office, she wouldn’t have been able to open it, but Umbridge couldn’t manage much more than the most simple locking spell. Elara dismissed it with a flick of her wand, and she rushed inside.

A few students had been called to the Head’s office during Umbridge’s tenor. Typically, she preferred to meet with students in her original office on the fifth floor—and Elara could see why. The witch hadn’t managed to do much of anything in here aside from shove Professor Dumbledore’s possessions aside like a petulant child. According to Hermione, there were boring, typically negligible bylaws about dealing with a prior Headmaster’s possessions and what happened to them—whether they needed to be collected by the Headmaster themself, a relative, or properly removed by the staff. The castle may have allowed Umbridge into the office, but it hadn’t allowed her to remove a single thing.

The miserable witch had only managed to conjure gaudy, cabbage rose curtains over every single portrait. Elara couldn’t help but stop and stare for a moment, taken aback by the spectacle, her lip curling on its own volition.

Tasteless. She couldn ’t stand to listen to them mock her, could they?

Dismissing the thought, Elara rushed to the hearth—and immediately ran into a problem.

No!” she hissed, outraged. She swept her hands over the top of the mantel where a witch or wizard might keep their dish of Floo Powder, and there was nothing. There was an array of tchotchke china plates featuring playful kittens and bizarre, wide-eyed cat statues that Elara didn’t hesitate to sweep onto the floor as she searched every centimeter of the mantel. She found nothing.

“She must keep it nearby,” she whispered to herself, palming her forehead as she surveyed the shattered mess on the hearth. “She must use the Floo all the time to contact the Ministry. God help us if she keeps the powder on her person—.”

Elara didn’t allow herself to finish the thought, and instead rushed to the desk. The magic locking those drawers definitely didn’t belong to Umbridge—but before Elara could despair, the locks clicked of their own accord and sprung open. She dove into the sheer mess hidden within Professor Dumbledore’s desk drawers, clawing through balled-up parchment and tangled thread, broken quills, a knitting magazine, candle nubs, notebooks, journals, loose coins from across the globe, open bags of sweets, a photograph of him and Snape drunk at a Yule party that Elara quickly pocketed, singing keys, a tiny broom, jars of phoenix ash, a giggling compass, sachets, an hourglass, a stale, half-eaten pastry, runestones, charts, maps, and fourteen dozen buttons.

“Oh, for Pete’s sake!” Elara cursed, whipping out her wand. “Accio Floo Powder.”

A velvet-wrapped pouch wriggled free of the hoard and flew into Elara’s outstretched hand. She hastily undid the top cord securing it closed and rushed toward the fireplace.

Expulso Minimo.”

A sudden blast of pressure collided with Elara’s side and threw her off her feet. She crashed into the floor, and the side of her head slammed into the rack holding the hearth tools. The long-handled tools fell with a clatter on the stone.

Dolores Umbridge stood inside the door, out of breath as if she’d hustled from her quarters to reach the office in time. “Aha!” the witch declared, holding her wand on Elara. “Aha!”

Elara rolled to her side, dazed, her vision swimming. She brushed her hand against her brow, and red streaked her pale skin.

“I’ve caught you in the act!” Umbridge continued as she marched closer. She wore horrid velour pajamas beneath a vividly shaded dressing gown with a feather collar. Elara had never seen a woman so hateful look so ridiculous.

She just attacked me.

“Are you barking mad?!” Elara demanded as she sat up—but when she went to rise, Umbridge flourished her wand again.

“I’ve caught you in the act! You’re doing something for Potter, aren’t you?” Umbridge practically salivated over the idea, standing over Elara. Floo Powder lay scattered across the floor, Elara’s wand caught under the edge of the carpet where it’d fallen. “She sent you here to spy on me! She sent you to spy on the Minister’s most trusted servant!”

“There are Death Eaters in the castle, you raving lunatic—!”

A Stinging Hex caught Elara in the shoulder, and her words cut off with a hiss.

“He said you’d make up lies,” Umbridge went on. “He warned me. He warned me about you and the Mudblood—that you’re seditious, poorly-behaved children who don’t know your place! Now, tell me what Potter sent you to do, Miss Black. Are you sending a message, hmm? Corresponding with criminals?”

Elara held her hands before herself, glaring daggers up at the squat witch. “I’ve told you, there’s Death Eat—.”

Another Stinging Hex landed in the same place. Elara yelped as the resulting welt doubled in size.

“I will get you to talk,” Umbridge swore. Her hair fell in her eyes, not that she seemed to notice, frantic as she was. “I will get you to talk, and you will give me what I need to get Potter expelled once and for all! I will not fail my Lord again!”

Elara’s eyes widened.

Crucio!

Pain enveloped Elara like an avalanche, bowling her over, crushing her. It throbbed in her bones and she flailed, trying to shake it off, throwing herself into the wall by the hearth as she tried to escape. It burned. It burned so badly, so terribly, and she screamed for it to end—.

Umbridge lifted her wand.

Elara came back to herself, panting and trembling, huddled against the wall. The Invisibility Cloak lay crumpled about her legs. Her throat ached, her vision spotted. The candlelight seemed to streak through the air as Umbridge approached her again.

“Well? Are you ready to speak now? Or do you need another dose of punishment?” Elara said nothing, shaking with disbelief, and Umbridge’s face reddened with fury. “You willful beast! You will tell me what Potter is doing! Do you hear me? You will tell me—!”

She reached for her as if to grab her by the arm, to shake her or perhaps pull Elara toward the center of the room—but Elara was having none of it.

With a snarl, her arm snaked forward, moving before she could give it a thought. Her bare, bloodied fingers wrapped about Umbridge’s pudgy wrist—and she pulled.

Blackness swept across the witch’s skin, crawling under the velour pajamas, skin flaking, peeling.

“What are you doing?! What are you—?!”

It came for her, consuming, the heedless march of undeterred feet, the magic that roared in Elara’s chest and begged to pool into her hands. She remembered the fruitless struggles of the rat, the weak tremble of bird wings rising again, pulling through her childish fingers. Elara kept pulling and pulling.

Umbridge screamed and tried to strike Elara, but Elara caught that fist in her other hand. Skin died first, and when it split like over-dried fruit, next came the muscles, the bones, blood dribbling to nothing, decay streaking through struggling organs. The witch’s terrified face bulged with rot before it, too, disappeared.

Umbridge had long stopped screaming when her wrists crumbled beneath Elara’s squeezing grip, her bones fazing through the Necromancer’s blackened fingers as nothing but ash. The velour pajamas crumpled, and the skull bounced upon the mound before it darkened, cracked, and splintered to dust.

Elara’s heart raced. Her vision blurred as she held her hands away from herself.

The Floo Powder.

She searched for it, the sparkling silver specs mixed with cinders on the ruined carpet. Elara choked, skull throbbing. Liquid dripped from her nose across her lips, staining her chin. Pain seized her chest, and when she coughed, red splattered across the hearth.

I have to—!

She tipped onto her side. The room darkened.

I have to help Harriet—!

Her head thumped onto the floor, blood mixing with the ashes of Dolores Umbridge, and Elara knew no more.


A/N:

Dumbledore: “I am a serene, put-together, all-knowing wizard.”

Dumbledore: “…”

Dumbledore: “No, you can’t look in my desk, why?”

Chapter 287: row ninety-seven

Chapter Text

cclxxxvii. row ninety-seven

 

The Death Eaters made quick work of leaving Hogwarts once they had what they’d come for.

Accipto went to grab Rowle and Rodulphus, and they rejoined their group as Dolohov and Bellatrix marched them down to the fifth floor at an exacting pace. Dolohov half carried Carrow, who’d been revived but needed treatment for his concussion. He kept cursing at Hermione, who’d been forced to come along for “assurance.”

“To make sure you’re a good girl, Harriet,” Bellatrix cackled.

Harriet refused to let them take her wand. “I’ll go down fighting before I allow that,” she rejected, steadfast despite how her voice shook. “And I’ll take at least one of you with me. It’s easier if I cooperate, innit? Are you willing to die or fail whatever your mission is?”

The Death Eaters obviously would have pressed the issue if they’d had more time, but for now, they relied on their numbers to cow Harriet into moving. That confidence when gathered in a greater group had to be their biggest failing. However, Harriet’s heart fell a little more when Rowle and Rodulphus appeared with Accipto—followed by yet another Death Eater, a woman Dolohov addressed as “Alecto.”

How many of them did I miss on the Atlas?

When they reached the fifth floor, they headed straight to the plain, boring corridor Harriet had seen Accipto in months before, and they opened the doors to a tall, black cabinet. Dolohov, Rowle, and Amycus Carrow went first, climbing into the cramped space and shutting the doors. Harriet and Hermione clamored in next at wandpoint.

“Harriet,” Hermione whimpered seconds before the doors closed on them. “What do we do—?”

“Wait for an opportunity,” Harriet told her. “Until then, stay close. They’re in a hurry and don’t have the time to make sport of us, but if we push them, they’ll make the time.”

The warmth and security of Hogwarts vanished in an instant—replaced by the dull, oily light oozing through the interior of a dark, moldering shop. Dolohov had the doors open an instant after they closed, and he ordered the girls out of the cabinet. He pointed his wand at Hermione’s face.

“If you run here, you might escape,” he told Harriet, his face still hidden behind the silver mask. “But the Mudblood will die.”

Harriet clenched her jaw and said nothing.

Soon enough, the seven Death Eaters and Accipto Lestrange forced Harriet and Hermione through a narrow aisle and then out the store’s front door. Given the time of night, even Knockturn Alley had a dearth of patrons stumbling through its dark, seedy warren, and once hurried onto Diagon, Harriet saw no one at all.

She didn’t know if she wanted anyone to appear or not. Yelling for help would only get someone killed.

Harriet wrinkled her nose in confusion, wondering where the Death Eaters were going. Then, they entered Empiric Alley.

The Ministry.

The glass doors to the Ministry’s entrance already stood open, waiting, and the Death Eaters slipped inside without fanfare. Rodulphus hung back for a moment, surveying the street outside, and Harriet heard him muttering wards beneath his mask.

What are they doing? Surely, there has to be someone here who’ll notice—.

The Watchwizard station stood empty. Red dots flecked the counter.

Another Death Eater waited by the lifts, dressed in his black robes and silver mask, though Harriet noticed a large crack in its surface. He wore gloves, but she could still see something was amiss with his hand, the limb distorted in the leather casing.

“You brought one too many,” the wizard grunted as their group piled into the lift, Bellatrix keeping a firm hand on Harriet’s upper arm. Her nails felt like daggers where they dug into her skin. His mask dipped as he twisted in place to stare at the pair of young, frightened witches. “Why’d you bring the other?”

Dolohov grunted. “Insurance.”

“Just get rid of her now.”

Harriet stiffened, her fingers tightening around her wand, ready to blast the floor out from the lift and take them all down with her if they dared—.

“No,” Dolohov snapped. “She’s here to keep Potter in line.”

The wizard scoffed into his mask. “I could keep Potter in line all right.” He made a lewd gesture by grabbing the front of his trousers.

“If you want your grubby cock to stay attached to your body, Macnair, you’ll keep quiet,” Bellatrix tutted. She balanced her chin on Harriet’s shoulder, and Harriet felt the ghost of her lips much too close to her ear. “The pretender has been training this one. My Lord says to be very, very careful.” She laughed.

Harriet eased her arm closer to Hermione’s, and they clasped hands between each other, where the Death Eaters couldn’t see. Hermione trembled.

“Did you run into any trouble?” Dolohov asked the wizard—Macnair.

Macnair? Walden Macnair? Harriet stared down at her shoes, thinking. But he works at the Ministry. He’s not a Death Eater. He’s a—.

Guardian. A Guardian of the Magical Right.

The wizard made an aggrieved noise and lifted his injured arm. The hand wobbled on his wrist in a grotesque manner. “There’s some nasty fecking curse work down there,” he said. “We need to get this job done so I can get this shite looked at.”

Pettigrew snickered.

The lift rocked as Macnair shifted his considerable weight, lunging toward Pettigrew. “What? You think that’s funny, rat?” he snarled as Wormtail cowered. “That’s what I thought, you sniveling heap of rubbish.”

Hermione’s hand slipped higher on Harriet’s wrist, pressing on the silver bangle there. The bracelet had been there since Harriet’s second year, a gift from Hermione. She thought of when she’d received in, sitting in the wilderness of Oxfordshire on her birthday, and she remembered how the sunlight had glimmered on the Charmed silver.

The comforting memory gave her the strength to step out of the lift when it arrived at the Atrium.

The massive hall much resembled how Harriet remembered it looking from her previous visits—aside from the lack of people. She knew it was very late, but surely there’d be someone around? Security, a late office worker? Somebody!

Bellatrix must have noticed her searching gaze because she leaned closer to Harriet, smiling. Her teeth were chipped, the gums pale and receding from poor conditions in prison. “Government holiday,” she said. “Given by the Minister himself! Isn’t Lord Gaunt generous, little Potter?”

Harriet didn’t reply.

“Of course, there was the odd straggler we had to…deal with….”

As if on cue, they passed the far edge of the fountain, and Harriet spotted a wizard prone on the floor, glassy eyes staring into space. A collection of parchment lay scattered around him as if he’d dropped his work when the Death Eaters came upon him.

Macnair broke away from the group with a grunt and grabbed the dead wizard by the ankle. He dragged him toward one of the Atrium’s dark corners.

Hermione’s hand shook harder in Harriet’s.

They continued on to the bank of lifts on the far side of the hall, boarding a familiar car that forced them to squeeze closer than before. As they started to descend, Harriet realized where they were going.

“The prophecies stored within the Halls may only be taken by those the prophecy refer to—.”

Her back straightened.

“So, does Voldemort just lend you out whenever he feels like it?” Harriet asked aloud, startling the Death Eaters. “Is that part of the on-boarding process? ‘Welcome to your life of eternal servitude, I may order you to follow the whims of my psycho alter-ego?’”

Bellatrix drove her nails into Harriet’s arm. “You dare speak his name?!” she hissed.

“Well, he dares to speak mine. Fair game, innit?”

The lift continued, the atmosphere tense.

Lower and lower they fell, and Harriet kept thinking about the empty Atrium, the sheer boldness of having Death Eaters stroll through Diagon. It was—barmy, frankly. What in the fuck was Gaunt’s end goal? He was being so—! So—.

“His efforts remain short-sighted and aggravating, and with the Dark Lord at his ear, he will only continue to spiral.”

Slytherin had told Harriet that, and it made her reflect on what she knew about Gaunt, what she’d witnessed in the past few years. Setting the Diadem Horcrux loose in the castle had been a calculated move that couldn’t be connected to Gaunt and had nearly removed both Slytherin and Dumbledore in one clean swoop. Kidnapping Harriet from Platform Nine and Three-Quarters had been methodical—a patient, well-thought-out trap that he must have started formulating the second he saw Terry Boot dead. Gaunt had been bold in his moves but still refined, still careful.

In contrast, hexing Harriet in front of the Wizengamot had not been refined or careful.

Ordering an attack on Hogsmeade had been risky—.

Sending Death Eaters and Guardians into Hogwarts to kidnap Harriet from her bed? Killing Ministry employees to clear the way? Letting them skip through Diagon? That was—.

—and with the Dark Lord at his ear, he will only continue to spiral—.”

Did something about the Dark Lord’s presence cause his Horcruxes to…deteriorate? To lose rationality and composure?

Harriet furrowed her brow, thinking fast.

Above their heads, a cool voice said, “Level nine. The Department of Mysteries.”

“Come along, Potter,” Bellatrix ordered, hauling Harriet out of the narrow lift opening. Hermione stayed stuck to her side, and the Death Eaters didn’t protest. They simply sneered, thinking they were getting their way.

Harriet remembered the long, cold passageway from her dreams, and it felt surreal to be there in person, marched down its length by a passel of masked lunatics. She expected to see the waiting door with its plain black paint and brass handle, but it was open—or, more accurately, blasted off its hinges.

Another wizard waited for them there, but he didn’t wear long black robes or a mask. He looked like the average bloke you might find hanging around the Ministry—if decidedly more roughed up, his lip split and his shoulder hanging awkwardly.

“What took you? You do not have much time,” the wizard said, a slight lisp to his words as if he’d injured his tongue. “My Lord is keeping the way open, but it will not be so for long—.”

“Whatever, Runcorn,” the woman named Alecto dismissed.

They crossed the threshold.

Harriet tripped when the strength of the magic inside fell upon her. She could tell it was leashed—pushed back, restrained—but its pressure leaned into her, and it took an effort to lift her head and study the black foyer. A hard shove from Bellatrix urged her and Hermione to start walking down the nearly invisible steps.

At the end of the long, winding staircase, they came upon the circular chamber Harriet had seen in her dreams. But, where the room was once lit by the soft, blue-hued nebula of sparkling stars, now it blazed blood-red with a series of runes hovering in the air. The Death Eaters went to great lengths not to touch them. Harriet dared hover a hand near one, and her fingers ached.

“They’re holding back the wards,” Hermione muttered. “The runes are acting like a dam, keeping back the magic that rests over this place.”

Harriet’s foot connected with something solid, and she looked down to see what she’d hit. A witch lay sprawled upon the floor, garbed in long, navy robes edged with silver. She didn’t move. Another witch slumped against the wall, motionless.

Someone waited by the door on the far right. Someone terribly familiar.

Though he wore a silver, bone-white mask that covered part of his face, Harriet had no difficulty recognizing Gaunt. Her scar started to itch the moment he came into view, and she felt his presence like a malignant sore festering in the middle of her forehead. His head tipped in their direction, and he stepped over the body of a man twitching in his death throes.

“You were instructed to bring Potter,” he said to the Death Eaters, eyes never leaving Harriet. Sweat dripped down her back from sheer anxiety. “And to keep casualties at a minimum. Why is the Mudblood here?”

“Leverage, Lord Gaunt,” Dolohov answered.

There it is again, Harriet thought, eyes narrowing.

One thing she’d learned about the Death Eaters, Guardians of the Magical Right, and the Knights of Walpurgis, was how bloody particular they could be about addressing Voldemort—whether that was Slytherin, Gaunt, or Voldemort himself. Very, very rarely had she heard the Knights address Slytherin as anything other than “my Lord,” circumstances surrounding them notwithstanding. At Hogwarts, appearances might force someone like Snape to call him “Professor,” but in private? Harriet knew if Snape said anything other than “my Lord” or “my Lord Slytherin,” he’d be in deep shite.

To have a Death Eater stand there and casually call him “Lord Gaunt,” as if he were just another knobhead in the Wizengamot? Oh, Gaunt must be fuming, and if he was fuming, he felt disrespected. Slytherin always had to reassert himself if he felt disrespected; Harriet imagined Gaunt was much the same.

“How much does it cost to rent Death Eaters nowadays, anyway?” she asked, earning a small, shocked whimper from Hermione. “Do they charge hourly, like a whore? Or do you get a discount rate if you take the lot? Are you babysitting them—or are they babysitting you?”

What are you doing?!” Hermione hissed. Harriet ignored her but tightened the grip on her hand. Don’t let go, don’t let go.

For an instant, Gaunt seemed too shocked to say anything—but the instant passed as quickly as it arrived, and he raised a hand toward Hermione—.

“Touch one hair on her head, and you’ll never get the prophecy.”

The Death Eaters stiffened. Gaunt’s hand paused in midair, then lowered. “Ah, so Dumbledore’s told you—for all the good it’s done him. Don’t mistake your situation, Miss Potter. You will be removing the prophecy whether you want to or not. The only difference is how much agony your cooperation might spare you.”

Harriet swallowed and spoke in a rush. “I’ll grab it for you if you let us leave unharmed.”

Gaunt started to laugh, a sound echoed by the Death Eaters until he snarled at them to be silent.

“You want things to be done quiet and simple, yeah? So let’s bargain.”

Bargain?” Gaunt’s mouth twisted in a smug half-grin. “What makes you think I wish to bargain with you, little girl? What makes you think I wouldn’t prefer watching you scream?”

Harriet ignored that last question. “Because it’d be nicer if all of this got swept under the rug, wouldn’t it? A few witches and wizards don’t show up for work in the morning—not a big deal. It brings less attention to your administration if I cooperate and make things easy, yeah? It’ll save time, too. Your gaggle of rent-a-minions didn’t do much damage at Hogwarts. Had a bit of a scuffle with McGonagall, but nothing I couldn’t Obliviate out of her. If Hermione and I are tucked back into our beds by morning, everything will go on as planned. If we’re not, well….”

Gaunt’s eyes narrowed behind his mask, and when he spoke, his tone lacked mockery. “And why would you agree to this?”

“Because I’m a Slytherin.” Harriet flattened a hand on her chest and reached deep inside herself for that forced, saccharine sweetness she’d used on the Dursleys when she got in trouble. It didn’t always work, but sometimes it did. “Slytherins bargain for survival.”

Gaunt seemed to consider her, stroking his chin in thought.

“She’s lying,” Bellatrix sneered, jabbing Harriet into the ribs with her wand. “The pretender has taught her how to lie. What a scheming, tricky brat.”

Harriet’s gaze cut toward her. “There’s nothing tricky about wanting to survive in exchange for something I don’t care about.”

“Don’t listen to her, Lord Gaunt—.”

Red eyes blazed. “Be quiet!” Gaunt snapped. Harriet spied how his left hand balled into a fist at his side. “You do not tell me what to do. Do you think me easily deluded by a wretched teenager?”

The Death Eaters fell silent. Harriet held her breath as Gaunt considered her again—and she saw how his gaze ever so slightly flickered toward the runes he must have carved. Maybe it was her imagination. Harriet felt the runes buzzing, prickling against her exposed skin—but beyond them, foreign magic thundered and loomed. She wondered how much longer they had until the runes failed.

Harriet saw the moment Gaunt decided to humor her. Oh, she suffered from no illusions. She wasn’t bloody stupid; she knew the moment he had the prophecy in his hand, both she and Hermione would be dead.

She had to ensure he didn’t get that far.

He had nothing to gain from letting her walk away alive but everything to gain if she got the prophecy for him. She needed Gaunt to believe himself in control, to be self-assured enough to indulge in this game. Harriet knew, without reservation, he could kill Hermione and force Harriet to do whatever he wished, no matter her bluffing. She would do whatever it took to make him play along.

We’re not dying here. Harriet’s fingers tightened around Hermione’s. I refuse to die here.

“Well, Miss Potter,” Gaunt said. He swept into the slightest of bows, a derisive smile on his lips. “After you.

Grim, Harriet and Hermione started forward through the next door.

The runes made for a rudimentary path; they formed barriers on either side of the pair as they walked, straining to keep between the lines Gaunt had so crudely drawn. All the while, Harriet could feel the Death Eaters aiming their wands at their backs.

“I think the lines keep the wards from alerting the Unspeakables,” Hermione murmured for Harriet’s hearing only. “You were right; he doesn’t want anyone to know he was here. Did you see his mask? It’s quite a risk for him to be present.”

“He’s impatient,” Harriet muttered back. “So is Voldemort. What happens if we step out the runes?”

“I don’t know.”

“Ah.”

“Do you have a plan?”

Harriet shushed her, heart pounding.

They crossed through the wide chamber beyond the door. The Department was lit by somber blue lighting that emanated from floating globes, except for the lamps on the desk that were rather more twee and golden. The air smelt very strange, and the place resonated with the perception of being deep, deep underground.

Harriet couldn’t shake the sensation of being watched. The magic felt as if it would eat her whole if given half the chance, and she’d let it—that it would enter the fabric of her being, and she would be forever claimed by the place.

Hælgan Stōwe, the wizards of old once called it. Before it was a Department, before it was a mystery. Sacred. Otherworldly. Incomprehensible.

The chamber opened onto a new room through a wide, soaring archway. Harriet couldn’t help but pause and take in the spectacle before her.

Soaring towers of shelves stretched toward a ceiling so far away, Harriet could scarcely see it yawning above them. The shelves contained thousands upon thousands of glass orbs, none of them uniform in shape, each emitting a faint, murky blue light, their insides a swirling morass of gray fog. Harriet didn’t notice at first, but each prophecy had a small label attached to it by a string.

It bizarrely reminded her of toe-tags in a morgue.

Gaunt’s hand touched her shoulder, and she nearly leapt out of her skin. “This way, Potter,” he said, almost friendly, but then he added. “Test my patience anymore, and I’ll start carving into the Mudblood.

Harriet swallowed and kept walking. At least Hermione couldn’t understand him.

Gaunt urged them into a quicker pace, and they hurried down a thin aisle, shoes pattering on the stone floor, candle brackets at the end of the shelves clipping their shoulders when they passed. Every so often, Harriet felt a strange flutter of magic, and then a distant click! of glass touching metal would echo into the dim. What was that? Another prophecy being struck?

She knew they’d reached their destination when Gaunt’s bleeding red runes came to an end. ‘Row Ninety-Seven proclaimed the brass plaque below the shelf’s stationed candle.

“It’s there, Potter,” Gaunt instructed, pointing. “If you value your sanity, I wouldn’t suggest touching any of the others.”

Cautious, Harriet took a few steps into the row, tugging Hermione along with her.

The prophecy wasn’t very large. In fact, it looked quite small for something so impactful; it would fit nicely in Harriet’s palm. If she squinted, she could read the faded label.

S.P.T to A.P.W.B.D

Dark Lord

and (?) Neville Longbottom

“Huh,” she breathed out. S.P.T? A.P.W.B.D? And it just said “Dark Lord” and “Neville Longbottom.” It didn’t sound terribly factual.

“Pick it up,” Gaunt ordered.

Harriet turned to look at him. Her pulse had been racing since the moment she saw the Death Eaters on the Atlas, but now it spiked again, and her hands shook. Carefully, she urged herself. Don’t push too hard….

“Back up,” she told Gaunt and his lackeys. “Back away from us, and you can Summon it from my hand. That’ll work, yeah?”

Gaunt scoffed, and the Death Eaters snickered among each other, Bellatrix laughing loudest of all. “I’m afraid it’s time to stop playing children’s games, Harriet,” Gaunt said, moving as if to come closer—and Harriet pointed her wand at the shelf.

Back up, or I’ll shatter the lot,” she told him, and Gaunt paused, his smug smile falling. “Back up and Summon it from my hand. Do it, or watch it break.”

His nostrils flared, and Harriet thought she’d gone too far, that at any moment, he’d draw his wand, and that’d be the end of Harriet Potter and Hermione Granger. But then—.

He stepped back. Gaunt flicked his hand, and a force of magic shoved the group of watching Death Eaters back as well. He allotted Harriet ten paces but not an inch more.

“Well, Potter? Make good on your end of the bargain.”

And so Harriet did.

Her thin fingers wrapped about the surprisingly warm glass and plucked it from the brass prongs holding it in place. She pulled her hand back—.

Gaunt didn’t hesitate. “Accio, Potter’s prophecy.

Nothing happened.

Harriet looked at Gaunt as she held the prophecy up, and she twisted her arm just enough for the sleeve to pull away from her hand. On her wrist, the Charmed silver gifted to her on her twelfth birthday glittered in the pale blue light.

Harriet grinned as Gaunt’s eyes widened behind his silver mask. She jabbed her wand at the closest shelf—.

Fragor Maxima!

 


A/N:

Gaunt: “I have been outsmarted by a teenager.”

DEs: *nodding*

Gaunt: “Unfortunately, that means I have to kill you all.”

DEs: ?!

Gaunt: “NO ONE CAN BEAR WITNESS TO MY SHAME!”

Chapter 288: the maze of mystery

Chapter Text

cclxxxviii. the maze of mystery

 

That was your plan?!” Hermione shrieked in Harriet’s ear as glass came tumbling down upon them. “This is an awful plan!”

Harriet didn’t have the heart to tell her she didn’t have a plan at all. She had one goal in this instant: to get as far as possible from Gaunt and the Death Eaters as humanly possible. To that end, she hooked her arm through Hermione’s and started running for the far end of the aisle while firing as many Blasting Curses in her wake as possible.

Cracks wended through the floor, slabs of stone rising, split by Harriet’s first spell. The sudden shift in the ground teetered the massive, soaring shelves, and the prophecies fell like beach ball-sized hail. Rows buckled, collided, and glass orbs exploded as they bashed into one another. Worse was the noise. Dozens upon dozens of incorporeal voices all chanted together, released from their spheres. It grew so loud, it throbbed in Harriet’s ears and threw off her sense of balance.

They bounded around a corner, and Harriet blasted more shelves.

Her scar blazed with agony. In the distance, Gaunt screamed orders at the Death Eaters.

A door waited on the far wall, smaller and less obvious than the large archway back the way they’d come. The first thing the Death Eaters would do was secure the entrance; the two witches weren’t going to be getting out there. Harriet threw open the new door, hoping they weren’t about to scuttle into a mystical broom cupboard, and let out a breath when she saw the adjoining room with several other doors. She and Hermione ducked inside.

The noise from the Hall of Prophecy dimmed when the door snapped shut. The new room seemed to be an office of some sort, populated by a few heavy desks, a filing cabinet, padded chairs. The Unspeakables had left their work out, a wealth of bizarre contraptions and thick tomes cluttering their stations. It was dark, and cold.

Epoximise Sempiternus!” Harriet barked, sealing the door behind them. Panting, she then waved her wand over her and Hermione, quickly incanting, “Misceo Omnia. Evanesco Vestigium!”

“I don’t—I don’t have my wand,” Hermione managed to remind her. “They took it.”

“Fuck,” Harriet cursed, shoving the prophecy into her robe pocket. She had her second wand on her leg, and she weighed her options. She could give it to Hermione, but chances were they’d come against a Death Eater very soon, and Harriet might be disarmed. It’d be to their advantage if she could whip out a second wand and protect them both. She was a much better duelist than Hermione.

“Okay,” Harriet said, taking a deep breath, then breathing it out. She felt spots along her scalp sting with new cuts, and her shoulder throbbed where a part of a shelf had cracked and struck her. A wound above Hermione’s brow oozed blood, and she wiped it from her eye. Harriet hit her with a weak Episkey. “We have to get out of here. There’s no way we’re going to make it back through that hall and escape the Death Eaters—.”

“So we need a different exit,” Hermione inferred, biting her lip. “I don’t know if there is one. I think that door might be the only way back into the Ministry.”

“That’s bollocks!” Harriet groaned. “There has to be another way—or at least a place we can hide until help arrives. We’ve gone and royally fucked Gaunt’s runes. That has to have alerted someone.”

She grabbed a stone paperweight from one of the desks. “Calx Ferro.” It turned into a heavy sword, and Harriet tapped her wand against the inside of her left palm. “Moderantum.”

The sword lifted into the air, hovering above her shoulder.

“Let’s be quiet and keep moving.”

Hermione chose the next door they moved through, and when that door closed, she had Harriet Transfigure the handle’s shape. “So we know we’ve been this way,” she explained. “But it’s not obvious to the Death Eaters.”

They passed through several rooms in this manner, never finding an indication of the right direction. There were a dozen more offices with different desks, tables, or long counters. One room held elevated alcoves with tidy beds where Unspeakables could sleep. There was a room filled with pieces of old prophecy glass being studied beneath massive magnifying lenses. They crossed through a circular solar wherein resided a single loom as big as a house, thousands and thousands of strings leading off of it toward a bright, searing light above.

“They’re studying Fate,” Hermione said, sounding uncertain and perhaps a bit spooked. In the next room, she pointed at the wall covered in Arithmancy calculations and said, “They’re trying to divine the future.”

Harriet lingered there, staring at the marks. “Did they figure anything out?” she asked. Hermione shook her head.

“No…there’s blood here. I—I think there was an accident.”

They pushed on.

Harriet blinked when they slipped into the next room and found it completely covered in tiles—floor, walls, and ceiling. No furniture had been placed inside, and the outer wall had dozens of different faucets and taps. She almost called it a shower room but thought it better resembled a washing station of some kind. What the Unspeakables were washing that needed so much water and space, she didn’t want to know.

Together, Harriet and Hermione started to cross the room toward the other door. Because of the tile, they heard when rushed footsteps echoed from the corridor beyond, and they froze.

Harriet looked at Hermione. “Get down, flat,” she whispered, and Hermione did as told. Harriet hit her, and then herself, with a Bubble-Head Charm before muttering, “Fumos Duo.”

Smoke issued from her wand and quickly filled the room with a thick, dense cloud.

The other door bounced upon the inner wall when it was kicked open, and two Death Eaters darted inside. The first, Alecto, coughed and waved a hand in front of her face, while the second, Amycus, grunted. “Now what? The fuck is this?”

“Who knows with all the strange shite they keep down here?” Alecto retorted, covering her nose. “This rubbish will probably rot out our lungs or grow tentacles on our arses.”

Coughing, Amycus asked. “What’s that spell for clearin’ the air?”

Redacto, innit?”

“That’s not the whole thing.”

“Well, if you’re so bloody sure, have at it then.”

Amycus snapped. “If we don’t get a fucking move on, Gaunt’s going to have both our arses, tentacles or no tentacles.”

As the pair bickered, Harriet crept low through the smoke and turned on one of the faucets so a generous stream splattered on the floor. The handle squeaked as it moved.

The Death Eaters fell silent. “Do you hear that?” Amycus whispered.

Pointing her wand at the floor, Harriet murmured, “Glacius.

Heavy boots tromped forward, the smoke swirling around a dark sharp until—.

Shite—!”

Amycus Carrow slipped on the ice, hitting the floor.

Incarceous!” Harriet incanted—using the sword to swat a spell blindly fired by Alecto out of the air. “Homenum Revelio.” The shape of the remaining Death Eater revealed itself in the fog, and Harriet fired a Stunner at her. Alecto went down in a heap.

“We don’t have long,” Harriet said as she quickly cleared the smoke, Summoning both of Amycus’ and Alecto’s wands into her hand. She shoved them toward Hermione, then cast a hasty Incarcerous over Alecto, and another Stunner on Amycus. “If they’re already spread out and searching—I’d bet the others do a better job than these two numpties. Hurry!”

They rushed from the washing station through a corridor with several doors. Hermione used Alecto’s wand to try a quick Point Me spell, but whatever magic lay over the Department resisted her efforts. They marked the door they’d come from and tried the one at the corridor’s end. When it revealed a set of stairs spiraling upwards, Harriet dared to hope they’d found another exit—.

“No,” Hermione said with quiet despair when they burst through the door at the top of the stairs and found yet another strange room. “This is just another section. That last area was devoted to prophecy, fate, etcetra. This will be a level meant for another area of study. We’re no closer to finding the way out.”

“How long do you think it’s been?” Harriet asked. She inspected the place they’d come upon, a bizarre library of sorts, towering shelves in the room’s middle surrounded by a ring of lecterns. It was bizarre because the lecterns all faced these large stone pillars, and there were foreign runes on the pillars that could be moved. In each corner of the square room was a pit on the floor, and glancing into one proved them to be very dark and very deep, leading who knows where. Harriet couldn’t make heads or tails of it.

“I don’t know,” Hermione answered.

“Surely it’s been long enough for someone to have been notified—for someone to get down here? We’re way past Gaunt’s stupid barrier. We must have triggered something in this Confunded maze.” Harriet demanded.

“I don’t know,” Hermione repeated, shaking her head. “I don’t—the Department of Mysteries is self-governed. Even if they were able to physically come down here, would Aurors have the clearance to do so?”

“Clearance?! There’s ruddy Death Eaters!

“Don’t shout at me, Harriet Potter!” Hermione retorted, her voice strained. “I know very well what’s down here with us!”

Harriet’s lungs heaved for air, and she stomped on the anger that had welled up inside her. Her chest and neck felt as if they’d been flayed. Blood from her injured scalp made a tacky film on the back of her neck and stained her collar. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I’m sorry. But surely Elara has alerted the Order by now?”

“She might not have made it.”

Harriet’s breath caught, sheer panic almost choking her. “Don’t say that,” she stuttered, refusing to imagine what might be delaying her god-sister. I didn’t see Pettigrew or Alecto on the Atlas. What else didn’t I see?

A shoe scuffed the floor.

Harriet raised a strong Shield, deflecting a thrown spell—Dark, sticky energy clipping her exposed elbow. She didn’t have a moment to glance down at the injury—but she heard Hermione gasp and quickly recite one of the powerful counter-curses they’d studied with the Coven. The fire in her limb receded.

Antonin Dolohov emerged from the shadows, his gait steady and confident, wand at the ready. Harriet gulped. This was not Alecto and Amycus Carrow fumbling about in the dark. This was a Death Eater, and Snape had always warned her against finding herself cornered by one.

They do not fight fair,” he once told her. “There is no dueling with a Death Eater. They are sent to do the bidding of their Lord, and they act with all the viciousness implied by their name.”

Heeled boots clicked on the stone as Bellatrix Lestrange emerged next through the shadows, her ghostly face appearing first, resembling nothing more than a smiling banshee creeping across a haunted moor. “Be careful with Potter,” she reminded Dolohov. “She has something that belongs to our Lord.”

Harriet spat on the floor.

Bellatrix’s curse came flying like a whip—whorling, cracking—only to be snared by Harriet’s sword as she Shielded against Dolohov.

Incarcerous Duro!” Hermione cast from behind Harriet, nearly snagging Bellatrix—but the hag was quick. She blocked Hermione, and a vicious twirl of her wand caught Harriet’s sword in a Contero, turning it to dust.

Meanwhile, Harriet countered two more curses from Dolohov and felt her exhaustion mounting. “Ventus!” she shouted—and it blasted the falling dust into their eyes. Momentarily distracted, Harriet shoved Hermione closer to the nearest door.

Crucio!

Protego Horribilis!

The Shield absorbed the oncoming Cruciatus—but did nothing against Dolohov’s Cutting Curse. Harriet flinched as it winged across her shoulder and snapped against her cheek.

They ’ve fought together before. They’re trying to get around the Shield by casting in different spectrums.

Declinatio!” Harriet’s spell rocketed toward Bellatrix—then veered and collided with Dolohov, throwing him off balance. “Adhaerere Lentum!

Her aim was off; she missed his face, but the black gunk fired from her wand stuck his arm to the floor. Dolohov swore in a foreign language when he tried to stand.

Sanguis Fervere!

Suddenly, the blood on Harriet’s cheek and dripping along her arm began to boil. She flinched but otherwise remained focused, pained tears spilling from her eyes. “Protego Speculo!

Bellatrix and Dolohov once more tried circumventing Harriet’s Shield with spells on opposite ends of the spectrum—and failed. The spells fired back toward them at the same time, and Dolohov didn’t Shield in time. He howled.

Hermione jabbed her stolen wand toward one of the towering bookshelves. “Moderantum!” She tapped the inside of her left palm, and before Harriet could figure out what she was doing, Hermione clenched her fist and yanked.

The heavy shelf groaned as it was thrust into motion. The Death Eaters only had time to glance up before books started falling upon them, and the shelf toppled with an all-mighty crash.

Harriet panted, her lungs burning, her sides tight. The fight must have lasted for only a minute or so—and it wasn’t over. She’d thrown more than a dozen spells in such rapid succession, it made her dizzy. It made her feel sick.

“Harriet—!” Hermione snagged her by the arm, tugging her toward the now-open door. “Hurry, run!”

But Harriet didn’t think she could run. Her legs felt leaden, her head floating from spell-fatigue and blood loss. Harriet’s eyes darted about the room, searching. Bellatrix and Dolohov were already blasting their way free of the shelf. Footsteps came running from the far corridor—and Harriet knew better than to expect they were anything but more Death Eaters.

Her gaze caught on one of the pits.

Thinking quickly, Harriet turned to Hermione and grabbed her by the arm. “Run,” she said in a rush. “And keep running. Try to use the Atlas. I don’t know how well it’ll work down here, but it should help you find an exit or hide if you need to. Forgive me for this. I love you.”

“Harriet, what—?”

Before Hermione could utter another word, Harriet shoved her hard by the shoulders, and she stumbled back over the waiting threshold. Her eyes widened in surprise.

Claudere,” Harriet whispered—and the door slammed shut. Then—. “Porta Evanesco.”

The door vanished completely, leaving nothing but a blank stone wall that Harriet turned her back to as she faced the room once more. Bellatrix and Dolohov came crawling from the wreckage of books and broken wood. The latter had ripped his sleeve off to free it from the floor. Rodulphus Lestrange came climbing through the archway over the debris, followed by Pettigrew and Macnair.

“Enough of your games, you little brat!” Bellatrix snarled, a nasty bruise forming over her eye. “There’s nowhere to run now. Hand over the prophecy!

Harriet had no answer for her, partly because she was out of breath, and partly because Bellatrix was the scum of the earth. Rather than standing there like a blindfolded man waiting for the shooting gallery to start, Harriet did the only thing she could think to do.

She took two steps to the right, threw the Death Eaters a two-fingered salute, and jumped into the waiting pit.

 


 

A/N: I keep getting a few comments lately that are like “why didn’t harriet kill that death eater blah blah blah,” and I thought it was pretty clear that’s not in her character. Even in desperate situations, she’s not going to go for the kill.

Harriet, wandering: “…”

Harriet: “Hermione, what if they want to find a loo in this place? What do they do?”

Hermione: “Stay off Twitter.”

Harriet: “What?”

Hermione: “What?”

Chapter 289: through the halls of the mind

Chapter Text

cclxxxix. through the halls of the mind

 

Hermione took one final glimpse of Harriet’s tired, bloodied face—and then the door slammed shut.

“No!” she gasped, scrambling to her feet after being shoved down. She lunged for the door’s knob—and it vanished from under her fingertips. The entire door vanished. “No! Harriet! Harriet!”

She pounded her balled-up fists on the stone wall until her hands throbbed with nascent bruises. “No! Harriet! You can’t do this!”

No answer came, and Hermione ventured that the wall was much too thick for her protests to be heard. She stepped back, frantically wondering what to do, when she remembered the Atlas tucked into her pocket. She pulled it free and desperately centered the view on herself.

In the room beyond the solid wall where Hermione Granger stood, she could see Harriet Potter frozen with Bellatrix Lestrange, Antonin Dolohov. Walden Macnair, Rodulphus Lestrange, and Peter Pettigrew crawled closer from the adjoining entrance. Then, Harriet’s dot jerked—and disappeared.

Hermione’s breath whooshed out of her. She stood staring at the Atlas, gobsmacked, willing for Harriet’s name to appear again—for the wretched thing to be malfunctioning. Why would her name disappear like that? All of a sudden? Surrounded by Death Eaters? What if she was—?

No!

She refused even to think about it. Focusing, Hermione tapped Alecto Carrow’s less-than-cooperative wand against the lens and whispered, “Search: Harriet Potter.

The relief Hermione felt when Harriet reappeared on the Atlas bordered by question marks made her weak in the knees. Hermione had no earthly idea where she’d suddenly disappeared to, but she was safe for now.

The sound of the furious Death Eaters on the other side of the wall brought her back to herself.

Right…there’ll be time to chastise Harriet for being utterly foolish later, Hermione thought, directing her attention toward the hall in front of her. To her dismay, it didn’t look different from other passages they’d taken—though Hermione thought there was a different feeling in the air here. She and Harriet obviously hadn’t had the chance to appreciate the scenery, but Hermione detected something distinctive in the moldings above the doors, the carved medallions on the corners of the lintels not the same as those downstairs. On the floor, the stone bricks had been arrayed lengthwise before, but here, they’d been arrayed in a herringbone pattern.

I was right, Hermione told herself as she used a weak, sputtering Lumos to shine a light upon the space. This is a different section than the area we were in before. There must be a sequence to this place, or a certain arrangement only the Unspeakables know how to navigate. But if it’s possible the sections are all connected, it must be possible to find another exit. I can find help!

Emboldened, Hermione marched forward, wand extended, pretending the terror thrashing in her chest didn’t threaten to burst free like an irritated Erumpent. She muttered a detection spell upon entering the next chamber, and when it found no living beings, she chanced a look around.

Several chairs had been stationed to face a central aisle. They resembled what Hermione would have seen in her parents’ dental practice, if more padded and anchored with a metal bar that would fit over a person’s brow if they sat down. Above each chair was a half-formed crystal bowl, tipped on its end so it captured rising clouds of blue, swirling gas. Large aquariums bracketed either wall behind the chairs, but instead of fish, Hermione watched as pale, gray brains swam through the murky green water.

This section is for the mind, she surmised. It’s for thought, perception, cognition, and memory. The section on the level below was for…prophecy, fate, probability, and chance. Hermione chewed her lip, trying to concentrate. I wonder at the correlation. Do they keep each section on a different level? I wonder if there’s any connection to Dante’s imaginings of Hell? Each level held a different sin—a different torment and repentance. To get out of Hell, Dante had to go through it, all the way to its depths. Is it possible the Department is the same?

If it was, she and Harriet had already gone backwards by coming up a level rather than going down—but Hermione didn’t know if she was correct. Her assumptions could be completely nonsensical.

Worry for Harriet gnawed at her. Hermione couldn’t deny she was talented. No—she had no desire to say so. Harriet wielded her wand with shocking grace and power, her movements seeming to flow and connect into one motion despite her firing spell after spell. Still, Hermione worried. Harriet had to be getting tired and reaching her limit. She couldn’t be expected to last forever.

Hermione consulted the Atlas again. The Death Eaters had split up once more, dashing at a quick pace through the unlabeled halls of the Department of Mysteries.

I can’t keep lingering.

Hermione pushed onto the next corridor. As the one before, it held several doors, and when she went to the end, she found another passageway instead of a staircase. Though quite dark like the rest of the Department, Hermione took her chances and stepped inside.

A series of flat steps led into a depression set within the room’s middle. Though Hermione lit Alecto’s wand and held it aloft, she saw very little through the thick, obfuscating shadows. She stepped on something solid, and it crumbled under her shoe. Hermione paused to study the object and decided it looked far, far too much like a rib bone.

Oh, please don ’t be a bone. Please, please….

Her breaths echoed back to her, buffeting her lips. The light formed a dim, cold circle around her. Hermione could see no walls, no torches—only the vaguest outline of light at her back outlining the exit.

She checked the Atlas, centering it on herself. She whimpered when it detected a single magical presence far too close to her, one that the Atlas couldn’t identify.

“…Hello?” Hermione breathed.

Something heavy shifted. A moment passed, and large footsteps thumped in the dark—lazy, almost shuffling. A noise like rocks tumbling against tarmac reached Hermione’s ears, but she knew it wasn’t rocks. She knew it was bones.

A figure neared, and the wandlight fell upon its profile. Hermione froze.

A child has wandered into my lair,” spoke the sphinx, its humanoid head tilting as it considered her. It was a massive thing—larger than the lion it meant to resemble, with paws as big as Hermione’s face and eyes that glittered with mirth beneath a furrowed brow. “What is it she’s after?

“I—I mean to pass,” Hermione stuttered. “Through, that is. I mean to find an exit.”

Oh, it’s just there,” the sphinx said, its waving tail straightening to point across the room. That wasn’t the direction she’d come in, and Hermione’s heart jumped with hope. At least it wasn’t a dead end. “But you cannot pass.”

“N-no? Why not?”

You must answer my riddles,” it said, simple as could be. “Answer my riddles, and you may pass.”

That didn’t sound too bad. “And if I can’t?”

Then I eat you. Though, you’re not much more than a mouthful, I should think.

Hermione squeaked in fear and considered bolting for the door behind her. Would the sphinx let her go back? She didn’t think so. She assumed the Unspeakables had placed it here specifically to safeguard against trespassers or to study its riddle propensity. That would fit with the section’s theme.

Fascinating, but also terrifying and very, very inconvenient.

Would you like to hear the first riddle?”

Hermione didn’t want to hear any riddles or to humor a magical creature at the moment, but she stiffly nodded.

“I am not alive, yet I can grow. I do not breathe, yet I can flow. I’m not a whisper, but secrets I hold. Within my pages, stories unfold. What am I?”

Hermione stared, her mind working furiously to rip apart the verse. Growing…flowing. Not a living thing, but something you add to. Pages…I don’t think that’s metaphorical. She took a breath, tentatively venturing to say, “A diary?” but then shaking her head. “No, a book. That’s my answer.”

The sphinx’s tail twitched. “Correct. Would you like to hear the next riddle?”

“Yes, of course. Go on.”

I am light as a feather, yet the strongest of all. I rise and I fall at a single call. From dawn until dusk, my power unseen. What brings life to all, both mighty and lean?

Hermione had less difficulty this time, honing in on the creature’s final couplet. There were few things life truly needed to exist, and one of them was—.

“Air,” she said.

Correct,” replied the sphinx, tail swishing again. It reminded Hermione of Crookshanks when he felt particularly playful. “Are you ready for your last riddle?

“Go ahead.”

I hide in shadows, I linger in light. I’m always near, yet out of sight. What you seek is not around. Look within, and there it’s found. If I am you and you are me, who is the witch you choose to be?”

Hermione didn’t know this one. It didn’t have any call-outs in the stanza—not one she detected outright, anyway. The longer she stood there, stumped, the more panicked she grew. Her panic excited the sphinx, and it began to pace around her. Once, Hermione spotted it licking its lips.

Look within.’ Rubbish. What am I meant to be seeing? ‘Who is the witch you choose to be?’ Hermione didn’t know. Hadn’t she always struggled to find herself, ever since she was a child? She’d been ‘too much’ from birth, it seemed. She’d only agreed to leave her family and attend Hogwarts because McGonagall told her she could be—.

Have you given up?” asked the sphinx. “Do you have an answer?

“Myself,” Hermione breathed.

Hmm?

“Myself. The witch I choose to be—myself. That’s the answer.”

The sphinx pouted. “Oh, very well,” it said. “Be on your way.

Hermione took a cautious step past it, then another, eying its large paws. She waited for it to spring—but the sphinx laid itself down, and rested its head upon its folded legs. Hermione ran for the door and nearly tripped on the steps.

She burst into the next corridor, shaking with adrenaline after her near miss. She was quick to slam that door shut, and she waved a flaming ‘X’ over it, not caring if a Death Eater saw. She certainly didn’t want to return to that room!

Another passage of seemingly endless plain black doors waited for her, and Hermione despaired, wondering where on earth she was meant to go. She picked a direction and walked, forcing her pace to quicken despite her fatigue. There had to be an exit somewhere—or a bloody hearth. She hadn’t seen a single one yet. The winters must be atrocious so deep underground with no heat source.

Sounds of a struggle drew Hermione short.

Ahead, she heard the winnow of magic slicing through the air, and a male voice shouting in alarm. Quick as she could, Hermione checked the Atlas again, and found that Thorfinn Rowle was in the next chamber—as well as another dot without a name.

Who is that? Is Rowle fighting them? Is it an ally?

Hermione eased the door open and peeked inside.

It was a cafeteria—or a pub, perhaps. The room contained a vast number of heavy wooden tables, chairs, and unlit chandeliers hovering over their tops. It smelled of oil, candle wax—and singed, burnt wood, as Rowle battled in the room’s midsts, blasting tables aside as his assailant advanced.

Hermione crept inside and ducked beneath a table, peering past the legs to watch, her brow furrowed. She didn’t recognize the person approaching Rowle. He was very blond and very pale, vaguely Malfoy-esque in his profile, dressed in a dark Muggle suit. Weirdly, he didn’t have a wand—but when Rowle attempted to curse him, the man swatted the spell aside.

What in Merlin ’s name…?

Her eyes widened when the man lunged, faster than humanly possible, and wrapped a hand about Rowle’s throat. The wizard yelled and struggled, but his efforts amounted to nothing as the blond forced him to his back and pinned Rowle to the floor. Rowle kicked like a dying fish as he was strangled until, at long last, he passed out. His wand clattered on the stones.

“Now I’ve seen everything,” Hermione breathed, shocked.

The man’s head twitched—and Hermione screamed when he suddenly came upon her, crossing the room in an instant to throw the heavy table above her out of the way as if it was made of parchment. Lurid red eyes stared down at her, a clawed hand reaching—.

“Solnothan.”

The hand stopped reaching. In an instant, a gold chain formed around the man’s neck, obviously conjured by magic given how it didn’t touch his skin and revolved around his throat. Scared out of her wits, Hermione scuttled backward until she hit a wall, and only then did she see the person who’d spoken the man’s supposed name.

At first, Hermione thought it was Death Eaters again—but as they lit the chandeliers, she saw their robes were dark blue, not black, and the witch heading the group had a glowing golden chain wrapped about her raised fist. Though not physically connected to the man, Hermione guessed it provided the witch magical leverage over his actions.

She blinked, then looked at the man—the creature—with his hateful red eyes and sneering mouth.

Is that—is that a demon?!

The witch holding the chain neared, her footsteps solid and condemning as she came to stand above Hermione. Though frightened, Hermione couldn’t help but notice the slight differences in the woman’s robes compared to the others. Hers had a metal gilt upon the hood’s lip, and the clasp was gold instead of silver. When she spoke, her voice resonated with authority.

These are Unspeakables!

“I am Morwenna Lincroft. What is your purpose here?” she demanded.

“To bloody leave!” Hermione blurted before she could think better of it, her terror and exhaustion overwhelming her manners and good sense. “I beg your pardon. I—my friend and I were forced to come here. We were kidnapped from Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.”

“Kidnapped?” the witch repeated. She didn’t sound particularly concerned, but Hermione wasn’t picky at the moment.

“Yes! My friend—Harriet. The Death Eaters are hunting her, please! Help!”

Hearing there were more Death Eaters on the loose seemed to garner more of a reaction from the witch—Lincroft. To one of the Unspeakables, she snapped her fingers. “You. Secure that trespasser there. We have more of them to find.” To another, she added. “You. Come watch the girl. Help her stand.”

One of the Unspeakables gripped Hermione by the arms and lifted her to her feet. Hardly to believe it, Hermione stared wide-eyed at Lincroft. The runes. The barriers! Breaking them did alert the Unspeakables! They’re finally here!

Lincroft’s hand flexed around the gold chain, and the waiting creature stirred, glowering at her. “There is another child on the premises. You will not attack her.” She raised her voice, speaking loud enough for the others to hear. “We will continue securing Hælgan Stōwe. We’ve Death Eaters to hunt.”

For the first time in hours, it felt like Hermione could breathe.

Chapter 290: mother, maiden, crone

Chapter Text

ccxc. mother, maiden, crone

 

Bellatrix’s scream of rage chased Harriet into the dark as it rose above her head, and she plunged toward the void below.

She only had time to utter one quick, rushed curse before she transformed into her Animagus form. Changing into a crow as she fell was disorienting, and as she tried to furiously beat her wings and slow down, she found herself tumbling arse over elbow—or, rather, tail-feathers over talon—deeper and deeper into the earth.

The crow wriggled and flapped like a defunct umbrella—when suddenly the pit curved at the base, and Harriet hit the side with an ungainly squawk, sliding along until it opened like the mouth of a pipe. She came rocketing out the end.

Harriet fell with a thump upon a new floor. She opened her beak and clicked and cawed with pain until she transformed again. She let out a proper groan and coughed.

“Ugh, that was a bad idea,” she wheezed on her back, her abraded skin stinging beneath her clothes. Harriet squeezed her eyes shut and took a moment to breathe and catalog her own body. Her knees throbbed from the jarring impact, but otherwise didn’t hurt. Pain lanced through her foot, and Harriet thought one of her toes might be broken. Of course, her face and arm still burned, and her elbow ached something fierce from Dolohov’s curse. Overall, it was better than she could have hoped.

“Definitely won’t be telling Snape about that one,” she grunted, gingerly sitting up. “Don’t much fancy seeing how much higher I can raise that poor bloke’s blood pressure.”

Harriet managed to roll to her feet with some difficulty, still clutching her wand in one hand, the other folding over her bruised ribs. She turned to study the room—and paused.

It was quite a bit plainer than the other chambers she’d passed through so far—and by plainer, Harriet meant bloody empty. There were no desks, no shelves, no clutter on the bare stone walls, and no mysterious artifacts or trinkets. One pewter statue stood in the center of the small chamber—a rather eerie thing comprised of three women. One looked quite young, maybe a year older than Harriet, and she clasped hands with an older lady who had lines formed about her eyes, whose smile was more reserved than that of the young woman. Their arms formed a bridge over the stooped head of an old witch. Her smile better resembled a sneer, and she held a burning candle in one hand that was the room’s only source of light. The other wizened hand she held extended, palm up as if waiting for something to be placed in it.

There were no windows, a singular entrance to the pit some two meters up the wall behind Harriet—and no doors. Not a single one.

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” Harriet muttered as she pushed herself into action, approaching the closest wall. She made a quick circuit of the room, patting every surface, then started tapping bricks with her wand. Nothing happened. She tried several revealing Charms taught to her by Slytherin and Dumbledore both, but again—nothing happened.

“For Merlin’s sake,” she huffed, popping a hand onto her hip. She was stumped. She glanced toward the pit’s bottom, wondering how long it’d take before one of the Death Eaters mustered the ability to come down it and search. Maybe they’d figure out how to conjure lava and fill the room. It did make her question where in the hell Gaunt had gotten off to.

Harriet shivered at the thought.

With nothing else to do, she returned her attention to the statue. It stood slightly larger than life, which meant all three women loomed about a foot higher than Harriet’s head. She circled them, inspecting their carved robes, how their bodies seemed caught in the middle of a dance—aside from the old woman, who stood solidly between the pair. Her eyes followed Harriet.

Stopping in front of the witch, Harriet stared at her in turn. A minute passed, and she poked the statue’s lined cheek. “Oi. Let me out of here.”

Nothing happened.

Huffing, Harriet returned to her pointless, restless pacing, her foot throbbing, back aching. Her attention kept coming back to the old hag’s hand, how it reached out, waiting.

Harriet stopped in front of her again and slowly, slowly laid her own hand within the statue’s.

Nothing happened.

“Well, fine,” she grumbled, snatching her hand back. She paced again.

Harriet hadn’t noticed at first, but by the floor of the open pit, a loose scattering of runes had formed. They looked to be the movable stone runes she’d seen above, and Harriet picked one up, frowning. Did the Unspeakables use the pits to discard these? Is this where they go? A sudden bolt of inspiration struck her, and she rushed back toward the statue with a handful of runes. She set one in the witch’s hand and—.

Nothing happened.

Harriet tried all the runes to similar effect, and she let out a frustrated growl as she dropped them on the floor once more.

“What do you want?” she demanded, receiving no answer. “Picky hag!”

Harriet resorted to shuffling through her pockets, finding all manner of rubbish forgotten therein. She gave the witch a Galleon and two knuts.

Nothing happened.

She gave her a graded Transfiguration essay marked with an ‘E’ at the top.

Nothing.

She dropped a smashed Chocolate Frog box onto her palm.

Nothing.

“Have it your way, then,” Harriet snapped as she grabbed the box and ripped it open. She crouched as she furiously ate the chocolate, glowering at the floor. The Death Eaters hadn’t followed her so far, but how much time did Harriet have to idle in here before they did follow her? Would help ever come? Had Elara reached the Order yet? Was Hermione somewhere safe?

Worry for her friends consumed Harriet as she swallowed the last of the frog, the food sitting sour in her belly. She dipped her hand into her pocket once more—and her fingertips grazed warm, rippled glass.

Blinking, Harriet withdrew the prophecy clenched in her hand.

She studied it for a long moment, watching the mist within churn and twist. “Might as well,” she muttered, and when she stood up, Harriet carefully settled the prophecy in the witch’s grasp.

Harriet jumped when stone fingers curled around the sphere. The old woman’s arm retracted toward herself, clutching the prophecy beneath her bowed head as she leered at Harriet, and the other women folded themselves above her, bringing their arms down as if protecting the old hag.

Across the room, a section of wall opened.

Harriet didn’t think twice about bolting for the exit.

Her trainers slid down a steep ramp, and she hopped at the end of it so she wouldn’t stumble. Torches sprang to life, flames bursting to the fore along the pillars of a massive stone area. The breadth of it took Harriet’s breath away, and she spun in place as she tried to see all of it contained in the belly of the monstrously large cavern.

How deep underground am I? she wondered. This is still the Ministry, right? Dozens of stairs and shadowed pockets in the distant walls seemed to lead toward different places, so Harriet assumed she hadn’t left the Department yet. That offered little comfort.

Making small, cautious steps, she moved through the colonnade into the area proper. The main, leveled floor was depressed at least half a meter, and several inches of crystal clear water quietly trickled and circled a central rock that rose from the arena’s middle like a lonely island. Harriet stepped into the water, and it didn’t wet her robes. Her fingers passed through it and came out bone-dry.

Not water, then, she thought. Not normal water, at least.

Wading through the strange liquid, she approached the island, her wand held at the ready. On the surface of the pitched rock rose a towering dolmen. It was obviously very old, like something you might find in Stonehenge or dotted through Cornwall’s granite moors. What was particularly peculiar about it was the bizarre, semi-transparent curtain attached to the capstone. It rippled without a lick of breeze as if someone had just passed through it.

The hair on the back of her neck stood on end.

Harriet stepped onto the rock—and started hearing voices.

Go back, sweetheart!” a woman cried.

Don’t come this way, Harriet!” a man shouted.

Harriet whipped around, wand raised. She scanned the area—but there was nobody there.

Her hands shook. Those voices had sounded…familiar.

Still searching, Harriet eventually turned around—and jumped.

A figure had appeared between herself and the dolmen, a figure nearly three meters tall, wrapped in a faded black cloak with a sizable tear along the edge. She could see nothing of his face or person, only the skeletally thin arms that ended in dark, pointed fingers.

He shook his head.

Harriet stumbled back a step, then another, shocked and little more than slightly horrified. The voices kept shouting at her. The creature pointed one of those fingers in another direction, and suddenly—.

Little Harriet stared, first in terror, then in wonder, as the monster in the boot cupboard made shadow puppets on the wall, and her fear subsided inch by inch.

Familiar, familiar hands forming dazzling shapes—.

“…Set?” she whispered, heart thundering. “Set…is that…you?”

Comprimo!

The curse struck Harriet in the side, and it slammed her down, tumbling off the rock. She kept her head from touching the strange water, but only barely, and she gasped against the crushing pressure squeezing her ribs.

The Death Eaters had found her at last. When she chanced a glance toward the dolmen, the looming figure had disappeared.

Where is the prophecy, Potter?!” Bellatrix demanded, sparing no time for attempted mockery. Both she and Dolohov looked the worse for wear; his mask had been splintered, one sleeve torn off, and Bellatrix had blood in her hair. Rodulphus had a definite limp, and Pettigrew looked ready to shift forms and flee for his life.

Harriet could only imagine what nightmares they’d see down there.

“What prophecy?” she snarked when the curse finally relented, and she could stagger to her feet. It hurt to breathe, her sides throbbing so painfully, Harriet resisted the urge to jump in place and shout to abate it. She counted seven Death Eaters, with Accipto included.

“Don’t reason with her. We need to get the fuck out of here,” Rodulphus sneered, hand gripping his thigh. “I hope the Dark Lord burns this place to ashes. Kill the stupid bint, and let’s get on with it.”

“No!” Runcorn snapped. “Our Lord wants the honor himself,” he argued.

“Yeah? Fuck your Lord,” Rodulphus retorted, seething. “Gaunt, the pretender. The true Lord would rather have her dead carcass and the prophecy than nothing at all!”

As they bickered, Harriet watched Bellatrix. The Dark witch attempted several silent spells from what Harriet could tell—probably Summoning or Detection Charms, all of which failed, considering Harriet didn’t have the prophecy anymore. She, Rodulphus, and Antonin stood in the water, the others farther back between the colonnade and the arena’s edge. Bellatrix glanced at the liquid around her ankles. She was the first to take an uneasy look around, her eyes narrowed and her posture stiff.

“Shut up,” she snapped at her husband. When Runcorn continued his insulted sputtering, she snarled at him, too. “Shut up!” Silence fell. The water gently lapped against the stones. “Do you feel that?”

Perturbed, the Death Eaters followed Bellatrix’s agitated inspection of the chamber. Harriet took the opportunity to ease farther from the rock, the water chilling where it reached toward her knees. She hoped their distraction would cover for her getting at least halfway across the pond—but a distorted reflection on the surface caught her attention. Startled, Harriet looked up and saw eyes peering down upon them. Dozens and dozens of eyes.

“…What in the fuck is that?”

Harriet’s quiet exclamation was the only warning the Death Eaters received before great shadowy tentacles burst from the earth, and one swatted Rolduphus headlong into the water. Macnair screamed like a frightened woman, and Pettigrew vanished into his Animagus form. Bellatrix and Dolohov jumped into action, their wands flashing with spell after spell as the eyes bore upon them.

Harriet just ran.

She ran blindly, terrified, refusing to listen to the strange chanting and rumbling that made her ears bleed—and she collided with a solid body. She reeled back, finding herself face-to-face with a blond, red-eyed stranger. He grabbed her by the collar, and Harriet’s arm jerked forward, her wand at the ready—.

The stranger moved.

It was not unlike Apparition, except for the lack of pressure and general discombobulation. In one instant, she stood in the water—and in the next, she and the stranger reappeared in a group of witches and wizards dressed in navy robes, Harriet gasping like a beached fish.

Fecking arsehole—.”

She swatted at the man’s arm, and he released her. Harriet staggered, less steady than a wooden puppet, her legs too stiff to move. She nearly collapsed when Hermione crashed into her, arms wrapping about her middle in a strangling vice.

“You idiot!” she cried, frazzled hair smothering Harriet. “You absolute idiot! I’ll never forgive you! Don’t ever do that again!”

“All right—,” Harriet coughed, patting Hermione’s back. She recognized the robes on the others now. Unspeakables. They’d come at last. “Let up, blimey. I think I broke a rib.”

Hermione did let up, wiping her wet cheeks on her dirty sleeve. She gripped Harriet’s free hand in her own, and given the strength exerted by her squeezing fingers, Harriet guessed she wasn’t about to let go.

One of the witches approached them. She looked Harriet up and down, and though Harriet had no idea who she was, she thought the woman might have recognized her.

Behind them, other Unspeakables began dashing into the area where the Death Eaters battled the eldritch monster.

The witch nodded once—a firm jerk of her chin—and she tapped one of her compatriots on the shoulder. “You,” she said, careful not to use a name. “Get them out of here. Return them to the school. Through the Atrium Floos. Go.”

The wizard complied in an instant, herding Hermione and Harriet further from the battle site. Harriet went with him, but she couldn’t help but glance back. The wizard gave her arm a gentle tap to hurry her along. Harriet turned around.

“Who on earth was that?” she sputtered to Hermione as they hurried through a dark corridor. The wizard took the front once assured they were following, and he navigated those confusing halls with brilliant ease.

“She said—she introduced herself as Morwenna Lincroft,” Hermione replied, a tad breathless. Exhaustion clung to her and Harriet, their injuries plentiful. It didn’t stop them from running to keep pace with the Unspeakable. “I think—she’s the Head of the Department of Mysteries.”

“She is,” said their guide.

That would explain her authority over the others. “And, err, who are you?” Harriet ventured to ask.

“You don’t need to know that.”

They spoke no further on their journey. The Unspeakable led them down another flight of stairs, through a chamber of locked doors as cold as a morgue, then across a bridge spanning an underground river. Then, they arrived at a rickety lift, and it took them straight up through the black, lightless earth. Harriet clutched Hermione’s hand as they waited and waited, blind in the dark, until the lift slowed. The Unspeakable yanked open a hidden panel in the wall—.

And they stepped once more into the round room of large, black doors and brass knobs, the nebula of stars churning blissfully overhead. It was the antechamber to the Department’s many sections, and the lift disappeared behind the illusion of a brick wall.

The Unspeakable started up the main stairs.

“This really was the only way out,” Harriet muttered as they once more followed. “Merlin, what happens if the passage gets blocked and they can’t get out?”

“I think they’re prepared to die down there,” Hermione returned, too quiet for the Unspeakable to hear. “Because if there is another way out, they’re unwilling to show it to us.”

“That’s barmy.”

“Maybe it’s designed that way on purpose. Maybe it’s for protection.”

“Protection of what?”

“Us. The protection of us. To keep all of that down there.”

Harriet shook herself as if chilled. They passed through the simple door barring entrance to the Department of Mysteries.

It felt as if a hundred years had passed her by in the bowels of the earth, and the lights of the mundane Ministry corridors burned Harriet’s sensitive eyes as they hurried toward the next lift. She never wanted to come back here. Some mysteries deserved to remain that way.

“We need to get help for McGonagall,” Harriet said as the lift rose higher, each floor narrated by that anonymous witch’s cool, dispassionate voice. “And find out what happened to Elara.”

Hermione nodded along as they reached their floor. “I can’t imagine what’s kept her from contacting the Order.”

“Can’t you?”

“No,” Hermione argued. “Those horrid Death Eaters would have bragged about catching her if they had. She didn’t run into one of them. So where is she? Where is the Order?”

Harriet had no answer for her as they crossed the silent, empty Atrium. They would have to check the Headmaster’s office first. Maybe the Floo had been blocked. But what would Elara do then? Merlin, what if she got caught out by Umbridge—?

It happened in an instant. The Unspeakable in front of the two witches staggered, then choked. He grasped at his throat—then fell upon the clean, polished floor. Surprised, Harriet stumbled to the side. Her trainer splashed in a forming puddle of fresh blood.

“What—?!”

Standing in the Atrium, safe from the mayhem unfolding in the Department below their feet, Gaunt waited with his wand out, not a single hair disturbed upon his dignified head. Harriet’s shocked gaze met his—and Gaunt’s lip curled. His wand rose.

Avada Kedavra!


A/N:

Harriet: “The fuck are those?”

Harriet: “The fuck is that?!”

Harriet: “…”

Harriet: “Okay, someone needs to call an exterminator, Cthulu is literally coming out of this fucking ceiling.”

Harriet: “I am going to leave the worst yelp review for this place.

Chapter 291: the better wizard

Chapter Text

ccxci. the better wizard

 

The blinding flash of poisonous green raced toward Harriet, and she had only enough time to tense her body, recoiling—.

The spell flickered over her being—then went out.

Harriet gasped and faltered, waiting for something, though she didn’t know what. Hermione cried out, but both the light and her shocked exclamation petered to nothing, a dancing echo chasing itself into the empty halls of the Ministry. Harriet didn’t dare move for fear she’d suddenly drop dead.

What in Merlin ’s name just happened? I’m—alive? What?

Gaunt stared. If he knew what had just happened, he wasn’t telling. He raised his chin, and his fingers tightened around his wand’s handle.

You’re a persistent thing, aren’t you?”

The comment was enough to shake Harriet from her stupor, and she adopted a dueling stance, stepping away from the poor dead wizard on the floor. “So this is where you slithered off to,” she snarked, covering her shaking nerves. “You left the Department so you wouldn’t be caught down there.”

“Astute, Potter. Is this the part where Slytherin would usually part your head and sing your adulations?”

Harriet laughed—or at least tried to. She sounded more like Elara during one of her asthma attacks. “You got them all pinched, you know. Voldemort’s best lieutenants, caught by the Unspeakables.”

Gaunt barely blinked. “The cost of progress is shouldered by the many,” he said. “And it matters little, so long as I succeed. You will be handing the prophecy to me. Now.

Harriet fired a spell, her strongest Blasting Curse, and as Gaunt swatted it aside, she Transfigured the floor beneath him. Hermione attempted to disarm him—but he managed to deflect that and flatten the ground in a single swipe. He countered, and a great flaming whip came sailing at their heads.

Protego Flammae!”

Harriet’s water-based Shield popped into being and caught the whip, dousing them in steam. She had just enough time to hit Hermione behind the knees and throw them both to the floor to avoid a second Killing Curse barreling in their direction, blazing through the mist.

For a split second, Harriet remained on the floor, her heart pounding, bones aching. Pain in her scar nearly blinded her with tears—but she rolled up again.

Get up, get up—keep going. Never give in—.

“Clear the air,” she ordered Hermione. “And Shield over your head. Protego Horribilis!

Gaunt’s following curse collided with her Shield—and crawled over the edges, devouring it. Harriet leapt out of the way before a second curse could clip her, and she tossed a hasty Reducto toward the overlooking offices. It struck their windows, and glass rained down.

Oppugno!”

The heavy shards rocketed toward Gaunt. Harriet used the distraction to create another floating sword from a bit of broken rubble—and then watched in dismay as Gaunt merely waved a hand, and the glass turned to sand and parted around him.

Smirking, he flicked his wand, Harriet’s eyes following the motion, cataloging—.

She dashed for the fountain.

“Harriet—?!” Hermione cried.

Fire, he ’s using the fire rune—!

She stabbed her wand into the fountain where they’d found Barty Crouch dead, and she gasped, “Serpensfiet Unda Maxima!”

The water coalesced into a great, watery serpent—and not a moment later, Gaunt conjured a snake comprised of fire, its body as large as a basilisk’s, spiraling from the end of his wand.

Surgit!

She’d never done this before, but Harriet flung her impromptu water golem straight at the snarling snake of fire—and they collided, boiling steam issuing into the air like a geyser. Blinded, Harriet blocked the white cloud from hitting her and Hermione, and jabbed her fingers in Gaunt’s direction. She fired the floating sword like an arrow. She heard the clack! of it being deflected.

Hermione again cleared the air. Panting, Harriet scanned the Atrium, searching for Gaunt. Fires spotted the hall, loose parchment smoldering, the edge of Harriet’s robes smoking. She found the Minister exactly where he’d been before, untouched by a single spell. His narrowed eyes mocked her efforts.

Nothing? Harriet thought, despair rising. Nothing touched him. Not a single drop of water, not a single spark. He hadn’t been trying. Harriet’s entire body quivered with exhaustion, and Gaunt held himself like an unbothered king looking down upon a dirty pauper.

“Enough of this farce,” he drawled, raising his wand—.

Gaunt didn’t have a chance to utter a spell before agony sliced into Harriet’s neck, and she collapsed onto the floor, shrieking.

Harriet—!” Hermione dashed to her side and grabbed her by the shoulders, searching for the source of her pain. “Oh God, Harriet, what’s happening?!”

Every muscle in her body seized as if struck with the Cruciatus—but this was something much, much worse. The pain in her scar made it feel as if the skin had burst open, and something heinous was crawling free of the flesh. Harriet clung to Hermione’s arm with her free hand. She pointed her wand toward Gaunt.

The Minister’s brow furrowed, and then he turned around.

There, bold as could be, stood a tall, pale figure in black robes, crimson eyes flashing in the burning embers of Gaunt’s spellcraft. Lord Voldemort had arrived at the Ministry.

You are not meant to be here,” Gaunt hissed as Voldemort approached, his steps slow and unhurried.

I grew tired of waiting,” was his sibilant response, and his gaze cut through Harriet like a knife, the sight of his pale, monstrous face startling a whimper from Hermione. Gritting her teeth, Harriet dragged herself to her feet.

“The time for heroic platitudes is at an end, child,” Voldemort said, voice soft where Gaunt’s had been annoyed and grating. “Release the prophecy to us, Harriet Potter. Do this, and there’s no need for you to die this day. You may face Lord Voldemort another day.”

Harriet didn’t believe that shite for a second. Neither she nor Hermione would be leaving this place alive—but he wouldn’t get what he came for.

With great satisfaction, she lifted her nose in the air, and she told the awful bastard, “There isn’t a prophecy. Not anymore. It’s gone—dusted.” Harriet watched as Voldemort’s face fell, and his eyes glimmered with growing temper. “Guess the only person who knows it now is Dumbledore. Good luck getting him to talk.”

Voldemort’s pale, bloodless mouth twisted, revealing teeth better suited to the mouth of a serpent. “You will regret this, Potter,” he said. “Not even Dumbledore is infallible.”

“He’s a better wizard than you’ll ever be!” Harriet retorted, quaking with anxiety, waiting for the inevitable. “Long after you’re forgotten, people will know the name Albus Dumbledore—!”

Voldemort let out a furious shout, and his magic blasted out.

Protego Tria!

Harriet mustered the strongest Shield she could over herself and Hermione. When Voldemort’s wordless spell collided with it, her trainers slid on the floor. She collided with Hermione, and the back of her legs struck the fountain’s side. The pressure of the spell bore down upon them with all the force of a hurricane. Stones cracked, bricks shattered, frigid water gushing over their feet. The golden statues in the fountain’s middle crumbled to pieces.

Harriet poured every bit of herself into the Shield as her arms trembled, sweat dripping along her temples. The lenses of her spectacles cracked under the pressure. She couldn’t hold it forever—and yet the spell persisted. She didn’t know what to do. All of her training, all of her efforts—and nothing had prepared her for this. The sheer power of it blinded her, singed the skin of her hands. What could she do? She had to figure something out—.

Gaunt attacked.

His curse slipped through Voldemort’s and right through Harriet’s buckling Shield. The Dark Lord’s spell ended—and Harriet dropped like a puppet with its strings cut. Next to her, Hermione did the same.

Shocked, Harriet blinked and found herself sitting in the fountain’s rubble, staring at her own hands. Her fingers still clung to her wand through sheer force of will. Heat blossomed across her front, and she could do nothing but watch as crimson bled through the dusty fabric of her robes.

That’s…my blood. I’m…bleeding—.

Next to her, Hermione didn’t move, face down on the floor.

A wet gasp slid from her mouth as a hand closed around her throat, and Gaunt lifted her from the bloodied water. The busted fountain pipe still gushed, and the mess spread across the Atrium, strains of Harriet and Hermione’s blood swirling around Gaunt’s feet. Harriet choked as the hand squeezed. Her vision came into focus, and she stared into Gaunt’s hateful eyes. His breath smelled of death.

“So much frustration for such a weak, worthless thing,” he said. His left hand touched her cheek, swiped over her gaping mouth. “You’re nothing, Harriet Potter. I will ensure even your name disappears from history.”

Harriet choked, grasping at his wrist.

His fingertips drilled into her neck, deeper and deeper into her throat, his golden ring glancing across her blazing scar—.

Something pulled—.

And Harriet found herself looking into her own face from Gaunt’s perspective.

As quick as it had come, the vision faded, and Harriet struggled once more to breathe. A look of confusion crossed Gaunt’s face, and he turned to look at an equally confused Voldemort.

Harriet’s fingers curled around her wand, tightening. She clenched her teeth, air rattling in her chest, and hissed—.

Sectumsempra!

Gaunt shrieked as the curse slashed across his hand, and something broke from his heavy ring. Harriet succeeded in forcing him to release her, though, as he yanked his arm back. She saw only the briefest glimpse of dark, sluggish blood oozing from the deep wound. Harriet swayed on her feet but remained upright.

“You will regret that, you—.”

Whatever insult he meant to spew was cut short as a burst of pressure shoved him back from Harriet. The shift in the air forced Harriet to blink, and when she opened them again, Albus Dumbledore stood next to her.

Harriet could have fainted dead away in relief.

“Professor,” she croaked.

He spared her a single, reassuring look before his expression hardened, and he addressed Voldemort. “It was foolish to come here tonight, Tom,” said Dumbledore. “And foolish to involve my students in your schemes.”

After an initial moment of surprise, Voldemort quickly recovered, scoffing at Dumbledore’s pronouncement. “You overestimate yourself, Dumbledore,” he belittled. “It was a mistake for you to come here. A mistake for you to face me. You’re weak. A one-armed wreck of a wizard.”

Dumbledore shrugged. “Maybe. I do find it has its benefits. I only ever have to buy one glove, but tying my shoes has become a bit of a challenge.”

“Yes, yes, keep your humor until the end, old man,” Voldemort seethed, bony, spider-like fingers moving along his wand. It made Harriet feel sick to watch his hands move. “But do you truly think you stand a chance against me? You’re going to die here!”

“Perhaps not,” Dumbledore replied. He kept his tone stern, but calm, as if conversing with a colleague he didn’t particularly care for but took great pains to be polite with. “But patience has never been your virtue, Tom, and because of that, you fail to see the most vital things.”

Gaunt looked wary, casting his gaze around the Atrium—but Voldemort’s lip only curled. “Like what?” he demanded in a high, cold voice.

Dumbledore smiled—a brief, mocking thing that didn’t suit his face well, but it seemed to gall Voldemort. “I don’t have to confront you at all.”

A series of pops rang through the Atrium, and Voldemort’s eyes widened.

Aurors Apparated into the hall—Aurors, hit wizards, other Ministry employees who Apparated or ducked out of the arrayed Floos. They froze upon seeing the scene that awaited them. Somebody screamed. Another yelled, “That’s—that’s him! That’s You-Know-Who!

They all saw Lord Voldemort in the flesh. Lord Voldemort, standing with the Minister for Magic, their wands pointed at bloodied school children and the great Albus Dumbledore.

And Dumbledore could only smile.

Voldemort snarled in rage. He and Gaunt vanished with a crack.


A/N: Just to reiterate, it ’s only been about an hour? Maybe an hour and half? I had some comments where readers thought it should be dawn by now, and no xD Not for several hours yet.

That one line, “It was foolish to come here tonight, Tom,” was from canon OotP.

Chapter 292: stay

Chapter Text

ccxcii. stay

 

The searing burn woke him from potion-induced sleep.

Severus grunted as he pulled his head from the top of his desk—then cursed when he whacked his skull on the old shelf above it.

Fucking—arsehole,” he growled, placing a hand on the crown of his head, rubbing at his lank hair. The resulting ache dulled. What fucking time was it? Where was he? What had he been doing?

It took a minute for Severus to gather his bearings, to recognize the shabby trappings of Spinner’s End. He remembered he wasn’t at Hogwarts and hadn’t been for some weeks. He’d been doing…something when he fell asleep. He relit the candle nub with a frown, then blinked at the smashed scrolls on his desk.

Right. Star charts for 1980. July, specifically. The Dark Lord had ordered a review of the stars on the evening and surrounding days of his initial defeat, and though Severus had a million other things to be doing, the trite review had fallen to him. It was nothing the Dark Lord had not seen himself and studied already. He’d been handed busy work like an errant apprentice in need of occupation.

How aggravating.

Using his left hand, Severus pinched the bridge of his nose, reordering his thoughts and shaking off the rest of his fugue. He’d taken a small libation of Dreamless Sleep, enough for a couple of hours of rest, but before he could move to his bed, he’d stopped to check something. He’d underestimated his own exhaustion and how quickly the potion would hit.

“Bloody wonderful,” he grumbled. He straightened in his chair, and his spine let out a series of ghoulish pops.

Spinner’s End remained its usual dreary self. He sat at the desk that once belonged to his mother, the one with the obnoxiously low shelf she’d never once hit with her head, and yet Severus managed to slam into almost every single time. He had bruises on his scalp to prove it, and yet, he could never muster the energy to rectify the situation.

In the confines of his own mind, he reflected on how keenly he felt the loss of Hogwarts, how this sudden reprieve from teaching hadn’t felt like a reprieve at all. He drank too much when he stayed here. The days mired together, he forgot to shave, and the world condensed itself to a meaningless existence within four gray walls that vibrated with horrid memories.

Dumbledore assured him it wouldn’t be long until they returned to the castle, but Severus didn’t see how he remained confident. He hated the man for his continual confidence while the rest of the world went to shit.

Fuck, he hated this house.

The reason for his sudden awakening reasserted itself, and Severus sucked air through his teeth as pain sparked through his wrist.

The Vow never relented these days, but with judicious applications of his numbing Charm, Severus managed to ignore it for the most part. He couldn’t afford to spend all his days jumping and overreacting to the tingling jolts and prolonged prickling sensations that swept through his forearm and hand. He kept the arm numb more and more often and trained with his left.

Tonight, however, the pain reached a new extreme, and Severus swallowed a groan when it felt like a knife was sliding between his bones, wedging beneath the ball of his thumb as if trying to shuck it like an oyster.

“Ruddy girl,” he hissed as he shook the hand and flexed his fingers. It was the middle of the bloody night! What was Potter doing?!

Aggravated and—though he would never admit it—quite worried, Severus yanked off his nightshirt and dragged on his day robes, using magic to do up the buttons when his hand failed to cooperate. He swept downstairs to check his hearth and windowsill for messages or owls. Finding neither, Severus Disapparated.

He reappeared on a quaint village lane, standing in a shadowed spot covered by a shrubbery kept deliberately large and leafy to hide anyone appearing or disappearing behind it. Severus didn’t bother Transfiguring his robes despite the Muggle presence in the neighborhood; it was past midnight, and he doubted anyone would be up to see him cross the cobbled street and enter the garden across the way.

Thick, buzzing wards rippled as Severus stepped over the daisies. The magic snagged on his left forearm like a tenacious dog, and he had yanked himself forward to get through.

The lower windows of the cottage remained bright with candlelight, which relieved Severus. His last communication with the Headmaster had indicated he would be at his residence in Godric’s Hollow tonight—but it was a fool’s errand to guess Dumbledore’s actual location if he was not tied behind his desk at Hogwarts. During the summer holiday, he often went visiting at the spur of the moment, almost as if keeping unpredictable hours kept Slytherin from enjoying mischief.

Severus delivered a series of six practiced knocks upon the painted door, spaced in a deliberate pattern. It opened for him.

He found Dumbledore in the lounge—and he wasn’t alone. Severus’ lip curled in exasperation as he stood in the framed archway, arms crossed, and he listened to Mundungus Fletcher bungle his way through a report.

“That’s what was said, Headmasta’,” the worm yawned, the words cutting off with a burp. He’d been drinking; the wafting scent of cheap ale turned Severus’ stomach from across the room. “‘Scuse me. And then, I ran right here, I did. Giblin was in a rush, he was, to go find Black, but he was outta the house with uh—what’s his name there? Snupin, right? Out on a mission—so’s up to ol’ Dung to deliver the message!”

In a rare show of impatience, Dumbledore leaned upon his arm, his wizened hand framing the side of his face with two fingers pressed to his temple, his thumb in his beard. “Mundungus,” he said. “Not to question your—credibility, but I simply find it hard to believe what you’re reporting. Death Eaters in Hogsmeade? I only just spoke to one of our agents stationed there, and he verified nothing is amiss in the village.”

“Don’t know what to tell ya, Headmasta’. Just passin’ along what I was told.”

“Well. Thank you, Mundungus….”

The squat maggot took his leave—and had enough sense to balk when he spotted Severus at the entrance, sneering. He didn’t move aside for the wizard, and Mundungus had to squeeze his bulk by, doing his damnedest not to touch Severus.

Once the door shut behind him, Snape moved into the lounge.

“Severus,” Albus said in greeting, not rising from his chair by the hearth. “It’s always so nice to see you, but I worry what’s brought you here at this hour, my boy.”

Snape took a breath—and didn’t know where to start. All this talk of “Death Eaters in Hogsmeade” had only raised his suspcions, no matter that Albus was convinced such a thing was not the case. “My sources tell me there may be an issue at the castle,” he said, watching Dumbledore’s brow raise. After all, he had sources in the castle as well. “It could be nothing—.” A nightmare. A bloody spider in her bed. Anything. “But it bears inspection.”

Slowly, Dumbledore nodded, and he stood from his winged chair. “Yes. Something is afoot, I fear, and we’ve not been given the full story. I believe I will go to Grimmauld Place to ascertain Giblin’s story myself and to see what’s riled him so.”

“Is he the only one there tonight?”

“I assume so. Sirius and Remus are on an errand for me, and the Malfoys tend to keep away from Order business when they can. Our surveillance has otherwise been spread quite thin, I fear.”

The pain lurched and fired through Severus’ ring finger, and he shook the hand as if he’d been shocked. Dumbledore frowned at the gesture.

“Are you well?”

“Yes,” Severus retorted. “I will go to Hogwarts and hopefully be back in my bed within the hour.”

“Ah, well,” Dumbledore sighed. “It’s good to have dreams. Something tells me this night will not end with either of us surrendering to Morpheus.”

Severus didn’t answer as he headed back out the door.

 

xXx

 

As part of their suspension from Hogwarts, the many staff members who’d been walked off the campus had been told they would not be welcomed back until such time as their probation came to a close or they were formally dismissed. At that point, they could return and resume their post or gather their belongings. Otherwise, they had been banned from Hogwarts and its surrounding grounds—by order of the Office of the Inspectorate.

Naturally, Severus could make it through the Guardians of the Magical Right stationed outside the gates without issue. The pair of twats put there at this hour would most likely be dead asleep, leaning on the boar-flanked pillars—but Severus couldn’t be certain the wards wouldn’t repel him. It rankled to think the place he’d called home for decades might view him as an outsider and reject his intrusion. He didn’t want to chance being delayed.

It mattered little, as Severus knew other means of entering Hogwarts undetected.

He Apparated into Hogsmeade itself, and a brief sweep of the quiet, slumbering village proved whatever rot Mundungus had been fed was false. No Death Eaters wandered there, and despite the blazing pain in his arm, Severus took the time to be sure. He surveyed the Order members from a distance and verified they hadn’t been compromised. Once assured of that, he Disillusioned himself and broke into the back door of Honeydukes. Severus descended the cellar steps, quiet as a shadow, and slipped through the hidden trap door to the tunnel beyond.

Only once during the trek did Severus need to stop. A sudden bolt of blinding agony had him seeing stars as it wended from his wrist to his elbow, taking away his breath. Mounting worry had him sprinting through the dark, half-crouched, until a sudden collision with a low-hanging rock forced him to slow.

Severus reemerged within the castle on the third floor—and no sooner had he crawled from the hump of Gunhilda of Gorsemoor did he sense a peculiar energy in the air. For lack of a better term, it was agitated. Fracturing.

What in the hell?

He laid his right hand on the wall—and the magic twisted away from his touch like a wounded animal.

Something was wrong. He’d been here for a moment and already he knew something was amiss.

Swallowing, Severus sprinted for the dungeons, moving swiftly while Disillusioned, though he met no one in the passing corridors. He didn’t know the current password to the Slytherin common room, but he’d been given the master override years ago when he’d very briefly been Head of House. He used it, and the wall parted before him, allowing Severus to delve inside.

The common room lay in dreamlike quiescence—exactly as it should be so late in the evening. What wasn’t exactly as it should be were the many wide, reflective eyes of house-elves half-hidden behind the furniture, following Severus’ every move despite his magical cover. He froze, and it was on the tip of his tongue to ask the meaning of their odd behavior, but he moved on, striding toward the girls’ dormitories.

Discomfort rankled him as he reached the door for the fifth-year witches, and he turned the silver knob, pushing the door in. He was met with the sound of soft, sleeping breaths, the ineffable warmth of an occupied room brushing his face. Briefly hesitating, he walked directly to Potter’s bed, his boots silent on the carpet, and jerked aside the hangings.

Her bed was empty.

Severus checked Black’s and Granger’s with similar results. A breath whooshed into his lungs, and he uttered a low “Fuck,” answered by the peeved snoring of a sleeping witch. Severus rushed out of the dormitory, then from the common room into the castle itself.

Potter was missing.

Where is she? Where are they? If those idiots have stepped out on a lark and gotten hurt, I swear I’ll murder all three of them—.

Left without further recourse, Severus decided to wake Minerva to help him search the castle, then return to Grimmauld Place and report his findings to Dumbledore. He hadn’t seen signs of a struggle in the dormitory. In fact, given how their night things had been scattered, he wagered the three witches had been afforded the time to dress, if hastily. Where would they go?

He climbed the stairs, clenching his teeth against the fire in his wrist. The paintings snored on the walls, undeterred and undisturbed. Upon reaching the seventh floor, he prepared himself to match wits with the prudish, bitter hag that guarded Minerva’s quarters. He approached—and came to a sudden halt when he was met with the sight of the splintered, charred frame that once bore the savage Victorian witch.

With a flick of his hand, Severus’ wand slid from his sleeve, and he passed it over to his left, his breathing shallow and uneven. He stepped through the broken portal, taking pains not to disturb the wreckage in case the assailant waited inside, listening. Severus entered the sitting room, wand raised—and he cursed, spotting McGonagall face down on the floor, surrounded by the wreckage of a wardrobe.

Minerva!” he said, voice low but urgent as he rushed to her side, scanning the room for further threats. Finding none at the moment, he gripped the older witch by the shoulder and rolled her to her side. The movement, or perhaps the resulting pain, roused Minerva, and she gasped herself back into consciousness. Blood darkened the front of her dressing gown.

“Severus,” she wheezed.

“What happened?” He used a simple spell to cut the belt on her dressing gown, drawing it open far enough to inspect the injury through her pajamas. One look at the damage proved it beyond Severus’ considerable expertise—bone and viscera peeking out from where they shouldn’t be. Pomfrey might know what to do, but despite being a formidable healer, Poppy was one woman and could only do so much. No, McGonagall needed St. Mungo’s if she meant to survive and not kick off on her bedroom floor.

Her hand made a feeble grab for his sleeve as Severus conjured bandages and magically wound them about her middle, keeping pressure on her sundered side. “Death Eaters—.”

He froze. “What?”

“Dammit, boy. There’s Death Eaters—. In the castle—.”

Fuck. He scanned the room again, quicker than before. How in the bleeding fuck had Death Eaters gotten inside Hogwarts? He knew it was ironic, considering who was asking the question, but Severus knew for a fact that none of his former brethren had knowledge of the secret passages leading out of the school. How did they get in?

They couldn’t stay here. It wasn’t defensible, obviously, given the bloody portrait split down the middle. “Where?” He stuck his wand between his teeth so he could tuck his arms beneath Minerva and lift. No time to Conjure a ruddy stretcher and float it along behind him. “Where, Minerva?”

“I, ah….” Her voice trailed off in a strained groan as Severus lifted her. With a fair amount of jostling, he returned his wand to his left hand and applied a Strengthening Charm to his arms. He feared the application of any additional Charms to Minerva would aggravate the curse wound.

“Are they still here? Minerva?

The witch roused again as Severus pushed them both through the empty portrait, his head swinging both ways in search of movement. “I—I’m not sure. They—the castle isn’t—.”

Severus broke into a run. The Headmaster’s office was near, and he knew Umbridge had closed every Floo in the building except for that one.

“Severus—. They took—Potter.”

He nearly dropped her, and his right hand convulsed. “What?”

Sweat painted a thin sheen on Minerva’s brow as she clutched her side and attempted to breathe through the pain. “Potter came to…wake me. She saw the—Death Eaters on—.”

Severus snapped with impatience. “That ridiculous map of hers, yes.”

“They cornered—us. Took Potter, and Granger.”

“Took them where? Where, Minerva?”

“Ah dinnae ken….”

He came to the proper corridor. He expected he might need to leave McGonagall and go in search of Umbridge to Imperius the lying toad into coughing up the password—but the gargoyle saw him coming, and it jumped aside unprompted. Confused, Severus nevertheless rushed up the spiral steps.

What were the Death Eaters doing here—and why did Severus know nothing about it? Had the Dark Lord lost confidence in him? Had the Death Eaters acted on a whim?

Once inside, Severus kept running until he could settle Minerva on the sofa. He sprinted across the room for a shelf by the main window. He scattered a pile of ash in the middle of the carpet but didn’t spare it attention at the moment, nor did he glance at the covered portraits. He climbed the shelves to reach over the carved crown at its top, thin fingers skirting along in the dust until they felt the key hidden there, wedged into a slot in the wall.

Severus blindly cranked it twice before the magic in the air shivered. He knew the emergency protocol had been engaged and alerted the staff.

Only once he started back toward Minerva did he notice the ash again—the soot, and the bloodstains smeared across stone. The trail led to the hearth, and in the lamplight, Severus could detect the sparkle of Floo Powder strewn through the debris.

What …?

A crack split the air, and Severus whipped about, ready to curse the first sorry bastard who showed himself—.

With a majestic flap of his wings, Fawkes burst into being, and Severus shielded his eyes from the intense light. When he lowered his throbbing arm, he found the phoenix had arrived with Albus Dumbledore in tow.

So much for subtlety.

The Headmaster looked more alert than he had when Severus last left his side. His eyes swept across his former office, taking in every detail, and he already carried his wand. Severus attempted to inform him of what he’d learned, but Dumbledore was two steps ahead of him.

“Death Eaters in the school, yes,” he said, grim but determined. “Have you activated emergency protocols?”

“Yes, Headmaster. But—.”

He turned to Minerva, bowing at the waist as he inspected her injury much the same as Severus had. He touched her face with the back of his hand, and the professor stirred. To Severus, Dumbledore said—, “Elara Black arrived at Grimmauld Place in rather dire condition. She was apparently set upon by Dolores Umbridge when attempting to use the Floo. Have you seen her?”

Severus shook his head, shocked by the news. “Umbridge? No. It’s not as if I went frog hunting, Albus.”

In no mood for his trite comments, Dumbledore continued by saying, “Miss Black informed me she was charged with delivering news of the Death Eaters to the Order, but was injured and cannot account for a decent amount of time. Harriet and Miss Granger went to awaken Professor McGonagall and alert the staff to the situation.”

On the sofa, Minerva groaned. Severus looked down at his arm, seeing how his fingers shook. A decent amount of time? How long was that? How long had the Vow been hurting before he awoke? How much of the agony had his self-administered Dreamless Sleep dulled?

“They came—for Miss Potter,” Minerva managed to choke out, clenching her teeth. “The Lestranges. Dolohov. They—took her.”

“Shh,” Dumbledore said, his hand drifting from her face to gently press on her shoulder, urging her to remain prone. “Rest for a moment, my dear professor.”

Given little choice in the matter, Minerva sagged into the cushions beneath her, and though she shut her eyes, her breathing continued to be labored.

“Have you heard anything about this?” Dumbledore asked. Severus could only shake his head, numb.

“No. The Dark Lord has told me nothing of any current plans for Potter.”

“It must be something else, then. If it isn’t Riddle’s machination, then it must be Gaunt’s….”

Snape heard Dumbledore, but only at a great distance, his troubled voice hard to decipher beneath the rapid thumping of Severus’ racing heart. Death Eaters had come into Hogwarts, creeping through it like an insidious poison, and they’d taken the girl. Gaunt. Gaunt had taken her. They’d all but plucked her from her bed in the dead of night—.

Severus had been sleeping. They stole Potter away, were doing Merlin knew what to her, and Severus had been sleeping.

“Severus? Severus!”

He stared at Dumbledore, his chest tight, arm on fire, his wrist breaking under the weight of his promises. “Albus, I….”

What did he mean to say? To apologize for his failings? To beg forgiveness before he expired on the man’s soot-stained carpet? He’d written a letter. It was in his desk, in the sealed compartment in the bottom of the top drawer. Dumbledore would find it. Nothing within the contents of the note explained the entirety of his truth; it clarified his sudden death would not be unexpected if Potter lost her life and how he wanted his body dealt with. He left Albus everything. It was curt, to the point. He hadn’t been apologetic.

How could he explain that he didn’t care what happened after he was dead? Albus would never accept that Severus preferred things this way, that even if the Vow didn’t take him, if it didn’t exist, he would follow the girl into the grave regardless. He’d rather his heart stop beating the moment hers did, and the only pang of remorse he felt was knowing it could happen in front of Dumbledore.

She was with Death Eaters. Taken. He felt every tick of the clock keenly.

“Severus,” Albus repeated again, louder than before, and Snape blinked. “You must take Minerva to St. Mungo’s. Then, return to the school and secure it.”

Severus struggled to Occlude, the pieces of his divided mind sinking beneath the cold, undulating waters until he could speak. His voice sounded emotionless, chilling. “And where will you go, Headmaster?”

“To muster the Order,” he replied. “And then, to the Ministry.”

“The Ministry?”

“If Gaunt has taken Harriet, it is for one reason.”

Ah, Severus thought, the realization skating over the ice of his mental shields. So, he’s gone after the prophecy. That stupid, insipid bit of drunken rambling spilled from the lips of a hideous, bug-eyed beldam.

Dumbledore studied him. Hating the feeling of being searched for weakness, Severus gathered himself, straightening his spine. He nodded once, then stepped past him to reach Minerva on the sofa. He didn’t notice the puzzlement in the Headmaster’s gaze that followed him back across the carpet toward the hearth. He didn’t look back as he stepped into Floo with McGonagall in his arms and disappeared.

 

xXx

 

When the pain in his wrist finally abated, Severus could not stop himself from searching.

He abandoned his occupation near dawn, leaving the school in Flitwick and Pomona’s capable hands, Aurors crawling through the halls like particularly tenacious slugs. Severus stepped through the Floo back to St. Mungo’s for the second time that day, finding the lobby in a state of disarray.

As if veiled in a fog, he listened to the healers and medi-wizards, picked apart pieces of the news to learn the Ministry had been cracked open like a spoiled fruit, all the rot within exposed to the light of day. There were casualties. So many casualties, they were still finding them tucked in cupboards, under desks, thrown into the streets of Muggle London in a bid to hide them.

The back of his neck burned, but he ignored it.

No one paid attention to Severus as he moved through the crowded halls and took the lift. They were too busy hovering over gurneys or consoling grieving family members. He saw an Unspeakable refusing to pry off their robe despite the blood visible on their arm. Somewhere, a child was crying.

It was quieter on the fourth level in the Janus Thickney Ward, but no less busy. The floor clustered various levels of spell damage and acuity in different divisions and rooms. He knew the room where McGonagall had been settled and he lingered there by the doorway, glancing at the shuttered blinds before moving on.

He passed through the main intake and came to one of the larger, quieter sections of the ward. An Auror guarded the entrance—the Tonks woman, who glanced once at Severus then jerked her head, indicating he could enter. Severus stepped inside.

Still held deep in his Occlusion, he inspected the room with bland, passionless eyes. It was long, tiled, the walls painted a summery yellow, the beds separated by Charmed privacy curtains. The first bed had yet to be occupied, but the second held Granger, Lupin standing with her, consulting with a healer. The third held Black, unconscious, her father seated on the edge of her mattress, holding her hand. He didn’t notice Severus pass by.

The fourth and final bed in the room was closest to the windows, which provided a rather bland view of the Muggle streets below. Severus didn’t look outside. He just stared at the room’s final occupant.

She looked very…small lying there, swallowed by the white of the sterile hospital sheets, her hair stark on the pillow like a crown of black brambles set on her head. They’d modified a Bubblehead Charm to fit upon her mouth and nose, easing her breathing—and she was breathing, however slight it seemed in Severus’ searching eyes. The side of her face bore a fresh scar, and the skin surrounding it appeared burnt, pillowy with growing blisters. She had one arm free of the bedding, ostensibly to give the healers access to the bandages wrapped tight upon her elbow. Her limp hand bore a patina of bruises, cuts, scratches, and spots of spell damage. Every nail was broken. The silver ring upon her finger had a large dent in its surface.

Severus blinked, and suddenly, he reached out. His quivering fingertips barely grazed her brow, brushing Potter’s fringe from her closed eyes.

Lashes fluttered. Dull, listless green peered at him, no recognition swimming in their shallow depths, and Severus retracted his hand.

“Stay,” she whispered, the word broken and muffled by the Charm helping her breathe. “Stay….”

Her eyelids slid shut.

“Severus?”

Severus blinked again. Albus looked at him—and Severus thought his ribs might cave in from how hollow his chest felt. His Occlusion reached into his very bones and froze the marrow. He could only stare, blank-faced, at the Headmaster until the man repeated his question.

“What are you doing here?”

And Severus lied. Because he was good at it. “Slytherin ordered me here,” he said, his voice a deep, grating rasp. “To watch the girl.”

“Ah, I see….” What exactly he saw, Severus didn’t know. His hands shook, hidden by the folds of his robes. “You should sit there, then. Out of the way.”

Dumbledore must have indicated the visitor’s chair because Severus walked to it, and he sat without question. He stared at Potter and did not look around at the Headmaster.

The inside of his left forearm burned, and he ignored it.

Dumbledore stayed for a time, and then he left, saying something about Minerva or Minerva’s brother. Severus stayed. Black shoved through the curtain on the far side and snarled at him, but Severus couldn’t hear what he said. Eventually, he left as well, and Severus stayed.

His arm burned, and he didn’t flinch. He stayed, and he waited. He watched the girl breathe until the rest of the world simply ceased to exist.


A/N: Originally wasn ’t going to have this chapter, but I think it’s a good addition to see what exactly was going on behind the scenes, to explain why there seemed to be a delay in the Order’s response, etc.

Chapter 293: the demon's eye

Chapter Text

ccxciii. the demon’s eye

 

Harriet’s memory of that evening in the Ministry reduced itself to brief snapshots of time.

She remembered people seeming to appear at all once, though she couldn’t tell if that’s how it happened, or if it was simply her failing perception. She remembered bright flashes of light, a ratchety click-whirr! noise bouncing through the alarmed shouting as her body tensed, expecting more spellfire. Professor Dumbledore’s arm swept around her shoulders, cloak hiding her from the crowd.

She remembered Elara’s trembling hand in her hair, pulling her head in against her chest, whispering, “I’m so sorry I’m late.”

She remembered thinking, “You look awful,” and didn’t know if she said it aloud. Elara had looked ghastly—sickly pale and drenched in what looked like her own dried blood. The remnant felt tacky under Harriet’s cheek.

She remembered the weight of Hermione’s head resting in her lap, quiet moans rising from her best friend’s mouth. She held her hand as the medi-wizards swept over, and they had a devil of a time finding where all the blood came from until they realized Harriet had been sliced open too and was quietly bleeding out.

“I have her,” Dumbledore said to the witch who reached for Harriet. His warm hand wrapped around her upper arm, holding her up, anchoring her. “I have her.”

She remembered the smell of soot, the heat of fire licking against her face. She flinched away from it, eyes shut. She flinched away from the loud crush of voice. She pulled away from the reaching, grasping hands, her heart racing—.

“You’re safe, Harriet,” Professor Dumbledore assured. “You’re safe. It’s all right.”

She didn’t feel safe. She didn’t want to let go.

So Professor Dumbledore stayed with her. He followed until he could follow no more, and Harriet sank into something soft beneath blurry lights, and when the shadows bent closer, her unfocused eyes rolled into the back of her head, and she knew no more.

 

xXx

 

The sound of distant, muffled voices woke Harriet from the darkness of empty dreams.

She didn’t recognize the ceiling above her, though the air had a familiar tang to it when it whooshed through her stuffy nose. She lay under crisp white sheets on a narrow bed, hemmed on both sides by floating curtains. Dim electric light coming through the far window gave relief to the otherwise dark room. She was surrounded by gentle, hushed breathing, and the magical chirp and chime of active spells.

Rolling her sore head on her pillow, Harriet glanced over her nightstand. A strange apparatus floated there that took her tired, groggy mind and fuzzy eyes several minutes to make heads or tails of. A series of potion bottles had been tipped and slotted into the device, and there were little brass levers and Charmed shutters that changed how and when the concoctions dripped from their bottles. As she watched, one potion dribbled, and the resulting droplets fell onto a flat, shimmering basin and disappeared.

“Fascinating contraption, isn’t it?”

Too tired to startle, Harriet nonetheless tilted her chin and stared dumbly at the blurry outline of the Headmaster standing at her bedside. He reached out his hand, holding something, and though Harriet stretched for it, her heavy, numb fingers couldn’t grasp anything. Dumbledore simply stepped closer to set her spectacles on her nose himself. His shape came into focus.

“Headmaster?” she croaked.

“Hello, Harriet,” he said, lacking his usual twinkle and cheer. He sounded…tired. “You’re in St. Mungo’s. You have been here for a day and a night. I’m very glad you’re awake.”

She didn’t feel bloody awake. Grunting, she tilted her groggy head again, staring at the potion device. “Wazzit?”

He followed where her attention had strayed. “I’m told it’s similar to a Muggle intravenous line,” Professor Dumbledore explained. “The needed dosage is deposited here, upon the basin here—and poof! It goes where it’s needed inside your body.” He nodded. “There’s a very interesting discourse in the Potions community about the differences in brewing these ‘bypass medicines,’ as they are referred to, or the normal potions which pass through the gastric system and interact with the acids there. Naturally, you could ask Severus all about this when he wakes up.”

The majority of what Dumbledore said passed right over Harriet’s head—but she noticed where he directed his eyes after his last comment, and she twisted on her bed with a frown. Snape was passed out in the visiting chair next to her, legs stretched out in front of himself, long-fingered hands laced together over his middle. His chin drooped to his chest.

“He’s here on Slytherin’s orders, so he says,” Dumbledore commented. “No need to worry—I placed him under a Muffling Charm. He can’t hear what’s happening in the room. Poor lad needs some rest.”

Feeling a tad more alert, Harriet made an effort to sit up, and the Headmaster assisted her. She found it almost too difficult to bend at the waist, and her right arm wouldn’t move at the elbow, so tightly bound in wrappings. “What happened?” she asked.

What small amount of levity Professor Dumbledore had found in their discourse faded, and he fixed his gaze on the floating divider, sighing. “I believe I can only give you part of the story, Harriet, for that is all I know. At an imprecise hour of the night, Miss Black entered Grimmauld Place. She was not in good condition, and it took considerable time and effort on her behalf to summon Kreacher and send him to retrieve a member of the Order in residence.” He paused. “I’m guessing you’ve heard of the Muggle game telephone? Sadly, receiving rushed news through a series of agents can often become such a game, in which the original message is confused, and it takes more precious time to figure out where it’d originated from. I did, eventually, unravel the mystery, but not before it was nearly too late.”

Harriet winced and touched her chest, feeling the thickness of bandages there under her hospital gown. “What happened to Elara? Did Death Eaters—?”

Dumbledore shook his head. “The healers aren’t entirely certain what she suffered from. Miss Black reported that she was attacked by Madam Umbridge in the Head’s office when she attempted to use the Floo. The attack included the use of the Cruciatus Curse. A warrant has been issued for Madam Umbridge’s arrest—but she seems to have fled and gone into hiding. So far, the Aurory has been unable to find her.”

So that was what had delayed Elara. Merlin, she’d looked absolutely wretched in Harriet’s brief recollection of her at the Ministry. What had Umbridge done to her?

“But, all will be well soon for Miss Black, and for Miss Granger. She suffered from the same curse you did.” Harriet prodded again at her chest, remembering the feeling of her flesh splitting, blood rushing. “I would suspect you took the brunt of it, but the tail-end of the incantation—.” Here, Professor Dumbledore’s hand mirrored the motion of Gaunt’s wand, slashing from left to right, angling down. “Caught Miss Granger in the abdomen. She—and you—will need more time in St. Mungo’s to recuperate.”

Harriet’s mouth soured at the prospect of being in a strange hospital. “Is—is McGonagall all right?”

“Ah.” Dumbledore’s expression fell somewhat, and for one heart-stopping moment, Harriet feared the worst. “Minerva will recover. Her injuries proved severe but not fatal. Harriet, I….” The older wizard faltered, and when he spoke, it was in a quieter voice than before. “Thank you for protecting her.”

“S’alright,” Harriet replied, frowning.

“No, it is not all right, my dear girl.” The Headmaster shook his head. “You should have never been forced to sacrifice your own well-being for a professor sworn to protect you as a student of Hogwarts. I know Minerva shares my thoughts on this sentiment. She is one of my oldest, most cherished friends, and as a selfish person, I can only be grateful for your actions. As someone charged with protecting you, I can only apologize for what has happened. Such a thing should have never passed within Hogwarts’ walls.”

Harriet shifted on her bed, uncomfortable. She kept thinking she’d done something wrong. She could have been faster, should have stopped the Death Eaters in Hogwarts, found another way to alert the staff, something. Then, McGonagall wouldn’t have been hurt. She and Hermione and Elara wouldn’t have been hurt.

Dumbledore continued his recounting. “While we attempted to puzzle through the bundled communication, Severus reported intelligence that something was amiss at Hogwarts. As he and I were both removed and banned from the premises, he had to utilize his own private means of getting into the castle, while I went to Grimmauld Place—wherein I found Miss Black. On Severus’ side of the story, he arrived at the school and discovered your absence from the dormitory. He found Minerva and was able to bring her through to St. Mungo’s. I came upon Miss Black in the care of an Order member, and though quite injured, she was able to relay what happened. We extrapolated from there and theorized Mr. Gaunt had removed you to the Ministry.” His mouth twitched around a frown. “The young man we had stationed there for surveillance didn’t survive.”

Harriet shut her eyes. It seemed a lot of people hadn’t survived that night. She remembered how callously Macnair had grabbed that wizard by the ankle to drag him out of sight. She remembered the Unspeakables, tossed aside like rubbish. She remembered the blood on the Watchwizard’s desk.

“If you have the inclination to read the Daily Prophet any time soon, you’re sure to discover that our esteemed Minister has been labeled a traitor to the state after his presence was discovered in the Ministry with the known terrorist Lord Voldemort.” Dumbledore waited a moment for his words to sink in. “Marvolo has proven his capable of twisting perceptions and controlling the narrative in the past—but in this instance, the evidence is too damning for him to overcome. He has been removed as Interim-Minister, and much like Madam Umbridge, a warrant has been issued for his arrest.” Dumbledore tugged at the end of his beard. The mischievous twinkle returned to his eye. “Quite an uproar you’ve caused, Miss Potter. Some would consider it revolutionary.”

Harriet huffed a small, forced laugh, but she couldn’t bring herself to do more than that. She felt numb, exhausted.

“I lost the prophecy,” she confessed to him. “Down there in that—bloody maze of a department. There was this statue, and—well, I guess it doesn’t matter, does it? I doubt anyone’s going to get it back.”

Dumbledore nodded, humming softly in thought, though the sound resonated on a low, sad register. “I will tell you what it said. Not right now, but at a more appropriate time. I…have something else I must discuss with you.”

Puzzled, Harriet watched as Professor Dumbledore reached into the pocket of his robes and removed a familiar strap, her many trinkets hanging from the end of it. He settled it on the top sheet so the trinkets spread themselves out, and he could select one in particular.

“Could you tell me about this piece here? Where you received it?”

Harriet scrunched her nose, but she extended her sore hand all the same, accepting the bit of Druid’s glass. “I got it from Mr. Flamel for the holiday. He said it’s Druid’s glass. Hey—the color’s gone off.” Indeed, the glossy black sheen with veins of rich amber had dulled to a lusterless gray. “That’s odd.”

Behind his half-moon spectacles, Dumbledore’s eyes squeezed shut as if in pain, and then opened again. He acted as if she’d confirmed something terrible. “Do you recall coming into contact with anything odd in the Department of Mysteries?”

Harriet had the rare privilege of looking at Professor Dumbledore as if he was an idiot, because that had surely been the dumbest question he could have asked. “Everything in the Department of Mysteries is odd, Professor.”

He conceded her point. “Anything dangerous, then?”

Harriet almost opened her mouth to rehash her statement and say everything in the bloody Department was dangerous—but the flicker of a memory touched her mind, and Harriet recoiled from it, her body as tense as a violin’s string. The feeling was only an echo of what she’d experienced at the moment, but the dread that had overcome her as the green light washed over her body still brought tears to her eyes.

The potions above her dripped, the droplets splattering on the basin before disappearing. Snape continued to breathe at even intervals, the quiet sound as constant as a metronome. A horrible, prickling sensation began to climb Harriet’s spine, and she suddenly didn’t want to hear another word out of Dumbledore’s mouth.

“Gaunt tried to use the Killing Curse,” she said, her throat growing tight. “I thought it—I thought it hit me, but it must have missed, right?” When Dumbledore didn’t reply, Harriet’s voice faltered to a quiet, featherlight volume. “Right?”

Dumbledore gently pried the trinkets from Harriet’s tight grip. “Though it is often mistaken as such, this is not a Druid’s glass. This is what is called a Demon’s Eye.”

“What is that? What does that mean?” Harriet demanded, her panic growing. “Professor?”

“I will spare you the particulars on how it is created. For Nicolas’ sake, I would ask you not to look into how it is made, but I—. The purpose of a Demon’s Eye is—.” He hesitated, clearly torn, and Harriet heard him take a gusty sigh. “It acts as a trade, of sorts. It will protect the wearer from death, but at great cost to the creator.”

“What—.” Harriet had to swallow, as her mouth had gone suddenly dry. “What are you saying, Professor?”

Dumbledore studied her with sad eyes. “Nicolas has passed away. He died on the night you were taken to the Ministry.”

Harriet stared at him. She heard the words—but they made no sense. He had to be speaking Gobbledygook. “You’re lying.”

“Harriet.” Dumbledore sounded almost disappointed. “I would never lie to you, and never about such a thing—.”

You’re lying!” The scream tore through her as rattled the unlit lamps in their sockets. He must have laid a Silencing Charm over the whole ward, as no one came running from the corridor beyond the ajar door. “You’re lying! He can’t—! No! No! Take it back! Please—!”

Then, she was wailing, and she tried to throw herself off the bed, but Dumbledore caught her by the arm and held her there.

No! Let me go! It’s not true!”

“It will be all right, Harriet. I promise it will be all right.”

“It won’t!” she shouted, tears burning a scalding path down her cheeks. “It won’t! It’s my fault! It can’t be real, or it’s my fault for being there! For this happening! No!”

“It is not your fault,” Dumbledore told her, his own eyes wetly gleaming. “It was never your fault.”

But no matter his assurances or her vehement denials, the truth didn’t change, and the Headmaster’s didn’t retract his words. Nicolas has passed away. He died on the night you were taken to the Ministry. Again and again, Harriet saw the green light meant to end her life strike her in the chest—and again and again, she relived her own relief that it had missed.

Relief she felt, unknowing the light had found a different target instead.

Harriet continued to sob, and Dumbledore held her as she did so, both lost to a deep, painful grief born of recognizing that a dear friend had been stolen from them, and had somewhere they could not follow.

Chapter 294: stories to share

Chapter Text

ccxciv. stories to share

 

Days at St. Mungo’s proved just as interminable as they did in Madam Pomfrey’s infirmary.

At first, Harriet had company, joined by Hermione and Elara in their shared room. Sirius and Remus were constantly there, and Snape was a shadow in the background, hidden behind a Daily Prophet. But then, after two days, Elara was discharged, and after four days, Hermione was too. Snape had to return to work, and so did Remus. Professor Dumbledore was busier than ever. Sirius still came every afternoon, but he had things to be doing for the Order.

That left Harriet alone more often than not. The healers kept chivying her back to her empty room, the stationed Aurors allowing no strangers to step inside. She tried to sleep—she truly did—but Harriet found no rest at St. Mungo’s. Her nightmares stalked her the moment she closed her eyes.

Letters piled on her nightstand. She ignored them.

When she could, Harriet liked to go to the room Professor McGonagall was convalescing in and sit with her. She couldn’t always go there—sometimes slipping past the healers proved impossible, and other times McGonagall’s brother, Mr. Malcolm McGonagall, was there with her sister-in-law, or her nephews visited. Harriet wondered what it was like to have family to worry about you.

She thought of the Mirror of Erised and the images within that lurked in the darkness of her mind. Her first glimpse of her parents’ faces, two younger siblings cloaked in their mum and dad’s love. Her own hand, so small, eagerly pressing to the glass, unable to pass through to the other side.

You’ll never know what it’s like.

No, that wasn’t true. She had a family. She did. She did.

That morning, she had a spot of luck, as McGonagall was alone in her room, propped up by pillows as she read the paper. She rolled her eyes when Harriet darted inside and climbed onto the visitor’s chair, folding her legs beneath yourself.

“Och, I know for a certainty you are meant to be in your bed, Miss Potter,” Professor McGonagall chided, though she didn’t glance up from her reading. She turned the page—and when Harriet caught a glimpse of her own face, she averted her eyes. “You’re going to give Healer Smethwyck a heart-attack.”

“I’m bored,” she complained, watching the door. Without a word, McGonagall picked up her wand from the side table and pointed it at the window, shuttering the blinds.

“Unfortunately, being in hospital is rarely fun, Harriet.”

Grumbling, she wrapped her cloak more securely over her gown. She knew that. She didn’t want to go back to that empty ward. She didn’t want to sit there, alone, waiting for someone that would never come.

“Hello, petit oiseau—.”

Shuddering, she shut her eyes and forced the memory away.

McGonagall continued to read, and Harriet stayed quiet, not wanting to be sent away. She glimpsed one particular article on one of the back pages that prompted her to quietly mention, “The O.W.L exams finished today.”

The professor nodded. “That they did.” Then, glancing toward Harriet through her square spectacles, she added, “The Headmaster has already informed you you’ll be taking your exams in the summer at the Ministry. Special allowances are being made.”

Harriet brought her knees up to her chest, not caring that it made the wound stretching from her left shoulder to the right side of her belly fiercely burn.

“I heard they want Professor Dumbledore to run for Minister,” she mumbled—and McGonagall barked a laugh.

“Ha! Yes, I’ve seen the speculation, too. I assure you, Albus is no more likely to leave Hogwarts than he is to depart for Wales and open a haberdashery.”

“I don’t know about that. He’s mad for fashion, Professor.”

“Oh, pish. You know what I mean.”

Harriet quietly hummed, cheek on her knees.

After a minute, Professor McGonagall folded her paper together and turned her head to properly study Harriet. “You look very tired, Miss Potter,” she commented with a hint of disapproval in her tone. “Did you get any sleep last night?”

“Mhm,” Harriet lied, because she hadn’t gotten any sleep at all. She hadn’t for several nights, but last evening, she’d made a very foolish decision. Despite Professor Dumbledore’s warning, Harriet had called Winky to her side, and she’d asked her to go to Grimmauld and find Elara’s thick, leatherbound encyclopedia of dangerous Wizarding objects. She’d thumbed through the gritty, yellowing pages until she found ‘D,’ for Demon’s Eye.

A shadowed relic, oft miscast as the gentler Druid’s glass, the Demon’s Eye is a treacherous artifact born of grim sacrifice and whispered curses,” she’d read. “When the bearer meets mortal peril, the Eye enacts its purpose: life is shed from its creator and bestowed upon the imperiled holder. Yet take heed, for the Demon’s Eye is thus named for the stolen élan vital upon which the bridge between bearer and creator is built, defining it thus as a Dark and disastrous object indeed.”

Harriet had carefully turned the pages until she found ‘élan vital.’ “Élan Vital, that sacred and ineffable breath, is the force unseen, the essence of life itself. It courses through all living things, a spark divine, igniting the heart and quickening the soul. Neither body nor mind, but the very pulse of existence, it sustains and animates where flesh and bone alone cannot.”

She’d dropped the book in the dead of night. The binding slipped right through her numb, bandaged fingers.

Mr. Flamel killed someone, she’d realized. Mr. Flamel killed someone to make the Demon’s Eye. For me.

Sitting with McGonagall, Harriet could not help but wish she’d listened to Professor Dumbledore—but she was an idiot. She’d always been an idiot who lacked common bloody sense, and she’d looked up what it was. She’d been an idiot to accept a gift so blindly, without asking questions. She’d been a stupid, worthless wretch of a girl, so pathetic that she drove a man who cared about her to commit murder just to keep her safe.

“Professor?” Harriet whispered.

“Yes?”

“Do you think it’s okay for people to do…terrible things to protect someone?” she asked, hugging her legs tighter.

“Well, I think that depends, Harriet.”

She chewed on her bottom lip. “When does it stop being okay?”

“I couldn’t tell you an answer. For some, there isn’t a time when protecting someone they love becomes too much. What’s the Muggle expression? They refrain from drawing lines in the sand to keep themselves from crossing them. You can’t cross a line if you don’t create it.”

“But isn’t that what Voldemort’s doing?” Harriet asked with a note of panic, not missing how McGonagall’s eye ticked at the name. “He’s the person he cares most about on this earth. He’s protecting himself. It’s wrong what he’s doing. When does it become wrong for other people, too?”

“I…don’t know, Miss Potter. I simply don’t know.”

It wasn’t much later that her healer finally found Harriet, the older wizard decidedly miffed he’d had to traverse the whole level before checking McGonagall’s room. “You’ve someone waiting for you,” he grumbled. “On the fifth floor, in the visitors’ tearoom.”

Harriet grimaced, already knowing it wouldn’t be anybody she wanted to see. Sirius would have gone straight to her room, and she wagered Professor Dumbledore would’ve probably come to see Professor McGonagall first anyway. Hermione and Elara couldn’t leave Hogwarts.

It was just as well, seeing as Mr. McGonagall chose then to visit his sister again, and Harriet quickly ducked out of the room. Healer Smethwyck gave her an exasperated look, and she stuck out her tongue before hurrying off to the lifts. She stepped inside and pressed the button for the fifth floor.

Harriet sighed.

The last time she’d been called up there, it’d been to talk to that weird Unspeakable woman, Morwenna Lincroft. She’d come in regular clothes, and it’d been bizarre to see a slightly pudgy, graying witch sit and nibble biscuits over a cup of tea, knowing what she wrangled with every day beneath the streets of London. Lincroft wanted an accounting for what exactly happened in her Department. Harriet did a lot of hemming and hawing, refusing to admit she’d been the one to blast half the Hall of Prophecy to kingdom come, though she felt Lincroft already knew the truth.

Wonder if she came back, Harriet fretted as she stepped off the lift. Merlin, can I go to Azkaban for that? Stupid, ruddy Department. Ruddy Death Eaters.

She opened the door to the tearoom, sniffing at the pungent aroma of steeping leaves and someone’s perfume. A couple sat on one side of the large space, deep in conversation, obviously not waiting for her. Harriet turned, searching, and then—.

She froze upon seeing Perenelle Flamel sitting in one of the visitor’s chairs.

Harriet thought of the letters on her nightstand. She thought of her weakness, her tears, her inability to dare open a single one.

Coward. COWARD.

Perenelle wore Muggle-passing clothes, beige slacks and a light, cowl-necked sweater that sufficed in the early summer weather. She had her head tipped toward the windows, and the sunlight splashed in thick, hazy bands of gold across her pleasant face, shining in her hair. She spotted Harriet in the doorway, and she smiled as gently as she always did.

As if drawn by a pulled string, Harriet staggered forward, unable to help the look of terror on her face.

What if she blames me? All my fault, all my—. What if she blames me? What if—?

When she stood in front of her, Perenelle tutted under her breath and gave Harriet a knowing look. “You’ve been ignoring my letters,” she said.

Harriet broke. She landed on her knees, startling the couple across the way, and started to sob. Perenelle didn’t hesitate to gather her close, Harriet burying her tear-streaked face in her middle as Perenelle ran her fingers through Harriet’s unwashed hair.

“Ah, ma petite chouette,” she sighed. “Such a silly thing you are. It is all right.”

“No, it’s not,” Harriet choked into her sweater. “It’s not all right! It’s—it’s my fault! I’m sorry! It’s my fault he’s gone! He gave me—gave me that thing! And I took it! It’s my fault!”

Perenelle shifted her hands to grip Harriet’s shoulders and ease her back. “It is not.” She stared into Harriet’s sore, red-rimmed eyes and raised a brow. “Do you really think Nicolas would do such a thing without telling me? Without me agreeing?”

Harriet paused. Her lower lip trembled as she stared into Perenelle’s sad eyes, searching for a lie, and finding none. She knew. She knew what he did—.

Oui, I agreed,” she whispered, hands rising to cup Harriet’s face. Her thumbs brushed away her tears. “And maybe that means there is a place in the lake of fire for both myself and my Nicolas, but c’est la vie.

“Who was it?” Harriet asked, swallowing another sob.

“Oh, non, my girl. Think no more on it. That is our burden to carry, not yours.”

But Harriet couldn’t forget it. This burden wasn’t like a school bag that could be slouched off her shoulders and left on the floor while she slept. She lived and breathed because Mr. Flamel gave his life—and the life of another—for her to survive. Who was he to judge her life more worthy than somebody else’s? Who had he killed? A criminal? An innocent? Where did the line between what was okay and what wasn’t get crossed? When had it become acceptable for anybody to die for her?

Perenelle bent to kiss the crown of Harriet’s head. “Sois forte, Harriet,” she whispered, and Harriet could feel an echo of her grief, the hollowness centuries of companionship could leave when it was snatched away. “Ma souffrance sera brève.”

Harriet wished she knew French. She wished she’d taken the time to learn, to ask more questions, to spend more time with him. She wished she was stronger so Mr. Flamel hadn’t needed to do something so awful to make up for her shortcomings.

She heard the crinkle of parchment, and she blinked her tired eyes to see Perenelle withdrawing a folded parchment from her pocket. Harriet’s name had been written across the front in a familiar copperplate.

“He left this for you,” Perenelle said with a slight sniffle, her smile watery when it came. “It is not part of le testament. That will come later. Here, take it.”

And Harriet took it, even if it felt like her fingers were burning, like her chest was caving in. She cradled the last letter in her hand and her eyes blurred with tears.

“I’m so sorry,” she said again, voice cracking. “I’m so sorry. I don’t want you to go.”

Perenelle rose, and her hand cupped Harriet’s cheek. She tipped the younger witch’s face up, and she traced a fond finger over her nose, above her brow. Harriet wondered if her mother had ever done the same, but she didn’t know. She’d never know. “Ce n'est qu'un au revoir,” she said, still smiling. “You needn’t be sorry for a thing, dear Harriet. We will meet again. I believe that with everything in my heart.”

She stayed for awhile longer, then it was time for her to go. The sunlight faded from the open windows, the night swiftly approaching. Harriet hugged her tight, and Perenelle embraced her with equal fervor. She looked back as she opened the door to the tearoom, and she grinned. Harriet waved until the door swung shut again, and she was gone.

 

x X x

 

A week later, Harriet received a letter in the post informing her Perenelle Flamel had passed away in her sleep.

 

x X x

 

À mon petit oiseau,

If you are reading this, then the time of my passing has come, though I cannot predict in what form my Maker had appeared. Should it happen peacefully, out of the blue, then so be it, and I will say no more. Should other events precipitate it, should your Druid ’s glass turn dark in your little hands, je te demande pardon. But I will not say I am sorry. One day, you will understand the decision I have made.

Your Severus once called me a “doddering old fence-sitter,” and he was not wrong. He referred to you as something “worth more than the gold and the years,” and again, he was not wrong. A remarkably cruel man, but then again, honesty is often cruelty to those who refuse to acknowledge it. I remember often your first letter. Since that day, you have not strayed far from my thoughts, the curious English girl who wanted nothing more than stories of magic and goodness in the world. You are the goodness in the world, Harriet. Worth more than the gold and the years indeed.

I have done a great many terrible things in my life, and I have had the luxury of living long enough to regret them. Time gives perspective to old men and gates wisdom from the young. Que c ’est étrange, in the twilight of my life, to discover anew something worth living and dying for. The latter is not so difficult when you hold no fear of it, vous savez? But to live? To grasp so desperately for that which you cannot hold onto? That is a terrifying thing. It is humbling and horrible to know that, no matter your youth, no matter your wisdom, you will one day fail.

For a long, long time, Perenelle and I have lived without regrets, but in these last years, I found I have many. I regret not listening to ma mie when she said we needed to challenge Albus, that we needed to take you in as our own, Tom Riddle be damned. At the time, I thought it was better for you, safer, and I cannot fully disagree with my own assumption even now. But, old men are selfish. They cannot help but reflect on what could have been, and I regret such silly things. I regret that we did not inquire about the b ébé who survived on that dreadful Halloween, that we did not take you in then and give you the life you deserve. It is a ridiculous thought, as we could not have known how precious you come to be to us, but it is a thought I have had nonetheless. I think often of the privilege it would have been to raise a child such as yourself in our home, and of the happiness I could have given my wife when I instead gave her many woes.

As you know, Perenelle and I have not had children. In the time we met and fell in love, the Plague had taken over Europe, and the Moyenne were not the only ones to feel its ravages. We decided then to not have d’enfants, and later, I believe it was the Stone that took all other choices from us. Which was, perhaps, a good thing. To outlive your child is the greatest nightmare a parent could have, and we have left behind enough friends to know it is not something we could survive.

You may think me selfish for being happier this way, to die before you as the coward I am, though I will always wish for one more day. One more day to see the witch you will become, one more day to see the Dark Lord dead, and you happy. One more day to see you fall in love, to have adventures, and change the world. For that is what you are destined to do, Harriet Potter, whether I am there to see it or not. Long after the Dark Lord is dust, apr ès que son nom a été réclamé par la Mort, you will still be changing the world, and this will all be a distant memory.

If I must give you any advice, if you are willing to listen to a man such as me after all I have done, I will tell you to live. To protect those you love, and to live without regrets. You could live for a thousand years and still find life to be much too short for such things.

For now, I must bid you farewell, and I hope we meet again upon distant shores with stories to share once again.

Now and forever, all my love to you, little bird, fille de mon c œur,

Your father,

Nicolas Flamel


A/N: “Sois forte.” Be strong.

“Ma souffrance sera brève.” My suffering will be brief.

“Ce n'est qu'un au revoir.” This is only a goodbye, suggesting it’s not a final parting.

“Après que son nom a été réclamé par la Mort.” After his name is taken by Death.

Harriet, reading the death announcement: “This is not very demure, not very mindful. Not at all.”

Chapter 295: chosen

Chapter Text

ccxcv. chosen

 

Harriet didn’t recall much of her remaining time at St. Mungo’s.

She did know Healer Smethwyck was glad to see the back of her when the time came for her to leave, and she did know eyes followed her through the corridors as if attached to strings tied to her forehead. Harriet ignored them, but she still felt the attention. She spent hours sitting at the window, watching London and pretending she wasn’t caving inward like a dying star.

After being discharged, Tonks Disapparated her from the hospital to a road in the highlands, and Harriet needed a minute to adjust to the altitude. The skin of her chest felt tight, and she grunted, pushing on the new scar tissue with her knuckles.

Moody stomped about in a loose circle as Harriet leaned against a convenient lamppost, and Tonks crouched nearby, twirling her wand between her fingers.

“Did they give you the right stuff for that, Potter?” Moody barked, jerking his head toward her massaging hand. “Damn healers are always in a rush to get you out the door once they’ve decided they’re done with you, and they never give aftercare a good thought.”

“They gave me Derma-Bond,” she told him.

Moody spat in the holly bushes. “Rubbish. That won’t do a thing against scars left by Dark magic. Get yourself some Curious Cortico Concoction. Now that’s the stuff you need. Get Dumbledore’s pet Death Eater to brew you a batch, and it should last the summer. Use it, or you’ll be twisted tighter than a deadman’s noose, Potter.”

Harriet didn’t have the energy to argue with the man over his treatment of Snape, and she guessed if anyone knew how to treat gnarled scars, it’d be Mad-Eye Moody.

“All right,” she settled on saying, sighing.

After another minute, she walked with the two Aurors the rest of the way to the gates. Two wizards stood at attention on either side of the entrance, but neither was familiar to Harriet, nor did they wear the maroon-colored robes from the Aurory. Instead, they had robes in a deep, royal blue, the piping done in silver, the cut more like a duffle coat, what with its fancy toggles in the front.

Tonks awkwardly shuffled in her boots as they passed, and Moody didn’t say anything until the gates slammed home behind them, and the wards visibly rippled as they sealed together once more.

“They’re from the ICW,” Moody growled. “The Ministry’s in shambles. The minute Scrimgeour came into office as Interim Minister, he declared a state of emergency and begged the ICW to send aid. Wizarding Britain’s being held together with blood bubblegum.”

“Anyone of those tossers who’s ever had one of those Guardian of the Magical Right pins is being hauled in for an inquiry,” Tonks added. “And their estates are being raided by Hit Wizards searching for Gaunt. We had a bet he’d come out of hiding and try to weasel his way out of things, but Moody figures once he knew those ICW chaps were getting pulled in, he’d never be able to threaten or bribe them all. He’s on the front page of papers across the world with You-Know-Who and his wand pointed at a teenager. The Hit Wizards are keen to sniff him out.”

Fat lot of good it’ll do them, Harriet thought. If the Hit Wizards did manage to find Gaunt, they’d also find the Dark Lord—and she wouldn’t wish that disaster on anyone. Besides, Lucius Malfoy was still hiding out in Grimmauld Place and wasn’t about to submit to an inquiry. As far as she knew, Voldemort was still squatting in the Malfoy ancestral home. She didn’t think Lucius could return if he wanted to.

She knew the Ministry was in a state of upheaval. Hermione had been quite keen on following the changes, and she’d written Harriet a bloody dissertation about it while she was still in hospital. She had a bunch of suggestions for how Harriet should vote in the next Wizengamot meeting, whether she attended herself or nominated Sirius as proxy to go in her stead.

They drew nearer the main doors, and those students lounging outside, enjoying the weather, stopped what they were doing to watch.

She’s back.

She dueled You-Know-Who.”

Have you seen her picture in the Prophet?

Do you see her?

Do you see her scar?

They’re calling her—.”

Harriet didn’t acknowledge the stares or the whispers. She didn’t even acknowledge members of the Coven who called her name in welcome; if she stopped walking and someone made the dire mistake of showing her that fucking paper, Harriet thought she might snap.

Oh, she knew what they’d started calling her. If anyone dared name her the Chosen One to her face, Harriet wouldn’t be liable for the subsequent hexing.

The Prophet had done a bang-up job of tearing into her life, dragging out the story of Terry’s death and her escape from the Dark Lord last year, interviewing students, posting her prior marks. They turned over all the little details and wrote exaggerated articles titled ‘Who is the Chosen One?’ Skeeter’s hands had been tied by Hermione, but that didn’t stop the rest of the Prophet’s reporters and correspondents. A few even tried to sneak into St. Mungo’s and get pictures of Harriet.

And this is what Longbottom wants? she couldn’t help but spitefully think. He wants this ‘fame’? He wants them clamoring after him, making sport of his mistakes, turning his pain into gossip for speculation? Idiot.

She remembered the inkwells shattering on the floor the last time she spoke to him, the hatred in his eyes. She sighed.

Tonks and Moody escorted Harriet through the main doors, then up the stairs, despite her protests.

“I’m inside the ruddy castle,” she complained. “I don’t need to be marched about.”

“Headmaster needs to see you right off,” Moody grunted, wooden leg thumping on the stone floor. “And don’t forget, girlie, the castle’s not as safe as you think. The Lestrange boy proved that.”

Harriet’s skin crawled with the casual mention of her abduction. “Don’t call me girlie,” she retorted, then subsided into stubborn silence.

She ground her teeth once the pair left her at the gargoyle, giving the password to see her up the stairs. That annoyance festered as she climbed to the office door, but Harriet took a breath once she stepped inside, and she squashed the feeling. Maybe she had viable reasons to be irritated with the Headmaster, but Harriet didn’t care. She didn’t want to feel so wretched all the time.

Professor Dumbledore stood before his desk, his hand resting against his middle as he spoke with Professor Snape. Snape sat sprawled in one of the guest chairs, and he straightened once he realized Harriet had come into the room. Dumbledore smiled in welcome, but she detected the same exhaustion that clung to her bleeding through the expression.

“Good afternoon, Harriet. It’s very good to see you better and back in school,” he said.

“For a day,” Harriet grumped, already anticipating her summer holiday would be unpleasant and filled with far too much Slytherin. She slumped into the second chair without waiting for the Headmaster’s leave, and she crossed her arms. She looked over at Snape, not quite able to meet his eyes, and muttered, “Hi, Professor.”

Snape gave a stiff nod.

“My apologies for summoning you here so abruptly,” Dumbledore continued as if Harriet hadn’t been short with him. “I thought it best for our discussion to happen now so you may enjoy the rest of your afternoon as you see fit.”

“What do you want to talk about?” Harriet asked, unsure. Snape looked uncomfortable, but he didn’t leave, and she wondered if he’d been asked here as well.

Dumbledore studied Harriet for a moment, seeming as if he didn’t know where to begin and needed to gather his thoughts. “When we spoke after your—excursion to the Ministry, let’s call it, I promised you I would tell you what the prophecy said.”

Snape shifted in his seat. “Headmaster, I don’t see why….”

“You’re needed here, Severus,” Dumbledore said simply, leaning off his desk. He paced around it, and from within one of the desk drawers, he removed a familiar glass sphere.

“Oh,” Harriet breathed, nothing else coming to mind as Professor Dumbledore returned to stand in front of her, extending the prophecy for her to take. The glass still felt warm under her fingertips when she picked it up. “They…they found it?”

Dumbledore inclined his head, a touch of humor brightening his eyes. “The Unspeakables are quite particular about things in their Department, though I’m told it was no easy feat to convince the Crone to release her prize.” He chuckled. “It’s not standard protocol, but Madam Lincroft saw it as a…precaution to release such a coveted prophecy from the Hall, as to ensure no one else would come looking for it again. I assured her it would be given into your keeping. I believe she views gifting it to you as an apology of sorts, though whether or not you thank her for it is yet to be seen.”

Harriet turned the sphere in her hands, skin sliding against the dimpled glass. She traced the thin brass band around and around its middle with her nail, unable to comprehend the symbols imprinted on it. “What do I do?”

“If you wish to hear what it says, you simply need to break the glass.”

“If?”

“The choice is yours. Your life doesn’t change whether or not you hear what it contains; you are still Harriet, after all.”

Harriet stared at the prophecy for another moment—and then tipped her hand without ceremony, letting it hit the bare flagstones by her feet. The glass splintered, and the pearly gray fog within began to seep out. A rough, haggard voice rose in volume and sent chills along Harriet’s spine.

The one with the power to vanquish the Dark Lord approaches... born to those who have thrice defied him, born as the seventh month dies... and the Dark Lord will thrice mark them as his equal, body for body, but they will be possessed of a power the Dark Lord knows not... and all must die at the hand of the other for none can live while the others survive... providence lies in the master’s service… the one with the power to vanquish the Dark Lord will be born as the seventh month dies....”

The voice faded, trailing into nothing with the last syllable dragging like a snake’s angry hiss.

Snape looked as if he’d aged ten years into a minute. His skin was paler than ever.

“I don’t…I don’t understand,” Harriet admitted, grasping for words. She didn’t know what she’d expected to hear, but it hadn’t been that. Were prophecies meant to be so—vague? Sounded like dreadful, doom-laced mimble-wimble to her.

Dumbledore clarified for her. “The prophet you heard speaking referred to a child of indeterminate gender, born to parents who had defied Voldemort multiple times in their pasts, born at the end of July, who would be marked three times by the Dark Lord as his equal.”

Harriet’s neck burned. Snape gripped the arms of his chair tight enough for the fabric to tear.

“But that’s just—rubbish,” Harriet asserted, her heart hammering. “All of it—tosh! Because, what does that even mean? It doesn’t—it might not even mean me. What if they meant the baby was born the next year? Why does—‘approaches’ might not mean born! Or maybe the year before? Hermione once told me July wasn’t even the seventh month before, so what if this stupid glass ball is referring to some old, funky calendar? And what does defying even mean? Maybe it’s referring to some bloke at the corner store who denied ruddy Voldemort a discount three times!”

Her voice had steadily risen in pitch as Dumbledore gently shook his head. “You’re quite right, Harriet. The subjectiveness of prophecies is legendary. However, all subjectiveness disappeared when Voldemort laid a mark upon your person.”

Harriet reached up to dig her fingernails into the robes covering her chest.

And all must die at the hand of the other for none can live while the others survive….

Her breathing quickened just shy of pants, and Snape reached across the space between them, curling a large hand around her thin wrist.

“Professor, I—.” Her throat closed, and Harriet struggled, baring her teeth. “How could you think I’d ever stand a chance against him? I’ll never—he’s too strong. I didn’t lay a single hex on him at the Ministry. I’m not enough. I’ll never be enough!”

“You’re so much stronger than you know, Harriet. So much stronger than Tom will ever be.”

And all must die at the hand of the other—.

“Bullshite!” she yelled. The tiny silver instruments scattered around Dumbledore’s office trembled, and the legs of Snape’s chair screeched against the floor as it slid back, yanking his hand from her. “I’m not strong! I’m just—afraid! I’m always afraid! And I’ll never be anything more than a stupid, scared little girl who gets everyone around her killed!”

“Harriet—.”

And all must die—.”

“I can’t do it!” she cried, the morass in her chest seeming to expand and constrict until her lungs ached and her heart fluttered like a pathetic, feeble bird. “I’m not what everyone thinks I am! I’m not anybody’s Chosen anything!” Tears dripped from her lashes, and Harriet wiped them away, so bloody sick of crying. “I’ll never be able to kill him, so I should just be ready to die, is that it?!”

The Headmaster said her name again, louder, but Harriet refused to listen. She was up and out of the chair, and in an instant, she was across the room, opening the door. Dumbledore could have stopped her, but he didn’t, and Harriet didn’t know if she should feel grateful or devastated that he let her go. She didn’t know what to think anymore.

She thought the Aurors might have remained at the bottom of the stairs outside of the gargoyle, but when the stone creature leapt aside to reveal the corridor beyond, Harriet was met with an entirely unwelcome sight. Professor Slytherin stood there, waiting for the gargoyle to permit him entry.

“Ah, I had wondered why the old man blocked access to the office,” he mused with a snide smirk. “So you’ve finally returned, apprentice.”

The unguarded look Harriet threw him practically glowed with her disdain, her eyes vibrant, hateful, and when she turned without saying a word to him, Slytherin grabbed her by the arm and whipped her around to face him.

I’d be careful, Potter,” he hissed. “After all, once your O.W.L exams are finished at the Ministry this summer, you’ll be all mine.

I’ll never be yours,” Harriet spat in reply.

Slytherin just laughed, loosening his grip enough for her to pull free. Harriet yanked herself away and started down the corridor at a furious clip. “Oh, we’ll see about that, Miss Potter. We’ll see.

 

xXx

 

Hermione and Elara found Harriet later seated on Slytherin’s Redoubt while the rest of the school went down for dinner.

They stepped out onto the sun-warmed parapet with her, both squinting against the orange sunlight blazing in their eyes. It got dark so much later now that summer had begun to bloom. Sometimes, Harriet wondered what it would be like to stay there for the season, to spend the temperate evenings in the sunshine by the lakeshore, so far away from the heavy shadows of a winter night.

“You’re missing the Leaving Feast,” Hermione informed her. “All your favorites are being served.”

“I can’t be in there right now,” Harriet said without looking around, her gaze fixed on the horizon. “I couldn’t stand it, I don’t think.”

Neither Hermione nor Elara argued with the sentiment. After a moment, they shuffled on the narrow platform until they could sit on either side of Harriet like tidy bookends. Hermione winced when she bent at the waist. Elara still looked peaky, distracted.

“Well, there’s no sense in going hungry,” Hermione said with her usual prim efficiency, and she withdrew a stack of bacon butties neatly wrapped in napkins. Elara pulled out threw goblets from her robe pockets and a flask, pouring three servings of cold pumpkin juice. Harriet couldn’t help her small, tired laugh.

“Cheers to that, then,” she said, accepting a sandwich and her drink. The first bite made her realize how hungry she’d grown, and she didn’t hesitate when Hermione waved a second butty under her nose.

The air stayed warm as the hour grew later. Birds sand in the distant forest, both mundane and magical, flitting above the canopy in brief snatches of vibrant color.

Hello, petit oiseau.”

Harriet swallowed, tongue darting out to lick pumpkin juice from her lip. Her nervous fingers peeled at the bread’s crust as she told her friends what was on her mind.

“He told me the prophecy,” she said. “Dumbledore, that is. He let me hear it.”

Quietly, she relayed to them the ghostly words she’d listened to in the Headmaster’s office. Elara and Hermione grew more grim-faced as she went on.

“I don’t know what to do,” Harriet confessed in a tone of soft, defeated misery. “I’ll never be able to defeat him. I’ll never be able to defeat one of him, let alone the others. Let alone…kill them. I’m not strong enough. What am I supposed to do?”

For a moment, neither witch had an answer for her, and Harriet despaired. Then, Hermione sniffed, putting her imperious nose in the air. “It’s obvious, isn’t it?”

“What is?”

“What we need to do. You’re not alone, Harriet. Don’t think that for a moment we’d leave you to do this on your own. And yes, it’s obvious. We need to find a way to destroy the Horcruxes.”

She made it sound so simple. Harriet huffed, rubbing her brow. “Not even Dumbledore’s sure how to do that,” she commented.

A smirk twitched on Elara’s mouth. “We know Fiendfyre works,” she said. Hermione reached past Harriet to swat her arm.

“Yes, and we’d set ourselves and half the English countryside ablaze,” she retorted. “Have some subtlety, for Merlin’s sake. We’re not Gryffindors.”

“Heaven forbid.”

Hermione harrumphed. “No, we’ll simply need to learn how to destroy them ourselves.” She fixed her gaze on Harriet, and there was steel in her brown eyes, the sun glinting in their depths like light off a blade. “If there are no more Horcruxes, then it’s just him. You’re more than a match for just him, Harriet Potter. I know you are.”

Harriet couldn’t describe the dread that filled her thinking of just him. Voldemort was not just anything. Her hands shook when she recalled the sheer magnitude of power that had slammed into her Shield at the Ministry. That was before Gaunt decided to slice her open like a pig.

With her friends there, and the sun shining, the dread didn’t reach quite so far, and Harriet’s spine didn’t feel as if it’d snap in two under the weight of her grief. The raspy, winding words of the prophecy felt less pressing, and her heart thumped steady in her chest.

“Long after the Dark Lord is dust, you will still be changing the world, and this will all be a distant memory.”

“All right,” Harriet said, then again, louder, stronger. “All right. Then, that’s what we’ll do. I’ll be stronger, better. We’ll destroy the Horcruxes—.” Her breath shuddered, and her friends each gripped one of her hands. Their fingers laced together. “And then…it’ll just be him. Him, and me.”

Chapter 296: i am lord voldemort

Chapter Text

ccxcvi. i am lord voldemort

 

Albus Dumbledore watched Harriet as she withdrew from his office, her back a straight, hard line with misery riding hard upon her raised shoulders.

The door slammed shut behind her.

Severus went to jump from his seat and follow, but Albus tempered him. “Leave her be,” he said, and the Potions Master stiffened as if he hadn’t realized what he was doing. “Let her go. She wouldn’t appreciate being coddled, Severus. Not now.” Albus knew how deeply such grief could cut when it turned to anger, and he didn’t wish that upon Harriet or Severus.

He blinked, and then his lip curled. “I’ve never coddled anyone a day in my life,” he retorted as if being convicted of kindness were the worst sort of slander. “I simply fail to understand why you would allow her to disrespect you like that and strut from the office.”

“I think you’ll agree with me that Harriet deserves more license than most.”

“I will do no such thing.”

He lowered his unhappy gaze to the floor, alighting upon the remains of the prophecy. His expression didn’t change, but he stepped forward, and Albus heard the remaining glass crunch beneath the heel of his boot.

If only it were so simple, Albus thought as Snape twisted his foot, and the broken slivers ground to dust. Often, Albus was of two minds; the first grateful that fate decided to place an old doddering wizard such as himself in Aberforth’s pub at the right moment to hear the prophecy, the second always wishing the damn thing had gone unheard, relegated instead to blissful obscurity deep in Madam Lincroft’s Hall of Prophecy. If no one had ever listened to the prophecy, would it have come to pass? Would Harriet Potter still have her parents? Would Lord Voldemort still be in power?

He never fell from power, Albus mused with a brief, self-deprecating smile.

Sometimes, he could admit to himself he wished Mr. Longbottom truly was the destined child—and not because he felt Neville was stronger than Harriet or more capable. No, sadly, Albus was of the opinion the poor boy lacked a certain quality of character needed to withstand Tom Riddle—but Albus’ selfish heart could not help but wish it’d been him sometimes. Him who needed to shoulder the burdens that were slowly, indelibly breaking parts of Harriet’s spirit.

He pictured what her life could have been if Tom Riddle had been nothing but a bogeyman instead of her destiny. Perhaps she would have gone to Beauxbatons when Nicolas first suggested it as a possibility. Perhaps Nicolas and Perenelle would still be alive. Perhaps Harriet would not bear quite so many scars, and maybe her smile wouldn’t have grown quite so rare.

But, it didn’t do to dwell on dreams and forget to live.

The Potions Master retrieved his wand and Vanished the ruined prophecy, having to repeat the spell to get the remaining granules.

Magic prickled against Albus’ ear, soft as a butterfly’s wing. He straightened and exhaled. “We’re about to have company, Severus.”

Not a moment later, the office door opened, and Professor Slytherin came inside without invitation. To say Tom sauntered in wouldn’t have been an inaccurate description in Albus’ opinion, and he had a sneaking suspicion he knew what had put that particular smugness in the wizard’s step.

Those few distraught glimmers of self Severus had allowed to surface vanished in an instant, replacing the unhappy young man with a flat, bored persona better suited for a professor unwillingly summoned to his employer’s office. He affected a gracious half-bow in Slytherin’s direction.

“Professor,” he said with all the loquaciousness required to say ‘My Lord.’

Slytherin fluttered his hand in Snape’s direction as if shooing a persistent footman. “Be on your way, Severus. I have words for Dumbledore.”

Again, Severus bowed, saying, “Of course, Professor.”

He turned to depart, and Albus called after him. “Professor Snape,” he said. “Please remember what I’ve said.”

Snape paused in his retreat to look at him, and Albus took a moment to appreciate the sheer depth of the man’s Occlusion. Oh, Albus might have been a fool for many reasons, but he wasn’t a fool enough to trust what he saw, not when years of experience had given him a better understanding of the wizard before him. Severus looked disinterested, almost contemptuous, and was anything but.

“Yes, Dumbledore.”

The Potions Master departed, and Tom slunk into the guest chair, sprawling like a king upon his throne. He laughed—and it was an arrogant, breathy sound Albus used to hear the boy use among his besotted peers.

How easily he drew them in. How simply.

“Ah, Severus. Always such a bore. To whom do you think he really belongs, old man? To you?” Riddle smirked. “Or to me?”

Albus met his derisive stare with measured calm. “I’m sure Severus knows his own mind.” He said the words, and yet Albus knew a simple truth Riddle didn’t; Severus belonged to no man. If he belonged to anyone at all, it was to a young, green-eyed woman upon whose shoulders the fate of the Wizarding world had come to squarely rest.

He knew that if serving Tom Riddle would spare the girl, then Severus would turn. Grudgingly, unwillingly, and yet he would turn all the same. In the past, Albus would have gone to great lengths to ensure such a thing couldn’t come to pass. He would have guilted Severus, black-mailed him, bent him until he suited a shape in Albus’ many plans—but Albus didn’t make plans like that anymore. He left the plotting and machinations to Riddle.

Besides, Albus didn’t mind, for he trusted more in the goodness of Harriet’s soul and the love in Severus’ heart than in Tom’s poisoned guile.

“What business do you have with me, Tom?”

The use of his given name earned a slight twitch in his eyelid, but Slytherin otherwise didn’t react. “Oh, I merely came to discuss the unfortunate death of Nicolas Flamel. You’ve heard about it, I’m sure. Such a tragedy.” He flicked invisible lint off his sleeve. “Of course, with Flamel’s death, I’ve been granted custody of dear Harriet.” And now his grin took on a decidedly sinister edge, madness peeking from behind his composed mask. “I do wonder what you’ll give me to allow her back into Hogwarts next year, Dumbledore.”

Albus listened to him with serene stoicism, and his lack of reaction nettled Tom. He stirred, restless as a dragon expecting dinner but not smelling the meat. “I’m afraid, dear Professor, you’ll have to forgo celebrating the joys of guardianship for a while longer.”

Slytherin’s smile slipped. “I beg your pardon?”

In answer, Albus nudged a scroll he’d left on his desk for this express purpose closer to the wizard. He’d expected Tom to come sooner, but it suited his dramatic tendencies to make his grand reveal the moment Harriet was released from hospital. It made Albus grind his teeth to think what misery Slytherin wished to heap upon the poor girl the moment she was well enough to leave her sick bed.

Did I not do the same? Did I not wait long enough for her to take a breath, just to pile on another stone?

Slytherin snatched up the scroll and whipped it open with a flourish, his nose already wrinkled in irritation. Albus waited, and he knew the exact instant Tom realized Nicolas’ duplicity. He had not been named Harriet’s guardian. Albus had.

The guest chair clattered to the floor. The silver trinkets that survived Harriet’s brief flare of temper fared less fortunate against Tom’s, and they clattered upon the floor in bright flashes of bursting mercury. Dumbledore found himself facing the end of a wand, and the serene old wizard didn’t blink. The tip flared green, and the color reflected in Tom’s eyes so they appeared emerald for a moment instead of a ghastly scarlet.

“Go ahead,” Albus told him, smiling. “Do as you will.”

The spell didn’t come. Of course it didn’t, for Tom knew if he murdered Albus Dumbledore, even if he managed to get away with the crime itself, the school would never recognize him as Headmaster. It would be a path forever barred to him, and it would ruin all his plans.

Tom bore his teeth in a furious grimace. “You think you’re so clever, Dumbledore,” he said. “You always have. But, your tricks won’t save you or the girl forever. Your time is coming to an end.” The wand retreated, vanishing into the wizard’s sleeve. “I’ll be there to watch them lower you into the ground, and I’ll relish every moment of it, knowing I’ll have the school—and I’ll have your favorite student. I’ll have her, and all the others. I’ll have Snape, and McGonagall. I’ll have the future generations of the Wizarding world beneath my thumb…and you’ll be dead.” Tom’s smile returned. “Every person you ever loved will die screaming while you’re you’re helpless to stop it.” He stepped back, and the pressure of his gaze relented. “Until then, Dumbledore.”

He made a quick departure, undoubtedly to vent his frustration on an unsuspecting victim, and Albus Dumbledore felt every single one of his years as he sat unmoving behind his desk, shoulders curving in. He stared down at his only remaining hand where it rested on the desk.

“Until then, Tom,” he whispered.

 

xXx

 

Through the night-clad halls of the once stately manor, screams echoed like the clarion call of a death knell.

The air trembled with cruel energy, a wickedness that tainted every breath and pulsed in the walls. It pitted the wallpaper, dulled the once vibrant jewel tones to dusky hues, and tarnished the floor where it once gleamed like sultry gold. The portrait frames collected dark, pitch-like dust, their occupants having abandoned their portals when the manor’s family fled in the night.

The screaming continued.

Figures in black robes dotted the corridors and sumptuous solars. Some slumped in puddles of oozing blood, streaks painting the walls at their backs, and others simply stood with their heads down, eyes averted. They heard the screaming but did not react.

The figures only moved when the looming specter of the Dark Lord oozed up from the darkness ensconcing the cellar steps.

A man sat in casual repose by the entrance, swirling a libation around the inside of a filigree goblet. The liquid emitted thin, gossamer veils of trailing smoke.

The man’s crimson eyes flicked from the goblet to the Dark Lord’s impassive face.

“He’s going to kill him,” he commented, the liquid turning in slow, idle circles. “We can scarcely afford to lose another servant.” A peculiar tick tightened the muscles of his neck, jaw twitching once before it settled again. “He doesn’t listen to us.”

The Dark Lord said nothing as he swept by.

The screaming grew in volume as the wizard passed through the plundered chambers of Malfoy Manor. His bare feet made no sound on the sullied carpet as he walked.

The door to the drawing room swung in on damaged hinges, revealing the scene beyond. On the floor, a burly wizard wailed and thrashed in his own emissions, held under by a slim black wand pointed at his heaving chest. Marvolo Gaunt’s hand didn’t waver. His gaze remained placid, and his mouth tipped ever so slightly further into a displeased frown when he sensed the Dark Lord’s presence.

Other Death Eaters dotted the room’s peripheries. Bellatrix lay on the floor, trembling from her own treatment beneath the Cruciatus, but that did not stop the witch from rolling to her knees when she knew her Lord was near. She pressed her sweating brow to the carpet, ragged breaths wheezing in and out of her lungs.

Lord Voldemort viewed this all with dispassion. Dolohov’s screams broke into static, unintelligible grunts, and he sighed.

“I went through the trouble of retrieving them from Azkaban…again,” he said in a cold, soft voice. “Desist in breaking my servants.”

Gaunt gave his wrist a smooth, practiced flick, and the curse ended, Dolohov’s distress fading into low, agonized groans.

Your servants?” Gaunt didn’t deign the Dark Lord with a proper address, refusing to turn to him. His hair fell across his brow, and his stately robes bore evidence of dishevelment. “Ah, that’s right…your ssservants.

Voldemort viewed him through half-lidded eyes. He steepled his long, spider-like hands together before himself. Gaunt continued hissing.

YOUR servants have cossst us everything!” he snarled. “They’re useless! You should have spared them our wrath and left them on that pitiful rock to rot!

“The failures of a servant are merely a reflection of the master’s mistakes,” the Dark Lord responded, stepping closer. “Your mistakes.”

Gaunt’s eyes widened as he turned now. “How simple it is for you to cast blame,” he scoffed. “You sit in reclusion, demanding, and never lifting a finger while I—.”

In a sudden fit of temper, the Dark Lord surged forward, and his hand wrapped around Gaunt’s throat. “You ARE me,” he said, the words cutting through sharp, serpentine teeth. “That you exist at all is a miracle of my design—.”

A mistake,” Gaunt corrected, uncowed. The Death Eaters watched in trepidation as the Dark Lord toiled with the pretender. “A mistake of your design. The unintentional. The pretendersss. My, my—how many mistakes has Lord Voldemort created, hmm?

Taloned fingers dug into Gaunt’s flesh. “Lord Voldemort makes no mistakes,” he retorted. He lifted until Gaunt had no choice but to grip his white wrist, but he did nothing so undignified as struggle. “I am a GOD among men, and that you assume yourself anything more than an echo of that greatness, that you PRETEND—.

As you pretend, my Lorrrd?” Gaunt drawled, his free hand coming to grip Lord Voldemort’s own throat. The Death Eaters flinched but didn’t act. “That you’re anything more than a remnant in the base of a cup? The final drop after the rest hasss been spilled? You’ve displaced so much of yourself, YOU’VE become the echo, haven’t you…Tom?

Cracks formed in Gaunt’s neck, wending up his jaw, blackened pieces of flesh peeling from the whole like ash. His breaths came in shorter, stilted bursts, but still, he laughed, and disdain glowed in his ruby eyes.

Do you believe regret changes anything?” he asked, his Parseltongue growing raspier. “I am Lord Voldemort. But are you? Regret won’t take Slytherin. He’s smarter than you. Smarter than us.” He grinned, teeth stark white but smeared pink with thin, trickling blood. “It won’t take the girl.

I am all that has mattered, and all that I have bore are mere reflections of my power. Lord Voldemort is my past, my present, and my future. And you. Are. A. Regret.

His jaw opened wide, too wide for a human’s—and he sank his teeth into Gaunt’s throat.

He devoured him.

Magic poured into him, poured through him, and when nothing but the dregs remained, blackened cinders spilling between bone-white fingers, the Death Eaters trembled at the power that thrummed and grew until it shattered the windows. Lord Voldemort threw back his head and laughed. The Dark Lord laughed and blood-red tears stained his cheeks.

 


END PART FIVE


 

A/N: That ’s a wrap for Year Five. Remember, there’s a Discord you can join to find updates about future chapters, projects, etc. LINK

Chapter 297: return of the dark lord

Chapter Text

6. THE HALF-BLOOD PRINCE

and dust you will eat all the days of your life - genesis 3:14

 


 

ccxcvii. return of the dark lord

 

The clink of glass and churning liquid provided a familiar, comforting backdrop to an otherwise miserable evening.

Severus kept his eyes on the potion before him, watching the crystal stirring rod cut smooth lines through the dense meniscus forming at the cauldron’s rim. A practiced flick of his other hand dispersed dousing powder on the flame, lowering the heat, and the foam dome began to congeal once more into a liquid. Severus used the rod to ladle the concoction into a basin.

Behind him, the line of Death Eaters waiting in makeshift camp beds remained silent. The sunlight outside the diamond-paned windows of Malfoy Manor glowered a deep, sullen violet, the sun vanishing into the dark thunderclouds like pale flesh blooming with swelling bruises. The light waned, and Severus snapped his fingers to flare the candles on the workstation.

Behind him, Bellatrix Lestrange sucked air through her teeth.

Severus didn’t know the specifics of what had occurred at the Ministry. It was worrying enough to know the Dark Lord had purposefully kept him busy with menial tasks to divert his attention, so attempting to decipher the events of that sordid June evening mattered little to Snape. He knew that Rodulphus and Bellatrix had been the only two to escape the Department, and the others had to be extracted from Azkaban. Again. Rolduphus’ skull had been cracked like an egg, and the damage Dolohov suffered had been mostly inflicted by the Dark Lord himself. Bellatrix was twitchier than ever. She’d been screaming in her sleep.

Extinguishing the last of the flames, Severus took the filled basin in hand and turned from the table. He swept over to Rodulphus and started unwinding the wrappings swaddling his head.

“What are you doing, Snivellus?” came Bellatrix’s hiss from the other bed.

“Attempting to keep some amount of brains inside your husband’s empty skull,” he drawled in reply. “The Dark Lord sent a missive ordering me to attend your injuries despite your failings at the Ministry. Our Lord is magnanimous.”

“Don’t speak of our Lord as if you know his mind,” Bellatrix retorted, but it lacked heat, and when she sat up, it was with lurching, clumsy motions. She kept curling her fingers toward her palm and then stretching them out again; Severus was familiar with the motion. The Cruciatus formed a habitual urge to extend and contract certain muscle groups. Typically, Severus also felt the urge in his hands. Potter, whether she realized it or not, stretched the muscles in her neck. Lucius disguised his facial tic beneath convenient sneers.

Sniffing with contempt, Snape gloved his hand in magic before working the foam through Lestrange’s matted hair. The potion would soak through his scalp and work on  mending the fractured bones below. Severus knew of other, faster potions that would be less painful and have better recuperation time—but it wasn’t as if he was in a hurry to put Death Eaters back on the street. No, better to have them laid up than our hunting Muggles.

Severus dug his fingers into Rodulphus’ temple until he groaned.

“I must confess, I am…surprised,” Snape said, his tone low and cloying, cast into its most slippery cadence. “I expected to see more of Gaunt’s…displeasure. Has he not addressed the situation yet?”

The Order hadn’t heard even a whisper of Gaunt since the Ministry incident a week prior, and nor had the Death Eaters. The Guardians of the Magical Right had been equally tight-lipped and oblivious. It’d fallen to Severus to learn more, but his efforts had been met with resistance.

Where is Gaunt? What is he planning?

Bellatrix’s dark eyes flashed toward Severus, then narrowed. “Poor little Snivellus,” she taunted in a high-pitched whine. “Always creeping about, asking his questions. What happens when that freakishly large nose fails to sniff out any answers, hmm? Does your other master get angry? Does he bend the schoolboy over his knee for a punishment?”

The witch cackled, and Severus observed with an unimpressed lift of his eyebrow.

“Forgive me for wondering if I might catch the lash for healing your miserable cohort,” he drawled.

“What?”

“Should I not be concerned with Gaunt stomping about the manor, interrupting my work?”

Bella’s cackling deepened into a throaty, knowing laugh. “You’ll see,” she answered, and Severus remained stone-faced, pretending the banal explanation didn’t unnerve him. He’d come to expect mentions of Gaunt to upset or frustrate the Death Eaters; likewise, discussions of Voldemort put off the Guardians of the Magical Right, and the Knights of Walpurgis disdained all discussion of any Lord aside from Slytherin. That Bellatrix could so easily brush off his comment did not bode well.

Severus moved on to the next Death Eater—or Guardian, as was the case with Macnair. The large man moaned under his breath as Severus assessed his shattered bones and what had been done for them. He murmured something about “eyes” beneath his breath before subsiding.

In his mind, Severus’ thoughts churned beneath the obscuring layer of his Occlumency shields, riled as an unquiet sea. He’d come to have certain expectations of the Dark Lord—no matter his incarnation—and in the wake of Voldemort’s ignominious exposure, Severus assumed he would be…murderous. Especially after Potter’s grim visage had been splashed across every magical media outlet in the country beneath the words Chosen One. But, the Dark Lord had been…quiet. He’d sent Severus a few missives but otherwise hadn’t required his presence. Gaunt had been nonexistent.

His thumb moved in anxious swipes over the potion bottle in his hand, his nail catching on the slight grain in the glass.

Much of his existence had been comparable to a tightwire act, and recently, it felt as if the wire had disappeared, and he was stepping forward on pure instinct, hoping not to slip. He’d spent years scrabbling up the ladder—years listening, maneuvering, quietly unseating those who questioned his allegiance and cast doubt upon his character. Since the Dark Lord’s return, he’d done everything he could to sneak into his good graces, to be the best spy he possibly could, and yet—.

He was left with more questions than answers in recent weeks. Was he losing favor? Did Voldemort suspect him?

He thought again of the photograph in the Daily Prophet—Potter in frame, Dumbledore clipped behind her, the Dark Lord and Gaunt less prevalent in the backdrop before they vanished from the frame. Rather than looking small or helpless, Potter’s bearing had been fierce, her hands and face blood-splattered, but her expression as hard as diamond. She had the face of a girl who’d battled the Dark Lord and lived to tell the tale.

Lost in his own dire musings, Severus almost missed the shift in air pressure, the steely glance of Dark magic that grazed his flesh like the flat side of a blade. Severus shivered as if someone had stepped over his grave, and Bellatrix sat up. Her head turned in an eerie mimicry of a dog hearing her master’s whistle.

The door into the makeshift infirmary opened. The power riding the air swelled in Severus’ lungs, and he choked, bowing his head on instinct. Despite her injuries, Bellatrix threw herself on the floor, and had the other Death Eaters been aware, Severus knew they’d do the same.

The Dark Lord entered the room, and the hair on the back of Severus’ neck stood on end.

What has he done? What is this feeling? It wrapped itself about his throat with physical strength, and Severus had to concentrate to push it back, to ward the reaching magic from his own mind so it wouldn’t choke him where he stood. Without a word, Severus knelt, and he felt Voldemort’s silent movement through the room.

“Ah, my Bella,” the Dark Lord sighed, his voice like the cold, winter rasp of dead leaves sliding against stone. “How are you recovering?”

“I am ready to serve, my Lord,” she said without hesitation.

“Lord Voldemort is pleased,” the Dark Lord replied, and Severus heard the brush of his black robes on the floor. “Severusss.”

The Potions Master tipped his head back—and froze.

The Dark Lord looked much as he had the last time Severus had been ordered into his presence—namely pale, his skin vaguely scaled, the structure of his shoulders, neck, and jaw somehow reminiscent of a snake. But there were changes as well. The deathly, skeletal thinness had eased, and more humanity had returned to his face. He had hair—thin, short, and streaked liberally with shocks of white. More structure filled out his nose, and he had brows and lashes.

Somehow, the change made him look all the more ghastly. It had been simple to look upon the hideous form of Lord Voldemort and know him for what he was: a monster. But this? Shadows of the man eclipsed the monster, and it made it all the more horrid to know the Dark Lord was—or had been—human and could order such heinous things to be done against his fellow man.

Power eddied from his towering frame. On his finger, a gold band with a broken facet glittering against bone-white skin.

“What of the others, Severus?” the Dark Lord demanded, a cruel smirk uplifting his thin mouth. He’d seen Snape’s hesitation. He delighted in it. “When will you return them to my service?”

“Very soon, my Lord,” Severus replied, swallowing. His mind spun. What has he done? What is this?

Bellatrix cackled on the floor, and he recalled her words, “You’ll see—.

The hand with the ring gripped Severus’ shoulder with enough strength to bruise, and Severus didn’t flinch.

“Make it sooner,” the Dark Lord hissed. “I have plans for them. Just I have plans for you.”

When he departed, Severus didn’t linger for long, finishing his work as quickly as he could. All the while, Bellatrix laughed and sang an old song about being swallowed alive.

I guess I know where Gaunt ’s gone.

 

xXx

 

He found the Headmaster on one of the castle’s upper parapets, his gaze pensive and distant as he looked toward the Black Lake rippling beneath the soft, warm breeze of the coming dawn. Dumbledore turned to look at him as he approached, and Severus’ face must not have been as blank as he’d hoped, as Dumbledore’s brows knitted with concern.

Snape stared at the man, his vast vocabulary failing him when he attempted to put into words what he’d witnessed.

After a long moment, his mouth opened, and he said, “We have a problem.”

Chapter 298: from platform seven and one-quarter

Chapter Text

ccxcviii. from platform seven and one-quarter

 

The lonesome wail of a distant train whistle stirred Harriet from restless dreams.

Her eyelashes fluttered as she blinked them open, confused for a moment as to where she was. Quiet voices murmured in conversation. Loose paper crinkled as it moved under a careless hand. Something heavy weighed on Harriet’s lap.

Then, she remembered.

The others glanced around when she leaned her head off the wall by the window, reaching beneath her glasses to rub the sleep from her eyes. Hermione lowered the French paper she’d grabbed from the station and smiled, the expression tight, and Elara raised her gaze from her novel to arch a brow. On the opposite bench, Professor Dumbledore and Sirius paused in their chat.

“Did you have a nice rest, my dear?” the Headmaster asked, his eyes bright but tired in their own right. “We’ve another hour or so before we arrive.”

“Mmph,” Harriet replied, and she shifted the book on her lap. She was doomed to show poorly in her History of Magic O.W.L, as it seemed every time she opened the book, her eyes fell shut on their own accord. She’d been exhausted since what happened at the Ministry. No matter how much she slept, she couldn’t get enough rest.

Slytherin will be mad if I do poorly, but what can I do? It ’s just History of Magic.

He’ll be furious. He’s only giving me this time because I promised high marks.

Bugger him.

The last time she’d ridden the emerald train from Platform Seven and One-Quarter, Harriet had been on the run from a supposed madman. Funny that said madman now sat in the carriage with her, though a part of Harriet—shunned and refused as it was—wished instead for the person she’d traveled with before. But, no amount of wishing would bring Nicolas Flamel back.

Hermione leaned closer and noted how little of the book Harriet had made a dent in. “Are you sure we can’t give her a bit of a hint, Professor?” she asked the Headmaster, fidgeting with her paper. “Just a point in the right direction about which area the exam covers?”

Professor Dumbledore chuckled. “No, Miss Granger,” he replied. “I have it on good authority from Madam Marchbanks that they will be adjusting Harriet’s exam to prohibit any chances of unfair help.”

Harriet thought it was more unfair she was in the bloody hospital because of the stupid Ministry while the exam was being administered, but she didn’t say anything. She shut the book and shoved it off her lap with a small sigh. She dragged a hand through her fringe as she looked out the window.

The summer-bound landscape swept by, magic flickering in the air where the foreign Ministry’s wards protected the rails from the French countryside. It looked brighter than it did in Harriet’s memory—shaded in bright, emerald green and buttery yellows. The hills rolled in sleepy, gentle curves.

“Will we have a chance to see the school?” Hermione asked the Headmaster. “I know it’s a solemn occasion, but I can’t help but wonder if we’ll be allowed a brief visit.”

Dumbledore nodded, silver hair glittering in the light coming through the glass. “Naturally. Beauxbatons Academy will be hosting the reception after the funeral, and I’m certain one of the professors could be persuaded to give a proper tour.”

In her mind’s eye, Harriet saw a glimpse of a grandiose castle, soaring turrets embraced by gilded lines, ice statues and chandeliers dripping with gold. She heard warm laughter, and the soft, rhythmic cadence of a French voice.

We’ll be in the Wizarding quarter of Toulouse soon. Perenelle will be waiting at the station.”

There would be no Perenelle waiting. No Perenelle, no Flamel.

The others resumed chatting or reading. Harriet stared at her closed History of Magic text so she could avert her burning eyes.

It ’s your fault. You don’t get to bloody cry when it’s your own ruddy fault.

Harriet took a deep breath to settle herself. The train kept rumbling, and the quiet, companionable atmosphere in the carriage chafed. She felt Professor Dumbledore’s eyes on her, watching with an air of sadness.

Clearing her throat, Harriet stood. “I’m going to grab some air,” she said. Sirius glanced up at her.

“Dining car’s at the end there,” he said. “You could find yourself a spot of lunch or a drink.”

“Okay, sure.”

Harriet didn’t want to eat anything, but she’d say anything to get out of there for a minute. The door rattled as it slid open, and she stepped into the corridor, letting it clatter shut behind her. She glanced along the way, and a witch in the next carriage lifted her head. She caught Harriet’s gaze through the window and nodded.

Members of the Order of the Phoenix dotted the train. Professor Dumbledore had told Harriet there’d be others traveling with them for safety, but the reminder pricked at her nerves. She controlled the urge to grimace and continued on her way.

The dining car had the same sumptuousness reflected in the carriages, the brass rails shined to gleaming polish, the wood of the bar richly oiled, the smell of cloves thick in the air. Some people glanced at Harriet when she entered—and did double-takes, leading her to wonder if they read the English news. Swallowing, she approached the bartender, asked for water, then scuttled for a booth in the back.

This isn’t much better than the carriage, she sighed to herself as she sunk into the bench’s leather cushion, turning her gaze out the window. At least I don’t have to pretend to study.

The landscape rushed by, cypress trees grown in carefully terraced rings above the track. It formed a sparse, leafy green tunnel through which they traveled, and Harriet watched the sunlight flicker for a time, splotches of jade and chartreuse spilling over the table.

Glass tapped against the wood, and Harriet looked around.

“Are you well?” Elara asked as she settled her tea across from Harriet’s water and sunk into the opposing bench. Her silver eyes flickered over her, coming to a rest on Harriet’s face—or, more pointedly, on the dark circles forming beneath her eyes. “You didn’t sleep for very long.”

“Can’t,” Harriet replied, tucking her hands beneath her thighs as she let out a gusty exhale. “Today’s just…going to be hard.”

“Yes, but the Flamels wouldn’t want you to lose sleep over them.”

Harriet didn’t respond to that. She feared she might snap if she did. She couldn’t know what the Flamel would want because they were dead, and it was Harriet’s fault. No matter that Mr. Flamel had been the one to create the Druid’s glass, it was her actions that led to his death. Her fault.

Elara joined her in gazing out the window, sipping from her delicate tea cup. Once Harriet stopped brooding and forced herself to actually look at the world around her, she realized Elara didn’t exactly look well herself. Her skin had an unusual pallor, and if not for the concealer blended into her skin, Harriet guessed she’d have her own dark circles beneath her eyes. She’d been distracted for the last week or so, and Harriet didn’t think it strictly had to do with the Flamels.

“Elara?” she ventured, and the other witch blinked, looking around at her.

“Yes?”

“Are you all right?” Harriet asked. “I know everyone keeps asking me that and I say I’m fine, but I—you’d tell me if something was wrong, right? I’d try to help, if I could.”

Elara gazed at her, and though she smiled, tension lingered behind her expression. “I—.” She hesitated, then settled her cup in its saucer. Again, she opened her mouth as if to speak, but then she didn’t. Elara looked at Harriet, and she thought her god-sister was on the verge of confessing something when she remembered the hum of voices around them and the curious, straying eyes. “Let’s…discuss this later.”

“All right.”

Soon enough, they returned to their shared carriage, and the emerald train rolled into the station at Toulouse. Their group attracted a fair amount of attention when they disembarked, as Order members went on ahead to secure the way and others swept along the length of the train, inspecting the people waiting there.

Harriet stood between her friends, adjusting her robes so they lay flat. She happened to glance across the station, under a rolling plume of smoke from the stack, and saw a young wizard staring in their direction. His confused expression cleared, and he tugged on his father’s sleeve, excitedly pointing.

Harriet glared at her shoes.

When the all clear came, Professor Dumbledore gestured for them to follow, and they departed the station. Harriet could tell the street had been layered in Notice-Me-Nots today, as the French Muggles going about their business eased away from the road leading toward L’allée Du Jardin.

“Ze call it The Garden. It’s the second-largest Wizarding commune in France, the bigger one being Paris—but I have always been fond of zis one. It is very charming.

Pressing her lips into a firm line, Harriet ignored her instinct to glance about the magical district and take in the sights, instead concentrating on the back of Sirius’ robes as they headed to their destination. He drew to a sudden halt, and Harriet barely avoided colliding with him.

“Damn,” Sirius remarked to Professor Dumbledore. “They set aside an entire line just for this?”

Harriet forced herself to look up, seeing what Sirius meant right away. They stood before the long, dark building where many stalls housed massive, winged palominos and smaller, spirited fillies. Each stall had a sign for a destination, and today, one of the signs read, “Les Funérailles des Flamel.” The carriages were festooned in black drapery.

“Of course,” the Headmaster told him. “Nicolas and Perenelle had quite a number of friends and acquaintances who will be traveling here for the day.”

Looking at the line of waiting horses pinned with traditional funeral trappings, Harriet suddenly found her feet glued to the cobblestones, and she couldn’t take a single step forward. She didn’t want to get into one of those carriages. She couldn’t go to the funeral. She wanted to be back on the train, back on her way to Platform Nine and Three-Quarters, and she didn’t know where she’d go from there, so long as it was away from here.

A gentle hand settled on her shoulder, and Harriet glanced up into the Headmaster’s bright blue eyes. “We’re not going to get anywhere by standing in the middle of the road, my dear.”

Harriet didn’t reply immediately. When she did, her voice came out stilted, hushed. “There’s going to be so many people there.”

“Yes. The Flamels were blessed with many friends.” His hand gave her shoulder the slightest of squeezes. “I believe it’s the wish of many witches and wizards to be so beloved, they need an entire field to host those who want to say their goodbyes.”

Harriet chewed on her lower lip. My fault, she thought again, the sentiment ringing in her head. My fault, my fault.

“The most difficult of journeys begins with one step,” Professor Dumbledore told her. “We just need to have courage.”

Harriet wanted to have courage—but she didn’t know how. She had been nothing but terrified since she looked into the Dark Lord’s eyes in the Ministry and understood how ineffectual she was. How could she be brave when she couldn’t do anything right?

“Harriet!”

From the waiting carriage, a head ducked out of the open door, and Elara called out to her. “Harriet, if you don’t come sit between Sirius and me, I will end up stabbing him.”

She couldn’t see him, but Harriet heard her godfather’s outraged squawk. It startled a laugh from her, and taking that first step proved less daunting than she’d expected. Harriet headed toward the carriage with Professor Dumbledore at her side.

Chapter 299: little wolf

Chapter Text

ccxcix. little wolf

 

The funeral was less solemn than Elara feared it would be.

She attributed the rather relaxed atmosphere to the fact that the Flamels had, for a few years now, been warning their friends and associates of their approaching demise. As far as anyone knew, the old alchemist had reached the end of the Stone’s longevity, and that was what had claimed his—and his wife’s—lives.

Very, very few people knew of the Demon’s eye.

A few tears were shed among the massive crowd gathered on the long, sweeping field Beauxbatons normally set aside for their Quidditch pitch. The graves themselves were farther up the mountain, near the large fountain in the main courtyard where Mr. Flamel had reputedly first seen Perenelle. Elara wasn’t entirely convinced of the story—more than a little skeptical over the fountain’s age and the amount of gold added to it over the years. However, it made for a romantic tale, and if that was where the Flamels had chosen to rest, she guessed there had to be some truth to it.

Two dozen rows of chairs held more than a hundred backsides, and Elara noted the presence of many famous figures from across the globe. She’d seen them in books, or the papers. A fair number kept shooting glances toward Harriet, but Dumbledore’s presence and disproving gaze were enough to keep the attention minimal.

The eulogies were nice—those in English that she could understand—though most were a tad vapid, and Elara found her attention wandering as her gaze slid over the peaks of the distant Pyrenees. She thought too many of the speakers attributed a closer relationship to the Flamels than they actually had, and perhaps therein lay the danger of attaining legendary fame. Everyone imagined themselves as friends with the Flamels in some capacity. It led to far too many people wanting to stand at the podium and reminisce about memories that were, more than likely, fake.

Harriet spent the entire ceremony next to her, staring at the grass. The only time she looked up was when Professor Dumbledore took the stage.

“Nicolas was never afraid to endeavor on the next great adventure that awaits us all at the end of our lives,” the old wizard said. “I have never met a man more fearless in the face of the unknown, but I do not believe he desired to leave our estimable company just yet. Love is a dangerous creature we let into our hearts, and it is dangerous not only because we fear how it may hurt us. It’s worse to wonder at the pain our love leaves behind when we must move on. In this regard, I do not think Nicolas was any different than a normal man.” His attention turned in their direction, and Harriet shifted in her seat. “So, let us rejoice in the memories of our dearly departed friends so that it is our happiness and well-wishes that reach them, and not our shared mourning. Let us remember Nicolas and Perenelle for their brilliance, their generosity, and their kindness. The world is a better place for having known them.”

The reception itself took place in the school, which was much the same as it’d been in Elara’s memory, though without the addition of Yule decorations or wayward students. There was food and music performed by a lively orchestra, which was reportedly playing some of Perenelle’s favorite songs. Dumbledore took it upon himself to introduce them to the acquaintances he shared in common with Flamels, a wide range of witches and wizards in funny garb with foreign accents. Elara begged off after the third round, socially drained after meeting so many strangers. She retreated to the refreshment table for a cup of tea.

As she sipped an earthy green tea, Elara wandered from the main hall with its heavy black drapery festooned over the walls and walked the outer corridor that bordered the northern part of the palace. It was quieter there, cooler, and the gilded torches didn’t burn quite so strongly in her eyes. The evening settled in against the rocky foothills and bled into the sky into shades of violet and indigo. Elara stared into the distance.

She felt somewhat numb to the passing of the Flamels. She’d been closer to Perenelle than Mr. Flamel himself, and their relationship had not been as close as the one they shared with Harriet. Elara was more aggrieved by Harriet’s loss than she was by her own. To her, the Flamels had been more like grandparents—familial, but marked by distance. To Harriet, they’d been her parents. They’d loved her like a daughter.

Elara tipped her head back, exhaling.

I’ve been numb to most everything lately, she thought to herself, gaze on the window. Is this what it’s like? Is this what the Dark Lord feels when he takes a life? If it is, it’s little wonder such a thing has become so…easy for him.

Someone approached, and Elara stiffened.

She smelled her before she heard her footsteps. The air thickened with the redolent scents of freesia, cherries, and apricots—the kind simmered on a hob, the richness of caramelized sugar, the tart, buttery heat. Elara’s fingers tightened around the handle of her cup, and she forced them to relax before she snapped it in two.

“You’ve been ignoring my letters,” Fleur Delacour said as she came to stand next to her. The words suggested the older witch should be peeved, but her tone came out as playful as a cat stretching its paws. “You know, I do not usually ‘ave to work so hard for someone’s attention.”

“It’s good for your ego to have some of the air let out of it,” Elara quipped, mustering her courage to turn. “But I assure you, I wasn’t being coy when I didn’t return your post.”

Fleur looked as beautiful as she ever did—if not more so, as if every year only added to her beauty, maturing like expensive elf wine. Her pale hair glittered in the candlelight, and the knowing cast of her narrowed eyes sent shivers down Elara’s spine. She cleared her throat and took a sip of tea.

“I didn’t know I would see you here,” she said, grasping for something to say.

“And I’m sure you would have avoided me if you had,” Fleur returned, her hand on her hip. “Madame Maxime asked f0r the help. The—security? Not that she or the board believe anything amiss will happen, but she does hope to keep nosy visitors honest.”

“Hmm,” Elara acknowledged. Now that she allowed herself to look properly, she saw that Fleur hadn’t dressed for a funeral and wore robes better suited for patrolling the palace. She wasn’t wrong. Elara would have avoided her if she’d known she was here. “So you’ve stayed in touch with Maxime since leaving school?”

“You would know if you opened your letters.” Fleur reached out to touch Elara’s cheek, turning her eyes to her own. “If you wish for me to move on, I will, but you will do me the courtesy of saying so to my face. You led me to believe my attentions were wanted.”

Suddenly, Elara felt very old and very tired. Much older than she rightfully should, and far more tired than she deserved. The usual charm that would have her blushing and stuttering didn’t shake her this evening. Like the Flamels’ deaths, it didn’t touch her. “It has nothing to do with being wanted or not,” she said. “Fleur…Wizarding Britain is poised on the brink of complete destruction. A madman will stop at nothing to kill my god-sister. I—how could I think to entertain this now when it’s entirely possible I won’t survive the year? What I want doesn’t matter, so I apologize if I’ve led you astray. It wouldn’t be right. It wouldn’t be fair.”

Fleur’s hand lowered, and she gripped Elara’s, slender fingers brushing her wrist before entwining with hers. “I know what you are doing.”

“What?”

“Do you think me silly and naive?” Fleur asked.

“No,” Elara told her.

“Do you think I became the champion for the whole of Beauxbatons simply because I am gorgeous? That I am an empty head with a pretty face?”

Elara didn’t snort, but it was a near thing. “Of course not.”

Fleur squeezed her hand. “Then don’t insult me, Elara. I understand what is happening in England. You cannot protect me from it.”

They stood in silence, not looking toward the window or toward each other. Fleur’s thumb brushed against the scarring left on Elara’s knuckles and fingers by Fiendfyre. At length, Fleur said, “I’ve accepted a position at Gringotts. In England.”

Elara focused on her. “Why would you do that?”

“Because I find what Monsieur Voldemort is doing unacceptable.” Fleur put her pert nose in the air, tossing the shimmering curtain of her blonde hair over her shoulder. “And so I mean to help ‘ow I can. It has nothing to do with you.” Elara almost laughed at her pout, and her stomach fluttered with affection. She wanted to laugh. It felt as if she hadn’t laughed in years. “Your Professor Dumbledore recommended work as a curse breaker at ze bank.”

“I think Professor Dumbledore is good at dragging others into the mess,” Elara replied with a touch of derision. Her amusement faded as quickly as it’d come. “You should stay in France. I…I don’t think you’re silly or naïve. I think you’re brilliant, and you know this. I don’t want to be selfish. I’m…terrified of what’s going to happen.”

“Wars don’t stay conveniently in one place, ma louloute. I do not mean to wait until it arrives at my home before fighting it.” Fleur brought her hand up and bussed a kiss on the back of it. “Be selfish with me. If only a little bit.”

Elara didn’t argue further. She’d voiced her concerns, and questioning Fleur further on the issue would be insulting to both her intelligence and her ability. Elara knew the older witch was quite capable, but no one was safe from the Dark Lord and his Death Eaters. People were going to die. People had died.

Harriet nearly didn’t come home from the Ministry. If Flamel hadn ’t created the Demon’s eye….

Fleur bumped her hip against Elara’s, stirring her from darkening thoughts. “So you will stay in touch now, oui? No excuses. I do not need to be protected, Elara.”

“Yes. I—yes, I will.” Sighing, Elara fidgeted—and she tucked Fleur’s hand into her arm. “Would you like to see Harriet? And my father? Mongrel that he is.”

“I would love to. Your father is charming, and you know it.”

Elara groaned as Fleur smiled, her voice light and airy like chiming bells. “You wouldn’t say the same if you had to live with him.”

“I’m sure I would. But, do not be jealous. He is not my type.”

They returned together to the main hall, back into the warmth of candlelight and laughter, leaving behind the stillness of the approaching night.

Chapter 300: the holy grail

Chapter Text

ccc. the holy grail

 

Harriet wasn’t entirely sure, but she thought she might be drunk.

Refreshments were plentiful at the reception, and the many tables stationed about the hall had a propensity to wander, meaning one selection of beverages often found itself replaced by another. In this manner, Harriet found the cider she’d sampled replaced by something that packed a proper punch. She hadn’t recognized the change before she’d already drunk three-fourths of her glass, and by then, she didn’t much care. She’d finished it and taken another.

Professor Dumbledore glanced in her direction, ostensively to check on her well-being, and he did a double-take when he saw her choice of refreshment.

“Oh dear,” he hummed, gently prising the cup from her fingers. “Let’s stick to the water for the rest of the evening, shall we?”

The effects of the alcohol worsened as the minutes passed, and though at first Harriet enjoyed the slightly muffled, cotton-like feeling it gave her thoughts, it quickly grew to a heavier despondency. She felt slow and lethargic, like her head wasn’t quite attached to her neck the right way. She wanted to be anywhere else but there, and she scowled at the black draperies on the walls. Her responses to anyone asking her a question grew shorter and shorter.

Eventually, Professor Dumbledore led her into a lounge attached to the main hall, which Harriet gathered usually belonged to the staff and found use as a place to smoke, drink, or enjoy a private meal away from the student body. There were several sumptuous sofas and long, gilded sideboards, and the diamond-paned windows overlooked the wide valley below, draped in shadows as the night thickened. Even as distracted and unhappy as she was, Harriet saw the stars and thought them breathtaking.

I wonder if Mr. Flamel and Perenelle loved them too, she thought to herself, brow furrowing. I wonder if that’s why they wanted to be buried here.

Older witches and wizards comprised most of the room’s occupants, those who’d tired of the more colorful visitors in the main congregation or simply didn’t have the vigor to stand for so long. It was one of these such wizards that Dumbledore approached—a large, robust man with a thick, silver mustache and a pinstriped waistcoat stretched over his portly stomach. He vaguely reminded Harriet of Uncle Vernon, except Uncle Vernon never appeared quite so eccentric or laughed so jovially.

“Albus!” the wizard greeted, voice booming. He was definitely English. He rose with some effort from the sofa he’d commandeered to shake hands with Dumbledore. “Dragged yourself out of the castle finally, I see! Good of you to come! Shame it has to be on such an occasion.”

“Horus,” Professor Dumbledore greeted with a dip of his chin. “It’s good to see you, despite circumstances. I’m certain Nicolas would have been happy for so many friends to have the chance to reconnect.” The hand on Harriet’s shoulder gave her a small pat. “Harriet, this is a good friend of mine, Horus Slughorn. He was our Potions Master at Hogwarts before Professor Snape was hired.”

“Ah, Severus. How is the lad doing? He never answers my letters.” Before Professor Dumbledore could do little more than open his mouth, Mr. Slughorn continued. “He was one of my best students, you know! I knew it from his very first year. A proper artist with a cauldron! Shame he’s so shy, though.”

Harriet didn’t know why the thought of Snape being shy struck her as hilarious—especially at a funeral reception—but a giggle escaped, and another nearly followed before she covered her mouth. Mr. Slughorn’s eyes lowered to her, and he blinked, though his smile remained.

“And who’s this?”

“This is Harriet,” Professor Dumbledore introduced. “Harriet Potter, Nicolas’ ward.”

Slughorn’s brow rose in recognition. “Oh, ho!” he said—and Harriet braced herself for any mention of the Ministry or the nonsense in the Prophet, but then—. “Lily’s daughter!” Slughorn said. “Of course, of course! I should have noticed the resemblance.”

Harriet was so thrown by the comment, she gawked. She didn’t see it, but Professor Dumbledore smiled at Slughorn, giving him a small, thankful nod.

“She was one of my favorite students, you know,” Slughorn went on, settling into his sofa again with a gust of air. Dizzy, Harriet found herself sitting down as well before she realized it, Professor Dumbledore’s hand firmly guiding her into place. He gave her shoulder a pat.

“I’m going to go ensure Mr. Black hasn’t found any trouble…” he said, unheard by Slughorn or Harriet.

“I know I say that fairly often, what with having taught so many clever boys and girls over the years, but she really was. She was a clever girl, Lily. Sharp as a tack in Potions—and though she didn’t have poor Severus’ artistry for it, she was an absolute treat with Charms. She used to combine the two in the most fascinating ways.” He rubbed a finger over the bristles of his mustache in thought. “We really weren’t meant to have favorites as professors, mind you. But I was ever so disappointed she wasn’t Sorted into my House. I even offered her an apprenticeship after she matriculated.”

“What—what House were you in?” Harriet asked, finding her voice.

“Slytherin, of course. I was Head of House before retiring.”

Harriet wasn’t at her most perceptive, but she thought Mr. Slughorn sounded oddly…nervous, or tense. As if mentioning his old House stirred unpleasant thoughts and he quickly suppressed them.

“That’s my House,” Harriet told him.

“Truly?” Mr. Slughorn replied, brow raised. “Oh! Poor James must have rolled over in his grave.”

The wizard chuckled, but his words touched an old insecurity, and Harriet’s stomach lurched with discomfort. “Yeah. I’ve heard that before.”

He realized his offense and quickly spoke. “Oh, forgive me. I’m sure James would have been perfectly happy to see you in Slytherin. He was only a boy when I knew him, after all. People typically grow out of their House rivalries. I’ve seen more than one parent in my time change their mind about old House prejudices.”

Harriet nodded, though she’d never know if that was true. She’d only ever know James as the memory of a young man who did some rather detestable things to fellow students, and who, by all accounts, would have hated Harriet for being odd, ugly, and Sorted into Slytherin. She comforted herself by imagining he’d have grown into a better person, and maybe he wouldn’t have liked other Slytherins, but he’d have loved his own daughter despite her Sorting. However, the truth would always be a mystery.

“So my mum was good at Potions?” Harriet ventured, changing the subject.

Mr. Slughorn accepted the olive branch and jumped into a story about Lily, about a gift she gave him at the end of school that he loved until the magic faded upon her death. He spoke at length about her mum in school, which Harriet enjoyed more than she’d expected. The people in her life who’d known her parents really didn’t know Lily all that well, and only had stories of James’ exploits, for good or for ill.

Meanwhile, Harriet got the impression Slughorn hadn’t been the fondest of James and knew Lily much better. He told her about how Lily used to stomp into his office during his meeting hours and demand extra tutoring, since she loathed always being second-best to Snape in class. She’d had the unfortunate habit of forgetting to tie her hair back, and more than once, she’d singed off the long ends. She would compete with Snape, and Slughorn released a fond laugh when he admitted to knowing Snape purposely let her mum win a few times. Lily got proper angry when she found out.

“I’ve pictures, of course,” he said, and Harriet wasn’t all that surprised when he fished out an expandable photo wallet from his waistcoat. There was a plethora of people merrily waving from inside. “I tend to carry them with me. Ever since leaving Hogwarts, I’ve had the propensity to never stay for long in one place. I blame it on spending so many years tucked away in that old castle—especially during the winter! Dreadful, those Scottish winters. I’ve been favoring the Amalfi coast during that time of year—anyway.”

He flipped through several folds in the wallet, grumbling under his breath as he did so. “Oh! This is an autographed portrait from Gwenog Jones! She was one of my students—went on to become the captain of the Holyhead Harpies.” He showed a small picture of a woman soaring on a broom. “And here—back when I had a full head of hair! Oh ho! That’s Bilton Bilmes and Ambrosius Flume.” He showed a picture of himself—a slightly younger-looking version of the wizard in front of her—with two smiling young men in Hogwarts robes. “Oh, and this here is Eldred Worple when he was only a second-year! He went on to write quite an interesting auto-biography detailing his life among the vampires….”

Harriet discreetly rubbed at her tired, bleary eyes as Slughorn chattered. At length, he found the photograph he sought, and he handed the wallet over to Harriet so she could have a proper look. She recognized her mother right off; the red hair was very distinct, even if the photograph had aged a tad. She stood next to a sallow, lanky teenager, and Harriet grinned at the image of a young, scowling Snape standing behind his cauldron.

“That’s Severus there with Lily. I think it’s the only photograph I have of him, now that I consider it. I could never get him to attend the club dinners….”

Harriet paid no mind to Mr. Slughorn’s nattering, tracing her mother’s youthful features with fondness. She flipped to the next fold, and there was another picture of Lily, though she was older in this one and the shot was less candid. She wore nice dress robes, and stood with Harriet’s father. Harriet guessed they’d been at some kind of party.

She turned the fold again—and her heart stopped.

“That’ll be the Quidditch team for seventy…eight, I believe. Yes, that’s right. Seventy-eight! The last champion team I had while teaching.”

Harriet swallowed, bile burning the back of her throat, nausea threatening to turn her stomach inside out.

Finally have her, do you?

Her voice shook when it came out. “Do you remember their names?”

“Of course! The Keeper there was….”

He rattled off a line of names that meant little to Harriet. They sounded Pureblood, and were probably dead, the poor blighters. She waited until he reached the bottom of their formation, where the Seeker stood, and his voice faltered.

“Oh. Poor lad. That’s Regulus Black. Your godfather’s brother, if I remember correctly. It was a shame to learn about his death….”

Harriet stared into the small face, so familiar but different than it was in her memory. Here, Regulus Black’s hair was thick and dark and his face unlined. His eyes were black—but Harriet had seen him since this photograph, since his death. Thick bands of white streaked his temples, and his eyes glowed a haunting crimson.

She’d seen that man before. She’d seen him in a rundown manor, standing behind the risen Dark Lord. Regulus Black was a Horcrux.

 

xXx

 

The metal cart rattled like Galleons in a tin as it rocketed along the metal rails.

“Ruddy thing,” Rabastan Lestrange cursed as he gripped the edge of the seat under his rump. The goblin manning the cart’s lever leered a delighted smile and switched to another gear. The cart screamed ever downward into the pits below Gringotts.

“Can’t you slow this thing down?” Rabastan barked at one of the pair of goblins assigned to him.

The goblin curled his lip. “One speed only,” he sneered, and behind his silver mask, Rabastan matched the creature’s disdain.

“We thought you didn’t wish to linger, Master Lestrange,” said the other, and his tone fairly oozed disgust. “The wizards might not be able to arrest you within the bank’s walls, but that doesn’t stop them from gathering outside of it.”

Rabastan swallowed, and he snarled, “Shut up, you nasty thing.” The cart lurched around a waterfall, and he doubled his grip on the seat. “If you impede upon my mission for my Lord, you’ll regret it.”

The goblins rolled their eyes, but they fell silent. They said nothing until they reached the vaults in the deepest reaches of the earth.

Rabastan didn’t know what the Dark Lord meant for him to retrieve from the Lestrange family vault. He’d only been told he would recognize what he sought when he found it, and that he would direly regret any failures. Such a task would normally fall to Rodulphus or Bellatrix, but neither was in the shape necessary to quickly duck into Gringotts and duck out.

The laws kept Aurors out of the bank proper and let him access the vault, but the goblins didn’t have to offer asylum, and he bet every coin to his name they’d alerted the Ministry to be on guard.

His gloved hands tightened into fists at his sides.

When the taller of the two goblins opened the vault door with a practiced touch, Rabastan kicked him aside and stepped through. Wisely, the goblins didn’t follow. The air coursed heavy and dense through the slits of his mask, filled with dust and ineffable musk of old, weathered magic. Torches roared to life, and the light gleamed upon the accumulated Lestrange wealth.

At first, Rabastan gazed about the gathered hoard, and then, unbidden, his head tipped, and his covered eyes fell upon the far wall.

There, resting alone upon an iron shelf, resided a golden goblet.

Once he’d seen it, the Death Eater couldn’t look away. The air thickened, his breath coming in short, choppy rasps as he crossed the floor. Had he ever seen that goblet before? Had his brother placed it there on the bidding of the Dark Lord? Was that what he’d been sent to gather?

He approached, deaf to the hungry, rumbling growl that crept from depths unknown. The goblet began to tremble, bidding him to come closer, closer—.

He stretched for it. Rabastan’s fingers grazed the polished gold—.

Outside, the goblins heard the screaming. They looked at one another, and the first snapped, “Close it! Close it before it gets out!” in Gobbledygook.

The taller of the pair rushed to slam the towering door—but he was too late.

From within the vault came a blast of blazing magic, and it flung the goblins backward, lifting them off their feet before hurling them from the platform. Their shouts of dismay followed them as they plunged into the dark below.

A shambling figure appeared at the vault’s threshold. Dark magic rolled from his hunched body in palpable waves, dripping like ichor from pale, sweaty skin. In his hand, the goblet hung loosely from white, twitching fingers.

He raised his head—and red, lurid eyes stared into the gloom.

 


A/N:

Everyone: “Oh, that guy with Voldemort is definitely the cup!horcrux! Definitely!”

Me: “Is he? That’s nice.” *sips tea*

I was struggling for my life trying to complete this chapter xD. Who has stolen my writing mojo? Please return to the Lost and Found.

Dumbledore: “I’m going to be an excellent guardian.”

Harriet: *already drunk*

Dumbledore: “Mmm not off to a great start.”

Chapter 301: blood of the enemy

Chapter Text

ccci. blood of the enemy

 

Harriet sat through Slughorn’s reminiscing for another hour, though the pleasant, muddling haze of alcohol faded almost as soon as her heart started to race. The image she’d seen remained burned in her eyes.

She hadn’t known much about Regulus Black. She knew he was Sirius’ brother, that he once lived at Grimmauld Place, and that whereas Sirius’ strict upbringing had turned him into a rebel, Regulus’ had pushed him into the Dark Arts and service with the Dark Lord. He’d disappeared years ago—before Harriet’s birth—and though a body had never been discovered, there’d been enough evidence, both physical and magical, for the DMLE to declare Regulus dead.

The man in Harriet’s memory had been very much alive, and though undeniably older, it had been the person shown in Slughorn’s photo.

But the Atlas said “Tom Riddle,” she reminded herself, chewing on her bottom lip. Could it really be Regulus? Is it…something worse?

The reception began to wind down, and Harriet at last found the opportunity to politely beg off from the conversation.

“Ah, of course. You’ll be needing to go to the reading,” Slughorn said with a sage nod. “Don’t let my waffling keep you. I was very pleased to meet you, Miss Potter.”

“Err—you too, Mr. Slughorn. Thanks—thanks for telling me about my mum.”

“Anytime, my dear. Be sure to write!”

Harriet hurried from the room, though she kept her pace limited to a quick walk, not wanting to attract undue attention. She had to search for Professor Dumbledore and Sirius through a series of rooms, only stopping when she found the pair in an antechamber adjoined to the main hall. Sirius wore a peeved expression that suggested he’d been coaxed out there by Dumbledore, most likely to keep him away from the abundant alcohol.

Both wizards turn from what appeared to be an argument as she approached.

“Professor,” Harriet said, pitching her voice in an undertone so any curious bystanders wouldn’t be able to hear. “Professor, I need to speak with you.”

“Of course,” the Headmaster replied, his brows knitting with worry. “I take it conversation with Horace didn’t go as well as I was hoping.”

“No, it’s—it’s not that.” Harriet wiped a hand over her brow, trying to order her thoughts. Where was she supposed to start? “I—when we were talking, he showed me his photograph collection.”

Sirius grunted. “He always liked carrying those around, even back in school. If he didn’t have ‘em on him, he kept the frames in this massive cabinet in his office. He loved lording his good students over the bad.”

Harriet didn’t react to that comment. She didn’t have time for Sirius’ bitter schoolyard remembrances. “He had some of my mum, and that’s what he wanted to show me. But I also saw one of your brother.”

Again, Sirius grunted, joined by a short wave of his hand. “Yeah, Regulus was part of his little brown-nosing club.”

Dumbledore sighed. “Sirius—.”

Harriet cut across both of them. “I recognized him,” she said in a rush. “Not from another photograph or anything like that. I saw him. I know it was him, though he’s older and—different. I saw him the—the night Terry died.”

Dumbledore’s gaze sharpened, whereas Sirius’ expression became more muddled. “That’s not possible,” he said. “Reg’s dead. We never got a body back, but the DMLE investigated….”

“Are you certain of this, Harriet?” Dumbledore asked, ignoring Sirius. “Is it possible this person is only similar in appearance to Mr. Black? It is frequent among the old pure-blood families for witches and wizards to share physical features.”

“I’m certain, Professor. It was Regulus Black. But—.” Harriet paused, and then shook her head. “His eyes were red. And the Atlas said Tom Riddle.”

“Yes, I remember.” The Headmaster stiffened, and the lines of his face only deepened as he nodded and looked to Sirius. “You will need to return and evacuate Grimmauld—calmly, if you please.”

Sirius’ eyes widened. “Wh—you think it’s actually Regulus? That can’t be right. It’s been—bloody hell, over sixteen years since he was seen, and he’s never touched the vault or set foot in the old house. The DMLE looked for witnesses.”

“I think it wise to be cautious,” Dumbledore corrected. “Until we can ensure the wards have been adjusted to disallow Mr. Black, it would be best to leave Grimmauld Place.”

“What about the Malfoys?”

“They should find shelter for the time being with Narcissa’s sister, if she’s willing to house them.” Dumbledore glanced around the room, at the people collecting their cloaks or making moves toward the palace’s entrance hall. He reached his hand into his cloak and withdrew a pocket watch with many dials and faces, studying the time. “You should go ahead, Sirius. Take Miss Black and Miss Granger with you, and ensure they gather what possessions they and Harriet need to spend an evening or two at Hogwarts. Again, there’s no need to cause a stir. As you pointed out, it’s been almost two decades with nary a word from your younger brother. I do not believe he will reappear now, but it doesn’t hurt us to be careful.”

Sirius crossed his arms over his chest. “And if people ask questions?”

“Simply inform them I will be performing a check on the wards for security.” Dumbledore’s eyes narrowed ever so slightly, and his voice cooled. “Sirius. This information is not to travel beyond those of us here. Do you understand?”

“Yes,” the younger wizard replied, though not without shortness. Not for the first time, Harriet got the impression Dumbledore wasn’t the fondest of Sirius, and while Sirius respected the Headmaster, authority rankled him. “Should I take Harriet too?”

“No. She’s needed at the reading.” Again, Dumbledore glanced at his pocket watch. “And we really must be on our way.”

Sirius grumbled, but he did as told and left to collect Elara and Hermione. Meanwhile, Professor Dumbledore gestured for Harriet to follow him, and rather than head toward the school’s entrance, they went deeper into Beauxbatons. A few others took the same path, and Harriet wagered they also needed to hear the Flamels’ will be read.

 They entered a large, unused office that had been opened for the occasion and supplied with far too many seats facing the main desk. Most had already been taken, leaving Harriet and Professor Dumbledore to find their place in the back row away from curious eyes. A wizard Harriet assumed to be the Flamels’ barrister sat behind the desk, wearing a pair of thick spectacles as he previewed the documents in his hands.

The reading began, done in French, so Harriet turned her attention elsewhere.

“Professor?” she whispered. “D’you really think that man I saw could be Regulus? He looked just like him, but Sirius has a point. Why would he never come to Grimmauld? Why would he never touch his gold in the Black vault?”

“I think your discovery is worth our caution,” Dumbledore softly replied, though he never turned his attention away from the barrister. “Whether or not he is Mr. Black remains to be seen.”

“Is he a Horc—?”

Dumbledore sharply interrupted her. “Some things should not be spoken aloud in such places, my dear.”

Someone coughed in the crowd.

Harriet flushed, frustrated with the professor—and with herself. She knew better than to go saying that word where anyone might hear it. The reading continued, the barrister handing the documents off to another woman who stood near him. When she started speaking in the more expressive, guttural tones of a Gulf dialect, Harriet realized the entirety of the will hadn’t been done in French. It made sense, considering the Flamels had associates all over the world.

Hermione had told her an official reading like this wasn’t normally done; usually, the will’s executor distributed bequeathed assets after probate and a bunch of other legal nonsense Harriet didn’t have the patience to learn about. For whatever reason, the Flamels had wanted their will to be read to all the beneficiaries, and though Harriet couldn’t say for certain, she thought it might be so there was no doubt where or who something was left to. No squabbling over a mislaid fortune.

Like vultures, circling—.

Suddenly, Harriet felt incredibly tired.

“The man at the manor wasn’t like the others,” she quietly continued, keeping her attention forward like Dumbledore did. “They look like…him. They have his face. The one I saw, though…that was Regulus. It was Regulus, except for the eyes. Except for the name. What does that mean, Professor?”

The Headmaster made a small gesture with his hand, indicating she should wait. The reading switched to English a moment later, and a sizable amount of gold was signed over into Hogwarts’ possession. From what Harriet gathered, the Flamels had split much of their money among the different wizarding schools. Madame Maxime, seated several rows ahead of Dumbledore and Harriet, looked rather pleased. As the reading unfolded and more possessions were allocated, some people looked less happy than others. Harriet thought they should be happy to receive anything at all. She would give any amount of gold, every last Galleons in her vault, just for one more minute with—.

When the Headmaster spoke again, it was to say, “Did you know, Harriet, we once were fortunate enough to acquire a sample of the former Minister’s blood? It was a serendipitous happenstance that was not to be repeated, as the sample was quite small and not worth the danger experienced for its retrieval.”

“…sir?”

Dumbledore continued as if he hadn’t heard her. “It’s rarely discussed at Hogwarts until your seventh year, how gruesome the reality of blood involved in magic can be. It holds the essence of being within it, and when used for malicious aims, can give control over a person’s will.”

Harriet’s brow furrowed. She tried to grasp where he was going with this strange conversation. “So you…you tried to control him? Is that what you’re saying?”

“Not necessarily.” Dumbledore exhaled, his hand running over his beard. “It was more of a thought than anything. I mention it only because, when we possessed said sample, I made a rather curious discovery. The blood wasn’t magical.”

Harriet blinked, and she couldn’t help but shoot the Headmaster a quick, puzzled glance. “What do you mean, sir?”

“Just as I said. The blood did not belong to a magical person.”

How is that possible? That doesn’t make sense. “So he…tricked you? It wasn’t his blood?”

“No. It was, and it was not, his blood.” Dumbledore turned his head, the weight of his gaze resting on Harriet. She found herself frozen, both confused and horrified by the implications of what he’d said. “I mean only to illustrate the imprecise nature of our subject, Harriet. It is not something I can find an answer for inside of a book. There simply is no answer that we couldn’t contradict with another. He is, and he is not, Tom Riddle, and I believe Regulus is, and is not, Regulus Black. At least, not now.”

With that, Dumbledore closed the conversation, and he urged Harriet to pay attention to the reading again. She couldn’t. Her mind raced with questions, and she almost wished she hadn’t asked for clarification. It only made her more befuddled and uneasy with the implications.

How is that possible? Gaunt must have switched the sample somehow. He must have tricked them. He ’s obviously magical, so his blood must be too! Unless…unless it’s not his body….

In her mind, Harriet remembered running through the Aerie, heart racing, bright, ubiquitous torchlight streaming through the windows—and Luna, dead-eyed and quiet, the diadem sitting above her brow—.

“I’m afraid Luna won’t be going anywhere. Not until I’m finished with her—.”

A voice broke through her frightened stupor.

“For Harriet Dorea Potter, our ward—.”

Harriet startled and looked around, the French wizard at the front clearing his throat before he kept speaking.

“—we leave our home, Aurum Hearth, in Trefhud, England, complete with assets therein not inherited by other parties. Included in this bequeathment is the ownership of our beloved house-elf, Bigsby, as we are secure in the knowledge she will treat him as nothing short of family, and will not seek to banish him from his home.”

Harriet folded her hands together in her lap, digging her nails into her skin.

“We hope it is a place of peaceful refuge for her as it has been for us for many years.”

The reading continued, though Harriet didn’t hear any of it. The accented voice washed over her as she stared at her hands, at the scars decorating her fingers and knuckles. She held herself so stiffly, her shoulders felt tight and ready to break apart.

It’s a simple piece of Druid’s glass. Keep it with you, oui? For luck. Do not leave it behind—.”

Professor Dumbledore touched her arm. “Let’s go, Harriet.”

Her eyes burned as she looked around, seeing that no one else had moved from their chairs, and the barrister still spoke. “It’s not over, is it?”

“It’s all right,” the Headmaster insisted. “We don’t have to stay. Let’s go.”

Harriet stood, and she followed him from their seats. Neither said a word to anyone as they exited the room, and the door closed with a hushed click behind them, taking away the voice systematically breaking apart what remained of the Flamels, one piece at a time.


A/N:

Me: *posts chapter*

Readers: “You spelled Horace wrong.”

Me: “Daddy, chill.”

Chapter 302: mind and will

Chapter Text

cccii. mind and will

 

The trip back across the channel was quieter than the morning’s journey.

The silence settled thickly in the nearly empty carriage, Professor Dumbledore’s pensive gaze turned to the window and the darkness of the empty, night-clad water. Harriet didn’t bother pretending to study or preoccupy her mind. She stared at nothing in particular, grateful the Headmaster didn’t feel the need to entertain her with chatter.

The day hadn’t been particularly taxing, but Harriet felt exhausted. Thinking about the Flamels made her sad, her mood heavy and almost sticky with grief, but it was thinking of everything that was to follow that truly wore her out. She didn’t get to go home and ameliorate her sadness among family and friends, taking the time to let the feeling heal over like a wound forming a scab. No, rather, she had to prepare for her exams, the results of which could reap their own brand of misery if she didn’t do well. Then, she’d be delivered straight into Slytherin’s hands, and she could feel herself aging just thinking about the summer ahead.

Then, she had to worry about Voldemort. She had to think constantly about the wizard who wanted to slaughter her and everyone she loved.

Harriet took a long, stilling breath, then let it out.

“Professor?” she said.

“Yes, Harriet?” Dumbledore answered as if he’d been waiting for her to speak.

“What’ll happen if I don’t do well on my O.W.Ls?”

Whatever he’d been expecting her to say, it hadn’t been that, and it took a moment for the Headmaster to answer. “I have full confidence you’ll perform well on your exams.”

“But what if I don’t?” she pressed. “Please, Professor. I need to know.”

He exhaled, a slow, careful thing, his eyes resting on Harriet. “If you did truly poorly, though you will not, the school would require you to repeat your fifth year and offer another attempt at the exams. Should you fail again after a second attempt, you would face expulsion.” He raised a brow. “I have only seen that happen to a few remarkably stubborn individuals, one of whom regretted her choices later in life and retook the exams privately for a third time—for a fee, of course.”

Harriet waited, her gaze still resting on the Headmaster. He knew what she’d truly been asking, and she didn’t let him prevaricate out of the question.

He sighed again. “Professor Slytherin would be immensely unhappy should your performance be judged lacking, but it wouldn’t have any bearing upon your apprenticeship. The contract between master and apprentice exists outside of Hogwarts. The C-triple-M may form an inquiry and if the inquiry discovered the apprenticeship was the cause of your failing marks, it could potentially be dissolved or otherwise amended.” He studied Harriet over the top of his spectacles. “You can only do your best, Harriet, and weather what will come. It is all any of us can do.”

His answer did little to satisfy either of them, and all Harriet could think about was what new torture Slytherin would devise if she didn’t meet his expectations. Some nebulous, irrational part of her brain feared failing entirely—but even the more logical bits of herself that knew it’d be unlikely for her to fail still worried about achieving less than a solid streak of O’s.

He’d probably punish me anyway, she thought, grim. He would say I was trying too hard on shite that doesn’t matter. Harriet shut her eyes. I can’t win. I can never win.

Platform Seven and One-Quarter was quiet when she and Professor Dumbledore arrived and disembarked from the emerald train. Knowing they wouldn’t be going back to Grimmauld, Harriet didn’t head toward King’s Cross and instead waited for what Dumbledore would do.

He extended his hand without a word, and Harriet took it. She braced herself for the uncomfortable squeeze of Apparition, scrunching her eyes shut, and they disappeared with a snap!

When her feet touched solid ground again, and her eyes opened, she expected to see the outskirts of Hogwarts or the northern valley in which the castle rested. Instead, she glimpsed the familiar trees of Devonshire and heard the distant sea roll against the rocks.

Her stomach rolled.

“Why are we here?” she demanded, though her voice came out tired, weak.

“I believe it’s important for you to see your inheritance,” Dumbledore told her, releasing Harriet to instead place his hand upon her shoulder, urging her to walk beside him. “And, you should speak with Bigsby. He has been with the Flamels for a very long time, and could use a visit from a friendly face.”

Harriet had completely forgotten about Bigsby, and felt like an utter knobhead when Professor Dumbledore reminded her of the poor house-elf. “Oh,” she said, her shoulders slumping. How could she have already forgotten about Bigsby? The Flamels trusted her to take care of him, and it’d barely registered in her mind.

Fuck, I ’m terrible.

She and Professor Dumbledore continued up the path, the moon and stars bright enough to illuminate the way despite the summer storm looming off the coast. Aurum Hearth waited ahead, almost entirely cast in darkness aside from a lone candle burning in the kitchen window. Even at a distance, it exuded a sense of emptiness, the gardens unmoving, no faeries or gnomes scuttling about the thick, well-loved foliage.

Harriet hesitated outside the wards, the dirt crunching under her trainers. She stared at the air as if it might bite her—and truly, she wouldn’t blame it if it did. What if the wards recognized her as the one responsible for their caster’s death? What if they knew she was unworthy and pushed her away?

Professor Dumbledore didn’t rush Harriet, choosing to wait until she started to feel silly with herself, warmth dusting her cheeks. She finally pressed forward through the gate, and magic briefly fluttered against her skin like hovering bird wings—then disappeared. Harriet let out a shuddering breath.

They entered the house without difficulty, and Harriet saw that a noticeable amount of the furniture and clutter had been removed, more than likely taken by the barristers and given away as part of the estate. The bones of the house remained, the familiar markers of tables and sideboards and Perenelle’s favorite scenic landscape. She’d loved a Muggle piece hung in the foyer of a distant cow grazing in a sweeping green field. Mr. Flamel swore up and down it was magical and he’d seen the cow move, but Perenelle had only rolled her eyes.

Harriet paused past the threshold to gaze at the landscape and its lone bovine. She almost smiled.

They found Bigsby in the kitchens, and any happiness Harriet found in gentle reminders of the Flamels fled as soon as she saw his red, watery eyes and sagging posture.

He greeted them with a warble of French, looking at Harriet.

“I don’t—I’m going to have to learn French, aren’t I?” she muttered to herself, scratching her cheek. At that moment, Harriet promised she’d do so, if only because she’d regretted not learning before. “Erm, Professor can you—?”

Professor Dumbledore nodded. “Go ahead.”

Harriet faced Bigsby, hesitating before she knelt. “I’m Harr—well, you know that already. Sorry, I’m out of sorts. Err, Mr. Flamel left—.” She nearly said left you to me, but she didn’t like how that sounded. Owning house-elves made her distinctly uncomfortable, and now she had two. “Well, I guess it’s just us now—and Winky, my other house-elf. You’ll be part of my family, if that’s what you want.”

She paused, Professor Dumbledore quietly translating, probably stringing together sentences with far more aplomb than she did. Harriet scratched at the back of her neck, right over the mark laid there by Slytherin.

“I don’t want to own anybody, or have servants or—. But I’m not going to kick you out of your home. You’re more than welcome to stay here, in your house. Do with it what you think is best. I don’t—I stay with my godfather and god-sister for part of the summer, and for the other part I…I’m not anywhere where you can come with me. If you need anything, though, or just want to have a visit, you only have to pop by. You can go wherever you want, Bigsby.”

Bigsby’s mouth pulled into a frown as his gaze drifted between Harriet and Professor Dumbledore. She thought she heard the wizard mention Poudlard, and realized he’d probably added that she spent much of the year at the castle.

When the Headmaster finished, Bigsby sniffled, using a folded handkerchief to dab beneath his bulbous nose. With his free hand, he reached out to grasp two of Harriet’s fingers, giving them a firm squeeze, speaking in thick French.

“He says he will proudly continue the maintenance of Aurum Hearth and the care of you in the stead of Master Nicolas.” Dumbledore paused, listening. “Ah. Apparently, Nicolas left something for you in the study.”

Harriet didn’t want to go into the study. She would have very much preferred leaving the room undisturbed, perhaps indefinitely, but she forced herself to smile and thank Bigsby, rising to her feet.

She left Dumbledore and the house-elf to speak in the kitchens, heading deeper into the house. She found the study with ease, the door creaking in on old, stubborn hinges, revealing the unlit room beyond. She lit the candles with a stiff flick of her wand.

It was silent and still in a way Harriet had never seen it before, the tables and desks empty and uncluttered, absent of the man who once filled the space with so much life. None of his forgotten cups of tea dotted the shelves, no lingering smell of pipe smoke, no experiments or bits of enchanted gems or stacked research material.

Harriet’s chest ached, hollow and brittle like a nest with no birds left to tend it. Like a stiff wind would come along at any moment and break it apart into so many pieces.

Her footsteps echoed when she crept through the room to the potions lab, standing at the doorway.

She knew at once what Bigsby had meant for her to find, what Mr. Flamel had left behind. Three years ago, she’d sat at the table in Mr. Flamel’s sunlight lab, the room filled with the gentle sighs of songbirds and bubbling concoctions, and he’d flitted about while Harriet plodded her way through a book of runes.

There, in front of the seat she once occupied, rested the small skull of a raven, the weathered runes of raidho, jera, and laguz carved over the crest.

Muriel, Harriet thought, reaching out to run the edge of her thumb over the beak. The skull had more wear to it than Hugh’s, but then again, there was no telling how long Mr. Flamel had kept it. Muriel could have been flying through the skies for centuries.

Wordless, Harriet retrieved the necklace from beneath her collar, twisting open the leather knot holding it closed. She picked up Muriel and, with practiced motions, threaded the leather string through the bird’s old bones. It slid down to rest by Hugh and the dull, lusterless sheen of the Demon’s Eye.

Dumbledore waited for her when Harriet exited the lab, the necklace tucked away beneath her shirt once more.

“I have something for you,” the older wizard said, and he huffed when Harriet shot him a suspicious look. “Oh, my dear. It’s nothing like what Nicolas gifted you before, I promise. I have no interest in crafting a Demon’s Eye.”

He extended his hand toward Harriet, his fingers curled in upon something small. They only unfurled when she stepped forward, and she frowned at the small black gem cradled in his palm.

“What is it?” she asked, her brow furrowed.

“It was part of Marvolo Gaunt’s ring until you broke it free in the Ministry,” he said, not really answering Harriet’s question. “It’s yours, and should be in your keeping. I want you to have it.”

Harriet glanced into Professor Dumbledore’s eyes, not quite sure of what to make of his expression. It felt heavy and intent, but earnest, and when she plucked the odd rock from him, he quickly dropped his hand away.

She held the stone between her thumb and index finger, frowning. How strange.

Dumbledore’s shoulders dropped half an inch, and his beard twitched. “Keep it as a reminder of your own strength, my dear Harriet. Your victories may seem small at times, and your losses many, but every day you continue to live and to fight for the ones you love is a triumph against Lord Voldemort. That grief you feel is evidence of your goodness, and it is something he will never understand.”

Harriet studied the stone for another moment, turning the smooth facets toward the light, finding nothing remarkable. She tucked it away in her pocket, and noticed how Dumbledore’s eyes followed the motion.

I wonder what that ’s about.

“Are you ready to depart?”

“Yes, sir.”


A/N: She is risennnn. She is riseeeeen.

That’s an Easter joke. Get it, because it’s Easter? Get it?

If you’re curious to know, I named Hugh and Muriel after Huginn and Muninn, the ravens of Odin.

You can find me on BSKY for updates on projects I’m working on or any questions you have.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 303: the vault below

Chapter Text

ccciii. the vault below

 

The streets of Diagon Alley teemed with more people than usual.

Standing in the crowd made for a miserable experience, the summer heat pouring over Hermione’s head like thick, molten honey, and it made the exposed skin of her shoulders sting with heat. Elara, who hadn’t dressed down in the slightest, looked ready to pass out.

“This is ridiculous,” Hermione muttered, straining to see around the taller wizards clogging the entrance to the bank. She could hear the arguing halfway across the square, and they were so far from the doors, they didn’t even fall into the marble building’s shadow.

When they waited another five minutes and the line made no progress, Hermione gave the whole venture up as a fool’s errand and grabbed Elara by the elbow.

“There’s no point in standing here,” she grumped. “Let’s move and at least get out of the sun.”

Elara didn’t protest, hitting herself with another Cooling Charm that did little to cut through the muggy, sticky heat. Hermione led them back beneath the line of canvas awnings.

This puts a pin in things, doesn ’t it?

Hermione scowled at the crowd again, then farther toward the doors of the bank, wondering what on earth the goblins were doing.

It was difficult for her and Elara to leave Grimmauld Place, needing to arrange an escort and compile an itinerary before they took one step out the door. A small, guilty part of her felt relieved that Harriet had opted against leaving the house. She’d looked at them as if they were barmy for asking if she wished to come along, her hair unwashed or brushed, trousers and t-shirt deeply creased with wrinkles. She was entrenched in her O.W.L revisions, and Hermione guessed she hadn’t slept in days.

Still, Harriet remaining behind made their excursion simpler and drew fewer eyes in their direction.

Hermione and Elara had plans to visit the Black Vault—or, more specifically, the Dark grimoires Elara and Harriet had snuck out of Grimmauld Place years ago and stored in Gringotts. Hermione had hit a dead end in their search for information on Horcruxes and how to destroy them. Hermione hoped to have more luck when they returned to Hogwarts and she could search the Aerie, but if they wanted to make progress, searching through the old Black books was the best place to start.

“What do you suppose is causing the hold-up?” Hermione asked aloud as Elara took a seat on a bench outside Florian Fortescue’s.

“God only knows,” Elara retorted, the heat putting her in poor spirits. “Wretched Gladrags. They claimed the Charmed lining on their robes would keep the wearer cool in the Sahara. I’ve been swindled.”

“I think it has less to do with the heat and more to do with the humidity….”

Elara glared at her. “Swindled.”

Fortunately, Florian Fortescue’s awning contained a sturdy climate enchantment, so the air falling over them from above felt crisp and refreshing, condensation forming on the canvas. Every so often, the awning’s fringe would flick back on itself to stop the moisture from dripping onto prospective customers.

“Do you think we could slip the Order long enough to go into Knockturn?” Elara asked after a minute, her voice low so as not to carry toward any passersby. “There could be books there that we want.”

Hermione lifted her chin and searched the square for the Order members, finding them easily enough, though she guessed that unless a person knew who to look for, they’d never know they were surveying the area.

One of the witches briefly met Hermione’s gaze before she went back to reading the Prophet.

“No,” Hermione answered, shaking her head. “There’s several of them watching us—and besides the point, going down that alley would be stupid of us! You know exactly who we’ve seen coming from there before.”

“Slytherin wants nothing to do with us,” Elara replied, droll and candid in her discomfort. “He’s content to let Harriet keep her ‘little friends,’ so long as he retains the illusion of control, and Harriet knows that. He could meddle, but would it be worth the headache when he can, instead, have Harriet begrudgingly grateful she gets to keep her family?”

Hermione pursed her lips, having thought all of this before. Slytherin understood if he attempted to drive a wedge between them and Harriet, Harriet would push back—and as self-absorbed as the wizard may be, he knew Harriet well enough to know her stubbornness knew no bounds.

Elara leaned back into the bench, a hand passing through her fringe. “Well, we’ll make no progress during the holiday, then,” she said.

Hermione shook her head. “No. But we wouldn’t have found anything worthwhile in Knockturn, either. The Ministry combs through it more than the average witch or wizard suspects.”

“We could—.”

Ma louloute!

The familiar voice lilted through the noise around them, and the renewed red flush of Elara’s face had nothing to do with the temperature. Hermione nearly grimaced, but she kept her face placid as Fleur Delacour flounced through the crowd.

Ma louloute,” the older witch said again as Elara stood and fussed with her robes. Fleur reached up to briefly cup Elara’s cheek, and she smiled—attracting eyes from all quarters of the square. They weren’t doing anything wrong, but the attention made the new scar over Hermione’s side throb and ache.

She didn’t care for Fleur very much. Mostly, she thought it stemmed from her own insecurities; Fleur was smart, accomplished, affable, well-liked, and beautiful, which seemed awfully unfair in the grand scheme of things. Hermione found her vapid and difficult to get along with. She didn’t see what Elara saw in her—but she kept her mouth firmly shut.

“It iz such a good surprise to see you here,” Fleur continued, pausing to give Hermione a friendly—if tight—smile. Hermione noticed her English had improved since the last time they’d spoken. Granted, that had been quite some time ago, but it still irked her. “Obviously melting in the heat. Must you wear such long sleeves even in summer?”

Her well-meaning nagging slid over Elara without effect, and she merely clasped Fleur’s hands in hers, holding them between their bodies. “And why are you here, and not cooking yourself on a French beach?”

Fleur feigned a gasp. “I would never. With zis skin? No. I would look like—.” She paused, searching for a word. “A lobster.”

“More like a crab.”

Fleur dropped her hands and pinched Elara’s side, earning a miffed huff.

“As I said before, I am employed by the bank here now,” Fleur said. “I moved earlier in the month.”

“We were actually here for the bank,” Hermione interrupted. “For Elara’s vault. We were standing in line, but gave it up when the line didn’t budge. Do you know what’s going on?”

Fleur frowned and shook her head, her loose hair floating over her shoulders like silk. “No, but the goblins don’t tell their human employees very much.” She considered the crowd in front of the bank—and cut a scathing, disgusted look at a man who’d been too openly gawking at her. Her hand slid into Elara’s gloved one, and took Hermione’s as well. “This way.”

She led them from under the awning and its comfortable cooling cloud, her hair seeming to glow like burnished bronze in the sun while Elara and Hermione felt like wilted, over-exposed weeds. She led them away from the main entrance and along the lane leading toward the northern district. They only went as far as the end of Gringotts before Fleur changed their path again, stepping into the narrow lane between the bank and the neighboring shop.

It was cooler there, darker, and Hermione entirely missed the narrow door Fleur stopped before. Elara must have missed it too, as she staggered to a halt, blinking—and Hermione realized it must be hidden under a glamour only employees could detect.

Fleur cracked the door open, tossing them a smug smile. “After you.”

She let Elara step forward first—then walked in before Hermione, leaving her to huff and duck through the short entrance obviously meant for goblins. Fleur reached down the front of her fluttering, turquoise blue robes to retrieve a chain lanyard, a badge dangling from its length. She ensured it was visible, then flounced her way further into the bank.

Hermione could hear voices from the front of the bank—loud, annoyed voices, and the snide, cold tones of the goblins answering them. They did not sound happy. Hermione quickened her pace to stay in step with Fleur, who held herself with easy, unswaying confidence as she strode toward the entrance to the vaults.

The goblins stationed there glared up at them, baring sharp, menacing teeth.

“I am escorting them to ze Black Vault,” she said, again exhibiting confidence that left her purpose there without question. One of the goblins, wearing a uniform that identified him as a cart operator instead of a teller, sneered.

“Not without a key, you’re not,” he said.

Elara—thrown off by Fleur’s sudden appearance—took a moment to fumble in her pocket and remove her golden key, swinging it from her finger for the goblin to see. The goblin sucked air through his teeth.

“Fine,” he said. “Let’s get this over with.”

They followed him and the other goblin—who carried a wicked looking club at his waist—through the doors onto the track, then loaded themselves into one of the carts.

“Must she come with us?” Hermione murmured in a fit of pique.

“Yes,” Elara answered as she settled between her and Fleur on the narrow bench. “Don’t start.”

“She can hear you,” Fleur said with a dramatic flip of her hair. “Being part-veela means my hearing is exceptional.”

Hermione grimaced. “I just—we’re looking for rather delicate material.”

“And you think I cannot keep such information to myself?”

“I think a secret isn’t really a secret if others know about it.”

Elara heaved a heavy, bothered sigh between them. “I’m grateful for your assistance, Fleur, and don’t mind your presence in the vault. I would ask you not to inquire exactly what we’re seeking, however”

“As you wish, ma louloute.”

They sat with their hands together as the goblins engaged the cart, and it trundled into motion, headed into the deeper recesses. As they plunged down and the temperature shifted, Hermione noted how the goblins kept exchanging looks. They communicated a lot between one another with those glances, but what was said, she didn’t know.

Hermione tightened her grip on the seat.

The rest of the trip to the Black Vault happened in silence. They reached the landing and disembarked, one of the goblins taking the key from Elara to unlock the vault door. Hermione, Elara, and Fleur all stepped inside, but Fleur elected to stay by the entrance. Elara led Hermione to where the grimoires had been stored.

“Have you noticed if anything has been touched in here?” Hermione asked. “Well, there’s so much in here, it’d be difficult to say, but—?”

“No,” Elara replied in her typical brusque manner. “Sirius told me the keys had been restruck not long before his incarceration. Not long after, Regulus was officially declared dead, though there’d been enough evidence gathered by the Aurors prior to that for it to be understood he was dead.” Elara’s mouth thinned. “Obviously, that wasn’t the case—but he would have needed to have a new key made, and the goblins would have a record of it.”

News of Regulus Black still being alive troubled Hermione. Harriet telling them he was a Horcrux made the issue even worse. The Order and Dumbledore didn’t think Regulus had been to Grimmauld—but what if he had? Tom Riddle was a crafty, sly individual, and his Horcruxes proved no less cunning. What if he’d been in the house and they didn’t know? What could he have done? What kind of malicious magic could he have left?

Hermione pulled on a spare pair of gloves she’d borrowed from Harriet, a pair she’d specifically threaded with runes to enchant against the hostile presence of Dark magic. Hermione used them to quickly shift through the tomes, the sharp bite of curses and malevolent hexes gumming against her covered fingers. One book growled at her, and she slapped the cover.

She and Elara knew they couldn’t linger overlong, so they devoted no more than thirty minutes to their search, selecting the most likely candidates and perusing their contents. Unfortunately, nothing jumped out as suspect; indeed, Hermione didn’t see the word ‘horcrux,’ mentioned anywhere, but anything that paralleled soul magic got investigated. Only two tomes looked promising, and they Charmed the cover to be innocuous before Hermione tucked them under her arm.

They rejoined Fleur at the vault’s entrance after Elara shoved a handful of Galleons into her pocket. Hermione opened her mouth to speak—to grumble an apology for earlier—but the French witch gestured for them to be quiet. She had her gaze on the vault door, which stood ajar, with the goblins waiting on the landing beyond. The goblins spoke together in the guttural, raspy phonemes of Gobbledygook, not bothering to keep their voices lowered.

Fleur’s eyes narrowed.

“Zey are talking about the problem upstairs,” she whispered to Elara and Hermione. “They are only allowing a few wizards into the building at a time.” She paused, brow furrowed, and both Hermione and Elara stepped closer as she lowered her voice further. “Two goblins are dead. A wizard—a wizard killed them, and something….mmm, zey are saying something got out of one of the vaults.”

“What does that mean?” Hermione asked, dread building in her chest.

“I do not know,” Fleur answered, her blue eyes turning toward them. “But I cannot be anything good.”

Chapter 304: spiraling the drain

Chapter Text

ccciv. spiraling the drain

 

As the week came to a strained, plodding end, Harriet felt ready to pull out her hair.

With the looming threat of returning to Slytherin’s keeping hanging over her head, Harriet’s O.W.L revisions took an awful toll on her brain. Her memory felt stretched and dried, like old, brittle toffee, and information leaked out of it like a sieve.

She didn’t usually have test-anxiety—not like Hermione did, at any rate. But she stayed up late at night, thinking about the summer ahead of her after the exams, and it filled her with dread. Slytherin was still unhappy after what happened earlier in the year with the Coven and Umbridge, and she knew he partially blamed her for his removal from the school. Slytherin’s pettiness knew no bounds, and Harriet knew she would reap the consequences regardless of her exam results.

Bigsby made time to visit, which gave Harriet the opportunity to introduce him to everybody, including Livi and her golems. After living with the Flamels for his entire life, he didn’t bat an eyelid at the large Horned Serpent or Harriet’s other eccentricities, but he did seem less than enthused by Grimmauld Place and Harriet’s living situation. He colluded with Winky to ensure sweets and pastries popped up at random around her, and Harriet often woke from her restless nightmares to the smell of freshly-baked bread settled on her nightstand.

Professor McGonagall had finally been released from hospital, and she’d taken it upon herself to lead Harriet through revisions. Harriet thought Dumbledore might be behind it, but it could be equally possible the professor had decided to help on her own. She told Harriet what had been on O.W.L exams in the past and what she could reasonably expect to be on hers.

“Doesn’t having private tutoring from a professor give me an unfair advantage?” she’d asked—which earned a sharp lift of a brow and roll of the eyes.

“The other students do not have to balance the responsibility of appeasing one lunatic while fearing for their lives from another. I don’t believe anyone would begrudge you the assistance—and, if they did, they can take it up with me.”

On that particular evening, as the week ended and Harriet’s nausea turned into a near-constant sensation, she sat in the parlor with her head in her hands while Professor McGonagall tried to talk her out of a full-blown panic attack.

“You wouldn’t be the first student to make too much of their exams, Miss Potter,” she said, watching Harriet with pursed lips. “You have more than enough knowledge to pass these tests. I have seen you exhibit the skills myself, both in and out of my classroom.” She exhaled through her nose, whether in a bid for patience or because of frustration, Harriet didn’t know. “Drink your tea, Harriet.”

She picked up her tepid drink and drank—grunting when McGonagall hit the cup with a warming spell, and it heated against her mouth. Harriet wrinkled her nose and set it back down. She cast her eye over the mound of revisions gathered on the coffee table and sighed.

“I would encourage you to relax, and to remember the information on the exams will all be something you have seen before.” McGonagall drank her own tea—and Harriet noticed she hadn’t finished her cup either, almost as if she were anxious as well. “And if you come across something you cannot recall, you can rely on your reasoning skills to deduce the best possible answer.”

“Professor Slytherin would tell you I have no reasoning skills,” Harriet grumbled.

“I don’t listen to fools.”

Harriet didn’t have the energy to smirk or otherwise take delight in hearing McGonagall snark on Slytherin. It just made her tired, and fearful. If Slytherin heard the professor badmouthing him, he’d find a way to hurt her in the worst possible way he could. Harriet would prefer never hearing his name again.

McGonagall studied Harriet over the top of her severe, square spectacles, and after a minute, her gaze turned to the window. Night pressed close to the panes of glass, made thick and hazy by the roving fog and Muggle lights. It churned like a thick, curdling potion lapping against the inside of a cauldron, and the imagery made Harriet feel sick.

Everything made her feel sick.

“Harriet.”

She looked at the professor again.

“You do know that, when you are—.” She paused, and though it wasn’t a very long pause, it held a world of meaning. “Not with your family, not home, and feel you are not being cared for properly, you need only write a letter.”

For whatever reason, her comment sent a fissure of anger through Harriet, and it prickled against the nape of her neck. “And what would you do?” she retorted before she could think better of it. “When Slytherin decides to hit me, or torment me, or curse me bloody under the guise of training, what would you be able to do about it?”

If McGonagall was taken aback by the sudden vitriol in Harriet’s voice, she didn’t let it dissuade her. “You do yourself a disservice by isolating yourself. Yes, Slytherin is a cruel, cunning man, but even he must bend to certain rules and authority. Were you in danger, I would write to the C-triple-M and challenge the apprenticeship.”

“They’re all terrified of him.”

“If you believe the people you might have met at Yewbarrow are the only people in the Circle and that there aren’t those who would gladly oppose Slytherin despite the danger, you’d be mistaken.” McGonagall adopted a lecturing tone when she spoke. “The whole premise of the Order of the Phoenix was to defy the infringement of human rights and the rise of an evil dictator. I have disagreed with Albus’ intentions of having you apprentice to that beast since the beginning, and if I must fight with him to keep you safe, I will.”

Harriet lowered her gaze to her cup again, mollified. She wouldn’t write. No matter what torment Slytherin developed for her, she wouldn’t drag others into the situation and jeopardize their safety—but the reminder that others cared what happened to her went a long way.

“What if I fail Transfiguration?” she asked, and Professor McGonagall’s eyes narrowed in a predictable manner.

“I will have you in revisions until you’re my age,” the witch retorted. Harriet cackled, and McGonagall tutted over her disrespect. “I would only be disappointed in the examination, knowing as I do how much effort you’ve put into your studies, and how your skill in Transfiguration has improved every year in reflection of your improvements. It is always such a privilege to see one’s students take such an interest in their education.”

Harriet paused and felt her face warm. “Elara’s better at Transfiguration,” she diverted.

“And Albus is better than me,” McGonagall replied, raising a brow. “There will always be those who are better than we perceive ourselves to be. Comparison is the thief of joy, Miss Potter. Their existence does not negate your own ability.”

Harriet kept her gaze on the table and pretended her cheeks didn’t sport a dark blush. She pulled forward another worksheet, though she didn’t see any of the words on the surface.

They sat in silence for a time, Harriet using the quiet to calm down, Professor McGonagall lost in her own thoughts. She made no effort to persuade Harriet to go to bed, seeming to know better, though despite her anxiety, Harriet actually felt herself growing tired. She picked up her teacup and peered suspiciously into the dregs.

The hour grew later, the house quiet around them despite how many were in residence. Harriet thought she heard Kreacher’s quiet, snide lisp down in the kitchens, and Winky bossing him around. Otherwise, the silence lay thick as a smothering charm, and Harriet’s eyes itched with fatigue. She rubbed at them beneath her spectacles and suppressed a yawn.

A thump sounded in the foyer.

Harriet jerked in her seat, and McGonagall did the same, both witches straightening where they’d begun to droop. The thump came again, joined by the protracted groan of the front door swinging slowly on its hinges. Harriet thought the door must have closed, hearing the air pressure shift—and then, somebody groaned.

Alarmed, Harriet’s gaze jumped to McGonagall. The older witch rose to her feet and pulled her wand from her pocket.

“Stay here, Miss Potter.”

Harriet scrambled up, yanking her wand from its brace.

“I said, stay here,” McGonagall snapped. “You dinnae listen—!”

Before either witch could say more, the parlor door jerked open. A shadow fell across the opening, and Snape appeared at the threshold.

He looked an absolute wreck. His body slumped against the open door, his fingers like claws that curled around the jamb, searching for purchase. His hair, though usually lank, lay slick against his head and neck, strands stuck to his face with feverish perspiration, and his breath came in sharp, shallow pants.

He saw the pair of witches staring at him, their wands drawn, and he pulled himself upright. Something shuddered through his expression, but it disappeared in an instant, shuffled behind the cool, apathetic look of his bottomless eyes.

“What are you doing here?” he demanded.

“What are—? What on earth is the matter with you?” McGonagall sputtered, lowering her wand. “It’s well past midnight, young man! It is inappropriate to come stumbling into the house, out your tree—.”

Snape slid several centimeters down the door, bearing his teeth. The unintentional motion dragged the panel of his cloak open. Underneath, his frock wetly glistened.

“Severus, is that blood?” McGonagall demanded.

“Shut up,” he snapped when her voice threatened to carry into the open foyer. He tried to straighten and stand, then cursed when he couldn’t. “I don’t want that fool Black down here. Let me through to the Floo,” he spat.

“You can’t use the Floo in your state!” McGonagall retorted, though she did lower her voice, gaze flicking toward the foyer. She hurried toward him. “Here, Miss Potter, help me with him….”

Harriet shook herself and jolted into motion, coming around to Snape’s side to force his stiff arm over her shoulder. McGonagall did the same on his other side, and the wizard hissed imprecations under his breath as they forced his torso to straighten up.

“Let’s move him over to the sofa, there….”

They shuffled farther into the room, Harriet hooking her ankle on the door’s edge to swing it shut. Snape allowed one low, shuddering breath to betray his pain as they lowered him onto the sofa, and Harriet thought he would have thrown them both from him and stomped over to the hearth if his knees hadn’t given out from under him.

“Get off of me, girl,” he muttered, and Harriet realized she hadn’t released his arm. She held it, grip tight, and his gruff comment had Harriet yanking her hands away.

“What happened?” McGonagall demanded, and Snape didn’t even bother to look at her. For a moment, he listed, chin dipped toward his chest, and his gaze moved over Harriet’s books on the coffee table. The moment passed, and he reached for the front buttons on the bottom of his frock coat, undoing them with shaking, bloody fingers.

Harriet froze as she watched, unable to look away from his hands or the dark patch soaking through the wool covering his front. He tugged aside the fabric to reveal the once crisp white of the shirt beneath, now stained a bright, vivid red.

Red like Slytherin’s staring, mocking eyes.

McGonagall let out a startled breath when Snape unbuttoned several of the lower fastenings on the shirt as well, then impatiently yanked the ruined cloth aside, pulling it free of his trousers. He revealed part of his pale, sunken stomach, the sallow skin sticky with perspiration and blood under the shadow of his ribs. Bruises both old and new marbled his flesh—and there, a few fingers above his waistband, was a narrow wound oozing blood in a thick river.

“I will Floo Poppy—.”

“No,” Snape told her.

“Merlin help me, Severus, you are going to bleed out on the sofa—!”

“She cannot enter the house, lest you forget,” he sneered, though the expression lacked energy. “Potter, in the lab downstairs. Particulate Eradicator, pale green, purple seal. A slender vial, wide bottom, green glass, black potion, second shelf. A red bottle, square, bottom shelf, there are several. Dittany—I can be at least assured you know what that looks like.”

Harriet stared at him.

Potter!

She jolted, his voice propelling her toward the door with such force, she nearly collided with it before she could get it open. Her heart thundered in her chest as she took the stairs down into the kitchen two at a time, Winky and Kreacher looking around when she bolted into the potion’s laboratory. It was a space that Snape usually visited, so the cupboard reflected his personal preference in sorting.

“Fuck,” Harriet hissed as she jostled aside bottles, trying to remember exactly what Snape had said. “Green, right? Green, purple seal. And something—black, there, that one. Dittany, Dittany….”

She nearly fumbled the vials in her rush to leave the lab and run back up the stairs. She tried to keep her footsteps light, lest she wake somebody up. Remus would have been able to help, but she doubted Snape would like that—and waking Sirius would be a bloody disaster. She ducked back into the parlor and closed the door once more.

“—mad bint Lestrange,” Snape was saying as Harriet ran over, settling the bottles among her books. McGonagall had her wand out and pointed at Snape’s left arm. The sleeve had pulled down, revealing the loathsome image of the Dark Mark—and dark bruises in the shape of boot prints, his wrist and forearm both swelling from obvious breaks. His other hand loosely cupped his stomach.

“Why did You-Know-Who let her do this?” McGonagall asked as she went about healing his bones. Her voice sounded firm, but Harriet saw how the tip of her wand quivered. She couldn’t blame her professor. The sudden adrenaline and fright of Snape showing up in the dead of night, half-dead, made Harriet feel nearly ill. “Does he suspect you—?”

Snape scoffed. “This is nothing new,” he said, bitterness clear in his tone. “The Dark Lord has always encouraged what he sees as a ‘fair bit of sport between his Death Eaters.”

“Severus, you’ve been stabbed.”

“And I will be again before the end, undoubtedly.” He let his head fall back against the back of the sofa, his dark eyes roving to Harriet. “The green one, Potter.”

He tried to administer it himself, but he couldn’t navigate the cork, and his arm had grown weaker the longer he’d sat there. The blood poured out over his lap, dripping along his hip and thigh to form a stain on the sofa cushion the house-elves would want to spend hours cleaning.

Harriet’s breathing felt tight and uncomfortable, her lungs too big for her chest. She stepped forward and took the vial from Snape’s uncooperative hand. He tried to hold on, but it slipped through his bloody fingers, smearing red over Harriet’s, and he shut his eyes in frustration.

“Pour it directly into the wound,” he instructed. “Not on my skin, unless you’d like seeing me flayed in front of you.”

Harriet swallowed her apprehension as she uncorked the vial, and the motion of her arms shifting wafted the harsh, corrosive smell. Harriet thought it would burn her nose hair off.

“Before I bleed out, you twit.”

“Shut up,” Harriet retorted—and the words shook, breaking. Her eyes flicked to McGonagall, who still held out Snape’s injured arm, and the older witch gave her a brief, brusque nod.

Snape’s skin felt cold and clammy when Harriet leaned closer and placed her hand against his stomach. She bit the inside of her cheek to keep her eyes from stinging as she held the wound open. It stank, and she knew enough to understand that meant he’d probably be bloody dead if he were a Muggle, and he must be in agony.

He’s told me before, she thought. Voldemort hurts his Death Eaters. He makes them hurt each other. It’s to be expected. It’s—.

The vial had a narrow, elongated nozzle inside the opening that made dribbling the potion into the open cut. Steam began to issue from it, and Snape stiffened. McGonagall grunted when he gripped her hand with bruising strength.

Snape gaze remained fixed on Harriet. She didn’t know if he was actually seeing her, but he stared as the potion bubbled, oozing—.

When the steam stopped, his shoulders slumped, and he slammed his eyes shut. “Clean it,” he rasped.

Harriet used her wand to clear the mess that had been pushed from his body, ignoring what had leaked over her fingers, the sleeves of her robe dripping red. She administered the other potions in a similar fashion, pretending her hands weren’t shaking, that her chest didn’t burn and there weren’t tears on her cheeks. Snape drank the Blood Replenisher and let out a silent gasp after he swallowed.

I don ’t want him to go back. I don’t want him to keep doing this to himself—.

When the wound had healed enough for the skin to knit together, Snape let his arm fall from McGonagall’s grip, and he used his other hand to pull his frock coat closed over his vulnerable stomach. His head remained bowed, black hair falling around his hidden face.

Harriet straightened and stepped back.

“I’ll see him through to the school now. He’ll be steady enough for the journey,” McGonagall said after they’d all breathed for a moment, easing Snape onto his unsteady feet, the taller wizard slumping against her shoulder. She looked at Harriet and sighed. “Go on, Miss Potter. Wash up and turn in.”

Harriet didn’t move immediately. She stood in a daze, watching as her Transfiguration professor saw Snape through the Floo, and they disappeared in gust of swirling green flame.

Eventually, she moved. She staggered out of the parlor, leaving her books behind, and moved on silent feet through an equally silent house. She walked straight into the washroom on the floor she shared with Hermione and Elara, and she didn’t bother to flare the lamps or light a candle after locking the door. She stripped in the dark, only able to see by the thin, reedy glow of Muggle lights from the window.

The ruined robes fell in a heap on the carpet, smearing red across the tiles. Harriet stepped into the shower, barely feeling the lash of scalding water as it fell across her back, soaking through her thick hair.

Snape’s blood sluiced from her upheld palms and dripped off her fingertips.

Harriet stared at the pink smudges swirling around the drain long after the water had gone cold.


A/N:

Snape: “What are you going to do, stab me?”

Also Snape: [gets stabbed]

Chapter 305: ordinary wizarding levels

Chapter Text

cccv. ordinary wizarding levels

 

Stepping into the Ministry filled Harriet with unspeakable dread.

It crept up on her with the suddenness of an Acromantula scuttling out of the brush—all long legs, wide, black eyes, and wordless menace. It stole her breath when she emerged from the Floo and stumbled to a halt, her muscles locked, knees shaking. Tonks had to pull her away from the grate to avoid being trampled by the next bloke rushing out of the green flames.

“Wotcher, Harriet,” the Auror said, giving her arm a familiar squeeze. “Ready to get this over with?”

She was not, in fact, ready to get this over with, and desperately wished they’d push back the date of her exams to the end of summer. She’d asked several times if it was possible to have them proctored at Hogwarts instead of the Ministry, but her inquiries had either been ignored or met with simpering pacification.

You’ll do fine, dearie,” one witch in the Department of Education said.

Harriet thought she’d do a lot bloody better if they wouldn’t force her to come back to this fucking place.

The Atrium looked the same as it ever did, the same as it had the first time she stepped inside all those years ago and gawked at its grandeur. Now, Harriet found it ugly. The glossy tiles, golden statues, soaring glass windows—she hated all of it, and when she neared the fountain with Tonks, she couldn’t help but stop.

Harriet stared at the spot where she and her best friend nearly lost their lives, where a wizard from the Department of Mysteries died trying to get them to safety. She stared at the fountain where they’d found Barty Crouch Junior’s dead body. Every tile lay exactly as it should, the grout smooth, not a spec of dust to be found. Witches and wizards continued passing through the space, content to follow their morning routines.

It seemed to Harriet there should be a mark, a flaw, something to mark the magnitude of what had happened there. She’d dueled the Dark Lord in that spot. She’d witnessed her life flashing before her eyes, had bled into the marble flagstones—and no one would ever know. She would, of course, and maybe a few others, but soon enough it’d be lost to memory. Gone, in an instant.

Early morning commuters began to pause and stare. Harriet heard her name whispered, carried on an invisible breeze that filled the loathsome space like a physical presence.

Tonks noticed their growing audience too, and she shifted from foot to foot, growing uneasy.

“Err, we’re going to be late, Potter….”

Harriet didn’t answer, but she did start walking, heading over to the lifts.

Tonks followed her as far as the fifth level, and Harriet disembarked there, following the cool voice of the witch announcing “Level five, Department of International Magical Co-operation, Department of Magical Education.”

Tonks flashed her a thumbs up as the lift doors started to close again. “Knock ‘em dead, Harriet! You’ve got this—!”

The doors shut, which was probably for the best, since the bloke in the lift with them looked to be in a rush. Harriet stared at the bronze gate for a long moment, gathering her nerves. She wagered nothing short of another duel with Voldemort would get her out of this now, and so she exhaled, adjusted her apprentice robes, and started down the corridor.

She didn’t have to wander far to find the hall marked “Proctoring and Practicals,” joined by the seal for the Ministry’s Department of Education. Harriet stepped inside to find a plain lobby fit with padded benches straight out of the sixties and beige colored walls. There were several people milling about inside, drinking their morning tea and picking over a tray of flaky pastries set on a sideboard. They chatted with one another—until Harriet came inside, and they fell silent in a wave.

“Oh, you’re here! Perfect, perfect!” said a woman with wide purple spectacles and a bow around her neck. She reminded Harriet of Dolores Umbridge, and the association made her stomach turn despite the witch seeming friendly and polite. “Your examiners are all here and eager to see how you’ll do today, Miss Potter.”

The group nodded in acknowledgment or waved, and Harriet smiled—or tried to. Her face felt funny, and she was sure she must have grimaced.

“I know the Ordinary Wizarding Levels are usually administered over a series of days at Hogwarts, but you’ll be taking all of yours today. You were made aware of this, yes? Had a good breakfast? Good! We’ll start the morning off with Potions, so your sample will have ample time to brew, then move on to History of Magic. We’ll get that out of the way, then do the first half of your Herbology examination, then Ancient Runes. Before breaking for a spot of lunch, we’ll move on to Care of Magical Creatures, have that break, finish your Herbology testing, then complete your Potions exam. From there, we’ll have your Charm, Defense Against the Dark Arts, and Transfiguration practicals, then finish out the evening with Astronomy. How does that sound?”

Sounds fucking awful. “Good. Sounds good.”

The witch clapped. “Lovely, no questions? You look confident, I like that! Come along over here, dear, so we can check your person and get you the materials you need….”

They passed a strange bronze object that looked like a Probity Probe around her, checking for cheating enchantments or illegal potions, then moved Harriet into the first set of examination rooms.

She did her best to shove all her worries and concerns out of her mind as she started, rolling up her sleeves to prep the ingredients laid on a high table by a standard-issue cauldron. Her sleep had been shite and her stomach too heavy to force anything edible inside of it, so she grew tired quickly as the day went on. She knew the fatigue must show in her History of Magic exam, and the plants she tackled for Herbology—specifically those more active in the morning—sensed her bad mood.

The examiners made few comments as she worked, giving no clue as to how Harriet was doing. They kept their faces blank, and feeling their eyes on her every so often made her uneasy. She wished she’d been able to do these at Hogwarts with her classmates, so at least she wouldn’t feel so bloody awkward.

Her Defense and Charms proctors proved the most lively. Harriet swore they came up with their exams on the spot, throwing out different spells to see if she could cast them, working her through various scenarios she had to overcome. The Defense Master, Mr. Verily, was particularly enthused with her wandwork and delighted in hearing Harriet explain why she chose or modified certain movements and incantations.

“And you’re only sixteen?’ he marveled.

“Just about,” Harriet said. She twirled her wand and her Patronus swept around her head, shedding sparks of bright, silver light.

“You have tremendous talent, Miss Potter. Truly a marvel. If you ever desire a change in Masters—well, I suppose that’s not entirely appropriate to suggest in the middle of an examination. But do keep my offer in mind.”

Harriet thanked the wizard, knowing full well she’d never be able to change Masters, no matter how she might desire to do so. It was a funny feeling, one hard to describe, knowing she’d learned all that she had and had fostered her ability because of Slytherin—either to spite him, or because he taught it to her. She’d grown more powerful, and yet it never felt like enough. It would never be enough.

By the time she wrapped up Transfiguration, exhaustion weighed heavily on Harriet, and those examiners who remained were more than ready to be on their way home. The first witch with the purple spectacles remained throughout the tests, maintaining that chipper attitude through the very end.

“You should have your results owled to you soon,” she said as Harriet slumped toward the doors. Certainly before the end of the holiday.”

Harriet grumbled her thanks, taking a breath when she stepped back into the corridor. It wasn’t a relieved breath, but it felt close to it, and though the fear of failure hadn’t completely abated, it’d shifted, the weight pulling at her differently. She’d done everything she could, and it was out of her hands.

Harriet walked toward the lifts, swiping her sweaty fringe away from her brow. She expected to find Tonks there or another member of Dumbledore’s Order lingering about, waiting to take her back to Grimmauld Place. Instead, she found a familiar figure donned all in black, leaning against the wall with their arms crossed.

Her chest tightened upon seeing Snape standing there with his usual aloof, impatient posture.

“You’re all right—,” she blurted, then quickly corrected. “I mean, you’re here? What’re you doing here?”

Snape met her eyes, his remote and still, giving nothing away. The lack of his usual sneer told her something was wrong. Her mind flew through the worst of possibilities—her stomach dropping to her knees—until she realized what had most likely brought Snape here.

“Slytherin,” she said, softly, despite there being no one else hanging about. “He sent you.”

Snape nodded, one solid dip of his sharp chin.

“I don’t have anything ready. I thought, at least, he’d give me the bloody night—.”

“You should not assume anything when it comes to Slytherin.”

Harriet scoffed, yanking hard on the apprenticeship cords hanging around her neck, as had become her habit. “Fuck. Fine, let’s go to Grimmauld.”

When Snape didn’t move to sweep off toward the lifts, Harriet’s stomach sank farther.

“I had your friends pack your possessions,” Snape said. “They have been sent ahead.”

“I don’t even get to say goodbye?” Harriet demanded.

“Don’t be dramatic. You may write to them when we arrive, and you will see them again soon enough.”

Harriet clenched her teeth as she fell into step alongside Snape, and they boarded the lift back to the Atrium. There was no use in arguing. She’d known Slytherin would demand her presence as soon as she’d completed her exams, but she’d thought—she’d hoped—.

There was no use in arguing, no use in bemoaning how unfair it was, or how much she hated Slytherin, this apprenticeship, and the bastard’s impossible standards. She had no choice but to move forward and accept the arrangement, no matter how much she resented it.

“Where are we going?” she asked at length, managing to keep most of her anger out of her voice.

“The Tor,” Snape replied. He turned his head and peered down at her. “He favors it, as the location is posh enough for his standards, and suitably located to make it difficult for others to track his movements.”

Harriet huffed, crossing her arms. “You haven’t asked how my exams went.”

“I don’t need to.”

She glanced up at him, her brow furrowed. “Huh?”

“I know you did well.”

“You don’t know that.”

“I have been a teacher for far too many years,” Snape drawled. “McGonagall and I place wagers every year on what students will attain in their marks.” He arched a brow. “I always win.”

Harried huffed, trying not to laugh. She wouldn’t admit it to the surly berk, but it did give her a measure of comfort to know he’d be at the Tor with her, even if it shouldn’t.

“Not planning on getting stabbed again, are you?”

Snape’s gaze sharpened. “Mind your tongue.”

“What? Slytherin doesn’t know?” When Snape didn’t answer, Harriet cursed under her breath. “Slytherin doesn’t know.”

They reached the Atrium and stepped off the lift. Rather than going to the Floo, Snape led her to the Apparition point, reaching one pale hand out to grip her arm. Harriet braced herself and even managed not to gasp when the crushing feeling of popping from one point to another squeezed her entire body.

They reappeared with a crack!, and Harriet sucked in a shaky breath, willing her stomach to climb back down out of her throat.

She could see the wily, summer bracken of the Scottish highlands, still limned in orange sunlight despite the late hour. In the distance rose the familiar silhouette of the Tor, grim as a gargoyle against the watery light of the midnight sun.

Slytherin stood at the head of the path, his hands steepled before himself. Harriet forced herself not to sprint in the other direction.

“Good evening, apprentice,” Slytherin said, his smug voice more distracted than usual, irritable. Harriet knew not to push her luck.

“Good evening, Master,” she replied with a respectable nod.

Slytherin sniffed, his red eyes glinting in the ochre hues of light as he examined her, inspecting her attire for any signs of shoddiness. “Very well,” he finally said. “Your education has been forestalled long enough this summer. Let us be on our way.”

Harriet stepped over the thorn bushes to reach the cobbled path, and Snape did the same, set to follow them up the mountain—.

“Be on your way, Severus.”

Harriet stopped in her tracks.

Snape, for his part, looked just as confused as Harriet, if only for an instant, his expression blanking faster than she could blink. “My Lord…?”

“You are not required here,” Slytherin said, a smirk curling the corner of his mouth. It was a wicked thing—sharp, knowing. “Be on your way.”

Harriet could only gape in wordless horror as Slytherin turned away and started up the path. She and Snape stared at one another without moving, Snape’s hands curling into fists at his sides.

He couldn’t leave her there, alone. Alone with the Death Eaters, alone with Slytherin. Suddenly, every ounce of bravado she felt in the wake of completing her exams vanished, and Harriet thought she might beg Slytherin to let Snape stay.

I ’m not strong enough to do this on my own. Please, please don’t—.

Goodbye, Severus,” Slytherin called, voice pointed. “Come along, Potter, my patience is at its limit.”

Snape had no choice but to bow his head, the dark curtain of his hair falling forward across his face as he stepped back behind the thorn bushes. His dark eyes briefly rose to Harriet’s—and then, without a word, he twisted, and Disapparated. The sound of his disappearance felt like breaking a bone.

He was gone, and Harriet was alone.

Chapter 306: highland blues

Chapter Text

cccvi. highland blues

 

Harriet waited with her back pressed to the wall and counted to ten before she dared to peer around the corner.

She held her breath—and let it out when she saw the corridor was empty.

Two days had passed since Snape left her in Slytherin’s care, and it’d been among the longest two days of Harriet’s life. She could barely bring herself to sleep at night, terrified of what might come creeping through her door while she closed her eyes for too long. When she did manage to catch a few minutes, she’d wake in a fright from horrible, half-formed nightmares, then spend half an hour checking her room for curses or surveillance Charms.

I’m going to go mad at this rate, Harriet told herself. If I’m not there already.

She earned more than one sharp word from Slytherin for her inattention, though he himself seemed distracted by something. Harriet tried ferreting out what it was, but Slytherin couldn’t be swayed by her poor attempts at meddling, and he merely rolled his eyes. Both afternoons, after grueling bouts of dueling, he set her to work on her formal treatise for her apprenticeship.

You needn’t concern yourself with my business,” he’d said, resting his hand on her shoulder as he watched her write, Harriet’s hand jerking from how tightly she held her quill. “Don’t overstep, little Harriet. There’s value in knowing one’s place.”

She sat in the library more often than not, glaring at any of the Tor’s residents who passed by to stare like she was a sideshow attraction.

At the moment, Harriet had slipped out of the stacks after she noticed night falling outside the windows—the sky dimming, though it didn’t retreat into full night this far north at this time of year. She’d expected Slytherin to show his face hours ago, but he hadn’t, and Harriet wanted to take the chance to slip off to her room and avoid supper.

She peered around the corner again, ready to make a dash for it, when—.

“It’d be less suspicious if you just walked there.”

Harriet jumped like a startled cat and cursed, reaching for her wand. She whipped around—and stopped, hand on her wrist, when she found herself face to face with Elinor Sangfort.

Nefaria and Gauthar’s daughter looked quite like her parents—tall, willowy, unmistakably pure-blood with those same sharp, chiseled features that were mirrored through many of the Sacred Twenty-Eight. She was taller than Harriet, prettier too, her eyelashes long and thick, colored a bright white like her long blonde hair. Her dark blue eyes resembled the secret places of the ocean, fathomless and haunted, swirling with mystery.

At the moment, rather than looking haunted or mysterious, Elinor simply looked bored, and thoroughly unimpressed with Harriet reaching for her wand.

Harriet dropped her hand with a harrumph. “Don’t sneak up on me.”

“It’s my house. I don’t sneak,” the witch delivered with a flat, droll voice. “Well? Are you going to stand here all night? Myles is coming this way.”

Harriet cursed again. Bloody Mirthcut. Both of them were cunts intent on destroying her peace of mind. She didn’t hesitate to follow Elinor out of the open into one of the branching corridors. She’d never been in this part of the castle, given its dedication to the resident family instead of any uninvited guests. Elinor opened a door with a casual flick of her hand, and Harriet—wary but curious—followed her inside.

“Take off your shoes,” Elinor said as they came into her quarters. “The carpet is Black Forest unicorn hair and I won’t have it stained.”

A bit stunned, Harriet toed off her loafers, not that she saw what was so special about the carpet. It was pretty enough, a dusky gray that went with the gauzy silver drapery strung against the stone walls. An astrolabe hung from the ceiling’s pinnacle, bronze spheres and rings lazily drifting in patterns among clusters of dim white light. Shelves crowded the corners of the room, stacked with crystals and books and flourishing magical plants.

“Err—your room is…lovely?” Harriet said, struggling for something to say after this odd turn of events.

“Thank you,” Elinor replied—polite, but disinterested in Harriet’s opinion. She took her own shoes off by the bed, slipping the pair under the edge of it so they were out of the way. Then, she turned to look at Harriet. “Come. Let’s play chess.”

“Oh, uh—,” Harriet stuttered as the other witch strode over to the chess table on the other side of the room. Like much of the furniture, it bore fancy scrolling along the edges brushed in silver gilt. “That’s all right? I really should be going….”

“You haven’t anything better to do than to skulk about and eye us like we’re bog monsters waiting for an opportunity to attack—not with Slytherin out.” She sat in one of the two chairs, not caring how it creased her robes. “Come here.”

Harriet’s eyes narrowed, but after a minute of dithering, she finally chose to step closer, her feet silent on that fancy rug as she approached the table. She’d never spoken to Elinor before, had never really had a chance to be this close to her.

She lowered herself into the other chair and shifted, trying to discreetly pull her robes up so they didn’t strangle her when she leaned back or forward. “I don’t look at you lot like you’re monsters,” she grumbled—and it was only after she spoke that Harriet paused, wondering if she did regard the people in the Tor like that. They deserved it, didn’t they? The whole lot of them were Death Eaters—or Knights of Walpurgis. Either way, a whole gaggle of Dark-magic addicted prats.

“You do,” Elinor said, boding no argument as she went about setting up the board. “At least tell me they teach you to play chess at Hogwarts.”

When Harriet shook her head, Elinor sighed, but it didn’t stop her from proceeding. “Oh, very well. You can go first, then.”

Harriet blinked down at her line of pawns, and she shifted one forward without any idea of what she was doing. The mention of Hogwarts reminded her that Elinor, despite being only a year older than her, didn’t attend. “D’you ever think about what it’d be like to go there?” she asked. “Hogwarts, I mean. Your family lives so close to it, closer than anyone I can think of. It’s odd you don’t attend, especially given, that uh, err—.”

“That Slytherin works there?” the witch finished when Harriet stumbled. It was only then that she noticed Elinor never said “my Lord or “Lord Slytherin,” just “Slytherin,” like it was a jagged bit of rind stuck between her teeth. “My family hasn’t been welcome in Hogwarts for centuries.”

“…Why not?”

“Not since my ancestor created the Cruciatus Curse,” she said, and the nonchalance with which she delivered that statement made Harriet’s blood run cold. Elinor’s eyes rose from the board to meet hers. “History always forgets to mention that he created it specifically to torture information out of his wife, who was also his first cousin. It’s difficult to get Sangforts to confess to anything, even under duress.”

She moved her own pawn, then laced her fingers together, elbow balanced on the table’s edge.

“It’s the family’s gift, you see. Innate Occlumency. It makes us impossible to read—and talented liars.”

Harriet moved another pawn, swallowing. “I…don’t think I’ve heard of that before. Occlumency?”

“You wouldn’t have,” Elinor replied, simply. “It makes the Tor an opportune place for Slytherin to holiday.”

“Why’s that?”

They played for a while before Elinor answered. “We can only feed his enemies information willingly. If we do, we know our lives are forfeit.”

She took two of Harriet’s pawns without a thought.

“You…don’t call him ‘my Lord.’”

“Neither do you.”

Her observation made Harriet’s stomach lurch. “Because I call him Master,” she was quick to correct—and Elinor Sangfort smirked.

“Sometimes,” she acceded, moving her rook. “He’s no Lord of mine.”

Suddenly, Harriet felt like this conversation was much too dangerous to be having, and her eyes darted about the room, searching for a trap.

“Then why are you here?” she demanded. “Why are any of you here? Your family is terrified of him. Why stay?”

Elinor sighed, unperturbed by Harriet raising her voice or her apparent irritation. “Where would we go?” she asked, still in that same droll, flippant voice. Indeed, Harriet realized her inflection hadn’t changed at all, monotone throughout their conversation, and her face reflected very few outward shifts of emotion.

It’s uncanny, she thought, shaking her head. “Go to Dumbledore,” she argued. “He would help.”

“Maybe. And then?”

The question took Harriet aback. “I—what?”

“And then? As in, after that?”

“I—you would be away from him? Slytherin? Your family would be safe.”

“Maybe.” Elinor shrugged. “You haven’t spent much time around Dark families, Potter. It shows. Yes, Dumbledore may help, may even accept me—but others? No. If we turned from the Dark Lord, it would not make us heroes.”

It was Harriet’s turn to scoff. “You don’t have to be heroes. You just have to live.”

“And we are, as best we can.” Elinor laced her fingers together again and observed Harriet. “It doesn’t make sense to you. It doesn’t have to. This is the life I was born into and the only one I’ll ever know.” The corner of her mouth shifted. Harriet couldn’t tell if she was grimacing or smiling. “No matter how many outsiders come traipsing through the castle and judge us as monsters.”

They continued their game until Elinor thoroughly trounced Harriet. “You’re awful,” she complained, flicking her wand to send all the pieces back into their original position. “Fine. Let’s play Settlers of Catan.”

“Wh—? I haven’t heard of that?”

“It’s a Muggle game someone snuck into Durmstrang last year. It’s quite fun.” Elinor stood, straightening her robes. “I don’t know how well it’ll play with just two people, but we’ll fudge the rules….”

That was how, two hours later, Elinor’s aunt Iris came to find the two witches sprawled on the fancy unicorn-hair carpet, studying bits of plastic on a play board. The woman looked at Harriet much the same way Elinor described Harriet looking at them: like some kind of ugly beast that came dragging its arse out of a cesspit.

Iris’ eyes flicked between them, settling on Elinor. “Is everything all right?” she asked.

“Yes,” Elinor said, studying the cards in her hand. “Slytherin’s nefarious apprentice has not harmed me yet.”

“Oh, ha ha,” Harriet grumbled as she glared at the hexagons failing to do what she wished. “You cheat at this game like you cheat at chess. If you take another one of my resource cards, I’ll bite your hand.”

The older witch stared as if she didn’t know what to make of the situation. Uncertain, she slipped onto the sofa behind Elinor, unbuttoning her cloak as she sat down.

“Shouldn’t you be with your Master, girl?” Iris asked of Harriet, who could only snort at the suggestion, rolling the dice.

“I’m sure he can ruin someone else’s evening all on his own,” she answered. “Kicking puppies or stealing lollies from babies, whatever he’s doing.”

Iris didn’t say anything for a long while, long enough for Harriet to forget she was there. When Elinor paused the game to ask a house-elf to bring refreshments, Harriet glanced at the older witch, and found her watching her niece, expression distant but content.

In the back of her mind, she heard Snape’s voice. “Iris Sangfort is one of Dumbledore’s spies.”

So, maybe Elinor isn’t right, Harriet thought, brow furrowing as she quickly looked down at her cards again. She thinks this is the only life Death Eaters will ever know—but sometimes, they make the harder choice.

It made her think of other people and other choices, for good or for ill. Snape, who made many mistakes and now bled for them daily, looking for a scrap of redemption. Accipto Lestrange, who grew up in a situation much like Elinor, and decided to take the darker path. Longbottom, who had bloody everything handed to him, and threw it all away in a fit of jealousy—.

Harriet traced the edge of a game card, staring at the little drawing of bricks.

She wondered what these days would look like if she lived to look back on them. If sitting here, playing a Muggle game with the daughter of Death Eaters, would be another mistake in a long line of mistakes, if everything she’d done and was trying to do would paint her as a Voldemort sympathizer when the future was written.

She considered the choices people made, and the consequences—good and bad—that came from them.

When the game came to a close—Elinor winning by a narrow margin of one victory point—Harriet begged off from another round, her exhaustion catching up with her. She said goodnight to Elinor and left her quarters, followed by Iris. The older witch shadowed her in silence, Harriet’s nerves prickling as she felt Iris’ eyes on the back of her neck.

“The old man is worried about you,” Iris intoned, staring straight ahead, barely moving her lips.

“I’m fine,” Harriet said. She’d repeated the lie enough times, she barely knew the truth anymore.

It could always be worse.

“Why isn’t Snape here?”

Her heart clenched, her throat dry. “I don’t know,” she whispered. “Slytherin sent him away.”

Iris didn’t say anything more as they continued away from the family’s section of the Tor, back toward the guest wing. When they reached Harriet’s doors, Iris kept walking, pausing only briefly at Harriet’s elbow.

“If you need to send the old goat anything…you know where to find me.”

Harriet simply nodded once toward her door, and Iris left, disappearing along the corridor with the clack of boot heels and the swish of her cloak. Exhaling, Harriet retrieved her wand, and opened her bedroom door. She closed it behind her—and locked it tight.

Chapter 307: a very bad summer

Chapter Text

cccvii. a very bad summer

 

The quiet noise of the chisel grinding against stone seemed loud in the otherwise silent workroom.

The other residents of the Tor had long since retired to their own apartments within the structure, though Harriet doubted they were sleeping. It hadn’t grown late enough, and the sky surrounding the highlands had only just taken on that orange evening hue it adopted in the summer season. The enchanted sconces came on in the last hour, and she’d only lit a candle out of reflex. Sunlight still oozed through the diamond-paned windows in a perfidious haze, regardless of whether the people in residence had retired or not.

No, if Harriet’s days spent wasting among the Knights of Walpurgis had taught her anything, it was that they never truly slept. They were far too busy scheming for something as mundane as sleeping.

I wonder what everyone’s doing at home?

Her tired, narrowed eyes followed the tiny edge of the chisel as it made precise lines on the bottom of the chess piece. The little cloth-covered mallet made no sound at all each time it tapped the chisel’s handle.

I really haven’t the knack for this, Harriet thought when she brought the chisel away and inspected her work. The edges didn’t line up, uneven and slightly wonky. The Sangforts must cringe every time they see me use their fancy tools.

She imagined Gauthar Sangfort weeping at her grubby fingerprints on his rune tiles.

Harriet smiled despite herself, and she laughed. It was a raspy, uncomfortable thing, like a puff of dusty air let loose after shaking a carpet, and it vanished as quickly as it’d come.

She turned her eyes to the window and gazed toward the valley, sighing. In her hand, the pawn loudly complained about its mistreatment.

“Steady on,” Harriet muttered before returning it to the board.

She had only three pieces for her experiment—a king, its corresponding pawn, and the opposing queen. With all the time she spent muddling over runes, she’d come up with the idea of making a sequence that could predict spellfire in duels. A significant part of dueling was making observations as they happened at a rapid pace and figuring out what all those motions and actions together meant. Harriet reckoned there could be a way to fashion a rune sequence on a warded object, like a conjured sword, that would recognize those patterns the same way she could and act on its own.

Of course, that was the idea, but putting the idea into action….

“All right, mates,” Harriet murmured to the chess pieces. “Test number five. Let’s see how this—.”

The queen immediately made for the king, and rather than interceding, the pawn thrust his sword through his own foot. The queen lopped the king’s stone head off.

“Oh, you tiny tosser,” Harriet grumbled to the pawn. She hit the lot with a Repairing Charm, then picked the pawn up, flipping it over to see the runes again. Its legs flailed. “What did I do wrong this time…?”

She squinted, swiveling over the magnifying lens attached to the edge of the desk, making full use of the Sangforts’ tools.

So transfixed by her task, Harriet didn’t notice the quiet, muffled thump of feet until they’d crossed the threshold into the room—and only then because the glass curios accrued by Cladius Sangfort clicked together when a leg bumped a table.

Harriet’s head lifted, and she swiveled on the stool, looking around. A man stumbled through the room.

“Hello?” she said, confused. She didn’t recognize him—but that wasn’t a terribly uncommon thing to happen in the Tor. Many of the Knights of Walpurgis or their family members passed through when it suited them, and despite how it might appear, Slytherin didn’t bloody own the Tor. The Sangforts did, and people they knew, worked with, and were related to visited regularly.

Still, Harriet found it odd for a bloke to come staggering through the house, clearly sloshed with his head wobbling, face down and covered by his long hair. His foot caught the hem of his oversized robes and he nearly toppled.

There’s something…off about him….

“Oi,” Harriet said as he came closer. Growing suspicious, she stood up. “I don’t know who you are, but you need to sod off—.”

Quicker than a breath, the man surged forward, and Harriet fell back, gasping, but not fast enough. All traces of drunken languor disappeared as his hands found purchase around Harriet’s scrawny neck—and he squeezed.

She grappled at the man’s hands. His skin felt—wrong. As she struggled, his clothing shifted, sliding against the odd, slick surface of his body, and his hair—his wig—slid from his head. His wizarding hat hit the table.

Harriet’s eyes widened, staring into a face with no eyes, no mouth, or nose.

Not a wizard, her mind supplied, even as the inhuman fingers squeezed tighter and they fell to the floor. The creature slammed her head to the floor. No, not a wizard, a human, or even a creature.

Who in the bloody Merlin made a homunculus?!

No more than a few seconds had passed, and already Harriet’s lungs screamed for air, her hands struggling to get at her wand. The strange, waxy fingers cinched closer as the blank face tilted toward hers in eerie mimicry of a person’s.

Homunculi were Dark magic. Witches and wizards could Charm inanimate things to take on human-like qualities, but homunculi crossed a line, and they were almost never created with good intentions in mind. It was not unheard of in Harriet’s history books for homunculi to turn on their creators, something indefinably wrong in their creation, their flesh inadequate in a manner that could not be understood, no matter how closely one tried to mimic a human.

Whoever created this homunculus hadn’t been fussed with realism—only with its strength and ability to hold a witch to the floor and squeeze the life from her.

Tears streamed from Harriet’s eyes. Saliva dripped from the corner of her mouth. Her wand! The thing had her arm pinned beneath its knee, her wand in the brace, and she couldn’t reach around its bulk. She couldn’t bring her leg up past its torso to reach the one on her calf.

Her body jerked, struggled. She couldn’t reach her wand. She twisted, and she couldn’t dislodge the weight holding her down. Seconds passed, and the more she fought, the more darkness ate at the edges of her vision.

Not like this, she thought, straining. Not like this. Nicolas Flamel did NOT die just for me to be fucking strangled by a hunk of cursed rubbish—.

She let go of the hand at her throat and instead fumbled for the face, pressing her palm against it. She poured every ounce of her wavering concentration into a single thought—.

Bombarda!

The head tore off with a resounding bang!, showering the room in pieces of meat reminiscent of old, bloodless mince. Seeing as it wasn’t alive, the move only deterred the homunculus for a moment—but it was enough.

Harriet wrenched her arm free, and an instant later her wand was in her hand and pointed at the thing’s chest. “Incendio—!” she hissed before it could press down again.

A roaring surge of flame threw the body from her and slammed it to the floor, rattling the floor, shaking the rafters. Harriet rolled to the side and gasped, the air coming in thin, reedy bursts through her damaged throat, she coughed—and coughed, and coughed some more, coughed until she thought her heart might burst, and the unmoving homunculus burned to nothing but filmy cinders on the expensive rug.

This time, she heard the footsteps that came hurrying up the corridor, and she had her wand pointed at the door when Claudius Sangfort rushed into view, his dressing gown hastily tied at his waist.

He froze when he found himself at the end of Harriet’s wand—then looked at the burning homunculus breaking down into its composite materials and the witch sitting sprawled on the floor with a hand to her injured throat.

“Oh dear,” he said, eyes wide. “This isn’t going to go over well at all.”

 

 

Harriet had never heard a silence so thick, it took on a presence all its own.

Despite nearly a dozen people gathered in the open hall, not a single breath could be heard, a rustle of a cloak, the creak of a shoe. To the last, every witch and wizard in attendance held themselves as still as humanly possible—and waited for certain doom.

Harriet’s heart throbbed in her chest and in her injured neck, the swollen marks pulsing and aching, the back of her skull aching where it’d smacked the floor. The weight of Slytherin’s hand didn’t help the matter, but she wasn’t mad enough to think of ducking away from him. His fingers stroked her hair as they stood before the house’s gathered residents, and he stared.

The cold caress of his nails grazing her scalp felt like knives.

When Slytherin had been recalled to the Tor to discover his apprentice had been strangled half to death, he hadn’t been pleased—not by the distraction, nor by the slight. He’d taken one sneering look at Harriet, the smoldering flesh on the workroom floor, and ordered every person at the Tor into the dining room.

He’d dismissed the elf attempting to heal her and had dragged Harriet up by the front of her robes, yanking her along with him.

He stood close to her now, and Harriet’s skin crawled, her neck aching—scar itching, throat burning. To the others who’d come trickling into the hall in their nightwear, smelling of firewhiskey and pipe smoke, it must have looked somewhat caring—but Harriet felt the anger seeping through the arm banded across her back, keeping her upright.

“One of you,” Slytherin said from behind her. Harriet couldn’t help but flinch. “Thought it a terribly clever idea to set a homunculus on poor Harriet here.” His fingers pulled through her hair, and though she couldn’t see it, she could picture his red eyes flicking from face to face. “One of you thought to kill my apprentice.” He leaned his jaw against her head. “The student I’ve invested my time in, my effort. One of you decided you would waste years of my exertion and patience on a whim with a half-made construct. The insult is untenable.”

Impossibly, the silence thickened, and the hand in Harriet’s hair curled. It twisted the strands through his pale fingers, and Slytherin pressed his nose to her crown, lips near her ear. “What do you think, Harriet?” he said in a faux-whisper loud enough for the others to hear. “What happens in Hogwarts when someone misbehaves in class and refuses to step forward?”

She didn’t answer, and his hand tightened. Swallowing, she stuttered, “The whole class gets punished.”

“The whole class gets punished,” he repeated, and she could hear his savage smile, even if she couldn’t see it. “That’s right. Even school children comprehend the concept. Should we punish everyone, Harriet? Whom do you believe we should start with—?”

“It was the Mirthcuts.”

Bonnie Bonespell’s voice cut through the stillness like a Blasting Curse, and all eyes turned to her. She stood quite still, sweating, but nevertheless composed.

“I beg your pardon?” Slytherin said, voice cold.

“It was the Mirthcuts, my Lord,” she repeated, ensuring to add the epithet.

“You lie,” Myles Mirthcut shot from his side of the room, his guttural voice hard and loud. He sounded panicked. “My Lord, she lies—.”

“Mr. Mirthcut and Malcolm approached me last year with the idea,” Bonnie went on, refusing to look toward the Mirthcuts. “It was the same plan, with the homunculus. They said if I backed Malcolm becoming your apprentice, they’d ensure my place among your followers.”

Slytherin scoffed. “But you declined, because you have ambition, Bonespell. Ambition and a modicum of sense.”

“My Lord,” Myles stuttered. “My Lord, we didn’t—.”

“It shows initiative, doesn’t it?” Malcolm cut in. The Sangforts and Cicero Aeter drew away from the pair, backing toward the walls. “My Lord, if she can’t defend herself, then what place does she have as your apprentice?”

“Malcolm, be quiet,” his father snapped.

Slytherin drew himself and Harriet closer to the pair, his pace even and smooth despite how her knees shook. His indolent gaze flicked between the two men, and he stroked Harriet’s cheek.

“Please, My Lord,” Myles said when he failed to address either of them. “It was an egregious oversight on our behalf and shan’t happen again—.”

“Harriet,” Slytherin spoke in a quiet undertone, sending chills down her spine. Myles fell quiet. “Pick which one of them you want to die.”

The others in the room gasped, and Harriet’s stomach dropped to her knees.

What?!

“Which would you prefer?” Slytherin continued as if he hadn’t said something appalling. “The man who orchestrated your murder, or the one who stood to benefit from it?” He laughed. “The one who believed he stood to benefit from your death, as it didn’t matter either way; I would not take such a failure on as my student.”

Malcolm flushed, but finally listened to his dad and didn’t speak.

“I don’t—I don’t think—,” Harriet choked, heart thumping too hard in her chest. Her throat hurt. She could barely force the words out. “I don’t think either should—.”

“Select one, or I shall kill both,” Slytherin said, the backs of his fingers moving against her jaw. Harriet thought she might be sick.

She couldn’t do this. She couldn’t be expected to hold someone’s life in her hands and decide to snuff it out. Yes, they’d tried to kill her, and she wanted them to be punished—but she would rather nothing at all happen than have to make this choice herself—.

“Pick me,” Myles ordered, his dark eyes fixed on Harriet’s face. She could see his throat bob as he swallowed. “Pick me, you stupid girl.”

Please, she thought. Please, please, let this be a stupid test, a dream, something—.

She wanted to scream, she wanted to curse Bonespell, because surely everyone getting punished wouldn’t amount to one person having to die, and Harriet having to choose—.

Master,” she whispered. “Please, I….

His fingertips brushed her brow. She felt the sleeve of his other arm shift ever so slightly as his wand fell into his waiting hand.

“Pick me!” Myles shouted. “Pick me, Nimue take you—!”

Harriet’s arm rose as if pulled by a string, and she barely recognized what she was doing when she pointed at Myles Mirthcut. The wizard’s shoulders slumped, and he exhaled.

Slytherin’s wand snapped out. Before Harriet realized it, the spell sliced through Myles—and right into Malcolm.

Both wizards dropped to the floor, dead, and in several pieces.

Distantly, Harriet heard someone scream. It wasn’t her. Despite the wail swelling beneath her breast, she remained quiet—stunned—leaning against Slytherin as something warm dripped off her face.

Blood, she realized. Blood.

She hadn’t known human beings could…burst quite like that, that they could…splatter. She could have gone her entire life without knowing.

“Shut her up,” Iris ordered her brother Gauthar, telling him to get his wife Nefaria to stop shrieking. She had her arms around Elinor, shielding her from the mess—from Slytherin, from Harriet.

Harriet stared at the nightmare before, and the unspeakable tableau of things that should never see the light of day now splashed across the carpet and her shoes. Myles’ hands looked like they were still moving despite Harriet knowing without a shadow of a doubt that he was dead. It looked like he was reaching for Malcolm.

“You said pick one,” she rasped. “You said to pick one. I picked. I picked.”

Slytherin brushed his fingers through her hair a final time and pressed his cold lips to the top of her head.

Good night, apprentice,” he told her as he stepped away. “We begin again in the morning.”

Nefaria continued to cry. Bonnie was sick in the corner. Blood followed Slytherin as he departed, swathed across the floor like a stroke from an artist’s brush, dragged by the hem of his black robes. It dripped from Harriet’s hands. She could barely see through her glasses.

Off to the side, Cicero Aeter heaved a weary sigh. “Someone get a house-elf,” he said. “Clean this shit up.”

 

 

Later, as she sobbed and screamed in her bed, sheets twisted, throat raw, cheeks tear-stained, Harriet wished for a lot of things. She wished she’d never left the cupboard under the stairs. She wished she’d never gone to Hogwarts, wished she never let the Sorting Hat put her in the House of Serpents, wished she never agreed to Dumbledore’s plan to become Slytherin’s apprentice. She wished the homunculus had finished her off.

She wished Snape were there.

At some point, Harriet started to laugh, and she didn’t understand why.


 

A/N:

Readers: *phone dings with new message*

Me: “I lived, bitch.”

Chapter 308: useful

Chapter Text

cccviii. useful

 

Not for the first time, Severus Snape wondered if he could punch Alden Rosier in the face.

He knew it’d be a bad idea. A potentially catastrophic idea at this junction, one that could endanger all that he’d worked for over the many years of his spying career. More immediately, it would definitely ruin all the work he’d done to ingratiate himself with the Rosier household, but at the moment, he rather thought that was the point.

He just wanted out of that fucking house.

The summer heat crawled through the cramped, narrow passages of the Rosier’s Lincolnshire estate, and the pure-blood twats had either never heard of opening windows or simply thought it beneath them. Judicious applications of a Cooling Charms just made him feel wet, the weave of his wool frock sticking to his chest, so Severus made do, trapped in that chair, boiling, as Alden Rosier droned on about his prized horses.

Severus didn’t give a fuck about horses. He didn’t give a fuck about horses, the Rosiers, or the “season,” but he had to be there. He had to be of use.

He needed something he could bring to Slytherin.

He stared at Rosier as he continued to speak, the others around him tittering and fawning. He tipped his eyes down to the untouched goblet of wine in his hand. Inside, he felt like howling.

He had always understood that he would be rendered redundant one day—that, as Slytherin and the Dark Lord continued to use and abuse him, he’d eventually break, and his Masters would toss him aside. What he hadn’t expected was to feel so helpless, and to be able to watch as it happened.

Slytherin hadn’t summoned him. Not once, not a single time in all the days since he’d dismissed Severus from the Tor, and he last saw Potter standing alone next to the man, pale and terrified. His wrist hadn’t stopped aching.

He had to be useful. There had to be something he could learn, something he could find out that needed to be brought to Slytherin directly—.

“You don’t seem entertained, Snape,” said Hektar Flint at his side.

“Not terribly,” he drawled, barely stirring from his spiraling thoughts to answer.

“You should be more grateful for an invitation. It isn’t often a half-breed gets to attend such a dinner among his betters.”

“I attend such a party among my betters at least once a week,” Severus quipped, not rolling his eyes, but it was a near thing. “It may be an infrequent occurrence for you, Flint, but some of us don’t suffer from an anemic social calendar.”

Whatever the lackwit had to say in response, Severus didn’t hear. The words disappeared under a sudden surge of agony tearing through his right arm. It was everything he could do not to snap the delicate stem of the goblet in his hand as his fingers spasmed, and blood roared through his ears.

Harriet.

He held still, muscles locked, jaw clenched, shout buried somewhere in his chest under his pounding, bleeding heart. Beneath the table, his toes curled in his boots from the pain, and sweat painted the inside of his palms, drenching his back beneath his robes.

To Rosier and the rest of his party-goers, it seemed as if nothing had changed. Severus continued to sit, still as stone and just as monochromatic, staring into his chosen beverage for the evening.

The pain didn’t fade. To Severus, it seemed to last a lifetime, as if he lived a thousand years in that poncy chair, a thousand years in a burning purgatory that turned his insides to ash, violins playing by themselves in the corner, the air thick, hot, dripping with perfume. He wanted to scream. He wanted to—.

The agony relented, drawing back in reluctant increments, until Severus could at last breathe, his nostrils flaring, and his hand trembled. The wine rippled in the goblet, only for an instant, then he stilled himself once more.

Severus set the goblet down.

“If you’ll excuse me,” he said, rising to his feet. His knees felt like limp pasta, his ankles as loose as bagged water. He deposited his napkin on the table and stepped away, moving quickly, certain his legs would go out from under him if he slowed down, even for a moment. He exited the dining room, his boots snapping hard on the floor in the outer corridor as he hurried away.

The pain had faded to its usual dull, aggravated hum by the time the loo door snapped closed on his heels, and Severus stood at the sink, leaning his arms against the counter. The coolness cut through the haze of his thoughts, anchoring him, and he looked up into the mirror.

The face looking back belonged to a stranger—pale, vaguely green as if sick, glistening with sweat over his brow. In contrast, his cheeks sported a dark flush. Part of his hair had come forward over his brow, and he shoved it back, lest he appear disheveled. Severus twisted the faucet on, hand shaking, and splashed cold water over his face. Twice he did this, feeling the water draw over his clammy skin and drip from the end of his eyelashes, and he exhaled.

When he straightened, he met his gaze in the mirror again, and he narrowed his eyes.

Find something, he ordered himself. Find something valuable. Find something worth his attention.

He remained for a moment, then exhaled again. His gaze lowered to his right arm, to the wrist that had so mercilessly ached minutes before, and he tugged the damp sleeve down enough to reveal a flash of gaudy turquoise scales wound just above the bone there.

As if sensing his attention, or reacting to the cooler air, the snake briefly tightened her hold around his wrist, and the narrow, angular head twitched where it rested against the end of her tail.

“Worthless thing,” he muttered before pulling the sleeve down again and carefully tucking the golem away.

What are you doing, Potter? What is happening?

He straightened his attire and exited the washroom. Each step pulled on his mental shields, tightening them, until Severus once more felt adrift in his own body, spectating behind his eyes like a Muggle watching telly.

At the mouth of the corridor, he crossed a pair in quiet conversation. Given they hadn’t found one of the rooms, it couldn’t be a terribly private conversation, but they’d gone to the effort to step away from Rosier’s table, and that meant there must be more to their chatter than the inane blather of the others.

Severus didn’t bother to try eavesdropping; he was too conspicuous at the moment, and the setting wouldn’t allow him to casually post nearby or attempt a spell. Rather, he merely included himself, stepping over when the shorter of the pair, Caspar Knell glanced up and begrudgingly shifted to allow him into their tête-à-tête.

“Sodding Alden as his weak-legged horses,” Knell commented, shielding his mouth with the brim of a heavy goblet, the bristles of his graying mustache brushing the wine inside. “If he spent half as many Galleons tithing as he does pissing it away on the damn ponies, the rest of us wouldn’t be emptying our coffers into our Lord’s hands.”

The other man made a soft, rumbling noise of assent. Severus slid his eyes over his person; it took a moment to see past the aged but well-made robes and deep hood to identify the wizard as Augustus Rookwood. Though nearly Severus’ height, Azkaban had left him painfully thin, and tailoring Charms only went so far.

“You might as well ask Snape,” Rookwood said, clearing his throat to rid his voice of its slight rasp. “See if his nosing about has dragged up anything useful.”

“I live to serve,” Severus drawled.

Knell sipped at his wine, eyeing the hall and dining table. He turned his back toward the party. “Rabastan is missing.”

Severus raised his brow. “On a bender, I would assume.”

“One would assume,” Knell acceded, glancing again at the party. “But with Rodulphus—.” He made a brief gesture toward his head to indicate Rodulphus’ brain injury after the Ministry debacle. Severus had healed him—nominally—leaving him with some flavor of aphasia that the man desperately tried to hide from the Dark Lord. “Rabastan has been taking care of certain tasks, and Bellatrix has been quietly fulfilling them on her own, assuredly without informing our Lord.”

Now that was rather interesting. Bella had been hiding something from her precious Dark Lord? It didn’t matter if the information would land her husband in hot water; frankly, Severus assumed she wouldn’t be bothered if the Dark Lord did her the favor of finishing Rodulphus off at this point. Merlin, he’d witnessed the barmy bint confess her own sins without compunction in the past.

What is she hiding?

“Has Slytherin heard anything, Severus?” Knell asked.

Unlike Severus—or Rookwood, for that matter—Knell lacked the circumspection needed to be coy. “Not to my knowledge,” he replied, his voice tone carrying its usual cool disinterest. It wouldn’t do for either Death Eater to know he wanted information on Rabastan and Bellatrix—not directly, not now. Not when he didn’t have anything to bring to the table, so to speak. “Can’t say I’m surprised. I would take every opportunity possible to slip Bella’s leash if I were him. Rodulphus must savor being brain dead.”

As expected, that earned him a pair of mean-spirited chortles at the expense of the Lestranges, and the conversation shifted.

This isn’t enough for Slytherin, he knew. It’s a start—but I need more. What is Rabastan up to? What is Bellatrix hiding?

Making his excuses, he returned to the dining hall and got back to work.

 

 

The summer wind blew warm and unwelcome across the highlands, wending up across the lake and sliding through the swaying grass as Severus crossed the grounds. It caused his cloak to lift and flair behind him like a low, billowing cloud, and stray strands of hair fell across his eyes. He didn’t bother to brush them aside.

He didn’t rush. Why bother? He had nowhere to be—nothing to report. Just the vapid, pointless blathering of half-drunk Death Eaters and painted socialites too concerned with ridiculous things to look out the window and see the world was on fucking fire.

Useless. Useless.

Though not quite dawn, the sun already warmed the sky in heavy shades of primrose pink and champagne gold, feathered in long clouds festooned across the horizon like festival flags.

It reminded Severus of something Dumbledore would wear. He grit his teeth and kept walking.

The castle’s wards enveloped him as he crossed the boundary, and he felt the wistful, lonely brush of its magic greeting his. The school remained its usual lachrymose self in the holidays, as bristly as a mother at the window waiting for her children to return home for supper, though it warmed for Severus, just as it always did.

That was the hard part. It was always the hard part.

He stopped at the top step, the doors opening on their own, admitting him. He stared at the flagstone under his boots and swallowed once, twice, and forced rippling shields to hold firm. Like a man gasping for air, he held his breath, not caring how his lungs burned, with the solemn promise to himself that could fall to pieces in the quiet of his own rooms, if only for a little while.

The quiet of the early morning followed him inside, complete with demure birdsong and the smell of blooming thistle, and his footsteps paid quiet complement to the whispering breeze.

Severus thought it would be better if he’d come back broken and bleeding, dragging himself across the lawn as he’d done before. At least then he could say he’d done more, that he’d done everything he could. No, like this, he felt lacking. Useless.

Severus?”

He paused, not bothering to reach for his wand. Minerva stepped from where she’d been leaning against the wall by the far corridor—obviously having been waiting for him, or for someone else. She had her cloak on over her tartan nightgown, and when she stepped forward, the cane in her hand tapped the stone floor.

Severus’ eyes flicked toward, then away. Guilt soured his stomach.

I should have done more. I should have acted faster. I should have—.

The older witch looked him over, and spotting nothing amiss, she nodded her head in apparent satisfaction. “Aye, and what time of the night do you call this to come traipsing back into the castle?” she said as she tucked her wand away.

“The puerile brains of pure-bloods have no concept of jobs or weekends, Minerva,” he replied. “What do they care if their soirées last until the little hours of the morning?”

She scoffed, and he turned away, thinking that the end of it, but McGonagall followed him toward the dungeon steps.

“I’m in no mood to be nagged,” he sniped.

“And who is nagging?” she retorted, not slowing, keeping pace with him despite having to use the cane to keep her footing steady. “Have a drink with me, Severus.”

“I’ve had plenty to drink at the pointless party.”

“Och, you haven’t drunk a thing, don’t think you’ve fooled me. Come along. We might as well enjoy the opportunity to sit down without that creature lurking about the castle at all hours of the night.”

Too tired or numb to argue, Severus went to his office, and he let Minerva in. He didn’t question how she knew where he stashed his firewhiskey, a gift from Albus neither of them acknowledged, but she pulled it out from his shelf behind his book and poured a finger into two conjured tumblers.

She set his tumbler in front of him after he slumped into his chair. She took in his appearance again, the measure of his long, distant stare, the wind-blown state of his hair, the shade of the circle hung below his eyes, and poured another finger into the glass.

“Do drink up, Severus.”

He chose not to say anything, instead snuffing out the flame dancing atop the liquid and downing a mouthful as Minerva found her own seat. To his amazement, she did keep her word and did not nag him; rather, she swirled the firewhiskey about the tumbler, sighed once, and sipped.

Severus wondered what she was doing there. He wondered why she’d waited for him to come back.

He drew back his sleeve and removed the golem from his wrist. She slithered through his fingers as he extended his arm and let her crawl back on the tree he’d Transfigured for her use. The turquoise scales glittered in the dim light coming from his banked fire, and Minerva made appreciative noises as she studied the creature.

Severus grunted.

A sudden wave of pain lashed through his wrist, brief but overwhelming for its intensity. He sucked in a breath and nearly dropped the tumbler when his fingers spasmed around the glass.

Minerva noticed. Her eyes followed the motion, watching as he bowed his head and pushed the drink away from himself, yanking his arm closer to his chest. For a moment, she said nothing, and he thought he might get away without her commenting at all—.

“Have you told Harriet about it yet?” Minerva asked in a quiet voice.

Of course.

Severus squeezed his eyes shut and scoffed. “It has nothing to do with her.”

“Surely you don’t believe that.”

“It doesn’t,” he insisted. He kneaded his palm and sore wrist until the last sparks of pain vanished, leaving his bones feeling hollow and empty. He stared at the snake wending her way higher up the tree. “Believe it or not, not everything is about Potter. I didn’t swear the Vow to her, I swore the Vow to Lily, so it’s between me and her and no one else.

“Lily is dead.”

“My, and they let you teach here with that stunning acumen.

Minerva gave him a look that clearly said he was another word away from being Transfigured into something unnatural, so Severus sighed and swallowed his next acerbic retort. “Dead or not, the burden does not belong to the girl. It’s mine.”

McGonagall snorted and shook her head. “I still think you’re being stubborn, Severus.”

“Then allow me to be stubborn. I am rarely allowed my own choices anymore. Let this one be mine.”

She met his gaze over the desk. At length, she nodded, and they returned to their nightcaps, sitting in silence as dawn warmed the castle, and the whiskey burned a hole through Severus’ heavy heart.


A/N: Happy New Year

Chapter 309: the consuming dark

Chapter Text

cccix. the consuming dark

 

The book fell atop the others with an unsatisfying flop. For the briefest of moments, Hermione fought the maddening urge to set the whole lot of them aflame.

“Utter tosh!” she said aloud, stripping off Harriet’s gloves. Even with them on, touching the tomes she and Elara had secreted out of the Black vault left her hands feeling sticky and filthy with Dark magic. “What a waste of ink and parchment!”

So far, her attempts to research Horcruxes had been a fruitless endeavor, and the books they found at Gringotts had been wholly unhelpful. Truly, as much value as Hermione placed on the sanctity of the written word and preserving it for future generations, she might make an exception for this complete bunkum.

“Elara’s ancestors were as mad as a bag of cats,” she grumbled. “That’s not even Dark magic, that’s just—the disgusting ravings of a serial killer. Merlin, is she related to Jack the Ripper…?”

She went to wipe her fringe back from her brow—then stopped, glancing at her hands. They appeared perfectly clean, but she couldn’t help how the cloying, tacky sensation of the grimoires clung to them still.

Shivering, Hermione grimaced and stomped out of the study, heading for the bathroom.

The rest of Grimmauld hummed with activity, the house never seeming to have a quiet moment now that Voldemort’s presence had been officially announced by the government. Professor Dumbledore’s Order of the Phoenix might not be sanctioned or strictly legal, but that didn’t stop all manner of Ministry officials, Aurors, or ICW wizards from filtering through.

Hermione had questioned how so many people came to Grimmauld Place, and Remus had explained that Professor Dumbledore had adjusted the wards on the ground floor and basement to allow some members of the Order to enter those necessary areas, while their memories of the house, its inhabitants, and location became quite foggy once they departed.

“He took inspiration for the idea from you girls, actually,” he’d told her, and Hermione had been taken aback.

“Really?” she’d asked.

“Yes. Despite his condemnation of the Tell No Tales Curse, we did speak at length about the theory behind your spellcraft. He thought recognizing intention was brilliant, and worked a version of the Charm into the warding here that prohibits those who have ill intent against the Black family from setting foot inside Grimmauld Place.”

“Just the Black family? Not the Order?”

Remus had shaken his head. “It doesn’t work that way, unfortunately. Not in a building as particular as this. But, so long as a Black is a member of the Order, it functions much the same.”

Hermione stepped into the bathroom and didn’t bother shutting the door, turning on the tap, and humming in thought as she lathered soap on her hands.

The Tell No Tales Curse is Dark magic, she ruminated. I wonder how Professor Dumbledore reworked his spell so it wasn’t.

She paused.

Did he?

Dire times called for dire consequences. It still made Hermione wince to think of how she and Elara had permanently damaged their relationship with both Professors Dumbledore and McGonagall. No matter that they’d done the spell for the betterment and protection of the Coven, an element of trust had been irrevocably shattered. A student had been maimed and would bear the scars for the rest of his life. The less said of what Elara had done to Accipto Lestrange, the better.

Hermione spared a thought for Neville Longbottom, but curiously, she felt little guilt.

We’re at war, that’s why, she reminded herself with a heavy sigh, rinsing off the soap. I can’t very well feel guilty for every person who makes foolish choices. Especially every person who makes choices like the ones he did. He tried to have Harriet expelled—arrested even. He tried to have all of us cast out of the school, knowing full well the danger we could face. He’s a traitor.

The landing outside the door creaked as someone walked by, and Draco paused in the doorway, peeking into the open room. “All right, Granger?” he asked.

Hermione looked up at him, glancing at the long, skinny sword he casually held in his hands. It was a rapier for fencing, she knew, dull, and it meant he was on his way to the garden to have a bout with his father. Wizards had to do something for physical activity besides Quidditch, and the Malfoys couldn’t very well go traipsing about the countryside with Death Eaters wanting to kill them on sight.

Draco had foregone his robes, dressed in his pressed trousers and buttoned shirt, the sleeves carelessly folded back to his elbows to reveal his forearms.

“Granger?”

Hermione cleared her throat and nearly wiped her hands dry on her blouse before grabbing the towel. “Yes—oh, err, yes, very well, thank you.”

He lifted one pale brow but didn’t question her, continuing on his way downstairs. Hermione stepped out of the bathroom to watch him go. She couldn’t help but notice how very narrow his waist was, offset by the width of his shoulders and the crisp, ironed lines of his trousers.

What on earth?

Someone cleared their throat behind her, and Hermione nearly jumped out of her skin. She whirled around and found Elara standing at the bottom step, her expression bemused.

Honestly!” Hermione hissed, her heart hammering against her ribs. “Don’t do that.”

Elara merely shot a lingering glance in the direction Draco had departed before her eyes rolled back to Hermione, and she smirked. Hermione felt her face blaze vermilion.

Thankfully, Elara chose not to twit her further, picking off an invisible bit of lint from her gloves as she changed the subject. “Have you made any progress on our project?”

Hermione grimaced. Rather than having the conversation out in the open, she tipped her chin toward the steps, and they headed toward the first floor and their favored sanctuary of the library, a room nobody aside from the rather nosy portrait of Phineas Nigellus Black liked to frequent.

Once they had the door shut and an unobtrusive Notice-Me-Not laid across the threshold, Hermione let out a gusty, frustrated sigh.

“Not nearly as much progress as I would like,” she confessed. She propped her fist on her hip. “The grimoires haven’t been helpful.”

“Have they had any information in them?” Elara asked as she made her way to the armchairs by the cold, empty hearth. It was much too hot for a fire, though it left the library rather dark, the windows on the far wall too small, the sunlight coming through them too anemic to illuminate the depths of the stacks.

She sat down, resting her head on the scrolled top of the chair, and Hermione paused.

“Are you well, Elara?” she asked, concerned. Elara kept her eyes closed. “It’s just, you’ve seemed a bit off this summer—not that the rest of us haven’t been off as well after everything that happened. I’m worried.”

Elara didn’t open her eyes for a long moment, and it spoke volumes to Hermione that she chose not to refute her concern immediately. “I’m fine,” she said, quietly. She redirected Hermione’s attention by repeating, “Did the grimoires have any information in them?”

Hermione pursed her lips and heard an echo of her mother’s voice in her head, warning her that she was too much, that she shouldn’t push, that she was too forceful sometimes, too presumptuous.

There’s something wrong, her intuition nagged. Oh, but there’s something wrong with everything, isn’t there? Should I give her space? Should I press the issue?

“Nothing we’ve found directly references Horcruxes or something comparable,” Hermione said, Elara’s posture relaxing. “Ironically enough, soul magic is an area of study even Dark wizards don’t appear all that fond of studying—or, at least, recording their findings in. That, or they have the good sense not to go sticking their noses into something that will more than likely drive them mad.

Hermione harrumphed, turning her gaze to Headmaster Black’s empty portrait frame. “From what I have been able to compile in my research, the kind of magic you would use to theoretically pull a piece of yourself away from the whole couldn’t be reliably held in organic material.”

Elara’s brow furrowed. “I don’t understand.”

Waving, Hermione gestured between the two of them. “It’s a question magical scholars have been asking themselves for generations. What is life? What is a soul? What is the organic compound of a soul or magic? There’s innate volatility—it’s all rather fascinating, but what I mean to say, what Tom Riddle has done should be impossible. The odds of successfully grafting part of one’s soul—no matter how it is done—onto something that possesses a magical signature of its own should not be viable.”

Elara rubbed her chin. “So,” she said, elongating the vowel. “If I’m following your logic here, you’re saying—what? You don’t believe the Horcruxes—Slytherin, Gaunt—are real? You think they’re not real people? That they’re homunculi or something?”

“No, that’s not what I’m saying. I’m saying it shouldn’t be possible for them to be real people. But they are.”

Elara let out an aggrieved sigh and splayed a hand over her eyes. “Hermione….”

“Do you recall what Harriet told us Professor Dumbledore confessed to her about Gaunt after coming home from France?” she interrupted.

Pausing, Elara lowered her hand again and blinked at her. “Yes,” she said, slowly, thinking back. “Something about managing to get a sample of Gaunt’s blood in the past, but it wasn’t magical blood.”

“And he’s clearly magical,” Hermione replied, touching her side. The wound had healed, but not quite fully, needing time to get fully back to normal. The horror of that night in the Ministry would haunt her dreams for the rest of her life. It put into perspective the nightmares her best friend had survived—and several times, Hermione had wept, thinking about Harriet, wishing she were home.

“That…makes no sense,” Elara muttered, voice trailing off.

“Doesn’t it?” Hermione challenged. “And in our second year—the Diadem. Remember the Diadem?”

“God, how could I forget that monstrosity?”

“Something Harriet said about her confrontation with the Diadem has always stuck out to me. When he had Luna, he didn’t simply make some grandstanding speech about her being his; Harriet said he specified that her soul belonged to him.” Hermione started to pace. “And now, we have your Uncle Regulus. Harriet saw him in Little Hangleton and recognized him in Horace Slughorn’s photograph, and yet, his name did not show on the Atlas when we used them to summon her away from the graveyard. She said his eyes were red, just like Slytherin’s. Like Gaunt’s. Like V—Voldemort’s. For all intents and purposes, it sounds as if he’s been—.”

“Possessed,” Elara finished. “Possession. You believe the Horcruxes are possessing other people’s bodies.”

“I believe he’s possessing other people’s souls,” she corrected. “The body is—more incidental.”

“Then why does my uncle still apparently look like my uncle while the others look like that tosser? And the Dark Lord doesn’t look human?”

“I really don’t know,” Hermione acknowledged. “This is only my working theory. A personal choice, maybe? Or—perhaps an inherent failing in the individual Horcruxes, a flaw or defect? Harriet mentioned the Diadem saying he was ‘too weak to manifest like the others.’ Merlin only knows what he meant, but it seems significant in a way, doesn’t it? Especially the emphasis on weak, and him specifying that weakness in comparison to the others.”

Elara nodded, and the gesture gained strength as Hermione spoke. “Well. That would be good news, at least. If we can expect the other Horcruxes to be weaker than Slytherin and Gaunt—.”

“We can’t expect anything,” Hermione insisted. “We can hypothesize, but this is unknown territory, Elara.”

Elara frowned. “Then we haven’t found out anything. We’re no closer to learning how to destroy them.”

Hermione shook her head. “No,” she acceded. “No, we’re not.” And how it galled her to admit as much. She leaned her hip against the chair next to Elara’s. “But with everything I’ve read and deduced, this is what I believe: the Horcruxes are possessing bodies. The strength and complexity of that possession is unclear, but based on what we’ve seen, and from what I understand on the volatility of soul magic, it originates from an outside source—like the Diadem.”

Elara straightened in her seat, tipping her head to look up at Hermione. “The Horcruxes are things.”

“It’s plausible. And it’s plausible he keeps these things on or near his person. Whether that’s because he needs to or because it’s a prideful compulsion is a matter of debate.”

At this, Elara rose from her seat and started to pace before the cold hearth, face lined in thought. “Things are different from people. Things can be destroyed.”

Hermione fiddled with her sleeve. “Theoretically,” she said, despising how often she’d been forced to repeat that dreaded sentiment this afternoon. “You know better than I do how finicky Dark magic is. It’s notoriously indelible. It persists, and I imagine Horcruxes must require specific perimeters to be met in order to be—.”

Elara didn’t appear to be listening, too stuck on whatever thought had consumed her mind as she paced, her long legs taking her back and forth before the hearth in quick, sharp laps. She turned to Hermione, and a fervent gleam had overcome the lassitude that had become her usual standard this past month.

“I have an idea,” she announced, and with that, she strode past Hermione, marching out of the library with little fanfare. Scrambling to follow, Hermione jumped up and nearly tripped on the runner as she rushed out onto the landing and down the stairs to the ground floor.

More people congregated here; the Order kept Grimmauld busy, much to Elara’s displeasure, but for the moment, the movement of bodies and conversation through the foyer and basement steps meant no one took notice of them heading toward the loo. Elara gestured Hermione in before her—and thankfully, either no one saw them or decided not to question why two teenage witches chose to step into the water closet together.

Elara snapped the door shut, locking it.

“What in the world are we doing in here?” Hermione asked, her tone testy. The loo on the ground floor had to be the worst room in the house; for whatever reason, it seemed to resist even the best of Narcissa Malfoy’s attempts to remodel and refurbish the house, remaining dingy and unwelcoming, the wallpaper prone to peeling, the tub unsafe for bathing.

“If you would give me a moment,” Elara retorted, matching her tone, and Hermione huffed as she leaned against the sink. Puzzled, she watched as the other witch pressed on a section of the wall—and suddenly, it became quite clear why the bathroom seemed cursed, as Elara unveiled a veritable hoard of cursed items.

“I’d forgotten you and Harriet had left that rubbish here,” she said, wrinkling her nose. She twitched when Elara shoved aside something heavy in the alcove to find whatever she sought. “What are you looking for?”

Rather than answer, Elara extracted her arm from the alcove—complete with a cobweb clinging to her sleeve. Hermione quickly wiped it away with a flannel off the rack. The rack proceeded to snatch the flannel back from her as if offended.

“Oh—I beg your pardon….”

Elara set her find on the counter—a bauble of some kind, though what precisely, Hermione couldn’t decipher. Squat and vaguely rounded, she thought it had the impression of carved feet and the shape of arms, and the more she looked at it, the more it reminded her of a crouched fetus made of smoked glass.

Hermione’s stomach rolled.

Dark magic radiated from the object—oily, sick, and cognizant in a way that raised the hair on the back of Hermione’s neck.

Elara stripped off her right glove and reached for the object.

“Wh—what on earth do you think you’re doing? Don’t touch that thing.”

Elara paused but didn’t lower her arm. “It’s the Darkest thing in the house,” she said as if that explained anything. “And it’s inert, as far as Harriet and I can tell. Nothing will happen if I touch it. I think the Blacks used to use it to curse the unborn children of other families.”

“That is abhorrent.

Shrugging, Elara continued. “I can destroy many things with my ability. Soul magic is a form of life, is it not? It adds a magical signature to an item? I’ve destroyed magical items before. It stands to reason that if I can destroy this thing—a cursed effigy passed down through the family through generations—I should have a chance against something like a Horcrux. Then, we would know how to get rid of them.”

Hermione chewed her bottom lip. It might have been her imagination, but she thought the glass fetus had turned its malformed head toward her, and really, she hoped Elara did destroy the horrid thing.

“Okay. Yes, it’s worth a try,” she said, nodding, and she saw Elara roll her eyes in the mirror. Clearly, she meant to try it whether Hermione agreed to it or not.

She folded her bare fingers over the top of the object and pressed down. Nothing happened. A full minute passed, and still, nothing happened.

“Are you doing anything?” Hermione inquired.

“Let me concentrate,” Elara muttered.

Again, silence lapsed, and the object on the counter remained unchanged.

“Do you need help? Is it a performance issue—? Ouch!

Elara trod on her foot, and Hermione elbowed her in the ribs to get her off her toes. As she did so, the object on the counter shuddered ever so slightly, and cracks began to form below Elara’s squeezing fingertips.

“Look! Brilliant, it’s working—!”

She received only a small, startled gasp in warning before Elara started to slump in a dead faint. Hermione’s arms snapped around her, trying to keep her upright, but the other witch was so much taller, and the sudden sag of weight onto her weak side proved too much. Hermione yelped, and they both toppled.

She managed to shield Elara’s head from slamming into the porcelain sink, but her own bounced against the wall, resulting in a wave of fuzzy stars bursting across her vision. For a moment, all Hermione could do was lie partially sprawled beneath her friend, too stunned to move.

What happened?

The effigy dropped to the floor, unaffected aside from a few scratches and cracks on its outer shell. Elara didn’t stir in Hermione’s arm, and when she used a shaky hand to turn the other witch’s face toward hers, she saw blood dripping in steady rivulets from her nose, ears, and mouth.

Hermione’s heart sped.

Something went wrong. Was it the object? Was she mistaken about it being cursed? Or—no, not now, Hermione—!

Frantic, she flung the stupid effigy back into the hidden cupboard, and with a burst of desperate, wandless magic, sealed the wall shut once more, hiding the evidence of what they’d been doing.

“Sirius!” she tried to shout, but her side ached, and it came out weak, reedy. She took a breath, forcing her lungs to expand against her pinching ribs, and tried again. “Sirius! Sirius!

Footsteps moved in the corridor outside—hesitant at first, as if questioning, then faster, running. Someone tried the door, and when the knob failed to open, a flare of magic zinged through the ward, breaking the spell holding it shut.

Sirius burst into the room, and he needed only a second to take in the scene—blood splattered on the sink’s pedestal, dripping down his daughter’s face, Hermione’s desperate bid to keep her from slipping to the floor—before he swept over the pair of them.

“Merlin’s buggering arse!” he cursed, crouching. He looped Elara’s limp arms around his shoulders and, with one arm beneath her knees, managed to stand with surprising grace. “I told those fucking healers she wasn’t well enough to be released yet, and look at this—she’s gone and relapsed. Remus—Remus!

He rushed out of the loo, managing not to snag Elara on anything despite the narrow confines, running toward the foyer and the Floo beyond. A moment later, Remus’ familiar gait followed, though Hermione didn’t see him pass by.

Narcissa watched both men go, her hand nervously patting at her chest as she glanced in their direction before checking on Hermione. “Are you well, Miss Granger?” she asked, tactfully ignoring the blood on the tiles and Hermione’s ruined blouse. She helped her stand up. “None of this is yours, is it? You and Miss Black didn’t feel the need to enact a blood pact in the lavatory? That’s terribly out of fashion, my darling.”

“I—I think so,” Hermione stuttered, and she didn’t know whether to laugh or cry. “But I did hit my head on the way down.”

“Then off you go after those two. We can’t very well have you getting a head injury. One of you girls has to retain some semblance of brain power….”

 

 

Hours later, after being cleared of a concussion by a mediwitch, Hermione stood by Elara’s bedside in St. Mungo’s, barely listening to Sirius have a go at the poor healer on the other side of the drawn curtain.

She stared down at long, lithe lines of Elara’s pale hand superimposed over the white sheets, her brow furrowed, thoughts popping like radio static in the back of her skull.

She couldn’t stop hearing what Sirius had said. “I told those fucking healers she wasn’t well enough to be released yet, and look at this—she’s gone and relapsed.

Relapsed.

Her symptoms from earlier that summer had returned: the bleeding, the lethargy, the unexplained magical damage. Everything that had landed her in St. Mungo’s in June. No one knew exactly what had happened, Elara simply stating she’d had a “run in” with that loathsome toad Umbridge, and the healers had been content to say she’d been hexed. Hexed with what, they didn’t know, but a warrant wasn’t issued for Umbridge’s arrest.

No one had seen Umbridge in months.

Slowly, Hermione’s eyes rose to Elara’s pale, sweaty face.

I can destroy many things with my ability.”

Her strange, withdrawn mood all summer suddenly made sense, as did why no one had found the garishly dressed Dolores Umbridge.

Elara had killed her.

Oh, Elara,” she whispered, and she grasped her hand, holding tight. With effort, Elara opened her bloodshot eyes and met Hermione’s—a shared understanding passing between the pair of witches that broke Hermione’s heart all over again. Sirius still yelled at the healer, but it felt distant, somewhere far away from where they were.

She squeezed her fingers around Elara’s and refused to let go. “It’s okay,” she said. “It’s okay. This changes nothing, Elara Black. Nothing, do you hear me?”

Elara looked away, and her throat bobbed as she tried to swallow. “I’m sorry,” she rasped.

“Don’t,” Hermione told her. “Don’t. You have nothing to be sorry for. I—let’s get you better. Get better, and let’s go home.”

In her hand, Elara’s fingers shifted, reciprocating Hermione’s hold as best she could. Sirius said something to Remus, and another healer was called in to calm the agitated father. The world came back into focus, even if it felt heavier than it had moments before.

“Merlin, this summer can’t end fast enough,” Hermione said, trying to lighten the mood. “I just hope Harriet is faring better than we are…”


 

A/N: The girls might keep referring to Gaunt in the present tense for a while. Not sure how widespread through the Order it is that he, uh, retired.

Elara, on her deathbed: “I saw you checking out Draco’s ahh…”

Hermione: *holds pillow over her face*

Hermione: “Announce time of death, doc.”

 

Chapter 310: room for improvement

Chapter Text

cccx. room for improvement

 

While everything in London was going perfectly awful, Harriet was in the woods, none the wiser.

It was a rare summer day for the highlands where the temperature felt neither too stifling nor too chilly, and because Slytherin had swanned off to do his nefarious bidding elsewhere, Harriet had the afternoon mostly free after she finished her studies. She somehow found herself following the Sangfort family outside of their towering home into the lands surrounding the grounds, enjoying the weather—and the absence of her demanding master.

Exhaling through her nose, Harriet lifted her gaze to the overhead canopy, squinting against the dappled sunlight falling against her face. She raised a hand to shield her eyes against it, and the breeze toyed with her hair, pressing the loose collar of her cloak to her neck. The apprenticeship cords swayed.

What if he never came back? she thought, looking over to where the dirt path turned off through the denser trees toward the far vale she knew would eventually turn back toward the lake where Hogwarts lay. What if, one day, he just never returned? Could I leave? Could I go home? Find a different master, like Mr. Verily suggested? Harriet didn’t know how serious the man had been, but she’d been thinking about the idea more and more lately.

She’d never given serious thought to what she might want to be after Hogwarts, and by the time she had to, it was too late; the decision had been taken from her. Now, discovering she might actually have a talent for defense and that she didn’t hate it, Harriet enjoyed considering what it’d be like to have a master she actually liked, someone she wanted to learn from and impress, someone she wasn’t afraid might hex or hurt her at any given opportunity.

Someone she wasn’t learning from to turn around and kill.

Harriet blinked and clenched her jaw, willing the sickness stirring in her middle to stay lodged in her stomach.

“Come along, Potter,” Elinor called from up ahead. “Lest you get lost in a bog.”

Harriet didn’t think it very likely she’d get lost in a bog while on a clear path, but she nonetheless took the hint and continued walking.

The rest of the Sangfort family were more or less ambivalent to her presence, and Harriet made herself unobtrusive by walking behind them. They were polite, and she was polite in return. Harriet was content to meander, simply pleased to be out of the house. She was in no hurry to get back.

They reached a clearing in the woods where the path branched in two directions, the western fork leading back up the bluff along the ridge to the Tor, the other devolving where it crossed part of a brook and entered the denser weave of pines. Elinor hung off the arm of her father, their attention caught by something in the water. Elinor pointed at it, and Gauthar nodded, holding them both back from stumbling into the ankle-deep trickle. Off to the side, Nefaria spoke with her sister-in-law, heads together, and given their drawn, serious expressions, the conversation must have been unpleasant.

That left Harriet to awkwardly shuffle her feet, ignoring the dust on her expensive boots as she picked her way over to the stone bench that an ancestor of the Sangforts must have placed there decades ago. Cladius Sangfort lowered himself to sit in the middle of the seat, doing so slowly, and Harriet noticed how he briefly pressed his eyes shut, his breath catching.

When he opened them again, they flickered in her direction, and when Harriet did nothing more than blink at him, the older wizard relaxed.

“Damnable thing,” he grumbled, discreetly stretching out his right leg, rubbing at the knee. “Tell me, girl: is there a reason he’s refusing Severus audience this summer?”

Harriet froze at the mention of Snape but otherwise tried to control her face, looking toward the bluff above them. “Dunno. Slytherin sent him off. I didn’t—I didn’t know he was refusing to let him come at all.”

I didn’t know Snape was still trying.

If Mr. Sangfort were a less stuffy, pure-blood wizard, she would have said the noise he made was a grunt, but it came out more as an aggrieved sigh behind his teeth, and his fingers dug in a little more tightly into his knee. He looked at Harriet again, unknowable thoughts, ticking behind his shrewd eyes.

“Are you two close at that school of yours?” he asked.

“No,” came her immediate response—too immediate. “No,” she repeated, firmer. “No, I hate him. Professor Snape is an arsehole.”

Mr. Sangfort snorted, guffawed. “Well, that was never in question.” He ceased his ministrations and folded his hands together. He peered at Harriet then, and in the sunlight, she noted the circles under his dark blue eyes. He lowered his voice when he asked, “Would you have the means of getting a message to him?”

She didn’t answer immediately—both because she didn’t know if she could and because she didn’t know if this was some kind of sick test. “Wouldn’t you?” she countered.

“He is watching us very closely,” he replied. “I would owe you a favor, Miss Potter.”

She considered him again, thinking about it. Why would he need to send a message? Was it a message for other Death Eaters? Was it about her? But if it was going to Snape, that was okay, right?

“I can try,” she finally settled on saying. Hugh and Muriel struggled with the wards around the Tor, but she thought if she called for Winky or Bigsby, they might come. She didn’t want to make a habit of that; it wasn’t safe for her or the house-elves. “Get me your letter, and I’ll do what I can. You can keep your ruddy favor.”

Mr. Sangfort sputtered and coughed, waving off his son when he glanced over to check on him.

“You have got to be the worst Slytherin I have ever met,” he said.

“I’m the best Slytherin you’ve ever met,” she corrected. “You simply don’t know it yet.”

Mr. Sangfort shook his head, and for a time, they said nothing, content to listen to the silence and the idle chatter of the others, the warble of birdsong and winnowing wind cutting through the old trees that had been there longer than any of them. With the warmth of the sun on her head and the smell of wildflowers scenting the air, scenes like the other night felt surreal and distant. A nightmare from a different life, removed from her reality.

But Harriet would have to return far too soon.

“When you scribe your runes,” Mr. Sangfort said, unprompted, startling her. “When you imbue them with magic, consider the element. Treat them as you would any incantation with your wand, and pass your hand through the right chakra on your body.”

He demonstrated the motion: a subtle turn of the arm lifted the hand from one starting position to the other as he drew runes in midair with his fingertip. It was nuanced enough that if Harriet hadn’t been looking for it, she wouldn’t have noted the difference, but it made sense.

“Huh,” she said. “Slytherin didn’t tell me to do it like that.”

“Of course he didn’t.” Mr. Sangfort settled his arms in his lap again. “He’s not a runemaster.”

A thrill went through Harriet. Something Slytherin didn’t know?

She opened her mouth and took a breath—to thank him, to demand he explain more, to beg he demonstrate the motion again—when the back of her neck prickled, awareness drawing along the skin like long, sharp nails. Harriet’s breath stilled and her head whipped around, looking toward the invisible Tor.

“He’s back,” she said, answering Mr. Sangfort’s unvoiced question. Without waiting for any of the Sangforts, she started back up the path, hurrying, until she knew the bluff had blocked their sight of her. She shifted into her Animagus form and flew most of the way back, going until she reached the edge of the wood bordering the grounds, and there she turned back before stepping into the open.

Slytherin waited on the top step, his hands folded before himself in the vision of patience he did not actually have. When the breeze caught his cloak, it rippled, causing the crimson lining to curl and roll like a river of blood falling toward his feet.

Harriet shut her eyes against flickering images of Myles and Malcolm Mirthcut.

Master,” she said, coming to stand at the bottom step. She raised her gaze no higher than his chest.

Apprentice.” He studied her, but finding no fault at the moment, Slytherin shifted and started inside, prompting her to follow him up the stairs. “I’ve returned from the Ministry. I collected the results for your Wizarding Levels.

Above his shoulder, he held up a tightly bound scroll wrapped in a blue ribbon and sealed with the Ministry’s crest.

Harriet’s heart leapt into her throat, then landed somewhere below her knees.

Merlin’s arse, she thought. I forgot all about that shite. Oh, bugger—.

She staggered after Slytherin, stiff-legged and reluctant, until he led her into the study he favored for their lessons and closed the door with a flick of his pale fingers.

“Straighten yourself,” he snapped at her, at which point Harriet lifted her shoulders and tried to make her expression less reproachful. “You are no longer a child, Potter. Do not act like one.”

Harriet held her arms behind her back and bowed her head. “Yes, master.” Her pulse thrummed like a rabbit’s in her neck, a mixture of fear and anger, the words fuck you balanced on the top of her tongue like poison she meant to spit and ingest in equal measures.

Slytherin sniffed, but if he objected to her tone, he decided to ignore the issue for the moment, opting instead to hold up the scroll once more. For a mad moment, Harriet thought he meant to give it to her, that he might actually let her see her marks for herself—but, no. With one long finger, he drew it along the scroll’s seam, and it split open, breaking the magic holding it shut.

He gave Harriet a sharp, cruel smile as he unfurled the parchment and started to read.

She held her breath, her palms sweating where she held them together. Slytherin’s eyes swished back and forth over the page—and his mouth thinned.

This is it, she thought, dread curdling in her middle like old, sour milk. I’ve failed everything. Merlin, what is he going to do? I don’t want to know. I can’t do this. I can’t—.

Slytherin’s red eyes jumped to Harriet’s face, and she lifted her chin, bracing herself for the worst.

“Well,” he intoned, voice soft. “There’s room for improvement.”

With that, he released the scroll, and it floated over to Harriet, drifting on its own current until it levitated in front of her. Taking that as silent permission to read it, Harriet swallowed her nerves and brought her shaking hands forward to grip the parchment.

She skimmed past the introduction and the key explaining what each letter mark meant, sinking her teeth into her bottom lip when she found her name.

 

HARRIET DOREA POTTER HAS ACHIEVED:

Astronomy: Acceptable (A)

Care of Magical Creatures: Outstanding (O)

Charms: Outstanding (O)

Defense Against the Dark Arts: Outstanding (O)

Ancient Runes: Outstanding (O)

Herbology: Exceeds Expectations (E)

History of Magic: Acceptable (A)

Potions: Exceeds Expectations (E)

Transfiguration: Outstanding (O)

 

“A particularly poor showing in Astronomy and History of Magic,” Slytherin said as Harriet read the list again, her fingers wrinkling the page. “The importance of the former cannot be understated in certain rituals, and the latter should be so simple, even a Muggle should be able to attain an Outstanding in the subject.”

History had never been Harriet’s strongest subject, Muggle or otherwise, and with everything else happening—well, the pressures upon her had made studying difficult. She wondered if Remus would be disappointed she only got an Acceptable in his class.

Instead of apologizing, Harriet said, “I will do better, master.”

“You will,” Slytherin retorted. “Your N.E.W.T scores will be beyond reproach, or you will suffer my displeasure. Do you understand, apprentice?

Yes, master.”

He leaned forward, a gleam in his eyes, his face hard, unyielding. “Our plans will not be interrupted by your laziness, Harriet. You will do better. You will be something worthy of me.

She met his stare and, with effort that deserved an Outstanding all its own, managed not to spit in his loathsome face. “Of course, master,” she said, and she sounded believable. “I will be worthy.”

Later that evening, when Slytherin presided over the dinner table and extolled Harriet’s accomplishments to the Sangforts, Bonnie Bonespell, and Cicero Aeter, no one would have been able to guess he’d spent the better part of an hour picking at her every fault like a butcher hacking away at a fresh kill. Harriet plastered on a fake smile and picked at her food.

All of it tasted like ash.

“Good showing, Potter,” Iris Sangfort muttered behind her goblet. “I’m sure the old man’s proud.”

Harriet’s eyes prickled, and her hand tightened around her fork. “Yeah,” she answered, clearing her throat. “I reckon.”

Would Dumbledore be proud of her? What would her friends think? Sirius and Remus? The Coven?

The results felt red-hot where she had them folded and tucked inside the front pocket of her robes. She’d only received an Exceeds Expectations in Potions. Snape didn’t allow any mark below Outstanding in his N.E.W.T.s course.

Harriet speared a piece of roasted potato and broke it apart with her fork’s tines, smearing it across the decorated plate. Around her, the Knights of Walpurgis shared quiet, pleasant conversation, and the room reflected their master’s pleased mood—but inside, Harriet felt…disquieted. Disappointed.

I didn’t have enough time to practice the practical portion, she thought with a heavy sigh. I…I won’t be in his class next year.

She set the fork down.

It was in the middle of feeling sorry for herself that another feeling overcame Harriet—a feeling wholly unknown to her. It swirled through her with a suddenness, striking fast and swift, anticipation overcoming her anxiety, triumph billowing up through misery, bloodlust saturating grief, copper on her tongue, salt in her nose—and then, it was gone.

Harriet blinked, and her neck throbbed. Her head turned, and across the table, her eyes met Professor Slytherin’s. The rest of the dining hall fell away, distant, voices lost to the buzzing in her ears. His gaze held hers before narrowing, questioning. Cicero Aeter asked him a question, and the distraction at last pulled his attention away, the moment broken.

Harriet shook her head and decided not to drink anything else at the table for the rest of the night.

Beneath her chair, Set swirled in unsettled circles. The untouched liquid in Harriet’s goblet rippled as a tremor shook the house.


A/N: I apparently keep switching Cladius’ name to “Claudius” in different places. I think it’s because Scrivener tries to auto-correct it all the time. Anyway, it’s meant to be “Cladius.” I’ve done it a lot with names throughout the series and usually I catch it, but sometimes I don’t lol. I’ll try to remember to go back and fix that. One day I might even correct my typos. One dayyy.

A brief recap if you’re not quite sure what’s going on here: we learned quite a while ago, Cladius Sangfort has a magical autoimmune disease that causes brittle bones and he gets his potions from Snape. By cutting off Snape’s contact with the Tor, Slytherin has also cut off Cladius’ access to his potions.

Chapter 311: shadows much larger

Chapter Text

cccxi. shadows much larger

 

Harriet rubbed her fingertips under her spectacles to relieve the burning in her dry, tired eyes. She tried to keep reading the passage, but the words blurred across the book’s yellowed page, and she couldn’t read on. She swallowed, clearing her throat, and her voice trailed off into the room’s warm, stilted silence.

From where he sat in his winged armchair, Slytherin glanced up from his own reading. He looked to where Harriet stood before his hearth and coldly intoned, “Continue.

Though night didn’t fully embrace the Tor, the hour had grown quite late, and Slytherin kept his quarters dim by slamming the shutters closed, leaving only the glowering coals and a few candles to read by. It strained Harriet’s eyes and made his borrowed quarters feel all the more eerie for the heavy shadows lingering in the corners.

She hated being in his rooms, and Slytherin knew that; he thrived on her discomfort.

Harriet shifted her weight from one foot to the other, tired from hours of standing. Another of his petty, pointless torments. The tome floating before her, The Historical Persecution of Alternate Societies, Volume One, was another. Slytherin had chosen it as part of her history revisions, and Harriet guessed Hermione would call it “propaganda.” Harriet would call it “gobshite.”

She sensed Slytherin’s growing impatience and quickly cleared her throat again, forcing her eyes to focus. She jostled her glasses back into place. “Uh—‘the 1742 Mandates sought to pathologize their way of existing in English society by categorizing any magic requiring a physical sacrifice—even a single drop of one’s own blood—as inherently ‘malignant.’ By decoupling the magic from—.’”

Harriet stopped to clear her throat again, and Slytherin took pity on her raw vocal cords—or, at least, grew bored enough with her stuttering. He snapped his fingers, and the books slapped shut a scant inch from her nose, the rough pages grazing her skin. She rubbed the spot as Slytherin gestured her forward with a short jerk of his hand.

He Vanished the wine from his goblet and replaced it with water, shoving it toward Harriet. She took it, sipping, not putting it past the bastard to poison her for his own amusement—but Slytherin’s mind had been elsewhere since dinner.

Since that weird feeling, Harriet corrected herself, frowning. Her neck still ached with the sensation’s echo, like a muscle overstretched and unsure how to right itself. She drank the water.

“I still expect you to acquire your N.E.W.T score for History of Magic even if you are not attending the class,” Slytherin said, and Harriet regretted swallowing when she nearly spat up all over him. “Do not allow your attentions to the subject to wane simply because your Wizarding Levels are behind you.”

“Wh—what?” she sputtered.

He narrowed his leering red eyes up at her. “Master,” he corrected.

She ignored him. “How in the bloody hell am I meant to do that?” she demanded.

Master,” he repeated, firmer, and Harriet sensed she trod very close to outright insubordination.

Master,” she said in a calmer voice. “I don’t understand how I’m supposed to do that.”

Slytherin studied her, forcing her to wait and stew. “Independently, of course. It is not strictly necessary to enroll in a class to then attend the proctored exam—encouraged and suggested, but not required. Your schedule won’t allow for you to take History of Magic or Astronomy, but I will expect you to test in both subjects and score appropriately.”

Harriet didn’t know what to say. Indeed, she thought if she opened her mouth, she might spout off something monumentally stupid and get herself hexed, so she clenched her jaw and swallowed the sudden, fierce burst of anger and indignation that raged through her chest.

Instead, she muttered, “Yes, master,” through her teeth.

He took the goblet from her hand, drinking. He tilted his head to the side and observed Harriet with a lingering, sidelong stare, his eyes flat and strange in the weak, faltering firelight, too bright and reflective, leering and cold like the watching gaze of a hungry, unfeeling animal waiting to strike.

It’s easier when you don’t fight me, isn’t it, Harriet?” he asked in a low hiss. “I’m not your enemy. I know that’s what Dumbledore tells you. Despite what the old man says, everything doesn’t have to be a battle between us.

Harriet didn’t know what to say to that. She expected “Go fuck yourself,” might go over like a lead balloon, so she opted to reply, “I’ve never been one to shy away from a fight, master.”

Rather than being insulted, Slytherin laughed. It came out as a soft sound, like the rustling of a snake’s body slithering through dry grass, and after setting the goblet aside, he steepled his fingers together. “Yes, I know, Potter. I do appreciate that about you.” The corner of his mouth lifted when Harriet blinked, and he rested the back of his head against the chair. “I was similar as a boy. It is something I understand. It is natural to resist authority when you are exceptional, as you and I are. But Harriet—.” And here his Parseltongue grew somehow colder, raspier, tension forming in Harriet’s stomach. “What you need to learn is that you will never be above me. You may pout and sulk and struggle, but you persist because you understand I know what is best for you. You are being made in the shadow of a god. Be proud…and remember your place.

She inclined her head—then lifted it, chin in the air as she spoke. “Things usually cast shadows much, much larger than themselves.”

She’d gone too far. She knew she’d gone too far when she saw his nostrils flare, and Slytherin rose with an abrupt motion, his hand finding Harriet’s throat before she could step back.

“The best servants know when to bend,” he said with a curled lip, applying pressure. “Lest they break, little Harriet.

She held her breath—and her tongue. She wanted to say more, but the voice in her head, the one that sounded suspiciously like Snape, demanded she shut up.

Slytherin held on, went to speak, and then—.

Without warning, the feeling from earlier returned, prickling and aching, rising up through her chest. Slytherin’s words fell flat and trailed off, unheard, the pair of them stilling as if they could both sense the same strange sensation crawling through their bones, yawning into being. Unbidden, her and Slytherin’s heads turned at the same moment toward the windows.

The air hummed with energy. Harriet felt it on her skin like dew, and with terror, she realized Slytherin felt it too, and it wasn’t coming from him, and it wasn’t a part of her imagination.

What is that? What is happening—?

His hand slipped from her as he turned away, his wand falling into his grasp.

“We have company, Miss Potter,” he intoned. “I would suggest preparing yourself.”

“What—?”

It was only by virtue of standing in Slytherin’s vicinity that his conjured Shield protected her from the first blast, and Harriet’s quick reflexes saved her from the second that caved in the outer wall. She slid along the floor and slammed against a table, head bouncing on the leg as rubble ricocheted and chunks of stone rained down.

Harriet covered her head and squinted through the dust, trying to catch her breath.

The summer night sun cast a lurid red light across the highlands, the sky raw as if bleeding, limned in jagged, bruised lines of violet and yellow, and there, hung in the middle like some ghoulish, horrific specter, a hundred feet above the trees, was the Dark Lord, his eyes blazing in eerie mimicry of the sky behind him.

He’s flying, came Harriet’s hysterical thought. How in the fuck is he flying like that?!

Slytherin sucked air through his teeth and tutted. He stood motionless and unperturbed. “Some people have no respect for my holidays.”

Harriet looked around at the man from where she was half-crouched under a buckling table, covered in dust. “Are you fucking mad—?!”

The next spell came with all the ferocity of the first two, drowning out Harriet’s voice, rattling the Tor as a bug being shaken in a jar. The floor buckled under a vivid burst of light, wood creaked, and Harriet chose not to see what would happen next.

When Slytherin retaliated, she used the cover of his spellfire, gasping for air as she sprinted for the door, scrambling over rock and stone, throwing her weight into the door to break from the casement sagging under the wall’s failing weight. Her knee skimmed the floor as she caught herself on the carpet—and then, Harriet bolted.

Voldemort—Voldemort is here. Why is he here?! What does he want?! Is he here for Slytherin?!

She had no answers for any of those question, and she resolved herself to run faster, determined to escape before Voldemort turned his attention upon her.

But how? The Floo? Fuck, I don’t know if these damn people are on the Floo Network. How—?

Sprinting, the wall continued to shake—and somewhere above, something collapsed, walls giving way, wood splintering, rafters quaking. Glass shattered, and the Sangfort ancestors shouted with alarm from their portrait frames as Harriet watched with stricken horror as the corridor swayed and heaved under the force of magic slamming into the structure’s side.

She could see the door to her bedroom just ahead. She needed to get inside—to Livius, the golems, her things—and then she could get out of this place, but before she could reach it, something in the dimly lit passage shifted. In her blind panic, Harriet almost missed it among the falling shelves and toppled cabinets—but then she breathed in.

It—stinks.

The shape reared back from where it’d been hunched over a little body huddled on the carpet, and it lunged at Harriet. On instinct, her wand found its way into her hand, and Harriet snapped out an incantation—fire lashing out in a vivid, narrow whip. She caught a glimpse of bloated, marbled flesh sloughing from brittle, ossified bone, brought into stark relief by the fire caressing the misshapen face, before the whip cleaved through the creature’s chest, and it shrieked in agony before collapsing in a smoldering heap.

For a moment, Harriet stood frozen, wide-eyed and trembling, remembering her brief foray into an ancient tomb beneath the earth and the old, forgotten nightmares she found slinking among the rot and empty coffins.

Inferi, she thought, wiping her mouth on the back of her sleeve. What are—? He brought an Inferius? No, not just one. There’s got to be more about. Merlin’s fucking bones.

She turned to the body the Inferius had been hunched over before she interrupted and gasped.

“No,” she breathed, crouching to touch the house-elf’s still, bloodied chest, his large eyes open and listless. He rested in a puddle of his own blood, the Inferius having set upon him and torn open his neck. “No….”

Gully. The Sangforts’ elf.

The building shook again, the chandeliers rattling, candles falling and snuffing themselves out before hitting the sullied carpet.

Harriet slid her hand over the elf’s eyes to close them before she stood and kept running.

The door to her room bounced off the wall with the force she used to fling it open, and Harriet scanned the area, wand at the ready, all the while feeling the Tor shake and shudder around her, the vibration traveling up through her legs. Then, she dove for her bed, ripping the skirt aside to grab the agitated Horned Serpent beneath it by the tail.

We’re leaving,” she snapped at him before her familiar could say more. “Right now!” She kicked open her trunk and levered Livi inside, resisting his efforts to coil closer and come out of her luggage. “Not now, Livi, get inside! It’s safer!

The dead house-elf in the hall had given her an idea, and as she scrambled to grab what few possessions she’d let allowed to spread around the room, she shouted, “Winky!”

Nothing happened, and Harriet tried again, and then once more. “Winky! Winky!

A loud crack! interrupted the rest of the chaos surrounding her, and Winky appeared at the foot of the bed, immediately looking around with wide, frightened eyes as she heard the tower wail and shingles fall like hailstones.

“Miss Harriet?” she stuttered, grasping the post. “It is being very hard to reach you here!”

“We have to leave, Winky!” Harriet said by way of explanation, snatching the golems and their warming rock from the nightstand. She didn’t even care that Kevin sank his fangs deep into her hand; she ripped him free without a second thought, hurrying to get them into the trunk’s upper compartment. “The Tor’s under attack. It’s not safe—.”

Another volley of spellfire struck the tower—and the windows exploded inward. Winky shrieked, and Harriet grabbed her, twisting, shielding her smaller body with her back to block the larger pieces of jagged glass. When it passed, she let go, then dove after Howard, who’d slipped from her grasp and dropped to the floor, slithering across the carpet.

“I don’t know what’s happening. I just need your help getting us out of here.” She grabbed Howard up and handed him off to Winky. Her house-elf, dressed in the Potter House uniform she’d made and decorated herself, looked close to tears, her fright plain upon her face, and Harriet felt terrible for dragging her into this mess.

“I can be doing this, Miss Harriet!” she warbled, and she extended her free hand for Harriet.

Harriet reached out—

And thought about Gully, thought, what if the Sangforts can’t get out?

Her hand paused.

Winky blinked as the wind whipped through the broken windows. “Miss Harriet?”

Harriet’s heart raced in her chest, her throat tight, stomach sour and twisted with fear.

They can Apparate. They can—.

They can’t. They can’t. Not with that ruddy ward surrounding the whole mountain. That’s why we have to traipse up the path to get here every summer.

They can get out, she insisted. They have to be able to get out—.

And if they can’t?

Who cares? A nasty, scared part of her hissed, urging her hand closer to Winky’s. Who cares? Isn’t this what they wanted? Isn’t this what they deserve for being—?

Elinor Sangfort sat on the other side of the chess table, her hands folded together, eyes downcast. “It doesn’t make sense to you,” she whispered. “It doesn’t have to. This is the life I was born into and the only one I’ll ever know.”

Harriet stared at her hand—the scratches, half-healed cuts, the bruises, the large scar across the back she’d inflicted upon herself to never have to see Umbridge’s words again.

Cladius Sangfort shook his head and laughed. “You have got to be the worst Slytherin I have ever met,” but there was something bright in his weathered eyes—.

“Damn it,” Harriet cursed, and Winky flinched at her use of profanity—or maybe because of another explosion in the distance. “Damn it. Go, Winky. Get them and yourself to safety.”

“Miss Harriet—?”

Harriet dropped her hand and straightened. “Go.”

“Winky is not being sure she can come back!” Winky cried, reaching up to twist one of her ears. “There is bad magic here, Miss Harriet, it is being very hard to come here! Winky is sorry!”

Harriet closed her eyes. She expected as much—or should have. She didn’t know what Voldemort was doing here, but he must have erected a barrier of some form beyond what the Sangforts had, or his attack made the old, family magics surrounding the Tor twist and writhe in a way that made it difficult for house-elves to slip through.

“I’ll find another way,” Harriet told her. “I’ll find another way. I just—I have to make sure the others get out.”

She touched the top of Winky’s head, and the house-elf peered up at her with watery eyes. Harriet could feel how much she shook with fear. “It’s going to be okay,” she said, not knowing if she was telling the truth or not. “Just go, Winky. While you still can. Please. Keep my familiars safe.” She paused. “Go to Hogwarts afterward. Find Dumbledore. Tell him—.” Tell him what? Come help? He couldn’t come here. He couldn’t get past the wards. And even if he could, what would he do? Send more people? To fight Voldemort?

It’d be a death sentence.

Harriet was well and truly on her own.

“Never mind,” she whispered with a small, mirthless laugh. “No, never mind.”

She turned, palms sweating, and tightened her grip on her wand. She marched back to the door, and didn’t look back. She didn’t let herself stop until she heard the sharp crack! of Winky leaving, and only then did Harriet hesitate, her shoulders sagging as she stopped at the threshold and took a breath.

“I’m a fucking idiot,” she whispered before once more running into the corridor.

She hadn’t lingered overlong in her bedroom, but in those intervening minutes, the Tor had continued to shake itself to pieces. Glass and glittering pieces of crystal crunched underneath Harriet’s shoes as she ran first toward the far end of the guest wing, stopping when she reached the door for Bonespell’s room. She tried the knob—and jumped back when it jerked open, Bonespell appearing dressed in her night things with her wand at the ready, aimed at Harriet’s head.

“Potter,” she barked, though it lacked venom, her voice cracking at the edges as her eyes jumped from one end of the corridor to the other. “What in the hell is happening?”

“The Dark Lord,” Harriet retorted.

“What?” Bonespell’s eyes flickered again, this time jumping back the way Harriet had come—back toward Slytherin’s quarters and his study. “Is he throwing a fit or something? What did you do?”

“No, you idiot—Voldemort!” Harriet didn’t stop when Bonespell winced at the use of the name. “He’s attacking Slytherin. We need to get out of here!”

Another spell hit the Tor—and suddenly, the corridor slipped downward, and Harriet didn’t wait to hear what else Bonespell had to say; she grabbed the witch by the wrist and yanked her into motion, sprinting toward the head of the corridor where the stairwell waited. They headed up.

She couldn’t quite describe the sound of the lower corridor collapsing—loud and quiet all at once, a strange deflating, followed by a roar, and a sudden updraft of air and rushing debris that nearly knocked her and Bonespell off their feet. They tumbled past the next landing, and Harriet felt something in her back wrench, but she managed to stay upright.

Bonespell hit the ground, but Harriet dragged her to her knees, then stumbling to her feet, forcing her to follow without pausing for breath.

“Potter—,” she gasped. “Where—?!”

Without warning, one of the doors to their right burst open—and Inferi spilled out, clamoring over the top of one another, groaning and snarling, gnashing chipped, yellowing teeth, emitting horrendous, shrill screams from their withered throats.

Harriet wheeled back, her arm snapping out. “Impedimenta!” she spat, firing the first spell as her wand danced out a rune for the second. “Incendio!

The shakiness of her hand didn’t get the right burst she desired, the quick gout of fire shoved the first shambling figure into the second, and they both went down in a yowling heap. They didn’t stay to see if they’d finished them off.

Harriet and Bonespell ran all the way to the family wing, and though sounds from the battle dimmed, other noises asserted themselves—noises of windows shattering, scrambling claws, grunts and dry limbs hitting stone floors, clicking, moaning, wailing—.

“Keep going,” Harriet ordered Bonespell when the witch tripped trying to turn and see all the shut doors at once, trying to see all the enemies surrounding them. She couldn’t. There were too many of them.

You’re an idiot, Potter. A damned idiot—.

They nearly collided with Iris and Elinor close to their quarters, and Harriet ducked a hex from Iris that nearly cleaved her head from her shoulders. The older witch’s dark hair had come undone from its typical plait, and she bore a fresh set of scratches quite close to her eyes, bleeding sluggishly across her cheek. Under her left arm, she clasped a pale-faced Elinor close to her side. Singe marks marred the bottom of Elinor’s nightgown, and she wore only one slipper.

“Where the fuck is Slytherin?” Iris demanded of Harriet without apologizing for nearly taking her head off.

Harriet jerked a hand back the way she’d come, and Iris briefly shut her eyes.

“He can’t defeat You-Know-Who,” she said without prevaricating, Bonespell gasping. “And he’ll leave the rest of us for dead. Neither Father nor Aeter were in their rooms and I can’t waste time looking for them. We’ll go for Gauthar and Nefaria and get out—.”

A blast radiated through the building—and cold, haunting laughter echoed from somewhere below. Harriet’s scar throbbed.

An old memory flickered across her racing thoughts—two wizards at a table on a raised platform, the smell of whiskey, rows of stations with instruments carefully arranged—.

“The laboratory,” she blurted. “D’you check the laboratory—?”

“No, Potter, I came out of my bloody quarters and nearly got my throat ripped out,” Iris snarled. “We need to reach the family solar below us—.”

Harriet shoved Bonespell toward the pair, already turning to run back toward the stairwell. “I’ll meet you there!” she shouted. “I’m going to check the laboratory!”

“Potter—!” Elinor yelled.

“I’ll be there!”

She didn’t listen to their shouts for her to come back, sprinting as fast as she could. She barely waited until she was out of sight before darting for the closest window. She blasted what remained of the glass out of it, and stepped up onto the sill. Preparing herself to take flight, she glanced down.

She wished she hadn’t.

Cast in the eerie red light of the midnight sun, the forest below teemed with movement—dozens upon dozens of grotesque, ghoulish bodies crawling from the smoldering bracken, scrambling over the cliff, swarming the fort like ants pouring from their nest.

From the corner of her eye, she caught a flicker of movement—dark robes moving, brilliant spellfire, shields swelling, blooming, bursting—and knew Slytherin had somehow taken to the skies as well.

He can fly. The Dark Lord can fly—.

Bracing herself, Harriet jumped, and she pulled her magic over herself, letting the transformation pour over her skin. In an instant, she disappeared into a tumble of black feathers, and Harriet beat her wings, rising higher. She beat them harder, increasing her speed, and she flew around the Tor, counting windows, searching, until—.

She shifted, and dove.

Inches from the battered glass, Harriet transformed, and she came crashing through the window, arms around her head, rolling across the floor. She leapt back to her feet, wand at the ready—.

The battle had hit the laboratory harder than the living quarters. How, Harriet didn’t know, considering Voldemort had blasted Slytherin’s quarters with direct curses, but the stations lay shattered upon the flagstones, and part of the ceiling had caved in, the dome brought low by the splintered rafters.

The Inferi charged the door.

Harriet sucked in a startled breath, taken aback, and stumbled—.

Praesidium Vivum.”

The crumbling archway glowed, the runes upon the lintel blazing green, and a sheer, milky curtain drew taut between Harriet and the dozens of undead creatures attempting to reach her. She spun on her heels and found the speaker of the incantation.

Mr. Sangfort sat slumped against one of the upturned tables, Cicero Aeter kneeling at his side. As Harriet expected, neither had been to bed, given they still wore their day robes, and both looked worse for wear. A number of Inferi littered the lab, their remnants smoking and strewn about as if taken by several blasts from a close-range wand.

“How good of you to join us, Apprentice Potter,” Mr. Sangfort said, voice strained, a hand pressed to his side. “I’m afraid we aren’t up for visitors at the moment….”

Harriet rushed over to the pair of wizards and took note of the blood seeping around the edges of his pale fingers. “You’re injured,” she said.

“Well spotted,” Mr. Aeter sniped, his eyes flicking up to her, before returning to the blocked doorway. He rubbed his face with his callused hand. “There’s more than two dozen of those fecking horrors out there, with more coming through from the main entrance every minute. I’d go right back out that window while you can, lass.”

“Don’t be stupid,” Harriet retorted, and Mr. Sangfort softly laughed. “Iris said we need to get to the family solar. I don’t know where that is. You’re bloody well going to lead me to it.”

“Are they well?” Mr. Sangfort asked, new urgency in his voice. “Elinor? Gauthar and my Iris flower?”

“I didn’t see Gauthar,” she told him, thrown by his pet name for his daughter. The Sangforts always came across as cool toward one another in public; it could be disarming to remember they were a family. “They went to find him and Nefaria before going to the solar—.” Harriet let out an impatient breath. “Where is the solar?”

Mr. Sangfort shared a look with Mr. Aeter. “Below us,” the latter grunted. He jabbed two fingers toward the west. “Two stories. There’s an exit there, a tunnel—but bleeding hells, it’ll be right where the Inferi are the thickest.”

Harriet’s eyes widened. “We have to get there,” she told them. She whipped around to face the doorway. “We have to get there now, or the others—.”

Mr. Aeter raised his voice as he stood. “Do you not listen, Potter? Does Slytherin get anything through that thick skull of yours? You’re not getting out that way. Those runes aren’t going to last. We’ve got less than ten minutes before—.”

“Then fuck the damn door,” she cursed, striding back toward the wizards, turning again to face the entrance. She searched the walls, the shelves, the windows—searching for a way out, but unless Mr. Sangfort and Mr. Aeter learned to become crow Animagi in the next five minutes or pulled broomsticks out of their pockets, they weren’t flying out of there.

Below us. Two stories. There’s an exit there—.”

Harriet’s eyes landed on the floor.

Down it is, then.

“Get him up,” she told Mr. Aeter, gesturing at Mr. Sangfort. He hesitated, then moved to do as she said when Harriet glared. She rolled back her sleeve, only now realizing something had sliced it, to free up her hand as she gripped her wand in a white-knuckled fist.

She pulled her arm back.

Sectumsempra!

A slash appeared on the flagstones. Harriet didn’t pause before changing the angle and carving another.

“What are you—?” Mr. Aeter started, but then he must have realized her intent, and he rushed to get Mr. Sangfort onto his feet, pulling the older wizard’s arm over his broad shoulders. “Oh, Dark Lord take us—.”

Harriet sliced the jagged rune for “sand” into the stone, then twisted her wand, throwing her body into the Charm. “Contero!” And then—. “Bombarda Maxima!

The explosion flung chips of shale through the air and Harriet covered her face—but the floor held. The Inferi shrieked, and the doorway groaned, the arch cracking.

“Again,” Mr. Sangfort rasped, sagging against Mr. Aeter. “Deeper. You must carve the rune deeper. The floor, it’s—it was crafted to withstand magical erosion, centuries ago. Again—.”

Sweat burned in Harriet’s eyes as she levied her wand at the damaged floor again, ignoring the plumes of dust and spectating creatures waiting to rip her to shreds.

Sectumsempra!

She placed the rune one agonizing line at a time, cracks growing wider and wider around the archway, the ward flickering—.

Contero—!”

The ward wavered, a body slid through, followed by another, emaciated limbs scuttling closer, and Harriet couldn’t stop—.

Ossivora!

Mr. Aeter’s voice boomed from behind, and a wave of heat sailed by her, singeing her hair. She caught sight of the spell only as a narrow glint of blue light before it struck the first Inferius and engulfed it in a plume of violet flames. Those flames devoured it whole and eagerly stretched for the next, moving as if sentient.

Dark magic crawled down Harriet’s throat. Her scar burned.

Ignore it. Concentrate, Potter!

Inferi started to pile through the room in earnest, smoke billowed, Mr. Aeter shouted her name—and Harriet moved her arm like a dancer trying to remember the perfect motion of a dance, her eyes shut, her breath held.

She stepped forward.

Bombarda maxima!

With a resounding crash, the floor gave way, and the rune transformed the rubble into sand, cushioning their landing on the story below. Still, they dropped more than five meters, and Harriet bit her tongue when her knees banged together, and she forced herself to roll on impact.

Somewhere behind her, Mr. Sangfort howled, and she knew he must have broken something.

“No time,” she gasped, throwing herself upright, not daring to glance above them. Sand poured through her clothing and chafed uncomfortably in her shoes. “Hurry, Mr. Aeter. Get him up. Which way—?”

“Leave me,” Mr. Sangfort groaned, half-buried, sand trickling down on his bloodied head. “Leave me….”

Shut up, you old bastard,” Harriet snarled. She jumped over to Mr. Aeter’s side and grabbed Sangfort’s arm, not caring if it was broken in three places as she yanked, pulling him free. Mr. Sangfort shouted, but he protested no further when Mr. Aeter hefted him up onto his back.

The Inferi above shrieked.

They ran along the black, unlit corridor, tripping on their own feet and pieces of the Tor, followed by their frantic footsteps and pursuing Undead. Between wheezing breaths, Mr. Aeter said they’d nearly reach the family solar—when they crossed paths with the rest of the house’s residents.

Given the state of them, Harriet guessed they’d had similar problems with the Inferi.

“Oh, thank Merlin, father!” Gauthar said when he saw Mr. Sangfort hanging off Mr. Aeter’s shoulders like an ungainly sack of potatoes. “We thought—.”

“We can share these thoughts later,” Mr. Sangfort stressed. Behind them, from the blackness of the winding passage, the carousing wails of the undead beckoned. “Quickly now, boy.”

Gauthar and Nefaria led them through into the family solar—a fairly sizable living space with a lofted ceiling surrounded by windows providing scenic views of the valley. At the moment, Harriet couldn’t speak on the setting, given that the furniture lay beneath a fine cover of dust, and several towering shelves had toppled, a vast chandelier shattered upon the floor. The hearth had been cracked entirely in two, and as ominous rumbling continued to shake the mountain, Harriet worried the room might crumble entirely.

“Here,” Nefaria said, using her wand to shove the chandelier’s remnants aside. “Through here—.”

Gauthar cast aside the carpet, tearing it free—and doing so revealed a trap door, sealed shut with a lock and a heavy haze of magic Harriet could feel from where she stood.

She glanced behind them toward the corridor, shifting.

Mr. Aeter eased Mr. Sangfort from his back as Gauthar knelt by the trapdoor. He weaved his wand in a practiced pattern above the thick bronze lock—then paused. When nothing happened, he repeated the motion with more fervor, and still, the lock didn’t move.

“W-what is it?” Bonespell sputtered, her lip sporting a new bruise.

Rather than answering, Gauthar gave his lips an anxious lick and turned to Mr. Sangfort. “Father, if you would come here….”

Gauthar and Mr. Aeter had to help Mr. Sangfort over to kneel by the trapdoor, and Gauthar had to lend him his wand, Mr. Sangfort’s lost somewhere in their descent from the laboratory. Like his son, Cladius tried to open the lock, repeating the pattern, and it remained unmoving.

“It isn’t working,” he finally pronounced.

“What? What does that mean?” Nefaria asked, her voice rising in a panic.

“It means it isn’t working,” Mr. Sangfort snapped.

“But it has to work!” Bonespell cried. “There’s nowhere else to go!”

Arguing ensued, tempers fraying, only for the group to fall silent as one when the cracked windows started to give way and more Inferi appeared at the frames, breaking the mullions to climb inside.

Nefaria wept in fear and grasped her husband’s arm. “God—Gauthar!”

From the passageway came the rapid patter of dry, unshod feet. Glancing behind them showed the dread-inducing sheen of animal-like eyes glimmering in the dark.

“Get out of the way,” Iris barked, shoving past the others to reach the trapdoor. Rather than waving her wand above it, she sliced open her palm, blood gushing from the opened wound, and with her fingertips, she started painting quick, hasty runes around the outside rim of the door.

Mr. Sangfort looked up from what she was doing into his daughter’s face. “You haven’t enough time to break the seal,” he told her, to which Iris said—.

“I must.”

The Inferi crept inside like spiders, leering and hungry, not caring how they sliced themselves upon the jagged glass from the windows or how they trod upon one another in their rush to squeeze through the doorway. As the witches and wizards closed ranks, one of the Inferi darted forward—

Ossivora!

—and caught flame, only to be replaced by another. More and more spells rained upon their numbers, but as each body fell, another corpse shambling over it, moaning, dead eyes set upon them, and the space between them grew narrower and narrower—.

Harriet grabbed Cicero Aeter by the shoulder. “Sorry, mate,” she said before using her grip on his ruined cloak to hoist herself up his back without preamble, setting her knees on his shoulders to give herself a better vantage.

Aeter cursed at her and stumbled, but his large hands came up to hold her in place, securing her—.

Harriet threw her arm up, wand twisting, the weight of the incantation pulling on her, spectacles flashing as she willed every ounce of magical ability she had into her casting—.

Aurumsphaera!”

A blazing halo left the tip of her wand, arching away from them, whipping around, followed by another, and another, until the room thrummed with golden light, and it shook through them all. The vibrations traveled into Harriet’s bones and left her toes numb. Blood trickled from her nose and splattered her cracked lenses.

The heat lashed through the Inferi, spiraling around them, a veritable storm of golden effulgence pulsing from Harriet’s wand, churning like molten fire against the room’s edges. It crashed against the walls and pushed upward like a rising wave, a towering inferno, and it was all the Sangforts could do to hold onto one another, their heads bowed against the storm.

The Inferi screamed—.

Harriet held on until she could stand it no longer. She snapped her wand away from the spell like a tailor snipping the end of a seam, and all at once the room went silent, plunging itself back into darkness.

For a long moment, no one dared move. They hesitantly lifted their heads, feeling ash rain upon their skin, glancing around the solar to find the Inferi dead—and the room utterly destroyed.

The scorch marks painted a fiery ring upon the crumbling ceiling.

Harriet dropped from Mr. Aeter’s shoulders, and the sound of her shoes hitting the floor startled the group. They stared. “Get the door open,” she said to Iris with a tired sigh. “Let’s get out of here.”

 

 

Dawn peered through the trees, golden and oblivious to the nightmare Voldemort had sown while the world slumbered. Harriet and the others stumbled through the dark over the wet rocks, splashing through the narrow mouth of the inlet as they came out of the cave into the light of morning.

They’d walked in silence through the tunnel hidden beneath the Sangforts’ home, moving slowly through the untended passage until it breached a cave deeper underground. They followed it until they found a source of water leading toward an exit. They had to walk for hours and stop more than once for Mr. Sangfort. Harriet didn’t know whether the wards extended this far, but no one mentioned Apparating.

Their breathing was rough and ugly against the cheery burbling of water and birdsong. Harriet wiped soot from her cheek and felt grit drag against her scratched skin. She lamented having to get yet another new pair of spectacles; hers sported a large crack across the left lens. Something had struck her across the face without her noticing.

“Oh, no,” Elinor breathed, and they looked around. They followed where her attention had strayed, up through the narrow vale, higher where the dale opened up and afforded a view of the higher mountains. There, on the cliffs, was the Tor.

Before their eyes, the smoldering ruin of the Sangforts’ ancestral home slid off the rocks and plunged into the forest below. They heard its impact, and felt the downdraft as nothing more than a slight breeze.

The Sangforts could only look on in mute shock.

Harriet didn’t know what to say, and so remained silent with them. She watched as the smoke continued to rise into the brightening sky, birds disappearing over the horizon.

The whisper of silk stirring the air announced Slytherin’s presence, and dread clenched Harriet’s heart when she turned to see him land upon a convenient rock. His robes bore visible signs of combat, but he himself appeared unruffled—and perfectly unperturbed by the fact that he’d been party to destroying his followers’ home.

“Well,” he commented, glancing about the assembled group with derision. “You managed to survive. How surprising.”

His eyes landed upon Harriet and lingered there. Without looking away, he stepped down from the rock and approached, his cloak’s hem hissing through the dry grass, Harriet holding herself still as he drew level with her.

The smell of Dark magic overpowered her nose, and she swallowed.

Slytherin leaned closer, peering into her eyes. He leaned back, then, without invitation, reached out to straighten the apprenticeship cords still hanging from Harriet’s neck. He ensured the ends were level, then tossed a look over his shoulder, gazing toward the cliffs that once hosted the Tor.

He exhaled, and his lip curled.

“Oh, the old man will be thrilled,” he sneered. “We’re returning to Hogwarts early, it seems.”


A/N:

Me: *Types Floo Network*

Me: *Brain thinks Food Network*

Me: *Brain immediately jumps to image of the Sangforts watching Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives*

Me, whispering: “We’re not in Flavor-Town anymore, Harriet.”

Remember, there’s a Discord available here: CDT Discord, where you can join the community, ask questions, and receive updates. This link stays active for 7 days after this chapter’s posting.

Chapter 312: lessons in loyalty

Chapter Text

cccxii. lessons in loyalty

 

Dumbledore stared at the lot of dirty, injured witches and wizards gathered in his entrance hall with the sort of bemused expression one might expect a grandparent to have when company arrives without warning, five minutes before supper’s meant to start.

“Tom,” he said, slowly, looking down at the other wizard from where he stood midway down the steps into the Entrance Hall. He must have been on his way to breakfast. “You’re back early.”

The glance Slytherin threw at the Headmaster could have flayed a lesser wizard alive. “Unfortunately, a change of venue was required.”

“Oh?” His gaze landed on Harriet and searched over her, a lingering tightness pulling at his shoulders and cutting through the levity of the moment. “Harriet! It seems you would benefit from a visit to our dear Madam Pomfrey?”

Harriet opened her mouth—but Slytherin cut across her before she could say anything. “Save your performative concern, Headmaster. The girl is in one piece.”

“Forgive me for being curious why my ward is injured while in your charge, Tom.”

Whatever Slytherin’s objections, Professor Dumbledore still ushered the group to the hospital wing, shocking Madam Pomfrey, who was enjoying a nice cup of morning tea and was not prepared for visitors.

She took one look at Harriet and sighed. “Why is it always you, Miss Potter?”

Harriet didn’t have an answer for her.

Fortunately—or unfortunately—there were more immediate injuries than Harriet’s that needed Pomfrey’s attention. She moved on to see to Mr. Sangfort after Mr. Aeter lowered him to sit on the edge of a bed. That left Harriet to sink into a chair, running a tired, grubby hand through her fringe.

At first, she didn’t know why the Sangforts were here, why they’d followed her and Slytherin to Hogwarts instead of going their own way, but when she considered it more, she thought it likely they didn’t have anywhere else to go.

They don’t trust St. Mungo’s, she reminded herself, having been told this more than once by different people in her House. Harriet’s luck with the Healers and discretion of the hospital had been positive so far, but the old families—and those with cousins or uncles or fathers and far-flung relatives—with people under the Dark Lord’s wing, didn’t trust their health or information about it to anyone.

As if in a daze, Harriet watched Madam Pomfrey’s back—the steady rise and fall of her arm as she cast spells. Elinor clung to Iris’ hand, the older witch’s eyes set on Slytherin and Headmaster arguing in the corner of the ward. Arguing seemed a strong word, as Dumbledore and Slytherin never argued in public, but both wizards wore displeased expressions, and they’d cloaked themselves in some kind of muffling barrier.

Iris watched them. Her lips ticked, tracking theirs.

Harriet lowered her gaze to her lap again, her hands curled into fists. Scrapes covered her knuckles, and she’d ripped a nail off—probably falling through the laboratory floor. It burned like bloody hell and she tried not to look too closely at it.

It wouldn’t be the first time she’d gotten such an injury, and probably not the last.

Letting out a shuddering exhale, Harriet stood up—swaying—and walked out of the ward. No one noticed her—or, rather, if they did, they didn’t register that she’d left, too busy with everything else happening. She didn’t go far, only crossing the corridor to the window, letting the relative quiet outside the doors enfold her as the knot in her chest loosened one painful bind at a time.

Morning swelled over the grounds, warm and irreverent, heedless of everything that had occurred in the night, and Harriet realized how very tired she truly felt.

She’d survived another encounter with the Dark Lord.

How many more times could she do so before her luck finally ran out?

The door opened behind her, and Harriet’s shoulders stiffened when her scar prickled under her torn, filthy shirt.

Slytherin came to stand by her, announced by the lack of footsteps on the flagstones, the rustle of cloth and the cold cut of displeased air through his teeth.

Do not assume this means an end to your lessons,” he said. “I expect your attentions and efforts to remain unwavering.

Harriet didn’t bother to respond, and Professor Slytherin strode away without waiting for her to do so. She continued to stare across the grounds, watching the morning light, listening to the birds that made their homes in the eaves beneath the castle’s many, many eaves.

Eventually, someone came along and found Harriet there. Professor McGonagall was torn between scolding Harriet for wandering off and being relieved she was relatively unharmed, and brought her back to Madam Pomfrey.

The healer chivvied Harriet through the ward to one of the private rooms away from the Sangforts.

“I suppose I should use the opportunity to check the handiwork of my colleagues at St. Mungo’s and make sure everything’s healing well,” she sighed, already lining potions on her trolley. “Please disrobe, Miss Potter.”

Grimacing, Harriet stirred herself enough to work open the buttons on her ruined clothes, shucking off her shirt. Madam Pomfrey turned—

Harriet knew she didn’t mean to have a reaction, that the witch strove for compassion and professionalism in all things that she did, but Harriet didn’t miss the slight widening of her eyes when Madam Pomfrey caught sight of the fresh scarring stretching across her chest over her ribs.

Her shock lasted for less than a second before her expression smoothed over, but it made Harriet’s shoulders curl inward, her brows furrowed.

Hers wasn’t the body of a freshly sixteen-year-old witch. It was a miasma of scars, both new and old, fresh wounds layered over faded lines, scratches and scuffs, welts, bruises, rough skin stretched too tight over crooked bones.

She stared at the floor, feeling like her throat was glued shut.

“Let’s have a look at you, then,” Madam Pomfrey said, clearing her throat. She retrieved her wand and began casting spells, studying the glow surrounding Harriet. The largest scar, the one left by Gaunt’s last attack, prickled and ached.

Pomfrey nodded as if to herself, then gloved her hands with magic before reaching for one of the jars on the trolley. “We’ll apply this here—Curious Cortico Concoction. You’ll need to apply it generously every morning for—well. Apply it every morning, Miss Potter. Deep scar tissue like this doesn’t behave as normal skin does. If you don’t follow directions, it will tighten, and you’ll lose mobility.”

“Moody said the same thing,” Harriet mumbled.

“The wizard may be of a singular sort, but he knows what he’s talking about.”

Pomfrey applied the balm, then tended to the rest of Harriet’s cuts and scrapes. When finished and satisfied Harriet hadn’t been maimed or otherwise injured, Pomfrey dressed her in a fresh gown, then bade her to rest, under threat of having her arse stuck to the bed’s mattress—a threat Harriet knew Madam Pomfrey would make good on if provoked.

With her robes in ruins and nothing else but the gown to wear, Harriet sat on the bed and stayed put. She held a pillow against her middle, hugged it tight. Her fingers curled into the material as she stared at the far wall and sighed.

The sudden appearance of Winky almost made her throw herself off the bed.

The little house-elf popped into existence at the end of the bed, and upon spotting Harriet, jumped into her lap, sobbing her little heart out.

“Miss Harriet!”

Harriet consoled her as she cried, blubbering about leaving her behind, swearing she’d never do such a thing again, not so long as she lived, and Harriet did her best to comfort her.

“You did exactly what I told you to do,” she said. “You kept Livi and the golems safe when I couldn’t. Thank you, Winky.”

When she calmed down, Harriet asked Winky to retrieve her a change of clothes, and she did—also bringing back Livius.

Misstresss,” the Horned Serpent hissed as he twisted himself over Harriet’s shoulders. The heaviness of his coils settled over her body, his scales pinching against the nape of her neck. “Foolisssh creature you are.

Getting dressed took effort, what with the clingy familiar who refused to let go of her, but Harriet managed it. She still did as Pomfrey said and rested, staring at the ceiling, until she couldn’t take the silence and the stillness anymore.

She rolled out of bed and fitted her scuffed, cracked spectacles into place. She managed to coax Livi into hiding himself, his body vanishing, though she still felt the heavy drag of his weight as she stepped out of the private room.

She didn’t mean to hear the conversation between Cladius and Dumbledore, but there was nowhere else for her to go. Slytherin had retreated back to whatever corner of the castle he’d found to crawl into, and the other Sangforts had left the hospital wing. Dumbledore had pulled a chair up next to Cladius’ bed, and the other wizard schooled his expression into something passably polite, though his eyes were remote, lingering on the wall behind Dumbledore rather than the man himself.

“The Order will be able to offer you and your family a place to stay,” Dumbledore was saying, only to be interrupted by a soft breath from Mr. Sangfort.

“In exchange for what?” he asked, in a tone that wasn’t angry, rather curious—or resigned. “I have had a decidedly trying evening, Headmaster, so let us dispense with the pleasantries for the moment. You needn’t feel the need to treat me as one of your charges. I understand the reciprocity of these things.”

Professor Dumbledore looked at Mr. Sangfort with the kind of sad weariness that said he’d had similar arguments with similar wizards a hundred times before, and they’d never gone his way. Still, he kept trying, no matter how futile the attempt.

“There is no need for reciprocity. No matter what you have done or harbored in your home, your family deserves safety. I would not put a price on that.”

Cladius exhaled and dragged a shaky hand across his brow. “I will think on it,” he said. Dumbledore seemed to expect this answer, because he nodded, then gathered himself to stand, dismissing his chair with a wave of his hand to leave Mr. Sangfort in peace. He saw Harriet frozen in the hall’s entrance, her eyes as wide as an owl’s at getting caught out, but rather than chastising her, he merely beckoned for her to follow him out of the wing, and she gladly went.

 

 

When evening came, Bonnie Bonespell and Cicero Aeter had long since gone on their way, but the Sangforts were still in Hogwarts.

Harriet knew Cladius had been released from the infirmary hours ago, but the family was still haunting one of the lounges on the ground floor, one of the rooms that saw little use aside from when guest lecturers were visiting the castle to give seminars on the weekends.

There weren’t many people in evidence in the castle—the Headmaster, Professor McGonagall, Filch, Professor Sprout, Madam Pomfrey, Professor Trelawney, who never left, Hagrid, Slytherin, of course, and Professor Preece, an auxiliary professor who taught Thaumaturgical Cartography to N.E.W.T students—but no one aside from Harriet seemed to note the lingering presence of the Dark family.

It was perhaps the fourth time she’d found an excuse to pass by the entrance to the lounge when Nefaria, through gritted teeth, said, “Miss Potter. Why don’t you have a seat?”

“Oh, err…”

Flushing to her ears, Harriet stepped into the room. The other gathered members of the family glanced at her from their various spots but seemed neither surprised nor bothered by her appearance. Gauthar stood from one of the winged chairs by the hearth where he had been sitting with his father and offered the seat to Harriet.

Confused, Harriet nonetheless sat, if only because her knees still smarted after slamming them into the stone floors of the Tor so many times. Gauthar went instead to one of the long benches where his wife sat, but rather than joining her, he started to slowly pace. Iris, exhausted, slumped against the stone casement in the window seat, gazing across the grounds. Elinor inspected one of Hogwarts’ many tapestries, her mind a million miles away, mouth set in a frown.

Cladius leaned against his arm, his complexion paler than usual, not entirely recovered from the incident that morning. His fingertips pressed against his brow, and he wore defeat heavily, like a cloak that weighed a two tonnes, tied to his shoulders, pulling his down.

An oppressive silence circulated through the room, highlighted by distant, irreverent birdsong coming from the Forbidden Forest. The same forest that now held the grave of the Sangfort’s ancestral home.

Harriet’s eyes flicked toward Elinor.

Dumbledore may help, may even accept me—but others? No. If we turned from the Dark Lord, it would not make us heroes.” The chess piece turned in Elinor Sangfort’s delicate fingers. “It doesn’t make sense to you. It doesn’t have to. This is the life I was born into and the only one I’ll ever know.”

Cladius Sangfort couldn’t meet Professor Dumbledore’s eyes, bruises on his hands, scrapes on his face, as he said, “I understand the reciprocity of these things.

Harriet’s throat felt tight, and she cleared it, all eyes turned again to her.

“I have a house,” she said. “You could use it, if you’d like.”

She didn’t know where the suggestion came from.

Only, she kept seeing the Tor slide from the mountain and feeling the vibration of the earth shake under her feet despite the fact that she was in Hogwarts, safe and sound and far away from the crash site now. She kept thinking about a cupboard, a lonely summer in the British wilderness, the ripple of canvas overhead as she lay in her tent at night and pretended it was perfectly normal not to have a proper home to call her own.

She remembered half-listening to one of Hermione’s long-winded arguments with Draco in the background about ‘land-rich, money-poor’ pure-bloods, and the name Sangfort passing through Draco’s lips—

“It’s actually my house-elf Bigsby’s home,” she clarified. “So if he says you can’t stay, or if I learn you’ve been a right cunt to him—that’s it, you’re out on your ear. There’s nothing for it. It used to be where—well. I think they’d be happier if I did something with the place, than just let it sit empty. I won’t stand for you turning it into a place for the Dark Lord’s twats, but if—if you need somewhere to stay, somewhere safe…”

Gauthar’s mouth gaped, then closed before he looked at his wife, then back at Harriet. Mr. Sangfort stared at her, hard, the dark blue of his eyes fixed on her face.

“And what of Lord Slytherin?” he asked. He said it carefully, the words holding meaning far beyond what they should.

“What of him?” Harriet repeated, sharp. “He’s not allowed in my house.”

Mr. Sangfort’s brow rose, and his gaze flicked from Harriet somewhere behind her—to his son, most likely, lingering there, sharing words in a look that she couldn’t understand. Then, in a move that showed surprising grace for a man who’d just been laid up in hospital, Mr. Sangfort rose from his seat and knelt in front of Harriet’s chair.

He bowed his head. “Thank you, my Lady. We would be grateful.”

Harriet grunted, her face once more growing hot. “Don’t call me that,” she said, and Mr. Sangfort stood, the corner of his mouth twitching with a smile. She shivered. “Merlin…let me call Bigsby and get you lot settled….”

 

 

Later, she received a letter.

Apprentice Potter,” it read in a lazy, rough scrawl. “Don’t think me ungrateful for skipping out without a word otherwise. If you ever need anything, address your owls to the Witch’s Son Trading Company, out of Cardiff. That’ll find me. I owe you. Me and my blood don’t give that debt lightly. Gods pray you have the backbone for it.”

The signature at the bottom belonged to Cicero Aeter.


A/N:

Sorry updates have been slow. I should have more free time soon-ish, and I’ll get back to posting more regularly.

Chapter 313: a wretchedly noble heart

Chapter Text

cccxiii. a wretchedly noble heart

Harriet kept her gaze fixed on the window as the distant bells tolled the midnight hour.

A pale glow rippled over the grounds from the summer sun, illuminating the distant forest and gates through the thin, paltry mist moving in off the lake, stirring in the night breeze. The Sangforts had departed a few hours prior, and Harriet was meant to be tucked into her bed, alone in the Slytherin dormitory, but she couldn’t sleep.

She sat at the window with a good vantage of the gates and waited.

Livi stirred and hissed in frustration, butting his head against Harriet’s still fingers.

Harriet blinked. “Stop that,” she told him, reaching again for the flannel she’d lowered into a bowl of steaming water. She wrung it out, then wrapped it around his horn where shedding skin stubbornly clung.

Misstresss movesss ssslowly,” he complained, his coils tightening where he piled in a heavy mass across her lap. “It doesss not feel right.

I know, it’ll be better in a minute,” she consoled, pulling the flannel away to check if it’d softened the skin enough. It hadn’t, so she replaced it, sighing as she did so. “It’s because you’re growing so much. Why d’you have to get so big, Livi, huh?

She meant it as a joke and hadn’t really been speaking to him, since Horned Serpents and snakes in general didn’t grasp humor very well, but he turned his blue eyes on her, tongue flickering.

All creaturesss grow,” he hissed. “They grow, wither, die. Thisss one will do the sssame. Ssso ssshall Misstresss.

“Gee,” Harriet deadpanned. “Thanks for the reminder. A real mood boost….”

She pulled the flannel back again, and this time, finding the warm water and drops of potion had done their trick to soften the keratin, helped peel off the tight, stubborn bit of dead skin clinging around his horns.

Livi shivered when the last bit of his old scales finally came free, and Harriet stroked an appreciative thumb over his bright, fresh scales.

There,” she murmured. “All better. You’re very pretty, Livius.

He accepted the compliment, turning his head so Harriet’s fingers grazed the gem atop his head. He stared at her.

The ssstone placcce isss bessst,” he told her, apropos of nothing.

I like Hogwarts, too,” she replied. “We can’t always stay.

He disagreed and protested accordingly. She exhaled through her nose, listening to him as her thoughts continued their absentminded wandering.

In the corner of her eye, the shadows flickered. She lifted her gaze, blinking, and watched as the shadows changed and stretched upon the stone wall, thickening, growing taller, until a familiar silhouette loomed above her.

“Set,” Harriet whispered—but no sooner had the word left her, had he already disappeared, the shadows resuming their usual shape upon the rocks. The candle rippled.

Harriet couldn’t help but sigh. “You’re rarely here anymore,” she murmured, addressing the pocket of darkness still sitting in the cracks between the flagstones and the weight of her own shadow. “I wondered why a lot. I remember the cupboard, the shadow puppets, and the games we’d play. You’re not here, and that makes me sad.”

Memories flickered—sharp, shadowy hands wrapping around her ankles, pulling her down. Unpredictable menace, ungentle prodding, pushing the wands to the floor, alerting Voldemort

She bit her lip. “And sometimes…I’m glad for it.”

No answer came, not that she expected one. She brushed the flannel over Livi’s body, cleaning his scales, and the Horned Serpent hissed. A minute passed before a firm, solid nudge pressed against her chin.

Her head snapped up, brows furrowed. She searched, but didn’t see Set. She still didn’t see him even when she felt a second soft, ghostly hand graze her cheek, tilting her head toward the window.

Harriet’s heart leapt into her throat when she spotted a dark, cloaked figure slipping through the gates.

Her arms snapped around Livi and she hoisted him up without a word, ignoring the strain in her back, the ache in her legs and knees. She left the bowl and the flannel and the mess of shed scales, the door banging against the wall with a clatter as she rushed out.

She took the steps down to the entrance hall two at a time, teeth digging into her bottom lip as she tried to keep quiet in the near somnolent evening corridors. When she reached the ground floor, the main door was easing open, the figure slipping inside—

“Snape,” Harriet said, breathless—and the man framed in the doorway, weak sunlight withering at his back, froze. His head jerked up, his exhausted gaze catching upon Harriet.

They stared at one another. The tension leached from Snape’s shoulders until they slumped, and his cloak dragged across the floor.

“Potter,” he said. The word came out on an exhale. “You’re here.”

“Yeah—.”

Livi shifted, displeased with having been jostled down the stairs like a loose sack of gobstones, and Harriet grunted as she adjusted him to rest more comfortably across her shoulders.

The interruption broke Snape out of whatever mood had allowed him to let his guard down; now, he straightened, his gaze narrowing as it darted around the entrance hall.

“What are you doing wandering the halls at this hour, Potter?”

She smiled—then tried to hide it, ducking her head, wiping a hand across her mouth. “I dunno. Are you going to give me a detention for it, Professor?”

Snape grunted. He turned to push the door shut behind him, and doing so darkened the hall once more. Before Harriet could so much as blink, he had his wand in hand, a softly voiced Lumos illuminating the tip, and he stepped toward the dungeon stairwell.

Without a word, he opened his other hand, and held it toward Harriet—not as if to touch her, but rather, as if silently encompassing the air, raising his arm in a quiet invitation for her to follow him. Harriet did so, falling into step next to Snape as they briskly walked from the open foyer into the darker cover the dungeons below.

He led them to his office and let Harriet inside first, gaze once more searching the corridor before he followed her through the door and shut it tight behind him.

“You shouldn’t be out wandering, regardless if school is in session or not,” he said as Harriet sank into one of the stiff visitor’s chairs. She shrugged Livi’s weight off her shoulders, wincing, and Snape’s brow furrowed. “Surely you’re not foolish to think it safe—.”

“Lay off,” Harriet sighed, interrupting his berating before he could work himself into a proper snit. “I know it’s not safe. And I wasn’t wandering—I was waiting.”

The unspoken question of “Waiting for what?” went unasked—unanswered—unnecessary.

Snape flicked his wand at the hearth, kindling a fire. He ran a hand through his hair, the motion pulling the lank strands away from his face, and for a moment, Harriet could see the exhaustion in his dark eyes.

“The Tor is gone,” she said into the stillness settling between them.

“I know,” Snape replied, speaking to the fire, the timber of his voice rougher than usual. When Harriet thought he wouldn’t say anything else, he added, “I went there.”

“What?”

“I said I went there,” he repeated, sharper than before, turning from the fireplace to face his desk. He reached forward to brace his hand on the branching perch for a moment—and when he did so, a flash of turquoise slithered out from beneath his sleeve. Sally the golem wound her way out onto the spindly tree.

Home,” she hissed, her vocabulary small and limited. “Safe.

Harriet’s face warmed, having been half convinced Snape chucked the poor thing in a drawer and forgot all about it. She cleared her throat.

“The Dark Lord did not illuminate us on his plans or the results of his activities,” Snape continued, either ignoring Harriet’s expression or not noticing it as he sat down in his own chair. “He has been keeping information close to his chest, as it were, ever since Rabastan Lestrange went missing.”

“So you didn’t know he was going to…?”

Snape shook his head. “No.”

“Oh.”

Harriet shifted in her seat. She didn’t know if it made her feel better or worse to know Snape hadn’t been informed about the attack before it happened. He was supposed to know these things. He needed to know these things—but if he had, and he hadn’t said anything—

I can’t blame him, she told herself. I can’t blame him if he doesn’t, because I’m an idiot, and I can’t keep quiet.

She wished he’d been there, and was glad he hadn’t been. Was really, really glad he hadn’t been, because what if Harriet had been too slow? What if he got cornered somewhere on his own, surrounded by Inferi? What if—?

She exhaled, rubbing at Livi’s scales.

Stop being a numpty.

“I got my O.W.Ls,” she blurted, and Snape blinked at her, as confused by the sudden segue as Harriet herself was.

“As you are not chained to a desk laden with revision material, I assume your marks were not entirely abysmal,” he replied, tone dry. “I suppose I should congratulate you.”

A lump lodged itself in Harriet’s throat. “I—I got an ‘E’ in Potions,” she finally managed.

Snape continued to look at her, his expression unmoving, and the odd trepidation Harriet couldn’t rightly name turned to frustration. “I only got an ‘E,’” she repeated as if he hadn’t heard. “I can’t—I didn’t get the Outstanding to keep taking your class.” Lowering her gaze, she mumbled, “I’m sorry.”

He finally stirred, but rather than getting angry or annoyed as Harriet expected he might, Snape only leaned down to reach one of the lower drawers of his desk. The lock opened at his touch, and though she couldn’t see what he grabbed, she heard the clink of glass touching.

A moment later, he straightened, and the drawer slammed shut again, lock clattering. Snape lowered a bottle and two clear glass tumblers onto the empty surface of his desk, and Harriet watched, wide-eyed, as he pried the cork from the Muggle whiskey, pouring a finger of it into one tumbler, then two-fingers into the second.

A grumbled incantation sent the first tumbler floating over to Harriet. It hovered in front of her, and she nearly dropped it when her nerveless fingers gripped the glass.

Holding his own tumbler, Snape slumped in his seat. He stretched his legs in front of himself, crossed them at the ankles, and stared, listless, into the building fire.

“Don’t be ridiculous,” he said, startling Harriet. “You’ll be in the class.”

“What?” She almost dropped the tumbler for a second time, and gave it up for a bad job, stretching to put it on a shelf before it met an unfortunate end on the floor.

“If your hearing is so impaired, perhaps Madam Pomfrey—.”

“But you don’t make exceptions,” she said, cutting him off. “You don’t let anyone into your N.E.W.T classes without an Outstanding. Not even Iola Crowle, who was dead clever at Potions. I heard she cried for a week when you told her no.”

Snape narrowed his eyes. “Crowle had a passable ability with brewing and I told her as such. There was no reason to pursue accredited education in Potions if she couldn’t perform under pressure. It is the same as I have told a multitude of students before her, and it is the same I will tell others. Not having a N.E.W.T in a subject does not mean you should stop pursuing the magic or being curious about it; in the case of Potions, it means you lack the finer skill of a potioneer, and the finesse of dealing with Guild bureaucracy.” He sipped from his glass. “Leave it alone.”

Harriet couldn’t leave it alone. “But why would you let me into the class?”

“Potter.”

“It just hardly seems fair—.”

His hand tightened on the tumbler. “I do not care about fair where you are concerned, you stupid girl.”

Harriet’s mouth snapped shut. Her hand on the back of Livi’s neck paused in its anxious, nervous petting. For a moment, it looked as if Snape might hurl his glass into the belly of the hearth, but he didn’t, the tense muscles of his pale hand relaxing, head tilting so his hair hid his eyes.

“For once in your life,” he said. “Do not be so wretchedly noble.”

Harriet laughed. It wasn’t much of a laugh, and it was either laugh or cry; it left her in a wet breath, her nose stinging, lungs heavy with muddled emotions that felt too big for someone so exhausted. Chief among them was gratitude—gratitude he would do this for her, gratitude he helped, that he always helped, that she would still have an excuse to come to his classroom or his office, and for an instant, she didn’t feel quite so alone—

The anxiety didn’t leave her. It rose up, inevitable as a summer storm, wondering what would happen if people found out Harriet hadn’t gotten an Outstanding in Potions, that Snape made an exception, what Slytherin would say, what Slytherin would do

She pulled Livi closer to her middle, and the Horned Serpent hissed. On the shelf, the untouched glass of whiskey glinted in the amber firelight.

The carriage clock ticked and the hour waned, but neither witch nor wizard made any move to vacate the office. Snape didn’t stir from his chair, and he appeared in no rush to banish Harriet back to her dormitory. Harriet, for her part, had no desire to leave either. She didn’t want to cross paths with her master on the way.

“You didn’t ask if any of the Sangforts lived,” she said, voice low to match the hushed stillness of the room. The logs popped in the hearth.

Snape continued to stare into the depths of the fire, the red light reflecting off the flat black of his blank, tired eyes. The nearly-empty tumbler tipped in his hand as he brought it to his mouth and swallowed the remnants.

His gaze flicked from the grate and found Harriet, remaining there.

“No. I didn’t.”


A/N:

Just a shorty for now. Work is literally devouring me. Keep on keeping on.